“All right. Thanks, Riley.”
“Hey, fun for me—plus the painting. I need a couple of things.”
She cleaned her brushes, knives, jars, exchanged her shirt for a black tank. By the time she got out to the grove, Riley was there, and pulling on leather gloves.
“Private enough?”
Sasha looked back at the villa. You could see if you looked, she thought, but she wouldn’t feel nearly as exposed as she would have on one of the terraces or on the lawn in front of the house.
“Yes. Just enough.”
“Okay, first things first. Make a fist.” When Sasha did, Riley shook her head. “Just as I figured. You keep your thumb up like that, you’re going to—”
“Ow!” Sasha snatched her hand away after Riley bent her thumb back.
“Exactly. Remember that, and keep your thumb folded down. See?” She demonstrated; Sasha mimicked her.
“Thumb down.”
“Always outside, never inside the fist. Okay, punch me.”
“I’m not going to punch you!”
The smirk came quickly. “I can guarantee that. But try. Come on.” She tapped her nose. “Straight in the face or this lesson’s over.”
Irritated, intimidated, Sasha struck out. Riley tipped to the side, and let the halfhearted punch meet air.
“Like you mean it this time. It’s my face, Sash. I can promise you’re not going to hurt me. A little faith here.”
That’s what it came down to, didn’t it? All across the board. A little faith. She punched out again, putting enough into it that when Riley sidestepped, she stumbled forward.
“Okay, see, you’re punching like a girl.”
“I am a girl.”
“Nobody’s a girl in a fight. You’re a fighter. You need to distribute your weight, your balance, and for right now, you’re going to plant your feet. Knees a little soft, but you need to feel solid on the ground.”
Riley circled her. “That’s better. When you punch, don’t throw your body at it, bring the punch out from your shoulder. Lift your shoulder as you extend your arm. No, don’t straighten your legs. The power comes up from your legs, and when you straighten them or lean forward like that, you lose power and balance. Keep your body centered. And exhale on the punch.”
Riley nodded or frowned as she circled, as she ordered Sasha to try it with her left. Left again. Left then right.
“Don’t flap your elbows like chicken wings. The jab’s not sexy maybe like a cross, but it’s your most powerful punch. Defense, offense. It punches, it pushes, and best of all it can distract while—”
She jabbed out at Sasha with her left, followed it with a right cross. Both fists stopped less than an inch from Sasha’s face, and came so fast and hard she lost her breath.
“Didn’t see the right coming, did you?”
“I hardly saw either of them. How many fights have you been in?”
“I don’t keep count. Here.” She held up her gloved hands, palms toward Sasha. “Fist in the palm, like the ball in the glove. Left. Come on, rookie, left! Left. Right. Left. Better. Lead with your knuckles, exhale, lift your shoulder. Concentrate. I want you to rotate your arm. You lift, and as you jab, you rotate. All one motion now. Left!”
Sasha threw jabs until her arms ached.
When she lowered them, Riley poked her. “Come on, you haven’t even broken a sweat yet.” But she reached in the small duffle she’d brought out, handed Sasha a bottle of water. “Hydrate anyway.”
“I thought you’d show me some martial arts, not just have me punch your hands.”
“Baby steps, Sash.”
She opened the water, drank. “I’ve never actually hit anyone before.”
Riley widened her eyes. “I’d never have guessed.”
“Oh, shut up.” But rolling her aching shoulders, Sasha laughed.
* * *
Bran thought yanking some bloody weeds from the bloody vegetable garden might purge him of the considerable resentment still stuck in his gut. And he’d take some of the herbs and roots while he was about it. He could use them.
Armed with a hoe and work gloves from the garden shed, his own boline for harvesting, he made his way to the garden gate. Over the odd and homey hum the chickens made, he heard Sasha laugh.
The woman plagued him, he thought with no little bitterness. Those big blue eyes filled with her hurt feelings. And worse. Disappointment.
As if telling everybody and their brother you were a hereditary witch was part and parcel of everyday conversation over a bloody pint in the bloody pub.
He hadn’t known her a week, for Christ’s sake. And let’s not be forgetting that being what he was, using what he had, saved her from an ugly fate.
But not before she’d been hurt, he thought. It fucking killed him she’d been hurt.
And he didn’t have time for that. They were, all of them, going into a situation that risked more than cuts and bruises, so he couldn’t afford to find himself worrying about her the way he found himself worrying about her. Each of them had to hold their own, use whatever skill or power at their disposal.
There was a lot more at stake than one woman.
He could want her, he thought, glancing toward the grove again. That was allowed. Sex never hurt anyone if done right and both were willing. And did a lot more to ease the mood and clear the mind than hoeing rows or pulling weeds.
He caught movement and, curious, propped the hoe against the fence, walked to the far corner of the garden.
He could see now, through the trees, Sasha in a skinny sleeveless black shirt punching into Riley’s open hands. She’d twisted her hair up somehow or other, he noted, leaving the back of her neck exposed.
Entertained, and considerably charmed, he leaned on the fence, watched the show.
Teaching her a right cross, he realized.
Doyle wandered down, stood on the other side of the fence. “What’s the deal?”
“Looks like a boxing lesson.”
Doyle watched a moment. “Brunette’s got form. The blonde hits like a girl.”
“She does, but I’ve got twenty says she won’t when Riley’s done teaching her.”
Doyle watched another moment, the way Riley demonstrated technique, or came around to take Sasha’s shoulders, move her body with the punch.
“Sucker bet, but I’m going to take it anyway. What’s life without a gamble?”
“Done. She won’t give up, you see. And Riley, she won’t give up on her. She may not turn her into a brawler, but Sasha will learn to hold her own. And that’s needed for all of this.”
“You could walk away from it.”
“We all could. None of us will, if that’s what you’re wondering. We all got our arses handed to us today, yet here we are.”
With a tug of pride, Bran lifted his chin toward the olive grove. “And there’s the two of them, getting and giving boxing lessons under the olive trees. The gods, I think they don’t understand the mortal’s stubborn resilience. So they underestimate us.”
Doyle hooked his thumbs in his pockets, watched Sasha throw a combination of jabs and crosses into Riley’s hands. “Boxing lesson, such as it is, makes sense. More than a sorcerer with a hoe digging up weeds. You could . . .” He wiggled his fingers. “And get rid of them.”
“The physical helps the brain, and I’ve been taught not to use magick to be lazy. Still.” As a kind of test, Bran held his hands out, spread them. After no more than a quiet shimmer, not a single weed remained.
“Quicker that way,” Doyle commented.
“It is. You don’t have much of a reaction to the magickal.”
“Dated a witch.”
Intrigued, Bran lifted his scarred eyebrow, leaned companionably on the fence. “Did you now?”
“Redhead, built in a way made you sure God’s a man.”
“It didn’t work out between you?”
“For a while it did. She wasn’t shy about using what she had. She wasn’t shy about anything,” Doyle added with a grin.
“She couldn’t help you with this venture?”
“Not for lack of trying. But she told me there would be five others, each with a separate power. Once united, we might forge the sword that would pierce the heart of a vengeful god. Then again, she also told me love would pierce my heart with fang and claw and lead me to the path of death.”