In His Arena 1: Slave Eternal (10 page)

Read In His Arena 1: Slave Eternal Online

Authors: Nasia Maksima

Tags: #LGBT; Epic Fantasy

BOOK: In His Arena 1: Slave Eternal
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Bull Neck’s shadow fell upon him, and in it, Lucan felt small. His opponent was taller, thicker.
His legs look weak. If I can only attack him low.
Suddenly, Lucan’s sword was slick in his hands. Mental fatigue threatened, weighing his body with anxiety, indecision, his legs going leaden as though he trudged through a swamp instead of over the light grit of sand.

“Reach and distance. Appropriateness of the attack.”
Hektor’s words stirred hope within Lucan.
“That is how fights are won.”
Speed, size—these things could be advantageous, but they could also be used against an unwary fighter.

Lucan backed away from both groups, leading Bull Neck toward the center of the amphitheatre. The crowd began to warm a little, cheers making their way through the booing and threats. Lucan’s gaze never left his opponent. He studied Bull Neck—the way he moved, the way he danced forward, then minced back, brandishing his blade. Lucan measured the breadth of the man’s swing and the way he swaggered afterward rather than protecting his side.

Without warning, Bull Neck came in fast.

Studying him did nothing for Lucan. He ducked, tried to sidestep, but Bull Neck caught him on the backswing. It was faster this time, not the lazy swing he had taken when he was swaggering.

Desperate, Lucan twisted, avoiding the worst, and suffered a slash to his thigh. He limped away, holding his leg. Blood slid through his fingers. Despite the heat of day, it rendered him cold.

The shouts of the crowd mingled with the jeers from Bull Neck’s group and thankfully drowned out the disappointment from Lucan’s circle.

“Get him! Take him!” Jackal Smile rallied them, his teeth gleaming white as he hollered to be heard over the din.

Bellowing, Bull Neck drove in again, pushing Lucan back with huge, sweeping swings. Despite his big movements, despite the fact that he lowered his shield, opening up his side to attack, Lucan could not take advantage. The man was big but deceptively quick. Every time Lucan darted in, he had to duck, dance away as the backswing came for his head.

Swing, backswing. Dance back, duck.

“Fight, damn you! Fight!” Bull Neck’s shout reverberated through the theatre.

Frustration burned Lucan hotter than the punishing sun.
I’m letting everyone down.
He looked to the portico where he had sat with Hektor, where the other trainers watched their charges. All he glimpsed were dusky figures in the shade. Was Hektor even watching? Perhaps he’d turned away in shame.

Anger suffused Lucan.

Through it, came Hektor’s teachings.
“Wait for the gap. It will appear. He’ll grow tired. Patience, Lucan.”

Serenity poured into Lucan like cool water.

Bull Neck preened and bellowed for the crowd as he danced in, cutting high for Lucan’s head. The gap came—an opening in Bull’s defense, his side exposed—but the backswing flashed in hard.

This time, Lucan did not try for it. He stepped back, his footwork sure, his serenity bringing strength back to his body. He breathed deep and ignored the jeering, ignored the shouts and the rabble.

He waited, drawing back and back, hope and Hektor filling his mind.

One swing. Lucan took it on his sword, his shoulder stinging. Two swings. He ducked, and the blade grazed the top of his head. Golden hair fell around his face.

Their weapons were blunted, but they could still wound, still kill. The Empress had said no deaths, but accidents happened.

Three swings…

Wait for the gap.

He misjudged the backswing and took a deep nick along his shoulder. Blood trickled.

Four swings. He blocked again. Bull Neck was tiring.

Five swings—
There!

Lucan darted in, beating the slowing backslash.
Make it count!
He dealt Bull Neck a powerful slash to the side. Skin split and blood flowed, and Lucan followed with an elbow to the wound, knocking the wind from the bigger man.

Bull Neck staggered back, wide open now, his shield and weapon out of position.

Lucan stepped in, his shorter stature a boon in close quarters. His uppercut to Bull Neck’s jaw sent a
crack
resounding through the theatre. The bigger man stumbled and toppled to the sand, his sword flying from his grasp. The crowd gasped, then hushed.

Lucan stood over his vanquished foe. “Do you beg the Mercy?”

Bull Neck rolled, straining to catch his breath, to speak. His team urged forward, weapons at the ready.

“Do you beg the Mercy?” Lucan eyed his own team. This was it—the moment he’d find out if his trust was well bought and paid for.

Malice burned in Bull Neck’s eyes. “Take them!”

