“Ow,” she said. “Damn. That’s going to leave a mark.”
Oliver walked away, circling restlessly, turning his épée around and around in his gloved hand. “You asked for it,” he said. “Now get off the piste if you’re going to complain about a bruise.”
Eve slowly rolled up to her knees, collected her helmet and sword, and stood up. She didn’t seem too steady.
“Help her out,” Amelie said. “Make sure she’s not broken a rib. Oliver, that was unnecessary.”
“What was unnecessary was her gloating,” he replied. “I didn’t come here to fight children, and she needs to learn the same harsh lesson I did: taunting those who are stronger has consequences.”
“The stronger have a responsibility to the weaker,” Amelie said. “As you very well know.”
“I’ve had quite enough responsibility. And I thought we came here to fight, woman. If all you want is to hold philosophical discussions while attractively dressed, surely we can do that elsewhere.”
Eve looked better now, with the color coming back to her face—coming back too fast for Claire’s comfort, because there was an angry, frightened glitter in her eyes. “Bully,” she muttered.
Oliver took off his helmet and stared at her. He looked as solid as bone, and like someone nobody wanted to mess with. “I don’t allow people to mock me,” he said. “And the next time you presume to call me by a pet name, I’ll do worse than crack a rib for you on the piste. Now get out of the way. The adults require space.”
Amelie cocked her head to one side, studying him, and said, “I’m bored with all these rules. Shall we dispense with the conventions, then?”
“By all means,” Oliver said, and tossed his helmet into the corner. She put hers safely out of the way. “Weapons?”
“I prefer the épée,” she said. “Two of them.”
“Ah. Florentine. That suits me well enough.”
They each took two swords, and as Claire and Eve retreated back to a bench in the rear of the room, Amelie and Oliver faced off. Amelie crossed her two swords in front of her face, and Oliver followed suit; the sound of four blades cutting the air in salute made Claire shiver. “What are they doing?” she whispered.
“Free fighting,” Eve answered, keeping it quiet. “No rules. More like the old-style duels.”
“Not quite,” Amelie said. She was almost smiling . “This likely won’t end in death.”
“But no guarantees,” Oliver said. He was smiling, and not his usual eviler-than-you sort of twisted lips, either. He almost looked happy . “Ready?”
“Of course.” Amelie didn’t seem to be; she was holding her swords down, almost not seeming to know what to do with them.
Oliver took one step toward her, and the weapons snapped up and targeted him so fast, Claire blinked. Oliver raised one over his head in a pose that made her think of a scorpion’s stinger, and circled to the right. Amelie circled, too, keeping the distance between them…until suddenly she was moving, two light, quick steps, a sudden jump that ended in a sliding lunge, and both her épées hit targets, one slicing across Oliver’s leg, the other under his arm. He whirled and hit her in the back with an underhand stroke—or tried to. She must have known it was coming, because she bent forward, graceful as a willow, and rolled up on her knee to parry the next lunge.
And that was just the start.
“You know,” Eve said distantly, about five minutes later, as the two vampires were still circling, slashing, hacking, and scoring points on each other, “I’m thinking that maybe I shouldn’t ever piss him off. Or her. Again.”
“You think?” Claire whispered back. “Jeez. It’s like The Terminator meets Buffy. ”
“How do they decide who wins? I mean, clearly, they’re hitting each other, but they don’t even pretend those are going to hurt….”
“I don’t think it matters,” Claire said.
She was proven right just thirty seconds later, when Amelie reached down and tapped the point of one épée three times on the floor. Oliver, moving in for a lunge, veered off at the last second and went to a neutral position.
“Done?” he asked.
“Most enjoyable,” she said. “Thirty-two mortal touches for you; thirty-one for me. But I don’t mind losing to a master, Oliver.” She bowed slightly, swords down.
He bowed back, a little more deeply. “Nor do I,” he said. “But winning is always better. You’re favoring your right again, you know.”
“I noticed. We can’t all overcome nature’s disadvantages so easily.”
They exchanged a smile, a real one, and Claire exchanged a look with Eve. Eve cleared her throat.
“Are you still here?” Oliver asked without changing his expression. He didn’t look away from Amelie. “Leave.”
“Right,” Claire said. “Going.”
She picked up Eve’s stuff and walked with her to one of the small changing rooms to strip off the sweat-damp uniforms. Eve stuffed hers into the bag and stripped off her pink shirt. Claire gasped at the forming bruise, which was at least three inches across and looked very painful.
“Dammit,” Eve said. “That’s going to show over my bra. Got to rethink the wardrobe for the next few days.” She probed at the bruise with a fingertip and winced. “Nothing broken, just a nice reminder not to screw around with Ollie on the pointy-object dance floor.”
“I can’t believe you fought him.”
“Fought him? Damn, girlfriend, I got a touch on him. You know how difficult that is? I’ve been a serious fencer for years, but I never even got close to a touch on anybody without a pulse. He used to duel for real, you know. Without the safety tips on the blades.”
Claire could believe it. What she couldn’t get her head around was that Eve thought that was cool.
Maybe, she thought, fencing isn’t my sport after all.
Michael was home when they arrived, and surprisingly, he wasn’t playing guitar. He was sitting on the couch in Shane’s customary spot, playing a game. “Hey,” he said as Claire and Eve entered. “Nobody made dinner.”
“Nobody but you was home to eat it,” Eve said. “And I’m taking a wild guess that you didn’t make it, either.”
“Nope.” He killed a zombie with a chainsaw, and ducked instinctively as another one lunged at him out of the shadows on the screen. “Guess we’re all going to bed hungry, like the bad children we are.”
“Guess not.” Eve winked at Claire, who held up a grease-stained bag. “Seriously, you couldn’t smell the burgers? Is your vampire nose on the fritz, Michael?”
“I was hoping I was imagining the burgers.”
“Shut up. I got you one made extra rare. With pickles. I know you like pickles.”
Michael paused the game and put the controller aside, and as he stood up, the door opened and Shane came in. He nodded to Michael as he dropped his canvas bag in the hallway, next to Eve’s. “Who got burgers?”
“See, he can smell the burgers!” Eve yelled from the kitchen.
Michael ignored that. “You guys go to the gym?”
“Yeah,” Shane said. “The martial arts guy is pretty hard-core.”
“I got a bruise!” Eve shouted. “Big one! Right over my heart! Guess who put it there?”
Michael raised his eyebrows at Shane, who held up his hands. “Not me, man. I never touched her.”
“Oliver!” Eve backed out of the kitchen door, holding plates, balancing them like a pro. “Michael, here’s your almost-cooked one. Shane, got you the jalapeño burger. Me and Claire have plain old boring ones.”
“We’re branching out into different forms of junk food,” Michael said. “Exciting.”
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