The Healer (Seven Sins MC 2)
I always figured that, worst case, eventually there would be a war between Good and Evil. And if Lucifer himself decided to open up a Hellmouth, we would have a way to go home.
But then there was Lenore with her powers, with her control over them.
She'd opened the Hellmouth that had produced Bael and Daemon, the same Hellmouth that Red had jumped into in her excitement over getting home after so long.
There had been a restless excitement among all of us since then. Even after several failures. We all figured it was just a matter of time before we found the right Hellmouth with enough energy left to open it.
I'd been sure as the Earth started dropping down into its own core that this was it, all the years on this plane were finally over, and I could take most of my men back home.
Not having that happen, then having Red show up so mutilated, it was more than my body wanted to deal with, let alone my mind.
I needed a few minutes to sort it out in my head before I could go back there.
"What?" I asked, sensing Bael's gaze on me.
"She didn't get fucked up like that just coming through," he told me, making me turn, finding his eyes intense, his jaw tight.
"I'd deduced that already," I agreed.
"So it stands to reason that someone did that."
He wasn't wrong.
"I've seen wounds like that on her back before," he said. "I've inflicted wounds like that before," he went on. "As I'm sure you have." I didn't want to think about it. I didn't want to come to conclusions about it. "Someone lashed her," he finished.
Yes.
There was no way around that fact.
Those lacerations were ones I'd seen a million times in my very long life. Both in hell and on the human plane.
If humans ever believed they were fundamentally good, all you had to do was go back in history a little bit to see how evil many of them were. Lashings and beheadings and burning at the stake. Even those who didn't inflict the pain stood by and witnessed it, took part in it, found glee in it.
"Yes," I agreed, turning back to the fire.
The questions were... who... and why?
Red could be a lot to handle if you weren't used to her. She could be cocky and forward. She liked to push buttons.
Time moves differently down there. For us, it had been a year and a half, give or take. For her, it had been decades. Long enough to possibly make some enemies, push someone's buttons.
We didn't usually attack one another. That was the base, animalistic shit that the humans did. We punished the humans. That was where we took our rage out.
At least, that was how it used to be, how it had always been.
But who knew what had changed since then.
"Was this commonplace?" I asked, hating having to defer to Bael, but recognizing that I was not the expert in this one way.
"Lashing each other?" he clarified. "No."
"Did it ever happen?"
"Not that I ever saw."
"Hopefully once she is healed, she will be in her right mind again. Then she can tell us what happened," I said, shrugging.
I was a facts-based man. It seemed a waste of time to speculate, bat around ideas that may or may not be true. It was better to wait, to get the information right from the source.
One glance into my bedroom showed Lenore fussing over the nurse's head, muttering under her breath. Whether it was words of encouragement or actual spells, I had no idea. I didn't give a shit. So long as she got her up and working on Red.
"What?" I asked when Drex jerked his chin toward the front room.
"Aram," he said, swirling his glass before taking a sip.
Sighing, I gave up my plans of grabbing a book and getting lost for a while before the nurse woke up and could give us some answers.
"Aram," I called, walking into the front room to find him sitting off the edge of the couch, his head buried in his hands.
"She didn't deserve this."
"No one is saying she did," I said.
"No one is worried about her. You just tossed her on a bed with a gag in her mouth."
"Because I needed to go get someone to help her. I did that. I did what I could do. I think we can all agree that hand-holding and comforting is not my department."
It was more of his, though.
And judging by the blood all over him, he had tried.
Unsuccessfully, it seemed, by his defeated posture.
"She shrieked when I tried to touch her hand."
"She's in pain, Aram," I reminded him.
It was easy to forget pain since we so seldom felt it, and when we did, it was fleeting. And Aram had led a much more charmed life on Earth than I had.