She went for the black guy. He might’ve been the biggest, but the groin shot had hurt. Using the woman as a decoy, Eve flew into a double spin, a snapping side kick, easily blocked, and used the momentum to carry her around, push her forward so that her upper body, head, and fists all connected with the black man’s crotch.
This time he went down, and stayed down.
She blocked blows with her forearms, her shoulders, gauging her ground, taking the defensive and drawing both her opponents in close.
A short-armed punch to the jaw snapped the female’s head back, and the elbow Eve jabbed into her throat took her out.
Eve grabbed her falling body and shoved it at her last opponent.
He had to spin away, but came back at her. They were both puffing now, and the sweat stung her eyes. She doubled over when his foot landed in her gut. And he was fast—but not quite fast enough to snap his leg back before she gripped his ankle and heaved.
He used the move to carry himself over into a flip, punched the landing with a grace she admired. Even as she was hurling at him, springing up to a flying kick. Her heel landed on the bridge of his nose, and she heard the satisfying crunch.
“That’s game,” Roarke said. “End program.”
The figures faded away, as did the dojo. She stood, in her work clothes now, catching her breath. “Good fight,” she managed.
“Not bad. You finished them up in . . . twenty-one minutes, forty seconds.”
“Time flies when you’re . . . ow.” She rubbed her right inner thigh. “What I get for not warming up.”
“You pull something?”
“No.” She bent to stretch it out. “Just a little tender.” She blew her hair out of narrowed eyes as she glanced toward Roarke. “Twenty minutes?”
“Twenty-one forty. Not quite the high score. I did it in nineteen twenty-three.”
She lifted her head, squinted at him as she pulled the heel of her right foot to her butt in a stretch. “Under twenty first time out?”
“All right, no, not the first time. That took me twenty and change.”
“How much change?”
He laughed. “Fifty-eight.”
“I’d say the difference is negated as you programmed the game. Gimme a sip of that.”
He offered her the glass. “Feel better?”
“Yeah. Nothing like punching your fist into a face to brighten up the day. I don’t know what that says about me either, but I don’t care.”
“Then we’ll have another game. Recreational hour’s not up,” he said before she could protest. “Initiate Program Island-3.”
They were on a white sand beach that flowed into water of blue crystal. There were flowers—pink, white, rosy red—strewn along the shoreline. Jewel-colored birds winged into a sky as clear and blue as a glass bowl.
Floating gently on the sea was a wide white bed.
“There’s a bed on the water.”
“I’ve never made love to you on the water. In it, somewhat under it, but never on it. You like the beach.” He lifted her hand to his lips. “I like the idea of floating away with you.”
She looked at him. He wore a thin white shirt now, unbuttoned so it rippled in the breeze, and loose black pants. His feet were bare, as hers were.
He’d programmed her for white as well, she noted. Floating white dress with wire-thin straps. Ther
e were flowers in her hair. A long way from a black gi and flying fists. “From combat to romance?”
“Can you think of anything that suits us more?”