Valerieâs body was thrown on the stone floor. She hit the ground hard, but despite how disoriented she was from her vision and her whirlwind visit to Thai, she had the sense to immediately leap to her feet and assume a fighting stance, though she doubted that she could take on all of the guards in addition to Sanguina.
It didnât help that she couldnât even guess how many people were surrounding her. She was in total darkness. Not even one of the dim balls of light was near to give her a sense of the layout of the room and the location of her enemies. She was defenseless without the use of her sight. How could she possibly fight Sanguina when she couldnât even see where she was standing?
âGlad youâve come out to play,â Zunyaâs voice slithered through the darkness. Valerieâs power dipped, and a hopeless fear gripped her heart. She would be completely defenseless in the battle to come with Zunya present to subdue her power.
âLeave us,â Sanguinaâs raspy voice commanded. Valerie heard the light tread of the guardsâ footsteps as they left the room. âYou, too, Zunya. I donât need your help with this.â
âI should stay, in caseââ he started to say, clearly annoyed at her order.
âGet outâNOW!â Sanguinaâs voice exploded. Zunya opened the door to leave, looking back once at Valerie with his vicious yellow eyes.
Then the door slammed closed, and she was alone with Sanguina and completely blind. She took a few practice kicks, preparing herself for Sanguinaâs attack. But the onslaught of blows never came.
âI didnât bring you here to fight me. Iâve already proven that I could kill you without making much of an effort,â Sanguina whispered in Valerieâs ear, the threat of violence in her voice. Valerieâs chest tightened as the fear that she couldnât hold back gushed through her.
âThen why am I here?â she asked. She was ashamed of how childlike her voice sounded in the darkness. The Laurel Circle was freezing, reminding her that it was only her fear holding her back nowânot her skills. She forced herself to breathe more slowly and fight back against her terror.
âTo answer some questions for me. If I like the answers, maybe your little lightweaver friend will see his family again. And if I donâtâ¦â One of Sanguinaâs long, sharp fingernails raked across Valerieâs arm, cutting into her skin. She cried out in pain and a thin trickle of blood dripped down her arm where Sanguina had sliced her.
Valerie punched the air wildly, but in the darkness she could make contact with nothing. âWhat do you want to know?â she asked, desperate.
âWhat did you mean when you asked me about haunting your dreams?â Sanguina shouted from somewhere nearby. âIt means something; I know it. And youâre going to tell me.â
âI donât know!â
âLiar!â Without warning, Sanguina landed a fierce punch across her left cheek. Sanguinaâs fist was a rock, and Valerieâs brain rattled in her skull and the skin on her cheek split open. Her ears rang from the blow and her head throbbed, but she managed to stay on her feet. She was already losing her tentative hold on her magic. She knew that if Sanguina tried to control her mind right now, she wouldnât be able to fight her off.
âI saw you in a dream or a vision, and you were always really angry, thatâs all,â she relented, knowing she had to give some kind of answer.
There was a short pause, as if Sanguina didnât know what to make of her answer. Switching tactics, she said, âHow do you know the boy, Henry?â
âHenry? Never heard ofââ Valerie broke off in a scream as Sanguina threw her to the ground by her hair.
âYouâll tell me everything you know about Henry, or I swear I will kill that boy in the dungeon!â
âKill me,â Valerie begged. âLet Cyrus and Henry go.â
âI will never let you goâor Henry. You are both mine,â Sanguinaâs voice was low and deadly.
But instead of terrifying her, the confidence in Sanguinaâs voice awoke something in Valerie. She was still afraid, but overwhelming her fear was her explosive anger. This monster would never own herâor her brother. The Laurel Circle suddenly blazed hot on her thumb, and Valerie knew that her fear wouldnât swallow her up this time as it had done before.
Her rage was uncontrollable inside of her, and she almost hurtled herself toward Sanguina so that she could finally hit her. But she forced herself not to attack wildly. Instead, she contained all of her energy and power inside her, and prepared to channel it into a more intelligent assault.
