Eve
Jules lunged at me again, her speed blinding. I barely managed to dodge, feeling the air shift as her fist grazed past my face. My muscles burned, screaming at me to stop, but I couldn’t afford to slow down—not now, not when survival was hanging by a thread.
I feinted left and dove right, aiming low. My shoulder slammed into her ribs, and for a split second, she stumbled. A surge of hope flared in my chest, but it was short-lived. Her hand shot down, tangling in my hair, and yanked me backward with brutal force. I choked on a cry, my scalp screaming in protest as I was thrown to the ground again.
Jules loomed over me, a strange dark amusement glinting in her eyes. "You fight like a cornered rat," she taunted, crouching beside me. "It’s poetic that you will also die like one."
I didn’t hesitate. My knee shot up, slamming into her side. She grunted, but it only seemed to fuel her rage. She grabbed my wrist before I could pull away, twisting it sharply. Pain exploded in my arm, and I let out a strangled gasp, my grip on the glass shard faltering.
"Drop it," she whispered, leaning in, her breath hot against my ear. "Blessed twin."
With a roar that didn’t feel like it came from me, I twisted, sinking my teeth into her exposed forearm. The taste of copper flooded my mouth, and Jules howled, her grip loosening for just a second.
I fought the treacherous bile rising in my throat. The coppery scent and the sanguine taste coated my tongue, my throat tightening momentarily as memories attacked me from the depths of my mind. I shook my head and spat out the blood.
I had only a second. **I had to fight my reaction.**
A second.
**It was all I needed.**
I wrenched myself free and scrambled to my feet, staggering back toward the overturned settee.
My fingers fumbled along the broken frame, searching—there. A jagged splinter of wood, sharp enough to do damage. I gripped it tightly, my knuckles white with desperation.
Jules wiped the blood from her arm, eyes flashing with something that sent a shiver down my spine. "You’re full of surprises," she mused, cracking her neck. "But I’ve had enough games."
She launched herself at me again, faster than I anticipated. I swung the splinter wildly, aiming for her face, but she was ready this time. Jules suddenly pivoted, her grip still locked around my wrist like a steel vice. Before I could react, she executed a brutal roundhouse kick, her knee slamming into the side of my head with bone-rattling force. A blinding explosion of pain erupted behind my eyes, and my vision blurred, stars bursting in my periphery.
But she wasn’t done.
Jules lunged again, but this time, I didn’t run. I ducked low at the last second, ignoring the scream of my shoulder, and drove my knee into her stomach with all the force I could muster. The impact sent her stumbling back, a flicker of surprise crossing her face. fɾēewebnσveℓ.com
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