Authors: Shelly Laurenston
“Ladies and gentlemen, I hope you’re ready for a night of raw brutality and unrepentant violence. You’ve been waiting for it…you’ve been wanting it! And now you’re going to get it! The new girls on the block against the most vicious broads known to derby. Welcome, one and all…to Boroughs Brawlers Banked Track Derby!”
The crowd roared, especially the wild dogs—except for the “top five,” as Lock called Jess and her best friends. They were all whispering and generally panicking.
“So let’s get this party started,” the announcer yelled. “And let’s all put our hands together for…the Assault and Battery Park Babes!”
The response was not exactly enthusiastic, the Babes being pretty new and mostly hybrids. Lock had been hearing a lot about them this past year, though, as they steadily moved up the ranks in the league, taking everyone by surprise.
The spotlights hit the track as the Babes came tearing out to John Lee Hooker’s “Boom Boom.” They moved fast and looked really cute in tiny red shorts, black fishnets, bright sparkly red derby skates, and three layers of too-small tank tops in red, black, and white. As each player zipped around the track, the announcer called them out by number and derby name.
“Number thirty-eight, and team captain, Pop-A-Cherry! Number sixty-two, Marlon Brandher. Number twenty-four, Our Lady of Pain and Suffering.” Lock laughed, kind of wishing they had cool names like that on the professional teams, when he heard Gwen gasp as the announcer called out, “Number seventy-six, Evie Viserate!”
Lock heard the wild dogs barking and was about to ask who she was when Jess yelled, “Lock, get her!”
Get her? Get who? Following where Jess pointed, Lock watched as Gwen marched down the stadium stairs toward the track.
“What the…” Glad he’d changed out of his skates, Lock went after Gwen and grabbed her around the waist, hauling her back up the stairs.
“
Put me down! She’s not doing this!
”
“Who?” he demanded.
Jess motioned to the track again and Lock looked at Evie Viserate. Really looked at her. She had her hair in two ponytails and a bright white helmet over that. But when she smiled Lock could only cringe. Because he’d recognize that smile anywhere.
“Uh-oh.”
Gwen was still putting up a fight. “Put me down!
Right now!
”
“I’ll be back,” he said to Jess. “Hold our seats.” And then he hauled the crazed feline back up the stairs and out into the stadium hallway.
“How could she lie to me like that?”
Gwen demanded as soon as Lock put her down on the ground in the hallway.
“Maybe because she knew you’d get a tad hysterical.”
“I’m not hysterical. I’m
pissed off!
She’s going to get herself killed out there.” She tried to go around him again, but Lock took one small step and immediately blocked her way with that insanely beautiful body of his.
“How do you know that?”
Arms folded under her chest, Gwen demanded, “Have you ever watched derby?
Real
derby? Not that full-human one,” which was pretty tough for a bunch of full-humans but, compared to shifter derby, totally lightweight.
“No.”
“Then you have no idea how bad this could get.”
“But you do?”
He really thought she was being a little drama queen for no reason, didn’t he? That her whole life was built around stopping Blayne from having any fun because she was Gwen the Fun-inator.
“Yeah. I do. I’m the daughter of The Rocker.”
Lock frowned. “The baseball player?”
Taking a deep breath, “No. Not the baseball player.”
You pinhead!
“The derby queen.”
His frown faded and she watched him try not to smile. “Your mother was a—”
“Yes. But not ‘a,’ she is
the
derby queen. Even now. She and my aunts ran the Philly league for years. Just
surviving
bouts against the Philly Phangs was considered an accomplishment by most teams. For shifters, derby hasn’t changed that much. The uniforms are hotter, the girls cuter, but the rest of it is exactly the same.”
“And you don’t think Blayne can handle it.”
“I know she can’t.”
“Because you tried and failed.”
Gwen paced away from him. “Yeah. I did try.” She leaned against the wall. “I did fail.”
Lock stood next to her, still towering over her even as he leaned back. “That doesn’t mean Blayne will fail.”
“I’m not worried about that, her failing like me. I mean, I was eighteen and daughter of The Rocker. I didn’t stand a chance, and everybody knew it. Even my mother. The whistle blew on my first game and I froze. Just froze. I’ve never experienced fear like that before.” She shook her head. “That won’t happen to Blayne.”
“Then what are you—”
“Her name was Marla the Merciless with the Pittsburgh Stealers—that’s ‘Stealers’ as in thievery. She slammed into me like a two-ton truck. I hit the ground and then she came down on me, breaking my leg in five places.”
“Ow.”
“My pelvis.”
“Uh…”
“My right hip.”
“God, Gwen—”
“My tailbone.”
“Okay, okay.” Lock shuddered. “I get it.”
“I woke up in the hospital.”
“Because you’d never go there on your own.”
“Exactly. It took weeks for me to fully recover.”
“Did you play again?”
“No. But not only because I was terrified, which I was,” she freely admitted. “But because when Marla was crawling off me and before I blacked out, she called me a ‘mixed-breed whore.’ And the way she said it, I knew whether I’d been the worst or best player out there, whether Roxy was my mother or not, she would have made sure she hurt me.”
“That was a long time ago, Gwen.”
“So? Nothing’s changed. Am I the only one who remembers Labor Day weekend? That Pack went after Blayne for one reason and one reason only.”
“Maybe. But Blayne’s entire team is mostly made up of hybrids. She’s not alone out there.”
“She’s the new girl, Jersey. Fresh meat.” She shrugged in frustration, knowing there was nothing she could do. “They’ll want her broken in right.”
“So when does the ball come into play?” Jess asked, earning a scowl from Gwen.
“There’s no ball in Roller Derby,” Gwen snapped. “That’s a movie—and I only acknowledge the James Caan version, not that other one.”
