Page 38 of Grace of a Wolf 2

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“Have you been sampling the modern drug scene?” I ask sweetly. “I hear it’s quite the experience. Psychedelics, edibles, alchemy. Not really my thing, but I coulddefinitelysee you vibing.”

Her expression curdles with rage.

She flings her arm forward. Blood leaps from the floor, needle-sharp and shrieking toward my chest. At least two dozen projectiles—center mass, vital zones. Predictable.

Again.

A second wave crackles across the concrete, corrosive magic streaking toward my feet in a hiss of vapor and heat.

Chapter eighteen

Lyre: Something Wicked This Way Comes (III)

LYRE

Her attempt at offensive magic is… cute, I guess.

I flick my fingers in her direction with a sigh. The blood missiles dissolve midair, raining harmless droplets across the floor, splattering across my boots. The corrosive spell makes it a few more inches before dissolving with a faint hiss, leaving only the faintest etching on the floor.

Isabeau stumbles back, throwing a few more spells my way.

They all fail. Spectacularly.

It isn't hard; disrupting arcana isn't something anyone can do, but it's been a special talent of mine since childhood. Chaos, after all, is my purview.

Seriously, does this girl remember nothing? Perhaps all her deaths have addled what little capacity she had for thought.

"You should be weak," she hisses, unable to fathom her terrible reasoning being… well, wrong.

I uncross my arms, genuinely perplexed at this point. Her stupidity is almost endearing in its persistence. Almost.

"Why would you think that? For even two seconds?" I gesture around at the carnage of her failed defenses. "After I waltzed in here like I was taking a stroll through a public park? I put my strength on display, and you decided it never even happened."

Isabeau shakes her head, her hair flying almost violently around her face with the movement. "The amount of mana required to break through those wards should be exponential. Even for you. Especially when you're no longer under divine grace." She points at the scuffed sigil. "That was calibrated to require the energy of three full covens to breach. Three."

I don't bother explaining. It costs me almost nothing to disrupt arcana, but she would never understand. For creatures like her, magic is always transactional—power for power, energy for energy. Always with a cost, always with limits. Must be exhausting, living like that.

"Your pathetic concept of limitations doesn't apply to me." I inspect my fingernails, deliberately casual. The blood spatter is going to be a nightmare to clean later. I'll have to shower before I see Grace. She's an anxious little thing. "Maybe it's time to accept your little calculations aren't universal laws."

The look of outrage on her face is almost worth the effort of this conversation. Almost.

But I've dallied too long. If I add the time it takes to shower… Ugh. Grace will definitely be awake by the time I get back.Worse, Caine might even be there. I want to help Grace, but I don't want to see them making googly eyes at each other.

"All of us have limitations," she snarls. "Even the highest denizens of Order and Chaos are bound by rules."

I bite back a laugh. Her certainty is charming in a pitiful way, like watching a toddler confidently explain how the world works. She knows what I am, and yet she still doesn't understand.

"I see motherhood hasn't improved your intellect. Still living in the shadow realm of your own ignorance."

Her eyes widen. "You know about—"

"Of course I know. I know everything about you, Isabeau. I'm just not particularly interested." I take another step forward, deliberate and unhurried. "Now, what to do with you..."

She retreats, backing toward the far wall. "You're violating territory rights. The ancient accords—"

"Ancient accords?" I laugh then, unable to contain it. "Those were written by the same creatures who believed the earth was flat and bleeding people cured disease. Perhaps you'd like to cite some medieval property laws next?"

The room trembles slightly—not from her power, but from mine seeping into the foundations of this pitiful place. I'm not even trying. It just happens when I stop caring enough to contain it.