Still, they stared at each other, just for a moment. They’d killed a gods-damned Asteri.
Hunt’s power buzzed through him again, in his very bones—
No. That wasn’t his power buzzing through him. It was his phone. The interior speakers on his helmet patched Ruhn through.
“Danaan.”
“You need to get to the hall with the firstlight core,” Ruhn said. “We’ve … We need help.” The line went dead.
“Bryce—” Hunt began, but when he turned to her, he found that pure light had again filled her eyes.
He’d seen that face only once before—the day she’d killed Micah. When she’d looked at the cameras and shown the world what lurked under the freckles and smile: the apex predator beneath. Wrath’s bruised heart.
Whatever it took to end this … she’d do it. His blood pumped through him, sparking at that look, at what she had done—
“Go,” shouted the thing Aidas had become, identifiable only by those blazing blue eyes as he faced Octartis beside Apollion.
The princes looked like the worst of horrors, but Hunt knew their true nature now. They had come to help. And for a single heartbeat, pride at being a son of Hel threaded through him.
Hunt looked back to Bryce, shutting the helmet’s visor over his eyes again. “We have to get to the hall with the firstlight core,” he said, but she was already reaching for him. Grabbing his hand, primal fury blazing on her face, the Starsword and Truth-Teller again sheathed.
A blink, and they were gone.
She was draining fast. They landed in a hallway three levels up, if the number on the nearby stairwell entrance was any indication.
Blood leaked from her nose, and Hunt might have fretted had he not heard the snarls surrounding them. Had his helmet not blared with alerts.
They’d teleported into a corridor full of deathstalkers.
Thanatos had sent his pets into the palace to distract and occupy any Asteri who might have stayed away from the battlefield, but his grip on them must have been weak, or he simply did not care.
Taking on just one had left a scar down Hunt’s back. Granted, he’d been bound by the halo, but even at full power, taking on this many would be no mean feat. Beside him, Bryce panted. She needed a breather. After her fight with Polaris, after managing to avoid the black hole she’d opened, after the teleporting … his mate needed rest.
Hunt eyed the snarling pack. The thought of wasting his power to kill an ally’s beast rankled him.
But in the end, he didn’t have to decide—a wall of water crashed through the corridor.
And roared straight for him and Bryce.
91
There was no way out. No window, no exit, no place to breathe as water flooded the hall up to the ceiling.
Hunt grabbed Bryce, his lightning rendered useless in the water, and swam toward where he guessed the stairs might be in the tumbling dark. His helmet filled with water, warping his vision—
A light shone. He hadn’t thought Bryce had that kind of power left—but no. It wasn’t Bryce. Tharion was swimming toward them through the hall. Ketos had never commanded enough power to control this much water, and with such force, yet here he was, clearly the master of this flood.
An air bubble formed around Hunt and Bryce. He yanked off his helmet, splashing water down his front. “What the fuck,” Hunt spat, choking on the water.
But Bryce got it before Hunt did, and yelled at Tharion through the air bubble now saving their asses, “Don’t drown them all! We need them on the battlefield!”
“I had a bag of antidotes,” Tharion shouted, his powerful, tiger-striped tail thrashing, “but the force of the water snapped the strap. It’s down here somewhere, just wait for me to—”
“No time!” Bryce shouted back. “Find it, then find us!”
Bryce was right: to delay getting to that room, cutting off the Asteri’s power at the knees … it wasn’t a risk worth taking, even for the antidote.
The water roared past, into the stairwell. “Go!” Tharion called as the water vanished from the hall, the mer and the demons swept upward in its current. “I’ll be right behind you!”
Hunt and Bryce landed hard on the stones, soaking wet and sputtering, but they didn’t wait.
“Hurry,” Bryce said, grabbing his arm to haul him to his feet. “The firstlight core’s below us.”
It was all Hunt could do to shake the water from his eyes, grab his helmet, and race after her.
Ruhn had fucked up. In so many ways, he’d fucked up.
He could think of nothing else as he stood before Pollux, hands raised, before the door down to the hall with the firstlight core running underneath it.
There was no sign of Actaeon or Brann.
“Where’s Lidia?” Pollux sneered, pointing a gun at Ruhn’s face, his white wings glowing with power.
Ruhn had left her bleeding and wounded on the stairs, utterly vulnerable, hating him—
“Where are the boys?” he growled.
“Someplace else,” Pollux said, and Ruhn’s stomach churned at what that might imply. “Rigelus guessed you’d seek out his mystics, so he instructed them to feed the lie to you. Which you swallowed so fucking easily, because you’re a gullible fool.” The Hammer stepped forward and jerked his chin at Ruhn. “Move. I know Lidia’s around here somewhere.”
Ruhn had little choice but to obey. To let the Hammer lead him away from the firstlight core, out of the archives, then back down that hall to where Lidia would be lying bleeding on the stairs.
Pollux’s breathing hitched as the scent of her blood filled the hall. “Lidia,” he called in a singsong. Her scent became overpowering as they turned the corner to where Ruhn had left her—
There was no trace of her.