Dalton, Tymber - Fire and Ice [A Triple Trouble Prequel] (Siren Publishing Ménage Everlasting) (35 page)

BOOK: Dalton, Tymber - Fire and Ice [A Triple Trouble Prequel] (Siren Publishing Ménage Everlasting)
13.14Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

She nodded, her adrenaline pumping and her body on automatic pilot. With a fireball in hand, she took off running around the far side of the house. By the time she rounded the corner, Callie was actually engaged in battle with a third cockatrice, who’d shifted, as well as two men who hadn’t.

“Hey, cluckhead!” Lina screamed at the shifted one. When it turned its feathered head to her, it had just enough time for its eyes to widen in shock before the fireball engulfed its head. Zack shot one of the men, and as the other turned to flee into the house, Callie kicked his feet out from under him and bashed his head in with a rock.

They all stood there, no noise except for the sound of the barn behind them engulfed in flames. Then, Zack started to laugh. Callie joined him.

Lina, not sure what was so funny, finally caught the giggle bug from them both and sat down, unable to stand she laughed so hard.

“Come on,” Zack said to Callie. “Help me pull them into the house.”

“Why?” Lina managed to ask as Callie stood to do it.

“Because,” Zack said, “you’re going to burn the house down.”

Ten minutes later, they were trudging back to the car with the sky behind them lit in a golden glow from the house burning. A motor scooter was parked behind the car.

“So that’s how you trailed us?” Lina asked.

“Duh. It belonged to one of the guys at the warehouse. Did you honestly think I wouldn’t keep tabs on you, sweet cheeks?”

Callie smiled. “I knew he was back there. I saw him tailing us.”

“And you didn’t say anything?” Lina asked.

She shrugged. “Why? What was there to say? ‘Hey, your Watcher is right behind us’? Duh, he’s your
Watcher
. It’s his
job
.”

Lina was going to say something when the shakes hit her as an adrenaline crash set in. She collapsed to the ground, trembling, then crying. Sobbing was more like it, and both Zack and Callie surrounded her and tried to comfort her. That’s where they were five minutes later when Jan, Rick, Kael, Brodey, Jocko, Andel, and Daniel pulled up in the rental van.

Her mates ran over to her. “What the hell’s going on?” Jan demanded. Other shifters also pulled up in different vehicles. “Lina, are you okay?”

She nodded and sobbed even harder as she collapsed into his arms. He and Rick took over the job of comforting her while Daniel eyed Callie.

“Anything you want to say, pet?” he sternly said to her.

She looked down. “Sorry, Sir?”

He started to shake his head. Then he laughed and opened his arms to her. She raced to him and he engulfed her in a huge hug.

“Okay, so what the fuck happened?” Kael said, pointing at the burning house across the field. “That’s the nest.”

“Not anymore,” Zack said. “We took care of it. Or, I should say, Callie and Lina took care of most of it. I just helped with the cleanup.” He winked at Lina.

She guessed he was going to leave out the part about him saving her bacon so as not to freak out Jan and Rick.

She winked back.

* * * *

Later, back at the hotel, everyone reconvened in Lina’s room. “The bad news is,” Brodey said, “with the place burned to the ground, we lost any intel evidence they might have had.”

Daniel shot Callie a dark look. “It was Zack’s idea,” she said, pointing at him.

“The barn was already fully engulfed,” Zack said. “I figured it was only a matter of minutes before a fire brigade or someone showed up to investigate. Hell, you could see the fire from miles away.”

Andel nodded. “He has a valid point. Besides, we got plenty of evidence from the ones at the warehouse. This was only a small nest, and its sole purpose was running their drug operation in this area.”

“We still haven’t found Fat Boy,” Lina grumbled. Try as she might, she hadn’t been able to produce any more visions of him. When she’d tried asking Baba Yaga, the matron had dismissed her with a smile and a wave of her hand.

Callie had tried to explain it to Lina. “She isn’t allowed to get in the way of free will.”

“I’m not asking her to deliver him to me. I just want his fucking name. Is that too much to ask?” She looked at Callie. “Can you find out his name?”

“Not the way you’re thinking. I don’t have the powers she does. I told you that. I’m as hamstrung as you are.”

“Why couldn’t he have been one of the assholes at the nest?” Lina griped. “That would have made life easy.”

“Because I don’t think he’s part of that nest anyway,” Kael softly said. They all looked at him. “He’s one of the three who killed my family. We know this because of Lina’s visions. The group we took out today were mostly younglings and half-breeds, but they were all cockatrice. Fat Boy, as she calls him, isn’t even a cockatrice. Cockatrice won’t let outsiders into their nests. They might have to work with outsiders, but their nests are sacrosanct. They’re too distrustful and closed off to allow any non-cockatrice in. Even humans they’re mated to.”

Lina looked at Callie. “What do you think he was?”

“I was too busy trying to keep us from getting arrested or run over to pay attention,” she said, “but no, he wasn’t a cockatrice. They have a distinct…aroma. Well, to me they do. I don’t know if you all can smell them the same way I can.”

Brodey smiled. “They smell like chicken to me,” he quipped.

Lina snorted with laughter. “Crispy?”

He gave her a high five. “You know it, girl. Definitely crispy. The crispier, the better.”

