We were back at the stadium. Three games remained and I couldnât wait for it all to be over. I had been looking forward to participating in the game for as long as I could remember. All the drama and the worry and everything else that kept happening had me feel like I was done with it. I just wanted to go home, shut myself away with Finlay in his house for a week and pretend this month never happened. I couldnât do that until we had finished the tenth game. So that was my aim. Finlay had told the pack about the new threat and I could feel them closing rank. I should make Finlay go to the different meetings of the packs, I had all intention of forcing him to be social when we got here, but now I hesitated. I didnât think I had it in me to handle him finding his mate on top of everything. Which made me a hypocrite. I sighed.
âHey, Red. Whatâs wrong?â Finlay mindlinked.
âNothing, Iâm just having a little issue with getting into the right headspace,â I told him.
âDo you need to sit this one out? It would be understandable,â he asked.
âNo. I will be okay.â
âWhen we get back home we will take a vacation,â he said. I smiled.
âI donât think I want to leave the pack so soon again.â
âWe can set up in one of the caves on the pack land,â he suggested. I laughed, making others look at me.
âThank you, I needed someone to pull me out of my pity party,â I told him.
âIf any one deserves to have one of those, itâs you. Let me know if you need another laugh and I will trip Sam or something,â he said. Before I could respond, the speakers came to life.
âWelcome to the eight game. Today will be a test in agility.â
âThat will be it for my brother then,â Finlay mindlinked us. We all tried our best to not laugh.
âThe game is to be performed secluded. Ten identical rooms have been set up. By now you know the drill. Wait until your pack is called. Please follow the rules given, if you break them, there will be punishments. We wish you the best of luck.â
âTime to break out the cards again,â Ramses said and took out the deck. We got as comfortable as we could and tried to focus on the cards. Every now and then, Sam would make us move around.
âBlue mountain pack, you are up,â an official told us. We packed away the cards and followed him. He let us inside a room with the instruction to stand within the marked area inside the door.
âThe last time we got that direction, I almost had my head taken off,â Sam said and made sure we all stayed inside the marked square. The room was again about sixteen square feet and on the other side of it, there was another door with a marked area in front of it.
âWelcome to the eight game. In front of you, you have an empty room. The room has lasers across it. If a laser beam is broken the red light will light. The objective is for each member of your pack to make it across the room to the other marked area. Once a member is across, a green lamp will be lit. Once five lights have been lit, counting both red and green, the game is over. You have two hours to complete the game. When the two hours are up, a red light will be lit for all members who arenât standing in the marked area across the room. You can use anything you find in the room or have with you. Good luck,â the speaker said.
âCan you see the lasers?â Finlay asked.
âNo,â Sam said, and the rest of us shook our heads.
âThat will be an issue,â he pointed out.
âHow do we make them visible?â I asked.
âThere are special glasses. Smoke or dust,â Jake said.
âWe donât have the glasses or dust. Iâm not that eager to light the room on fire to get smoke,â Sam said. We all agreed.
âHow about water?â Ramses asked.
âUm, like filling the room with it? I think that would break the beam. Or rather refracting it,â Jake said.
âAnd we do need to breathe,â I added.
âThere is that,â Jake agreed. Ramses chuckled.
âI donât think we need to fill the room. I was thinking more of a mist,â he said.
âThat could work. But we donât have enough water to create a mist,â Jake answered. Ramses pointed upwards. We all looked up and we all smiled. There was a sprinkler system on the roof.
âHow do we trigger it?â Finlay asked. âWe are not starting a fire,â he added before anyone could suggest it.
âWell, we donât need to start a fire, itâs usually enough to cause smoke or increase the heat,â Jake said.
âAnd how do we do that without starting a fire?â I asked.
âWe start a small fire?â Jake hesitantly suggested. I giggled when I saw Finlayâs face.
âWe will not burn down the councilâs game room,â he told us.
âOf course not,â Ramses agreed.
âJust a small fire,â Sam said.
âWhich will go out from the sprinklers,â Jake added. I continued to giggle.
âI have to be insane, but go ahead. Tell me how we are going to start a fire?â Finlay said with a deep sigh. There was a moment when everyone looked through their pockets and had a look around the room. There wasnât much to work with.
âWe can use the Gammas smartwatch to make a shortcircut that may ignite the scrap paper and we can then use the paper to light the cardboard box and some playing cards. They should create more smoke and heat than the paper. But we will still need to get it as close to the detector as possible,â Jake said. We all looked up at the ceiling.
âAmie can get on my shoulders,â Finlay said.
âSo we are doing this?â Sam asked.
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âI guess we are,â Finlay admitted. He squatted down and I got the message and climbed onto his shoulders. He stood up and I confirmed I would be able to reach the sensor. Jake started fiddling with the smart watch and Ramses was making a bundle of playing cards with scrap paper in between.
âHere we go,â Jake said, holding the watch close to the pile of scrap paper they had placed on the floor.
âIf we burn the councilâs building to the ground, they will definitely force us to merge with my brotherâs pack,â Finlay mindlinked me. I did my best not to laugh and slapped him on the shoulder. Jake gave a cheer as he created a spark that made the paper catch fire. Ramses hurried to hand him the cards and Jake lit it on fire, it looked like a small torch. He handed it to me. It smoked and it was hot. I raised it towards the detector. Nothing happened.
âGive it a moment,â Jake said. We all looked up at it. I could feel the fire creeping closer to my fingers.
âMake another card bundle,â I said. Ramses started to work. I would have to hold out until he handed me the next one. I felt my fingers get uncomfortably hot. Ramses raised a new bundle up to me and then there was a ringing sound and water started to fall down, drenching us all.
âWell, it worked. Now what?â I asked.
âLook,â Sam said. We looked out over the room. Faint lines of lights were seen. It wasnât like clear ribbons like it was in the movies. But it at least gave us a hint of where the lasers were.
âLetâs do this,â I said, getting down from Finlayâs shoulders. I wanted to get out of this room. The water was cold and the longer we stayed, the colder our bodies would be and the harder it would be for us to move.
âAmie, you are the most agile. You should go first and try to scope out a path the rest of us can take,â Sam said.
âSure. Iâm guessing it would be best to try and find the best gaps and keep close to the floor?â I asked.
âAvoid things that need me twirling like a ballerina,â Ramses said. We all laughed. I brushed water out of my face and looked at the beams. I started moving through them, knowing the others were watching me, trying to remember the path I was taking. Once or twice, I needed to stop to look at different options and ask the others how it looked from their angle. It felt like it took forever, but I landed on the marked area by the second door. A green light switched on.
âNext one!â I called. Finlay was next. He was an impressive Alpha, but he wasnât built for this kind of thing. He needed to move even slower than me to make sure no part of his large, well built body interfered with the lasers. It was a treat to be able to watch his body as it twisted and flexed. The water which made our clothes cling to our bodies, didnât help. A couple of times I had to call for him to stop before he would break the lasers. He made it to my end and a green light turned on.
âWell done,â I mind linked him as we focused on Jake.
âI think we need one of these at home. It was interesting to watch you move through it. We should do it again in a more private setting,â he told me.
âIâm game as long as we both do it,â I agreed. He looked at me. First with surprise and then with a grin. Jake made it through with no difficulty. His more lean build was an advantage here. Next it was Ramsesâ turn. I wor