“If there’s no ball, then what are they doing?”
“Going around in circles,” Phil explained incorrectly. “Until someone dies.”
Lock could feel the feline bristling next to him, which only got worse when he started laughing. He hadn’t thought he’d be able to convince Gwen to come back in to watch Blayne—watch, not rescue—but he had. Now they sat with the wild dogs, and there was something quite entertaining about watching Gwen deal with them.
“All right,” Gwen said. “
Very
short lesson in derby before the whistles blow. Four girls from each team that includes three blockers and one pivot make up the pack. The whistle blows, they take off. Two other girls, one from each team, are jammers. When a second whistle blows, the jammers’ whole goal is to get through the pack as quickly as possible. Whoever passes the other team’s Pivot first becomes the lead jammer and she’ll earn points for every player she passes from the other team. This all happens within two-minute intervals called jams, although the lead jammer can call off the jam before then. The whole thing wraps up in about two hours, including time-outs and a thirty-minute halftime break. There. That’s derby.”
The wild dogs stared blankly at Gwen, the disappointment evident on their faces.
“That’s it?” Jess finally asked. “That’s the entire game?”
“It’s called a bout, not a game. And yes. That’s it.”
“That sounds kind of…”
“Boring,” Phil finished for her.
Gwen shrugged. “To each their own,” she said, focusing back on the track.
As Gwen said, five females from each team rolled onto the track. Blayne was among them. She looked terrified as she rolled to a stop, lifting her gaze to the crowd, her eyes searching. She saw Jess and the wild dogs first, her smile painfully forced as she waved at them. Then Blayne’s gaze moved over to Lock and Gwen.
She blinked, her head tilting like a confused German shepherd’s. Then she smiled—and the power of it nearly blew out the stadium lights.
She lifted her arm high and waved. “Hi, Gwenie!”
Laughing, Gwen waved back, but both women jumped when a large hand slammed down on the rail in front of Blayne.
“Who is that?” Gwen asked, her eyes targeting the good-sized player leering down at Blayne.
“She’s one of the Staten Island Furriers.” Jess smiled around her chocolate-dipped banana on a stick, like most canines ignoring the potential risks of eating chocolate. Even her wedding was a veritable chocolate fiesta that every dog attending indulged in. They were fine the next day, but Lock didn’t understand taking the risk. Then again, if someone told him he couldn’t have honey…“Her name is D.F.A.”
“D.F.A.?”
“Death From Above.”
Gwen and Lock looked at the wild dog. “That’s her
name
?” Lock asked.
“It’s her derby name. And considering her size…kind of fitting.”
“Muzzles on,” one of the refs ordered and Lock could only stare.
“Uh…Blayne’s wearing a muzzle.”
“Yeah,” Gwen clenched her hands together. “I heard some leagues insist on it if wolfdogs, coyote-dogs, or wolf-coyotes play. They have to wear muzzles.”
“Tell me you’re kidding.”
“Nope. It’s the only way the leagues would allow them to play against nonhybrids.”
Well, at least the muzzles they wore were fitted, snapping on to their helmets, the crisscrossed strips of white leather stretching over their noses and mouths and under their chins. Not only did they protect the other players from bites, they also looked pretty cool. Lock’s dweeby side was impressed.
The first whistle blew and the pack of females shot off. Lock and Gwen leaned forward and he wondered if they saw the same thing when it came to Blayne as a player. She had solid strength, holding her own against the other players in the pack, but she was a little timid and she needed more confidence on her skates. A few times it looked as if a strong wind would knock her on her ass.
The second whistle blew and the two jammers sped off after the pack, working their way through when they reached them. The Furriers’ jammer tried to get past Blayne, and Blayne was nicely holding her off so the rest of her team could get their jammer through. But as the pack tightened up, Lock suddenly heard Blayne snarl, and Gwen sat up straight as they watched her best friend lifted into the air by D.F.A.
It was strange how he knew, how he sensed it without actually knowing, what Gwen would do. Automatically his hands reached out and caught hold of her waist as she tried to shoot past him. He yanked her onto his lap only seconds before she could launch herself over the seats and probably onto the track.
Holding Gwen tight, Lock watched as D.F.A. shot out from the pack with a struggling Blayne still in her arms, rolled toward where Gwen and Lock were sitting, and, when she was about ten feet away, shot-putted Blayne right at them.
The entire section instinctively ducked as Blayne’s body flew over the railing and into the protective glass between the audience and the track. He’d never been so grateful for protective glass as he was right now.
Slowly lifting his head, his mouth open, Lock stared at the spot where poor Blayne’s body had hit.
Had he really just seen that? Had he really just witnessed one player throwing another
at the crowd
? And, more importantly, why wasn’t that player thrown out of the game?
“Do you know her, Gwen?” he had to ask, because D.F.A. had been staring right at Gwen when she’d lobbed Blayne at her.
“No. I’ve never seen her before.”
“Why is she still playing?”
Gwen was sitting up, straining to see Blayne, who’d hit the floor between the banked track and the stadium seats. “You’re kidding, right?”
“No, I’m not kidding.”
“You’ve gotta do a hell of a lot more than toss around a player before they’ll throw you out. Marla the Merciless didn’t even get a thrown out after she took me down.”
Lock didn’t know what to say, but then Blayne managed to get to her feet. She had to grip the railing for several seconds and then she realized she was blind, but that was quickly remedied when she readjusted her helmet and muzzle.
Giving her body a once-over shake, she waved at Gwen again, a happy smile on her face, and rolled off to get back in the game. Admiring the will it took for her to get back in there, the crowd cheered, but none so loud as the wild dogs.
Gwen applauded, but again, Lock knew from her body language how stressed she was. And he didn’t blame her one bit.