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The Chronicles of Koa Boxed Set

Page 4

by K.N. Lee

Halston clenched his jaw. He should have never sent her alone. He couldn’t understand how Bund could have known that Halston had sent Galena. Halston had to remember, Bund was smarter than he seemed. Like Halston, Bund was a great deal more than he appeared to be.

  He didn’t say anything. He waited for Galena to go on. He knew it was hard for her, but he needed to know what they were dealing with.

  She took a while to continue. She kept looking at the portal to make sure no one was going to step through.

  “I might as well spit it out, right?” Galena asked the question, but Halston could tell that she was speaking to herself.

  He nodded anyway. “Go on. It’s just the two of us. Whatever you tell me will stay between us. I won’t tell a soul.”

  Galena gave him a look. Her gray eyes narrowed. She pursed her lips and examined his face. “Not even Koa?”

  Halston’s eye twitched, not because he was lying, but because Galena seemed to have suspicions about his relationship with the young vampire. He knew that would be a problem if people suspected that he and Koa were more than professional associates. He would have to find a way to eliminate such suspicions.

  He swallowed and shook his head. “Not even Koa.”

  Galena looked unsure. She watched him for a while longer and sighed. She looked down at her feet. “You know… it’s all right if you like her. We all like Koa.”

  Halston pulled away from Galena.

  She watched him. “You don’t have to go all pale on me. We all see it.”

  He didn’t know what to say, so he said nothing.

  Galena slumped against the wall and stared at the portal again. “Well, there were so many of them that I lost count, but they raped me, fed from me, and kept me locked in a cage.”

  There was a long stretch of silence. Halston held her head to his shoulder and she started to weep again. It was unnerving to hear that woman cry. She was always so strong, even cold. She had been broken.

  She looked up and rubbed her face. She threw her hands up. “Bund didn’t even feed from me! You know what he said to me? He said that I was too old. What the hell?”

  Halston shook his head. He knew Bund’s preferences. Children gave him more energy than adults.

  “Bund just watched the others with a stupid grin on his face!” She slammed her fist into her thigh so hard that Halston feared she’d bruise herself. “I hate that man more than anything in this world,” she said through clenched teeth. “Please, tell me how to kill him.”

  Halston took her fist and gently opened it. He took her hand into both of his. “You don’t worry about it. I’m terribly sorry that I put you in that situation, but even I can’t kill him.”

  Galena’s shoulders slumped. “Great.”

  He tilted her chin up. She was still shaking a little. “But, I know someone who can get rid of him. Forever.”

  “Well, I want to be there when you do it, so that I can spit in his face.”

  “I’ll try to arrange that.” He smiled for her, hoping it would soften her angry face. Tonight… his smile wasn’t working.

  “If it wasn’t for one of the dumber vampires, in his drunken stupor, forgetting to lock the cage, I would still be there. I might be dead now.”

  Halston patted the back of her hand. “It’s all in the past now. I don’t want you to worry. I can erase this event from your memory, if you’d like.” He came to his feet and held a hand out to her.

  Galena took his hand and pulled herself up, but she held tight to his hand. Her eyes were serious. “No, Halston.”

  He tensed. The tone of her voice was unexpected. She sounded like herself again, cold and serious. She looked… ready to hurt someone.

  “I don’t want to forget. I need to remember this. You’re not getting out of letting me spit in his face when you kill him.”

  Halston nodded and tried to take his hand back. She held steady.

  “Listen,” she said. “There’s more.”

  Halston sighed. “What else?”

  She leaned in close to him. Her eyes were hardened, her grip unyielding. “He knows about Koa.”

  There was little in this world that would make him react recklessly. He would have to restrain himself while he listened to what the Russian woman had to say.

  5

  THE SAFE HOUSE was an unassuming abandoned warehouse that Halston had purchased decades ago. The entire strip of land was abandoned. Once a power plant, no one dared come near it for fear of radiation exposure.

