His left hand caught Kunther’s sword wrist as the older man dispatched a fourth serpent, and he drove his knee into the back of Kunther’s, buckling the joint.
Kunther went to one knee and twisted, pulling Jake with him, converting the takedown into a grapple that brought them both to the courtyard stones in a tangle that had no elegance in it whatsoever.
The sword was trapped between them at an angle that made it useless and Kunther was fighting to free it while Jake was fighting to keep it trapped, and they were a ter apart wrestling with each other’s limbs while three remaining shadow serpents circled them looking for openings.
Kunther headbutted him again.
Jake absorbed it with Scale Armor this ti, the scales distributing the impact, and responded by slamming his forehead into Kunther’s nose. Less elegant than everything else he’d done, thoroughly effective.
Kunther’s grip loosened for the half-second Jake needed.
He broke free, rolled away, and ca to his feet.
Kunther rose a beat behind him, blood running from his nose, sword still in his right hand but his left arm hanging with the specific dead weight of paralysis completing its work. His sword arm was compensating, the grip adjusted, the whole fighting style restructuring itself around a single functional arm with the practiced adaptation of soone who had trained for exactly this degraded scenario.
But the math had changed.
One functional arm. Two cracked ribs. Blood in his eyes from his nose. Six shadow serpents reassembled around the courtyard. And Jake is standing across from him with Scale Armor still active and his bloodline running hot from the combat.
Kunther looked at him across the courtyard stones.
For the first ti, his expression held sothing other than confidence or analytical assessnt.
Not fear. Sothing more complicated than that. The expression of soone recalculating not the fight but the person they were fighting, updating a category that had been set, and finding the new information didn’t fit the existing container.
"You’ve been awake for a month," Kunther said.
"More or less," Jake said.
Kunther’s jaw worked for a mont.
The paralysis had climbed to his shoulder now, visible in the way his left arm hung completely still against his body. He could continue—Class I durability and a single functional arm still represented a genuinely dangerous opponent, and Jake’s energy reserves were lower than he wanted them to be.
The fight wasn’t finished.
But the point had been made.
"Enough," Jake said.
"You know you can’t win against right now."
Kunther looked at him for a long mont, then drove his sword point-first into the courtyard stones, a gesture that was less a formal surrender and more a man choosing to stop. His blood was falling in drops onto the stones around the blade’s hilt. His breathing was controlled with visible effort.
"You’re not what I expected," Kunther said finally.
"I hear that a lot too," Jake said.
He turned away from his ninth brother and looked at Matilda Linnam, who was standing against the wall still holding Margeret with the rigid posture of soone who had been braced for catastrophe and hadn’t quite processed that the catastrophe had a different ending than expected.
"Lady Linnam," Jake said.
"Pack what you need imdiately. You and Margeret are coming to Raaya Villa today."
Matilda looked at him, at Kunther still kneeling over his embedded sword, and at the shadow serpents dissolving back into the courtyard’s shadows as Jake released the manifestation.
She looked at her dead guards.
"Yes," she said.
"Yes, we’ll co."
Raani appeared at Jake’s shoulder as the household began its rapid, chaotic preparation for departure, the Dragon Maidens spreading through the courtyard with efficient authority, establishing a periter and organizing the remaining staff.
"The ribs?" she said quietly, eyes on Jake.
"Probably fine," Jake said.
"Definitely sore."
"The cheekbone?"
"Also probably fine. Definitely more sore."
Raani looked at the bruising she could see already developing across his face with the expression of soone who was professionally restrained from saying several things she had strong feelings about.
"You need to stop letting people hit you in the head."
"Working on it," Jake said.
Kunther had pulled his sword from the stones and was standing with the careful movents of a man managing multiple injuries and maintaining dignity while doing it. He watched Jake overseeing the evacuation of the Linnam household with an expression Jake couldn’t fully read from this distance—sothing between anger and sothing more complicated that needed more ti to resolve into a recognizable shape.
When Jake passed him heading toward where Matilda and Margeret were being brought out, Kunther spoke.
"This isn’t finished," he said.
"I know," Jake said, not breaking stride.
"You understand what you’ve done. Humiliating a clan mber in front of witnesses. Taking what I ca for."
Kunther’s voice was controlled. "That has a shape, Jake. It becos sothing between us now."
"It was already sothing," Jake said.
"You killed six n this morning."
He kept walking.
Raani fell in beside him as they reached Matilda and Margeret, the older woman gripping her daughter’s hand and carrying a single bag that suggested she’d packed fast and practically.
"The villa?" Matilda asked.
"The villa," Jake confird.
He looked back once as they moved toward the gate.
Kunther was watching him go with that complicated expression, his paralyzed arm still hanging at his side, blood drying on his face, sword sheathed. A man in the process of updating his understanding of a situation he thought he’d controlled.
Jake turned back to the gate and kept moving.
The morning had produced another complication and another enemy, and Jake’s face hurt comprehensively, and he was genuinely looking forward to sitting down sowhere quiet and letting the bloodline regeneration do its work.
Roakan continued its morning business around them as they made their way up through the terraced streets toward Raaya Villa, ordinary and indifferent, entirely unaware that one of the succession contest’s leading candidates had just had his nose broken and ribs cracked by his newest and least-experienced competitor.
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