controlled her expression, even though her palms were damp with nervous sweat and her stomach
knotted around her illusory meal. She swallowed, hoping she wouldn't vomit with fear. "If you'd come here
earlier in the year, like the other girls did, you'd have had a better choice in opponents."
Easier, Xantippe meant. While the men confined here for the womens'-trials were never inferior or
diseased specimens, there was a certain amount of choice insofar as size or agility went-or rather, there
was at New Year's and at Midsummer, the days when Xantippe combed the slave-markets for new stock.
Now-the men left were the ones even the bravest girls feared to face, and for good reason.
Most were battle-captives, which meant that they already knew how to fight. And even though they would
be facing their opponents bare-handed, that gave them a distinct advantage. They had learned how to kill;
had experience in killing. For all their training, the Mazonite girls making their trials-by-combat had never
had that experience.
The rest were simply formidable. Damnably formidable.
Forbidden by their keeper to speak, they sat or stood in their cells, staring back at Xylina as she paced the
cold, torch-lit stone hall, examining them.
There were around a dozen of them. Fully half of them leaned against the back walls of their cells, staring
sullenly at her, despising or hating her, but unwilling to chance punishment for displaying that hatred
aggressively. Most of the rest sat on their bunks and stared somewhere over her head, faces blank, eyes
unfocused. One or two looked away, carefully, as Xantippe glared at them.
One, however, did not stand at the back of his cell. Instead, he posed defiantly right behind the bars
confining him, massive, muscular legs braced apart, fists on his hips, chin up, glaring directly at both of
them. Xylina in particular.
She glanced at him, feeling a kind of electric spark leap between them-not of attraction, but of recognition.
Here, perhaps, was someone who loathed her as much as she loathed herself.
Hatred struck her like a palpable force, and she stopped, forced almost against her will to return his stare.
He was huge, perhaps the largest man she had ever seen. The top of his shaggy, ill-kempt head loomed
high above hers. His shoulders were broader than a prize bull's, his chest as deep and as heavily-
muscled. Eyes the color of storm-clouds glowered at her from beneath coarse black hair and heavy black
brows. Sweat gleamed from the curves of sharply defined muscles in his shoulders, chest, and arms. His
blocky face could have been carved from granite, and the scowl-lines seemed permanently graven there.
No racing-stallion possessed more powerful legs. His hands, by contrast, were not the hard, heavily
calloused implements of labor she had expected, but were manicured, clean, and scrupulously cared for.
Xylina stared back at him, wondering what he saw. Certainly she didn't look like much of an opponent.
Small, slim, with full breasts and long, slender legs-wheat-gold hair down to her waist-surely there was
nothing in her to inspire such a look of virulent, poisonous malevolence.
And yet she could have been as hardened a warrior as Xantippe, for there was no softening in his
expression. If anything, his expression grew crueler as a shadow of a smile crossed his lips.
It was not a pleasant smile-it had no sense of good humor about it. But it did promise horrors if he ever got
his hands on her. She could well imagine what he had in mind. Rape would be the easiest, simplest thing
that he would do to her. She returned his vicious, rage-filled gaze, transfixed, hypnotized by what she saw
there.
He wanted to get his hands on her. He lusted not merely for her body, but for the vengeance he would
have once he got her. And no one would stop him, if it happened in the arena. In fact, he would be freed
and set loose on the border of Mazonia. This was the only time a man had a free hand to strike back