“How did you know where I was and what I needed?” Koldo asked.
“Axel told us,” Malcolm said, rubbing the spikes in his hands together.
And what else had Axel mentioned? He waited, but no one informed him of anything more.
“Thank you,” he said. He wouldn’t tell them he’d had no need of them, that he would have pulled through on his own, because he still couldn’t bring himself to lie. And they would have tasted it, anyway.
To Jamila, he stiffly said, “Why weren’t you at Estellä?”
Her chin lifted. “That little witch Sirena flashed me to a cage in a cave and locked me inside. I can’t flash and couldn’t leave. I had to summon help.”
“I needed you with Nicola,” he said, even though he knew he couldn’t fault her for how things had gone down. They’d both been taken by surprise. But he wasn’t exactly rational at the moment.
“Well, too bad,” she snapped. “Nicola Lane is your responsibility, not mine.”
She was, wasn’t she? “She will never again set foot in Estellä Industries.” He would make sure of it. And if she protested, she protested. He would deal with the fallout, as he should have done before this happened. “I’ll take things from here.”
Koldo flashed to the house in Panama—or rather, tried to. He remained in place. He frowned, and once again tried to flash. But once again he remained where he was.
What was wrong? He’d been bitten by the serps. He’d been stabbed, shot and scratched by the Nefas. But he’d endured all of that before—and worse—with no such consequences. Only difference was...Sirena, he realized with sickening dread. She had leaked something into his veins.
If he’d forever lost his ability to flash—
He couldn’t finish that thought without howling. No. Her poison would fade. He would recover.
He had to recover.
But he’d wanted to be punished, and this certainly fit.
At least now he knew Nox’s game plan. He knew Sirena’s purpose. He knew the Nefas and demons were working together. And he knew Lefty and Righty were back in the picture, more determined than ever to reclaim Nicola.
“Fly me to Panama,” he told Malcolm, his cheeks heating with embarrassment. He hated that he had to rely on another being for his transportation.
“Wow. Aren’t you a big bag of polite,” Malcolm muttered, but still the warrior strode over to him and wrapped him in his arms. “You’ll owe me for this.”
“I know.” That was the way of the world. He only wondered if Nicola found him as aggravating as he now found Malcolm.
White wings laced with gold flared, and a twinge of envy lit a fire in Koldo’s chest. Then they were airborne, the wind whipping against his skin, and he found himself closing his eyes and pretending he was soaring on his own. That he was healthy and whole.
That he had an untainted future.
* * *
KOLDO ARRIVED AT the ranch cradled in the arms of another man. A beautiful Asian man with a green fauxhawk, weird silvery eyes and tattoos of bones on his neck. Just...wow, he was beautiful, but he was also seriously scary.
Desperate to figure out a way to return to the park and help Koldo, Nicola had been pacing in front of the couch, where Axel and Laila sat. If anyone could win with ten-against-one odds, it was Koldo.
Koldo, who had promised to marry Sirena. His horrible troll of a sister.
Koldo, who never lied.
“He lost consciousness halfway here,” the newcomer said.
“Put him—” Axel began, standing.
Nicola cut him off. “Put him in my bed.” She rushed forward to show the new guy the way, surprised her heart wasn’t pounding more forcefully and that she wasn’t light-headed.
“Don’t leave me here, Co Co!” Laila shouted.
She glanced back to watch Laila shrink to the edge of the couch in an effort to get as far away from Axel as she could.
“And don’t you dare touch me!” Laila yelled at him. “I don’t want anything else to do with any of your kind!”
Axel shrugged and strolled to the kitchen. “You want something to do with a muffin? I’m starved.”
Nicola was torn between rushing back to her sister to offer comfort and staying with Koldo. In the end, she shouted, “No one’s going to hurt you, La La, I promise,” and raced to the bed to jerk the comforter and sheets out of the way. Then she moved so that the newcomer could easily place Koldo in the center.
“What was done to him?” she asked, heading into the bathroom to gather a washrag drenched in hot water and all the creams and cleansers Koldo had brought from her house.
“War.”
Well, duh. She would ask Koldo, then. When he awoke. And he would. She wouldn’t believe otherwise. “Give me a knife,” she said when she next stood beside the bed.
Fauxhawk frowned. “Why?”
“So I can cut away his robe and doctor him. Why else?”
“So you can kill him,” he stated simply.
“I would never hurt him!” She placed all of the supplies on the mattress. “We’re dating.” Or rather, they had been, BS. Before Sirena.
“Good for you, but that doesn’t help your case. Just so you know, I’ll hurt you worse than you’ve ever been hurt if you injure him further.” That said, he handed her a blade. Rather than leave the room, he rocked back on his heels and crossed his arms over his massive chest, as though waiting for her to mess up.
Nicola worked the tip down the center of the fabric, careful not to nick Koldo’s skin. By the time she got to the hem of the robe, the top part had already woven itself back together.
“Help me,” she commanded.
The warrior pursed his lips, as if he wasn’t fond of being told what to do. “Your male will owe me another favor, I think.”
Another? “I’ll pay for your favor. How’s that?”
“You have nothing I desire.” He bent down and ripped the robe in two, then yanked the material out from under Koldo.
“So why did you just help me?” She dropped the blade and grabbed the robe before the man could discard it, then draped the fabric over Koldo’s naked waist. He was littered with bite marks, cuts, bruises and scratches. At his neck, four tiny wounds in the shape of half-moons had turned black and now festered.
“I told you. Your male will owe me another favor.”
He was a great listener, wasn’t he? “So what’s your name, anyway?”