Chapter Seven

Before they returned to the States, Lina wanted one last talk, alone, with Uncle Andel. She met with him for coffee downstairs in the hotel restaurant before she and the others headed for the airport. Andel would head home from there by train.

He gave her a sad smile. “Seer, you have a specific question for me?”

“How could you tell?”

He shrugged. “I suspected.”

She looked down at the table, where she slowly turned her coffee mug around in her hand. Their coffee wasn’t as good as Baba Yaga’s.

The thought nearly made her laugh, but she clamped down on it.

“When we first met in Yellowstone,” she said, “I noticed this grey cloud sort of surrounded you. It’s still there.”

He nodded, a sad smile on his face. “Yes. It doesn’t surprise me.” He took a sip of his coffee.

“And?”

He let out a deep breath. “I’ve had a lot of good years on this earth, Lina. Seen a lot of things, had more than my fair share of love. I’m tired. And, unfortunately, I’m not immune to things.”

“Cancer?”

He nodded. “It’s in my bones. Metastasized. I’ve had it for a couple of decades now.”


Decades
?”

“Being a dragon, it’s slowed the progress of the disease. Being half human, however, left me vulnerable.”

“You can get treatment though!”

He snorted, amused. “I’m part dragon, Lina. I don’t intend to spend the remaining years of my life locked up and being experimented on, or in hiding.”

“But, don’t we have doctors or something who are one of us? Or who are at least shifter of some sort, who can help you?”

“Sure we do. And I was given the option of trying treatments in hospitals where they couldn’t guarantee my safety, or living my life the way I wanted. I would rather the cancer take me with dignity than die as an experimental lab rat.” He glanced around and lowered his voice. “My wife, Ella? She was a beauty. We had a lot of good years together, more than any human ever has a right to expect. Our kids grew up and left home. Do you know how I lost her?”

Lina shook her head.

“She died in the bombing of Hamburg in 1943. She was trying to help her cousins escape.” He looked down at his coffee cup. “I spent a lot of years feeling bitter and angry. At the Nazis. At the Allies. At everyone. We didn’t have a side in the battle, we were simply trying to survive and keep our families alive. I found out about the cancer twenty-three years ago, when my first grandchild was born. Beautiful little girl. They named her after my Ella.”

He looked back up at Lina. “I made an active choice to live for that little girl. The Nazis are long gone. So are the RAF and others who bombed Hamburg. They are no threat to my little Ella. There are many dangers in this world, but there is only one danger that has directly sworn to try to kill her and others of our kind, as well as other shifters.”

“The cockatrice,” she whispered.

He nodded. “My hate is directed only at them now. I will do everything in my power to keep our people and others safe from those bastards. I will die fighting them, if I have to. Once I decided that, I felt a peace in my life I haven’t felt since losing my Ella.”

“Does anyone else know? About your cancer?”

“Bertholde did. She promised not to tell anyone. She’s the one who came to me and told me to get it checked out. That I was sick.” He shrugged. “I will die a happy man if all Ella has to worry about in the future are the same things the rest of the world usually must worry about. Only the cockatrice are deliberately out to harm her.”

“I won’t tell anyone.” Lina reached out and laid her hand over his to give him a gentle squeeze. Instead, her vision went blue. She was standing with Jan, Rick, Zack, Kael, and several others in a funeral home. She turned and at the front of the chapel she spotted a bronze urn. Next to it sat a picture of Andel looking a few years older than he did now. She realized she held something in her hand and looked down.

The program. On the front, the same picture of Andel, a made-up birth year that put his age approximately right, and the date of his death.

In seven years.

Her vision cleared and she was once again sitting in the booth in the hotel restaurant with Andel. He stared at her, curiosity on his face.

She let go of his hand and quickly tucked hers in her lap, under the table.

He laughed. “Don’t tell me. You saw how long.”

She forced a smile and nodded.

He sat back with a sigh. “I don’t want to know when. I’m guessing not right away?”

“No. There’s a while, yet.”

“Good. Plenty of work left to do.” He finished his coffee and left money on the table to pay their bill. He climbed out of the booth and helped her to her feet, giving her a hug. “Take care of those boys of yours,” he said with a smile. “The fanged as well as the furry ones. I’ve got to get checked out of the hotel and to the train station so I can go home. Safe journeys, Goddess.”

She smiled. “Safe journeys, Uncle Andel.”

He laughed. “See? Family is family. Adopted or not.”

She headed back to her room where Jan and Rick were struggling to get all the luggage stacked on a cart so they could make it downstairs in one trip.

“What are you two doing?”

Rick looked up. “It’s not obvious? We’re taking rumba lessons.”


I’m
the Goddess of Snark, buster, not you. I meant why not take two trips?”

Jan grinned. “I bet him he couldn’t do it in one.”

She rolled her eyes. “You two are like a couple of kids, you know that?”

“And you love it,” Rick said. “We’re never boring.”

Other books

Peter Pan by James Matthew Barrie
Conquerors of the Sky by Thomas Fleming
Digital Winter by Mark Hitchcock
Passionate Ink by Springer, Jan
Leota's Garden by Francine Rivers
Lost in the Blinded Blizzard by John R. Erickson
Flirting With Danger by Suzanne Enoch
ICAP 2 - The Hidden Gallery by Wood, Maryrose