Arcana Rising (The Arcana Chronicles Book 5)

Arcana Rising (The Arcana Chronicles Book 5) Read Free Page B

Book: Arcana Rising (The Arcana Chronicles Book 5) Read Free
Author: Kresley Cole
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what must be two hundred men. Past the cells at the far end of the curving hallway was an open doorway. Light, heat, and music spilled through it.
    I could tell I neared those plants! My claws budded and sharpened, and I felt the first real tingle of regeneration.
    No one had seen me back here in the dark. All eyes were trained in the other direction on two more shirtless men guarding that doorway.
    Whimpers and murmurs rippled from the cells: “What happens now?” “Has anyone escaped?” “What will they do to us?”
    Nothing good, I wanted to answer.
    Since the Flash, I’d been caged by a militia, shoved into a serial killer’s laboratory, dragged down into a cannibal’s subterranean pantry, and forced into a house-of-horrors torture chamber.
    These prisoners weren’t headed for a pleasant destination. Would they be slaughtered like cattle? Or used as target practice as some faction mowed them down?
    I sidled closer to the cages. In one, a boy of about nine was crying while an older guy—looked like his granddad—tried to comfort him. But the grandfather was clearly just as wigged out. The kid called him Pops.
    I eased over to them, keeping a low profile until I got more intel. “What state are we in?” I asked Pops.
    He jolted, maybe because he’d just heard the voice of a rare female; or because I was strolling around outside the cages. “Indiana.”
    Still? Damn it! “Who runs this place?”
    Overhearing our hushed exchange, a burly guy with a bandana over his head turned toward me and said, “Solomón, the leader of the Skins.”
    “Skins?”
    Pops said, “Those are Sol’s fanatical followers.”
    Bandana added, “They consider us the Shirts.” Shirts and Skins. As in football? Who makes up this shit? “Sol’s been rounding up survivors all over the state.”
    “Why? Why put you in cages?”
    “Because Sol likes games,” Bandana said. “For entertainment. You’ll see soon enough.”
    A guy sitting beside Bandana asked me, “Don’t suppose you know how to hotwire electronic cell locks?”
    No, but I could slip a tree between two bars, growing it till the metal bent. Maybe I should free these prisoners.
    Then I remembered the lesson I’d learned from Jack and Aric: shackled person did not mean good person.
    Besides, these men roaming free presented too many new variables and would slow my mission. In an altered future, I never would have been here anyway.
    How to get to Sol most quickly? If I turned myself in, those guards might not hand me over to their leader right away, might even mutiny to keep a female for themselves.
    An electronic whirring sounded, and all the cell doors opened. No one was brave enough to be the first to step out, to try an escape.
    The two shirtless guards—Skins—started down the corridor, guns at the ready. One of them called, “You men are about to make history!”
    In Sol’s games ? If these prisoners were part of his entertainment, then my best hope of access to him might be to join them. I slipped into Pops’s cell, blending with the others before the guards passed. The pair ambled to the other end of the corridor.
    “Everybody out and start walking,” the second guard called. “Any of you still in a cage when we roll through gets shot. Better hightail it out before then.” They were driving us toward that entrance?
    Men hurried to exit, and I joined them. Playing along—for now—seemed quickest. Still, impatience had me by the throat.
    Bandana edged closer to me. “I could look out for you, little girl,” he said. “If we live through this.”
    I frowned at my new suitor. “You’re optimistic. And I don’t need you to look out for me.”
    Bandana’s friend smirked. “You say that now, but wait till the blood starts flowing.”
    That was my problem; I couldn’t wait. The red witch bayed for it.
    Pops murmured, “You should announce you’re a female. You’ll be spared whatever’s about to happen to us.”
    I could feel that we were

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