House of Earth and Blood Page 169
The other …
Bryce kept her focus upon Syrinx, refusing to let her terror take over, to let it rob her of breath as she reached the chimera’s limp body.
She would not accept this. Not for a moment.
Her lungs began burning, a growing tightness that she fought against as she bore Syrinx back toward the feeding platform, her lifeline out of the water, away from the nøkk. Her fingers latched into the chain links as the dock rose back toward the surface.
Lungs constricting, Bryce held Syrinx on the platform, letting it propel them up, up—
From the shadows of the rocks at the bottom, the nøkk burst forth. It was already smiling.
The nøkk knew she’d come for Syrinx. It had been watching her in the library for weeks now.
But the feeding platform broke the surface, Bryce with it, and she gasped down sweet, life-saving air as she heaved Syrinx over the edge and gasped to Lehabah, “Chest compressions—”
Clawed hands wrapped around her ankles, slicing her skin as they yanked her back. Her brow smashed into the metal rim of the platform before the cold water swallowed her once more.
Hunt couldn’t breathe as the nøkk slammed Bryce into the glass of the tank so hard it cracked.
The impact shook her from her stunned stupor, just as the nøkk snapped for her face.
She dodged left, but it still had its talons on her shoulders, cutting into her skin. She reached for the knife she’d tied to her thigh—
The nøkk grabbed the knife from her hands, tossing it into the watery gloom.
This was it. This was how she’d die. Not at Micah’s hand, not from the synth in her body, but by being ripped to shreds by the nøkk.
Hunt could do nothing, nothing, nothing as it again snapped for her face—
Bryce moved again. Lunging not for a hidden weapon, but another sort of attack.
She punched her right hand low into the nøkk’s abdomen—and dug inside the nearly invisible front fold. It happened so fast Hunt wasn’t sure what she’d done. Until she twisted her wrist, and the nøkk arched in pain.
Bubbles leaked from Bryce’s mouth as she wrenched its balls harder—
Every male in the pit flinched.
The nøkk let go, falling to the bottom. It was the opening Bryce needed. She drifted back against the cracked glass, braced her legs, and pushed.
It launched her into the open water. Blood from her head wound streamed in her wake, even as the synth healed the gash and prevented the blow from rendering her unconscious.
The platform dropped into the water again. Lehabah had sent it down. A final lifeline. Bryce dolphin-kicked for it, her arms pointed in front of her. Blood swirled with each undulating kick.
At the rocky bottom of the tank, the nøkk had recovered—and now bared its teeth up at the fleeing woman. Molten rage gleamed in its milky eyes.
“Swim, Bryce,” Tharion growled. “Don’t look back.”
The platform hit its lowest level. Bryce swam, her teeth gritted. The instinct to take a breath had to be horrendous.
Come on, Hunt prayed. Come on.
Bryce’s fingers wrapped around the bottom of the platform. Then the rim. The nøkk charged up from the depths, fury and death blazing in its monstrous face.
“Don’t stop, Bryce,” Fury Axtar warned the screen.
Bryce didn’t. Hand by hand by hand, she climbed the ascending chain, fighting for each foot gained toward the surface.
Ten feet from the top. The nøkk reached the platform base.
Five. The nøkk shot up the chain, closing in on her heels.
Bryce broke the surface with a sharp gasp, her arms grappling, hauling, hauling—
She got her chest out. Her stomach. Her legs.
The nøkk’s hands broke from the water, reaching.
But Bryce had cleared its range. And now panted, dripping water into the churning surface beneath the grated floor. Head healed without a trace.
The nøkk, unable to stand the touch of the air, dropped beneath the surface just as the feeding platform halted, sealing access to the water beneath.
“Fucking Hel,” Fury whispered, running her shaking hands over her face. “Fucking Hel.”
Bryce rushed to the unresponsive Syrinx and demanded from Lehabah, “Anything?”
“No, it’s—”
Bryce began chest compressions, two fingers on the center of the chimera’s sodden chest. She closed his jaws and blew into his nostrils. Did it again. Again. Again.
She didn’t speak. Didn’t beg any of the gods as she tried to resuscitate him.
On a feed across the room, the bathroom door fizzled beneath Micah’s assaults. She had to get out. Had to run now, or she’d be ruptured into shards of bone—
Bryce stayed. Kept fighting for the chimera’s life.
“Can you speak through the audio?” Ruhn asked Declan and Jesiba. “Can you patch us through?” He pointed to the screen. “Tell her to get the fuck out now.”
Jesiba said quietly, her face ashen, “It’s only one-way.”
Bryce kept up the chest compressions, her soaking hair dripping, her skin bluish in the light from the tank, as if she were a corpse herself. And scrawled on her back, cut off only by her black sports bra—the Horn.
Even if she got free of the gallery, if she somehow survived the synth, Micah would …
Syrinx thrashed, vomiting water. Bryce let out a sob, but turned the chimera over, letting him cough it out. He convulsed, vomiting again, gasping for every breath.
Lehabah had dragged a shirt up the steps from one of the desk drawers. She handed it to her, and Bryce swapped it with her ruined shirt before gathering the still-weak Syrinx in her arms and trying to stand.
She moaned in pain, nearly dropping Syrinx as her leg gushed blood into the water below.
Hunt had been so focused on the head wound he hadn’t seen the nøkk slash her calf—where the flesh visible through her leggings remained half-shredded. Still slowly healing. The nøkk must have dug its claws in to the bone if the injury was so severe the synth was still stitching it together.
Bryce said, “We have to run. Now. Before he gets out.” She didn’t wait for Lehabah to reply as she managed to get upright, carrying Syrinx.
She limped—badly. And she moved so, so slowly toward the stairs.
The bathroom door heated again, the metal red-hot as Micah attempted to melt his way through.
Bryce panted through her teeth, a controlled hiss-hiss-hiss with each step. Trying to master the pain the synth hadn’t yet taken away. Trying to drag a thirty-pound chimera down a set of steps on a shredded leg.
The bathroom door pulsed with light, sparks flying from its cracks. Bryce reached the library, took a limping step toward the main stairs up to the showroom, and whimpered.
“Leave it,” the Autumn King growled. “Leave the chimera.”
Hunt knew, even before Bryce took another step, that she would not. That she’d rather have her back peeled off by an Archangel than leave Syrinx behind.
And he could see that Lehabah knew it, too.
Bryce was a third of the way up the stairs, sparks flying from the seams of the bathroom door across the library behind them, when she realized Lehabah was not with her.
Bryce halted, gasping around the pain in her calf that even the synth could not dull, and looked back at the base of the library stairs. “Forget the books, Lehabah,” she pleaded.