“Yes,” Xerxes replied, deadpan.
“He looks like a cold-blooded killer.”
In Koldo’s case, looks were not deceiving. “You don’t have to—”
“So of course I’ll give him a lap dance!”
Wait. What? “No, thank you. I don’t want—”
“Whoohoo, this is gonna be fun.” She fist-pumped the air. “Are you prepared to soar?”
“We’re already in the skies, sweet,” Thane said, clearly fighting a wave of amusement.
She rolled her eyes. “Whatevs. He knew what I meant. Didn’t you, Killer?”
“I would rather you not—” Koldo began, only to be cut off again.
“Move the table,” the girl said, rubbing her hands together. “I want to get this party train out of the station the right way. And that’s my way, in case anyone missed my meaning.”
Koldo pinched the bridge of his nose as Bjorn and Xerxes stood to obey the Harpy. Before the warriors could get started, he stiffened.
Not because of their intentions, and not because of the Harpy. Deep inside, where instinct sizzled and crackled, he experienced a sudden knowing.
Nicola was in trouble.
“I have to go.” He jumped to his feet, accidentally sending the table toppling the floor.
“Well, that’s one way to do it,” the girl muttered.
Zacharel’s orders stated that Koldo was to remain with Thane twenty-three hours a day. If he disobeyed, he risked punishment. He’d already used up his hour away today. “And you get to come with me,” he told the warrior, pointing at him to show there would be consequences if he was ignored.
“Wait. You’re leaving right now?” The Harpy’s pink, glittery lips fell into a seductive pout. “But I haven’t even started yet, and I’ve got some wicked-cool moves. Did I mention I’m very bendy?”
Thane’s gaze narrowed on Koldo. “We’re not leaving. We do, and I’ll never get you back here.”
The warrior had just as much to lose as he did, Koldo realized—and that gave Koldo all the bargaining power he needed. “We’ll return. You have my word. Until then, you had better follow.” He informed Thane of where to go and flashed to the hospital, but … Nicola wasn’t there. He flashed to her office. She wasn’t there, either. He did, however, spot a Sent One, as well as a girl he didn’t recognize but thought he should.
There was no time to question either female. He flashed to Nicola’s house, but his redhead wasn’t there, either. Her second job … nope. Back to the hospital, where he materialized at an empty nurse’s station and used the computer. A good decision. Laila had been moved to a new room.
Thane landed just in front of him. He tucked his wings at his sides as he looked around. “What are we doing here?”
“You’re waiting for me to conclude my business, and I’m in the process of concluding my business.”
Without another word, he flashed to Laila’s new room. And that’s when he found Nicola, sobbing over her sister’s body.
CHAPTER SIX
KOLDO ASSESSED THE SITUATION quickly. Laila’s heart monitor was racing. There was a sharp odor in the air—the scent of impending death. There was a wheeze to her breathing, even with the machines doing all of the work—the sound of impending death. Though she wasn’t dead, her spirit was already halfway out of her body, about to ascend or descend whatever path she’d chosen for herself.
She wouldn’t last much longer. Once the spirit was all the way out, the body couldn’t survive.
Nicola’s forehead rested on the bed, her delicate shoulders shaking as she cried with the intense force of her despair. Despair … a mix of both fear and tension, strengthening both of the toxins. Soon, every demon in the hospital would be hungry to feed off her.
“Nicola,” he said, stepping into the natural realm and becoming visible. His first word to her in all these many days. He shouldn’t have waited until tragedy struck, he realized.
Her attention whipped up to him, and red, swollen eyes landed on his face. She gasped, “Koldo,” with a big dose of surprise. Her nose was stuffed, her voice no longer smoke and dreams but scratchy. Strands of hair clung to splotchy cheeks. “What are you doing here? How did you find me?”
How could he explain that he’d felt her pain, when he wasn’t sure how or why he’d done so? Ignoring the question, he forced his gaze to move to Laila. “She’s dying.”
A pause. A trembling, “Yes. I shouldn’t be crying. I knew this was coming.” Nicola covered her face with her hands, wiping away the tears, perhaps even trying to rub away the tension. “She needs me to be calm. I need me to be calm.”
So do I.
“But …”
“You hurt,” he said.
“Yes.” Sighing, she fell against the back of the chair. She released a breath, drew in another, and her nose wrinkled adorably. “Last time you smelled wonderful. This time you smell like a brothel.”
He wasn’t embarrassed by the insult. Nothing had ever or would ever embarrass him. He was … overheated. Yes. That’s why his cheeks suddenly felt as though they were on fire. “And how do you know what a brothel smells like?”
“Fine. You smell like what I assume a brothel smells like. Cigarettes and alcohol and conflicting perfumes.”
“My apologies.” The first part of what she’d said at last penetrated. Before, she’d thought he’d smelled wonderful.
His body tensed, just as before. But there was no urge to inflict pain … he wanted only to touch her, to offer comfort and—he wasn’t sure.
The beeping from the monitor sped up.
Nicola traced her fingers over her sister’s hand, then stopped, just stopped, as if the action were too much for her.
How much strength had she lost since his last visit?
No matter the amount, the answer was the same. Too much.
“What are you, anyway?” she asked almost absently. “You haven’t figured it out on your own?”
“No. How could I?”
“There are many ways.”
“Name one.”
“Easy. A sensitive spirit.”
She expelled a weary breath. “All I know is you aren’t human.”
“Correct.”