  Koa had the suspicion that Halston probably had a dozen or so safe houses. Whenever one was compromised, he always had a backup, and he didn’t always tell her his plan. He was clever. People tended to assume that such an attractive man couldn’t possibly be such a genius. They didn’t know that he was always at least ten steps ahead of them, and that his brain functioned at a superhuman level. They could never guess that he was not, in fact, human.

  She walked into one of the secret entrances in the back and covered her head with her hand. The exposed pipes still tended to drip cold water onto her head. It was dark and silent, except for the incessant drips. She rolled her eyes and lifted herself a few feet off the ground to avoid stepping into the black puddles that covered the flooring.

  Halston was good. This was all a diversion, in case anyone dared come inside. They would see the oil spills and the oozing green gases that seeped into the air from cracked pipes along the wall. Anyone would be discouraged from going any further, but Koa knew better.

  She ignored the mutilated rats and followed the labyrinth-like tunnels to a small door that one might never have noticed because it seemed to blend into the darkness. The door was rusted and covered in a slimy film of green goo. She pulled the hidden lever and pushed. With a creak it opened, and her eyes were affronted by bright lights.

  Koa groaned and hurried inside. She pushed the door closed and set the lock on the digital keypad attached to its back.

  “Glad you finally decided to join us,” Halston called.

  Koa sighed and turned to face him. With clean, white walls, the sterile space reminded her of a lab or a hospital. The constant buzz of electronics hummed in the background. The sleek white desks and long bare tables were spaced apart like a study hall.

  Halston’s love for technology was apparent at first glance into that room. He had flat screens everywhere and prototypes for weapons and various gadgets and devices. Everything was neat and tucked away into its proper place. Then then she saw it, locked away in its glass case.

  Halston’s infinity gun.

  Koa shivered as she looked at it. She loved that weapon. She almost wanted to trade in her Lyrinian sword, just to wield that shotgun one time. She’d only ever seen Halston use it a handful of times, and each time she had been appalled by its power. He refused to let her touch it.

  She shifted her gaze to Halston and Galena, a female assassin from their Russian office. She gave Koa a forced smile and returned her attention to Halston. Koa felt the tension in the room. Galena looked as if she had been crying. Her dull blond hair looked dirtier than normal, and she had suspicious cuts on her arms that were barely hidden by a bunch of bangles.

  Galena had first been seen by Al, their recruiter, and later brought into the Netherworld Division by Halston. She was a charge, or ‘pet’ for hire, similar to Ian in that she sold her blood to paying customers, but Galena worked with the most notorious of them all. Now, she went undercover for the Netherworld Division and sought to expose the most evil of the vampires and kill them. She was ruthless, cold, and calculating.

  Koa swallowed and silently took a seat a few feet from them. She glanced at Galena and saw that her eyes were red and swollen. She had bruises on her cheeks and neck.

  Koa didn’t like to see that. Koa looked at Halston with questions in her eyes. He gave her a look that begged her not to ask any questions.

  “Right. Here’s the plan. Galena, I want you to go home, clean up, and rest. Let me know if you need anything. I want you t
o consider this a vacation.” He looked to Koa and then held up a holograph device that showed her a small, shabby, building. “Koa, you and I will visit the Oracle.”

  Galena stretched her long legs and took a deep breath. “What if he finds me?”

  Halston clenched his jaw. “It’s not you he wants. I will take care of it.”

  Galena’s voice cracked. “I don’t know, Halston. He seemed different from the others.”

  Koa tensed. Galena was frightened, which made her feel worried.

  Halston sat before Galena and his face softened. Galena looked at him with fresh tears in her eyes and Koa felt a tug at her heart. Halston took her hands inside of his. Halston could be the most serious man she’d ever met, and he could also be surprisingly tender.

  He spoke to Galena and Koa leaned forward to hear him. She couldn’t wait to find out what had happened to their most trusted informant.

