courtroom training betray her as her mouth tightened in recognition. Dark humor slid through Bialiâs expression. âEverything make sense now, lawyer?â
Margrit drew in breath to respond and let it out again in a shriek as a flash of white darted over her head. Biali launched himself skyward to meet Alban, all attention for Margrit lost.
They crashed together with none of the grace she was accustomed to seeing from the Old Races. Too close to the rooftop to keep their battle aerial, momentum and their own weight slammed them to the blacktop. Margrit staggered with the impact and ran for shelter, putting herself against the rooftop access door. It seemed impossible that no one would come to see what the sound had been, and each roll and thud the combatants shared made it that much more likely. She didnât dare shout for the same reason, but she pitched her voice to carry, fresh fear and anger in it: âAre you crazy? Somebodyâs going to come!â
Neither gargoyle heeded her, too caught up in their private conflict to respond to sense. Biali lifted a fist and drove it down like the rock of ages. Alban flinched just far enough to the side that the blow missed. The rooftopshook again and Margrit skittered forward a few feet, sure that interfering would be useless, but driven to try. âAlban, stop! He grabbed me to make you come after him! Just get out of here!â
For a moment it seemed heâd heard her, an instantâs hesitation coming into his antagonism. Biali took advantage with a backhand swing so hard the air whistled with it, his fist a white blur against the graying sky. Alban spun, dizziness swaying his steps. An appalled fragment of Margritâs attention wondered how hard a hit that was, to stagger a gargoyle. A human jaw would have been pulverized.
Her gaze locked on the shattered left half of Bialiâs face; the ruined eye socket that in gargoyle form was all rough planes worn smooth by time. Alban had done that centuries earlier, and if the blow heâd just taken hadnât conveyed similar damage to his own face, Margrit couldnât imagine what strength had been necessary to destroy Bialiâs features.
As Alban reeled and regained his footing, Biali backed away, unwinding the length of chain from around his waist. Unwanted understanding churned Margritâs stomach as the stumpy gargoyle knotted one end and began to swing it. It wasnât an adornment of any sort. It was a weapon, and more, a prison.
Of all the Old Races, only gargoyles had ever been enslaved.
Margrit let go a wordless shout of warning that forgot the need for silence. Alban responded, flinching toward her as if he would protect her from whatever she feared, but too late: Biali released the chain, sending it clattering toward Alban. Margrit sprinted toward them, her onlythought to break the chainâs trajectory, regardless of the cost to herself. She would heal from most injuries: that was the gift another of the Old Races had given her, and for Albanâs freedom she would risk her fragile human form against the dangerous weight of metal.
But sheâd taken herself too far from the fight, her safe haven now a detriment. Crystal-precise clarity played the seconds out, letting her see how the chain left Bialiâs hands entirely, flying free. Alban recognized the threat an instant too late, wings flared and eyes wide with comprehension and furious alarm. Metal wound around his neck and his hands clawed against it, desperate to snap the chain and shake himself free.
Dawn broke, binding iron to stone.
TWO
MARGRITâS HEARTBEATS COUNTED out an eternity, incomprehension making a statue of her as if she, too, was one of the gargoyles, frozen in time. Then the need to act paralyzed her, useless choices rendering her as still as astonishment had.
Her impulse was to dart forward, to claw the chains away from Albanâs throat just as heâd tried to do. To pound on his