âFine, I give in. Iâll tell you what you want to know,â Valerie said quietly, remembering her lessons with Jet and Chrome. She needed to gauge where Sanguina was standing in relation to her in order to launch an effective attack, and the only way to do that in the dense darkness was by listening to Sanguinaâs voice.
âYes, you will,â Sanguina replied, and this time, Valerieâs heightened senses told her that Sanguina was two feet behind her.
âPathos!â Valerie yelled, and immediately her blade was in her hand, glowing brightly in the black room.
Sanguina screamed in agony when the light hit her. Valerie immediately lunged toward her, bringing the blade down forcefully toward her shoulder. But despite her pain, Sanguina managed to dodge the blow with astonishing speed. She darted across the room, and Valerie raced after her.
Sanguina grabbed something hanging on the wall, and this time, when Valerie wielded Pathos, aiming for Sanguinaâs heart, she heard the sound of metal meeting metal as Sanguina blocked her with a long, curved rapier of her own. The air was filled with sparks and the sound of their swords crashing against each other.
Valerieâs arms moved faster than they ever had before as she deflected Sanguinaâs blows. She was in a trance, and nothing existed except for the fight. The flow of magic inside of her was only a small stream, as her fear kept gnawing at her mind, trying to steal her attention away from the fight. By the glow of Pathos, she could see Sanguinaâs confidence in her ability to defeat her. Sanguinaâs mouth turned up in a cruel snarl of victory. Valerieâs fear flared, interfering with her concentration, and Sanguina managed to slash Valerieâs leg with the tip of her sword.
âHow many times do I have to prove to you that you arenât good enough to defeat me?â Sanguina jeered.
Valerie refused to let Sanguina know how much pain she was in from this new gash on her leg, from the earlier slash on her arm, and from the dizzying blow to her face. But the pain had the opposite effect from what Valerie had anticipated. Instead of distracting her, adrenaline rushed through her body, sharpening her focus so that she barely noticed the blood trickling down her cheek and leg.
She said nothing, but more of her fear transformed into rage, and the stream of magic inside of her exploded into a torrent. She gave in to her power, fighting purely by instinct. Now Valerie had Sanguina on the defensive, and she slowly backed her into a corner. Sanguinaâs face was grim, and Valerie knew that she had to use every ounce of her own strength and speed to fend her off. Sanguina tried to grasp at her brain to control her, but her attempts to claw her way into Valerieâs mind were useless, as if her consciousness was a ball of fire that couldnât be contained.
Valerieâs heart raced. She was actually winningâbut she knew that she couldnât keep fighting this hard for much longer. Her magic would eventually run out. She needed to try something different. So this time, after blocking Sanguinaâs sword from lopping off her right arm, Valerie deliberately flashed the luminous blade in Sanguinaâs eyes. The light made her squint and flinch. A second of hesitation was all Valerie needed, and she pressed her advantage. She knocked Sanguinaâs hand with the flat of her sword as hard as she could, loosening Sanguinaâs grip on her weapon. The rapier clattered onto the ground.
Swiftly, Valerie pressed her blade against Sanguinaâs neck. âSurrender,â she said quietly, trying to contain the glorious tide of joy rising inside of her. Had she really won? Sanguina stared at Valerie, her hatred emblazoned across her face.
Suddenly, Valerieâs attention was drawn to light glinting off of a crystal hanging on a chain around Sanguinaâs neck. She saw Henryâs image inside the crystal, screaming. With her other hand, Valerie grabbed the chain and yanked it off of Sanguinaâs neck. In the process, Sanguina tried to push her away, but she didnât budge.
Sanguinaâs eyes flicked down, noticing Pathos, and suddenly shock replaced the seething hate in her eyes. She looked up at Valerie searchingly. âWhy do have Adelitaâs sword? Who are you? Tell me. Now!â Sanguina commanded, but her hatred seemed diluted, as if something had distracted her from their fight.