  “Listen, Galena,” Halston said. “I will not let anything happen to you. Wear the earrings I gave you and I will track your location. I have two of my best Shadows following you. They will be like bodyguards and defend you if anyone tries to hurt you again. I don’t care if they’re human, vampire or whatever, the Shadows will provide a defense for you if you need it. And if someone tries to hurt you again.” He handed her a vial.

  Koa’s brows lifted. This must be serious. Vials could only be bought in the Netherworld, from the Alchemist.

  “You throw this, and you run like hell.” He gave her a pointed look. “Got it?”

  Galena nodded and looked down at the black vial that Halston placed in her hand. She curled her fingers around it and attached it to the holster underneath her skirt. She wiped her eyes but smiled. “Thank you, Halston.”

  Halston nodded and wiped the tear from her cheek. “Don’t mention it.”

  Galena gave a confident nod. She obviously felt better about what she now had to do and came to her feet with her head held a little higher than before. Koa watched Halston sweep his hands behind Galena and two Shadows emerged from the floor. They were translucent beings that walked in unison behind the woman.

  Koa never liked Shadows. She sat back in her cold metal chair and watched them vanish. They might have vanished from their sight, but they still lingered unseen, and would follow and protect Galena. Koa shivered. She remembered when Halston had attached Shadows to her one time. She could always feel their cold, unearthly presence. Sometimes Koa would look behind her and frown, wondering if they were still there.

  Galena didn’t seem to mind. She was comforted by the knowledge that they would always be with her.

  Galena nodded. “I’ll be at my cottage in Greece.” Halston nodded and came to his feet. He folded his hands behind him as she gathered her bag and headed for the exit.

  Galena gave Koa a look. Her gray eyes made Koa hold her breath. There was something hidden in them that made Koa afraid.

  “Good luck out there, Koa.” Galena’s voice lowered. “Watch your back,” she said and left the room.

  Once the door was secured, Koa shot a glance at Halston. “What happened? Tell me?”

  Halston sighed and leaned back against one of his computer stations. He shrugged and looked off toward the door that Galena just went through. “We have a problem, Koa.”

  Koa frowned. “Obviously.”

  He gazed at her. He looked paler than usual. Koa sat on the edge of her seat. Something was definitely wrong.

  “I think something is brewing. A war, perhaps. Someone is letting nephilim out of the Netherworld at an alarming rate. They are gathering and mobilizing.”

  Koa felt her face flush. “More Syths,” she whispered.

  Halston shook his head. “Not just Syths, but Netherworld vamps and even demons.”

  Koa fell back in her chair. “Why do you think that, Halston? Why would they mobilize?”

  Silence.

  Koa saw that Halston was holding back. She sat up. “What is it?”

  Halston ran his hands through his hair, making it messy. “You remember who killed your father?”

  She could feel herself shaking. She ground her teeth. “How could I forget? It took us a long time to find out who did it.”

  Halston sucked in a breath. “Well, Bund has returned.”

  Koa put both hands over her lips, as if in prayer. One of her deepest fears was being realized. “He is free? From the Netherworld?”

  Halston’s silence answered her question. Koa whimpered and felt acid from her stomach enter her throat. Fear washed over her like hot water. She covered her mouth. “No, Halston.”

  Halston held his hands out to calm her down. “Did I tell you to start worrying? I have this under control.”

  “Halston, he killed my father.”

  Halston sighed in exasperation and turned away from her. He slumped into his chair at his computer station and began typing away. “I have a plan, Koa. Don’t I always have a plan?”

  Koa nodded. Her throat felt dry. When Halston found Koa and recruited her, it had been only weeks after her father had been killed in a Parisian alley. Koa had only been seventeen, and just returned from a nightmare that she couldn’t remember, to find her father killed and her mother cursed to live as a cat.

  It would be an understatement to say that Koa had turned to the dark side for a while. She didn’t like what she had become, but Halston had given her direction. Halston helped her find out who had killed her father. Someone named Bund. For five years, Koa thought about what she would do once she found that person, and yet, she was fearful of him. Her father had been the strongest vampire she’d ever known.