The Priassin rushed forward, hooting and hollering.

“On!” Jackal Smile screamed, his teeth bared.

The crowd came to their feet. Sand and dust kicked up at arena center as the two teams converged and the fight erupted in full force.

Caught in the epicenter, Lucan ducked the sweep of a buckler and smashed his opponent with the butt of his sword. The novice went down. Lucan tried for the novice’s buckler, but his flank filled up with enemies. He could not wrest it from the novice’s arm before he had to dance away.

Outnumbered, he faced off against his opponents in the gritty theatre.

He blocked a gladius with his own and shoved his opponent, a gangly kid with less arena experience, back three steps. Gangly staggered, but before Lucan could finish him, another novice leaped into the fray, guarding his ally with his spear and shield. Together, they stalked toward Lucan, both behind the shield. Lucan knew they would attack as soon as they spied a weakness.

All around him was chaos and blood.

At least four novices—Vulpinius and Priassin—struggled in the sand, moaning from minor wounds and bone breaks. Slashes of blood marred the sand.

His two opponents corralled him.

Behind them, Bull Neck stood in the midst of the fracas. He had regained his sword, and he fought like a daemon, swinging and shield-bashing. Two of Lucan’s team was on the ground before him.

We are losing!
Desperation made him jerk that way, but Gangly and Shield-and-Spear broke from their cover and attacked.

Lucan parried the first blow, Gangly’s swing ringing off his sword like water off the song-crystals in Rilrune’s temple. He twisted.
Too late!
Fire printed pain across his ribs, and Shield-and-Spear drew back, his spear tip colored in blood.

Blood dripped down his side, pooling into his loincloth, dripping onto his bare feet. Lucan pressed his hand to his ribs.

The two flanked him. He glanced from one to the other. His defenses flagged. Beneath his hand, the skin began to tear. The wound was worse than he’d thought, deeper and more severe. Blood sluiced down his side even as he shoved his hand against it.

The cheers from the crowd were deafening, and then his own heartbeat blotted out all sound.

“No speed, no strength, no skill. Only appropriateness of attack,”
Hektor said smoothly in Lucan’s mind.

The two charged in.

Smartly, Lucan sidestepped. He dealt Gangly a measured blow to the back of the neck, and the novice crumpled. With an angry shout, Shield-and Spear committed to one thrust, one strike meant to take Lucan from the fight, and perhaps from this life.

Lucan leaped forward and over it—the crowd gasping—and thrust his fist into the novice’s face. Bone crunched, blood spattered, and the boy went down.

Darting sideways, Lucan reached for a fallen shield. He dodged others as they rushed in to stop him. Grabbing up the shield, he raced toward Bull Neck.

Jackal Smile was there, jabbing with his shortspear, trying to keep Bull Neck and a rat-faced novice at bay.

Lucan slipped in front of him and raised the shield just as Bull Neck swung mightily. The blows rained down, ringing across the theatre.

“Nice of you to join us.” Jackal Smile grinned grimly as he tucked in behind Lucan, his shortspear at the ready.

They turned to Bull Neck and Rat Face. Two on two.

The roar of the masses swelled.

Lucan knew they could not outlast their opponents. He turned his head and pitched his voice low. “On my signal,” he whispered.

Jackal Smile only smiled.

Bellowing, Bull Neck rushed in, all fury and bravado, raising his sword.

Lucan slung his shield at the man’s legs. A sharp
crunch
as the rim impacted his shins, and Bull Neck went down. Lucan was on him in a breath. To Lucan’s side, Jackal Smile traded blows with Rat Face. His grin flashed in the sunlight, and he jabbed downward, spearing the novice’s foot to the ground.

Two sharp punches. Lucan raised his fist for another.

“Mercy!” Bull Neck’s cry went up.

Lucan grabbed Bull Neck’s sword and raised it. He preened and postured as the crowd railed and stomped, and yelled his name. “Golden! Golden! Golden!”

Shouts of approval came from the trainers on the sides, and now Lucan realized that all the veteran gladiators were watching as well as the Heads of Houses to see if their investments had been worth all those denarii.

Hektor would be in that crowd.

Lucan’s knees went weak. He cursed himself. What was it about that man that undid him so? He lowered his arms, and a sharp, stabbing pain in his side stole his breath. A fresh gush of blood, Jackal Smile’s worried face, and then everything blurred and went red and gray.

The next thing he knew, gentle arms had him, and his head rolled back onto a warm, firm chest. Fingers came blessedly cool on his forehead and smoothed his hair.

