The Healer (Seven Sins MC #2) - Jessica Gadziala Page 0,2

the screams were as ear-splitting as ever no matter how far we walked.

"Here," Bael said, ripping off a piece of his shirt, shoving it in her mouth.

"Lenore, give her your cloak," I demanded, getting a raised brow from Ly.

"We need to cover her completely or the humans are going to call the police. We all know that Red can't end up in a human hospital."

"It's fine," Lenore insisted, pulling off the antiquated garment I'd told her at least a dozen times made her stand out in human society—and not in a good way. She insisted it was something that reminded her of her upbringing, that she didn't care if it made her stand out.

Eventually, we made our way back to the SUV we'd rented to take this trip, none of us wanting to be on our bikes in the freezing cold if we could help it.

"What?" Aram asked, still holding Red on his lap in the car.

"I don't understand. She's not healing," I said, watching one small cut I'd been keeping an eye on for the whole drive back to our rental house. It was hardly more than a scratch. It should have healed in moments. But we were an hour into our drive and it was still bleeding and open.

"If you don't know, that's not good, right?" Daemon asked from the row behind us, looking over my shoulder. "You're the resident brain and all that."

He wasn't wrong.

And I had no answers.

"Maybe they just need to get cleaned out," Aram suggested. "Can't Lenore do some of her magical first aid on her?"

The only problem was, when we got back to the house and put Red down for Lenore to fuss over, not only did nothing she knew how to do work, but Red fought her every inch of the way. With fingernails, with teeth, with her fists and feet. Even with several of us holding her down, we could barely keep her still.

"I don't know what else to do," Lenore said later that night, so covered in blood that it looked like she'd been in one of those horror movies the humans loved so much. "I'm no healer," she added. "I only ever handled minor injuries in my coven. I... I don't know how to help her."

But someone needed to.

No, we couldn't die.

We could suffer, though.

And, clearly, Red was hurting.

She still needed to be kept gagged in case anyone within earshot could overhear her. Even with something muffling the sound, her screams were unrelenting.

I gave Lenore a nod, dismissing her, as I moved into the bedroom where Red was on the bed, a blanket draped over her damaged body.

"You gotta get someone," Drex said, moving in beside me. "You know what happens when someone is hurting for too long."

I did.

Because I'd done it to people over and over in the past.

Pain could drive someone insane a lot more quickly and easily than most would realize.

Drex was right.

This could go bad—worse—fast if we didn't help heal her.

"Alright. You get some drugs to get in her," I suggested. "I will find a doctor that can do something."

"How are you going to do that?" Drex asked, following me out of the room. "We're not like humans. They are going to realize. And then there will be questions."

"You let me handle that," I suggested, grabbing a coat that wasn't drenched in blood, and making my way out toward the car.

I didn't have a great plan. Which was unusual for me. Planning was what I did best. But there had been no way to prepare for this.

All I knew was Red needed someone to heal her.

And that I had to get that for her.

The consequences of it could be dealt with later. In a very final sort of way.

I rummaged in the SUV's trunk to find the couple of supplies I needed, shit normal people never kept around, but we always made sure we kept a supply of.

You never knew when you were going to need some handcuffs.

Or a gag.

Or even a suitcase big enough to stuff a body inside.

We'd learned that all the hard way over the years. So we were never unprepared if we didn't need to be.

And I needed to be prepared for this.

You didn't just go and snatch a human being off the streets without the right supplies.

At least not anymore.

Not with their alarm systems and large populations of do-gooders who wanted to step in and save someone in need.

I had no plan on who to take.

I watched two men in