  Her father had trained her, loved her, and protected her. She felt her adrenaline start to simmer. She might get her revenge sooner than she thought.

  “Now, I need you to trust me. Can you do that?”

  Koa nodded again, but her entire body felt as if it had been stuck with pins and needles, like a foot that had fallen asleep. Was she ready to face her father’s murderer?

  She grabbed her arms and massaged them. She tried to shake off that horrible feeling of fear. She didn’t like it. She didn’t like being reminded of the horrific events of her past.

  “Halston.” Her voice sounded almost childlike. Koa couldn’t explain why she almost felt like a child again. A terribly frightened child.

  He stopped typing and turned his attention to her. “Koa. Don’t. Just don’t.”

  She pursed her lips. “But, you don’t even know what I was going to say!”

  “You were going to ask me if you could go to the Netherworld.”

  Koa lowered her head and pulled a loose string from the hole in her jeans. “Perhaps, I could go there and find out what is happening. Maybe I can find out the truth about my past. I mean, look at my sword…” She held the hilt out toward him.

  He didn’t look at it. He knew already.

  “There are Netherworld symbols on it. How could my father have such a weapon? Why did he take me there as a child?” More questions crowded Koa’s mind, but she was afraid to ask them. “If I knew the answers to these questions, I could have my memories back. I mean, an entire chunk of my adolescent life is missing!”

  Halston didn’t speak for a moment. Koa’s eyes brightened. There was hope. Maybe he would finally let her go. Maybe she could finally recover the missing memories of her past. He didn’t know what it was like to lose years of memories and have no clue as to why.

  All she knew was that her father had taken her to the Netherworld when she was twelve. Then there was nothing… a white void. When Koa woke, she was in a strange place with no recollection of what had happened, or how much time had passed.

  Halston finally broke his silence. He shook his head. “No. It is out of the question. You are not ready.”

  Koa’s eyes narrowed. “How the hell can you say that? How do you know? You may be the ‘boss’ in this Netherworld Division, but you don’t control me!”

  Halston shook his head. “You don’t get it, Koa. I don�
��t want to control you. I am trying to protect you.”

  Koa sneered. “Yes,” she said sarcastically. “I suppose it’s for the best. I suppose I’m not meant to have my memories back. I mean, they are my memories and all.”

  Halston gave her an odd look. “Perhaps you don’t know just how lucky you are to not have those memories back. Have you ever thought of that?”

  Koa glanced at him. “What do you mean?” Her face was hot with rising rage. She hated being told what she could and couldn’t do. She was an adult, not a child. “What do you know, Halston?”

  Halston’s watch began to ring. He answered it and Koa sighed. He hung up and came to his feet. “The Oracle is ready to meet with us. Let’s go.”

  Koa nodded and watched Halston arm himself. For the first time, she felt as if Halston was hiding something important from her. He wouldn’t tell her what happened with Galena, but she had an idea.

  She frowned down at her hands. She couldn’t shake the feeling, but she felt a small spark of doubt that she could fully trust someone who kept so much from her.

  Halston glanced at her, and it was as if he could read the concern on her face. She thought that he would say something, dismiss her doubts. She wanted him to. Instead, he simply nodded for her to follow and left the room.

  6

  Koa was a little taken aback by their means of transportation. Out of every car that Halston had, they drove an old sedan to the Oracle. She was confused. There were so many better ways to get there—that is, until she saw where the Oracle lived.

  They arrived at a tiny flat in a lower-class complex. A seedy hole in the wall that most people of means would try to avoid. Koa knew better than to judge, though. Her childhood home wasn’t much better. She knew what it was like to be dirt poor.

  She overlooked the dilapidated buildings and pot holes in the street and looked into the faces of the children. They played in the street with nothing more than their imaginations. She knew what it was like to not even have a toy. Most people would have felt uncomfortable in this neighborhood.

 

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