“Don’t jostle him.” A smooth, rich baritone. Hektor. “I will carry him.”

Suddenly, Lucan was being borne up into the light. The sun hurt, but he was shaded, cradled in strong arms.

Despite the pain, Lucan felt the blush of shame rising to his cheeks. “I …failed…”

“No.” An easy chuckle. “You won the day. You are well on your way to making your name.” Hektor’s words rumbled in his chest, and that rumble soothed Lucan. He held on to its smoothness, its power, let it grow inside him as Hektor carried him.

Soon, the blare of the sun gave way to cool white curtains. Healers’ Haven? Each House had one—a place of rest and recuperation for wounded gladiators.

But surely Lucan’s mind played tricks with him. His ears buzzed with the distant sounds of the Empress’s Theatre fading, the sounds of gladiators moving their charges, the rattle and clink of weapons being picked up, other fights beginning.

And then he was laid on soft bedding, a downy pillow pushed beneath his head. His body hurt and ached. It had been so important for him to fight well, to make Hektor proud. He’d…won? His body wanted to tell him differently.

Is this what victory feels like?

He’d only trained with Hektor for a very short time, but he had wanted to make the primus palus proud of him. He only hoped. He grabbed for Hektor’s arm, but someone caught his hand and eased it to the bedding.

Lucan turned his head and spied the insignia on the healer’s robes—two short swords crossed over a shield wreathed in laurel. He balked. House Actaeon. He should not be here. He tried to sit up, but Hektor gently urged him back down.

“It’s all right, Lucan.”

“But…” he spluttered. “House Vulpinius has its own healers.”

Hektor’s rare smile was warm. “They are not as good as House Actaeon’s. Here.” He propped another pillow behind Lucan’s head, had him sit up, offered him water—real water from the healing wells of Rilrune’s Temple, not the brackish stuff normally given slaves.

Lucan gulped greedily, and would have finished the entire jug, but Hektor eased him off. “There now. You’ll make yourself sick.”

Gasping, Lucan laid back. Hektor leaned in and brushed the sweaty hair from his forehead. “Let them work.”

Behind him, an array of healers looked on with trepidation. What a Vulpinius boy was doing in House Actaeon, they clearly could not guess.

Lucan fumbled for Hektor’s hand. If it was a childish gesture, Hektor did not let on. He grasped Lucan’s fingers in return and soothed him with that smooth baritone. “There you are. Just lie back now.” Lucan relaxed. He didn’t care what the healers did to him as long as Hektor held his hand.

Hektor directed the healers. He told them what to do, what herbs to mix, what unguent to make and with what consistency. They followed his orders and did nothing else. Lucan was poked and prodded, his robe pulled aside. A sweet-smelling, pungent odor filled the room as they smeared a cool paste on his wounds. The bleeding stopped, but the chill struck through Lucan, and made him arch his back and cry out.

“Shhh… It will be well. The coldness will take the pain.” Hektor held Lucan’s hand and quieted him.

That hand. Just that hand on Lucan made him feel like he was soaring.

Soon, he discovered Hektor was right. The coldness numbed the pain as the healers worked. After a time, they backed away, putting aside their unguents, bandages, and bone needles. They left him with ten stitches in his side and a bandage wound round his middle.

“Drink.” Hektor offered the clay jug again.

Lucan drank more carefully this time and wiped his mouth with the back of his hand.

Hektor also took a draught, and when he lowered the jug, the droplets of water clung to his lips and the slight stubble he always sported. One droplet fell to his collarbone and carved a path down over his pectoral before evaporating in the heat.

Regret seized Lucan, for he’d wanted to tongue the droplet from Hektor’s glorious skin. His cock twitched beneath his tunic, and he pulled the covers over him, lest he start making a visible tent.

Hektor chuckled, not unkindly, and Lucan had to look down, lest the desire in his eyes betray him.

When Hektor took his hand away, Lucan was abruptly afraid the primus palus would leave him here, in a strange house, in a strange haven. “You know how to heal,” he blurted, hoping to engage Hektor so he would stay.

Hektor’s smile was self-deprecating. “Yes, a little.”

“Why?” Lucan was truly curious. “We have plenty of healers.” He gestured. “Even House Pineus had half a dozen.”

Now it was Hektor’s turn to blush, a handsome scald that traveled up his neck to his ears. “Well,” he said, folding his hands atop the white sheets. “There comes a time when fighting isn’t everything, when the sound of glory and the rush of the crowd are not enough. And when we retire—”

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