âThis time itâs you whoâs not in a position to give orders,â Valerie said, pressing her blade against Sanguinaâs throat even harder. âYouâre not going to distract me.â But she was genuinely confused at the change in Sanguina.
âCould you be⦠itâs not possible, butâ¦â Sanguina said, so puzzled that she seemed almost unaware of the sharp blade against her neck. âItâs you!â Sanguina cried out, and her face contorted as anger warred with some other emotion that Valerie couldnât begin to guess.
Pathos had nicked the thin, chalky skin on Sanguinaâs neck. It was only a scratch, but Sanguina shrieked in pain. As Valerie watched, the light from Pathos poured into Sanguina through her wound. Valerie pulled her blade away, but it was too late. The light traveled through Sanguinaâs body, illuminating her veins from the inside out. The sight was ghastly, as Sanguina appeared to be nothing more than a network of glowing veins in the blackness.
The pitch of Sanguinaâs scream became higher, and Valerie knew, without a doubt, that the light was killing her. But instead of triumphant, she was more horrified than she had ever been in her life. Because of her, someone would die. She hated this woman, but suddenly she wished more than anything that she could take it all back. There was no way that she could live with herself, knowing that she had ended a life. She heard a faint clatter in the hall. Someone was coming. But she didnât care. She didnât know if she would ever care about anything ever again.
The door to the room burst open, and dim light streamed in. But Valerie couldnât take her eyes off of Sanguinaâs death throes.
Strangest of all, when Sanguina looked at Valerie now, all of the loathing was drained from her eyes. For the first time since Valerie had known her, Sanguina spoke without bitterness, and said, âIf I had known who you were, I never would have hurt you.â Then Sanguinaâs eyes rolled back in her head.
It was more than Valerie could bear. Agonizing remorse left her frozen in shock.
Something flashed through her like fire. She was burning with an energy that filled her from the top of her head to the tips of her toes. Sanguina started to fall to the ground, but before she collapsed on the floor, Valerie caught her, and the energy inside her burst from her fingertips and shot through Sanguina. Sanguinaâs entire body glowed fiercely with a bright yellow-green light.
Energy flooded out of Valerie and into Sanguina in a torrent. Her strength faded as her field of vision narrowed to a tiny circle. She knew that if she didnât stem the tide, she would be swept away with it, gone forever. It was as if she were pushing hard on a door inside of herself that didnât want to close. With a burst of strength, Valerie slammed it shut.
Abruptly, the light inside of Sanguina went out and her body relaxed. She shuddered in Valerieâs arms and sighed. But then something miraculous happenedâValerie heard the sound of ragged breathing. Sanguina was alive.
Azraâs soft voice moved through Valerieâs mind, comforting her.
Valerie struggled to remain conscious and not give in to the darkness that surrounded her mind, inviting her to lose herself in its oblivion. She couldnât let go, not yet. Henryâs life depended on her. With a struggle, she pushed the darkness back inside her.
She blinked, aware for the first time that Azra and Kanti stood in the doorway, and behind them were a crowd of other Conjurors, some, like Gideon and Midnight, whom Valerie recognized, and many she had never seen before. Everyone was staring at her, stunned. Even Azraâs eyes were wide with surprise and sudden understanding.
âI donât understand.â Valerie said.
Azra trailed off with a shake of her mane.
âWill Sanguina be okay?â Valerie asked, resting her gently on the ground. In the dim light, Valerie could see that Sanguinaâs skin had lost its pasty sheen. She looked almostâhuman.
âZunya was the one who made her a vampyre? Howââ Valerie began, but Henryâs fear ripped through her. âHenryâs still in danger! I have to go to him!â she cried, realizing that she was still clutching Sanguinaâs charm for Henry in her hand. Adrenaline burned away her exhaustion.
She gripped the charm and concentrated. In the space of a thought, she was transported to Earth.