The three of them looked at each other, the weight of what they’d learned settling into their bones. They’d gained invaluable information—confirmation of the guardian’s existence, understanding of its limitations, insight into the real structure of this tournant. But that information had co at a price.
They’d made an enemy of the one person in this arena who controlled everything.
"We’ll handle it," Nyla said finally, her voice carrying quiet steel. "Whatever he sends. We’ve survived worse."
"Have we?" Akhil asked, genuinely uncertain.
Nyla’s smile was sharp and cold as her ice. "We’re about to find out."
---
In the shadows at the edge of the arena, Jeren stood perfectly still.
His fan moved with chanical precision, the rhythm of it no longer theatrical but tronomic, betraying the tight control he was exerting over sothing that wanted very much to be rage. His eyes, visible above the mask, tracked the three fighters as they huddled in their small conspiracy, no doubt analyzing what had just happened, no doubt thinking themselves very clever.
They were clever.
That was the problem.
Jeren had run hundreds of these tournants. Thousands of fighters had passed through his arena, and he’d learned to categorize them quickly: the strong ones who relied on power, the fast ones who relied on speed, the desperate ones who relied on luck. They all fell into patterns. They all beca predictable. That predictability was what made the data collection valuable—you could asure skill when skill operated within expected paraters.
These three were operating outside the paraters.
The ice girl who could see through veils. The orc who fought with more intelligence than his size suggested. The swordsman who watched everything and drew conclusions he had no business drawing.
He’d wanted this tournant to go smoothly. Wanted clean matches, good data, satisfied gods, and fighters who understood their place in the hierarchy of things. He’d been willing to let them have their small victories, their monts of glory, their divine gifts and their growing confidence.
But they’d forced his hand.
They’d walked out of their boxes, triggered the guardian into visible action, and demonstrated to anyone paying attention that Jeren’s untouchability ca from external protection rather than personal power. They’d stripped away a layer of mystique that had taken him decades to cultivate.
For that, there would be consequences.
He couldn’t kill them outright—Poloneus, Jayne, and DaylithNight had made their favorites clear, and gods were notoriously possessive of their toys. Killing a god’s chosen fighter outside of sanctioned combat was a complication Jeren didn’t need.
But if they died during a tournant match? During a properly announced, formally structured bout with an opponent they’d agreed to face?
That was just unfortunate.
That was just how these things sotis went.
"Najim," Jeren said quietly, his voice dropping into a register that carried no theater at all. Just cold, precise instruction.
His shadow rippled.
The movent was subtle at first—a distortion in the darkness at his feet, like heat shimr in reverse—then more pronounced. The shadow deepened, beca textured, gained dinsion. And then a figure rose from it with the fluid inevitability of sothing that had always been there, just waiting to be acknowledged.
Najim stood seven feet tall and was composed almost entirely of edges. His armor was black and form-fitting, segnted in ways that suggested it was less worn than grown, and every surface of it caught the light wrong—not reflecting, not absorbing, but doing sothing else that made the eye want to slide away. His face was covered by a helm that showed only eyes, and those eyes were the flat, patient yellow of a predator that had never known hunger because it had never failed to feed.
One of the ten centurion commanders of Jeren’s personal army. A fighter who had ended more lives than most people had seen days.
"Master," Najim said, his voice carrying the texture of grinding stone.
Jeren didn’t look at him. His attention remained on Akhil, on that too-clever swordsman who thought observation made him safe.
"The next round," Jeren said softly. "You’ll be facing the one with the red blade. Akhil."
Najim’s yellow eyes shifted to follow Jeren’s gaze, settling on Akhil with the focused attention of sothing selecting prey. "Understood."
"Make it look fair," Jeren continued. "Make it look earned. But make sure he doesn’t walk away from it."
"And if he’s stronger than expected?"
"He won’t be." Jeren’s fan snapped shut. "But if he sohow surprises you, rember: the gods want a show. Give them one. Let him think he has a chance right up until the mont you take it away."
Najim’s helm dipped in acknowledgnt, and then he simply dissolved back into the shadow he’d erged from, the darkness swallowing him with the sa casual efficiency it had released him.
Jeren stood alone again, watching the three fighters who’d just made the worst decision of their short lives.
They’d wanted to test him. To understand him. To confirm their theories and feel clever about the knowledge they’d gained.
Well.
They’d succeeded.
And now they were going to learn exactly what that knowledge cost.
---
The voice that rang through the arena carried Jeren’s familiar theatrical brightness, completely at odds with the conversation that had just concluded in the shadows:
"Fighters! I hope you’ve all recovered from that... unexpected interruption!"
His fan snapped open with a flourish, and he was back—fully back—into the role he wore like armor. The pleasant host. The enthusiastic organizer. The man who just wanted everyone to have a good, violent ti.
"The second round will now continue! I trust you’re all ready to show us what you’re truly capable of!"
On their platforms, Akhil, Nyla, and Nibo exchanged glances.
They knew things were about to get significantly harder.
They’d discussed it. Prepared for it as much as preparation was possible. Acknowledged that Jeren would be sending sothing lethal.
But standing there as the barriers brightened and the shadows began to gather again at the edges of the platforms, as the temperature in the arena shifted and the divine attention above focused with renewed hunger—
They realized they didn’t actually know how hard things were about to get.
They were about to find out.
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