Authors: Lisa Kessler
Tags: #Select, #Entangled, #nurse, #paranormal romance, #shifter, #Lisa Kessler, #Moon series, #Otherworld, #boxing, #boxer, #werewolves, #romance, #pnr, #tortured hero, #fated mate, #enemies to lovers
Rage erupted, burning through my bloodstream until my hands trembled with adrenaline.
Damn it.
“Shut up and come with me.”
He stiffened. “What are you doing at the hospital? Is someone in your family sick?”
I grabbed his upper arms and pressed him back against the wall, lowering my voice. “I’m not going to ask again. We need to talk.”
He nodded, and I took a step back. Keeping hold of one of his arms, I walked him toward a door labeled S
UPPLIES
. Once we were inside, I threw him to the far wall, pinning him there. “How long have you been working for Nero? Is that why you invited me to the club? Have you been giving them intel on me, too?”
He shook his head, stammering. “I-I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“I think you do.” I clenched my hand into a tight fist. “And if you don’t start answering me, I’m going to jog your memory for you.”
“I don’t work for them.” I pulled my hand back. “Okay, okay. Some guy came in about a month ago, told me to watch for new nurses from New York. There was money in it for the information. He said they were taking a survey or something.”
My fist landed in his gut on instinct, before I realized I was going to punch him. He wheezed, collapsing to his knees. I yanked him back onto his feet. “You stupid bastard, Todd. It never occurred to you that these guys might want to hurt her? You led them straight to her.”
He gasped for air. “You know Kelly?”
I almost corrected him, but I managed to keep her cover. “Yeah, and now she’s in danger. And it’s your fault.”
“I’m sorry, Wolf. I needed the cash.”
“You needed to think, asshole. A survey? No way. You knew it was blood money.” I hit him again and when his knees buckled this time, I let him fall to the floor. The door flew open behind me. I spun around to find Kilani, eyes wide.
“Oh Jesus, Jason.” She rushed past me to inspect Todd’s bloody lip.
I frowned. Was she seriously nursing that waste of skin? “He’s working for them. He told them where to find you.”
“I’m angry, too. Pissed, in fact.” She looked up as she grabbed some gauze pads from the shelf. “But this isn’t a boxing ring. This is assault. You could get arrested.”
“I don’t believe this. You’re angry at
me
?” I pointed at the piece of shit she was cleaning up. “This is the bastard who told Nero where you work. He took their money and sold you out.”
My pulse pounded in my ears, fury roaring in my head like a lion. I’d never needed to hit anything so badly. I wanted to pummel something until I was too exhausted to lift my arms, until the rage ran dry.
“I know who he is.” She disinfected his wounds with a jerky hand. He flinched a couple of times but had the good sense to keep his mouth shut. “And I know what he did.” She met my eyes. “But right now, I need to clean up this mess so you don’t end up in jail. I need you with me, remember?”
“What the hell?”
I turned around to find Jared in the doorway. Kilani glanced up at him. “Your brother just beat up this nurse.”
I narrowed my eyes, struggling to keep my voice down. “
This
is the guy who tipped off Nero, and she’s defending
him
.”
Jared met my eyes, his tone low and even. “Go walk it off, bro. I’ll be sure she stays safe.”
“Walk it off? Are you two crazy?” I raked both hands back through my hair. “This bastard sold out my mate for money and I’m supposed to be calm?”
Jared put a heavy hand on my shoulder. “You don’t have to be calm, but beating him senseless isn’t going to get us information.”
I coiled my fingers into an aching fist, welcoming the pain. Rational thought was out the window, but I managed not to hit my brother. Barely.
“You’ll keep her safe.”
“You know I will.”
I nodded and started to walk away.
“Where are you going?” Kilani asked.
“Ask him.” I pointed to the weasel with the ice pack. “He runs the fight club.”
T
he sun faded into the horizon as my tires ground into the pitted, cracked pavement of the warehouse that housed the fight club. Above me, the sky was painted in a sea of turbulent orange and red, mirroring my frustration and anger.
Todd, the guy I’d talked to just last night, the guy who first invited me to the club, also spied for goddamned Nero. Did he know they wanted to kill her? On second thought, I didn’t give a shit whether he knew or not. What kind of man gave out personal information about a coworker for money?
Filthy spineless weasels. Pond scum.
And I’d been paying him for a chance to get in that ring, for a little taste of control of my destiny, a vent to release some pressure. I couldn’t have known he worked in the building right next door to my office, but as I tore off my shirt in the musty locker room, clear thinking was a distant memory.
With my aggressive wolf so close to the surface, the world seemed more black and white, right and wrong. Todd led killers to my mate. That made him a threat to her. I wanted to kill him.
Instead, I’d take it out on the poor bastard waiting to fight me.
My chest heaved with frustration as I stalked toward the ring, seething for primal satisfaction. A familiar scent hit me between the eyes, as solid as any punch. Jaguar.
Adrenaline exploded through my body. If I weren’t a werewolf, this might’ve been enough pressure to cause a heart attack, but in my current state, all I could think was,
Bring it on, asshole
.
Marv blocked my path. “Wolf. I thought you were resting. You said—”
“Change of plans, Marv.”
He shook his head. “Your eye’s still bruised up, and your ribs—”
“Are fine.” I stared at my opponent’s back, willing him to turn around and face me. “Tell Bob I’m in.”
Marv sighed, but he did as he was told. Bob’s shoulders fell as I approached. He met me at the ropes. “This is a bad idea, Wolf. Go home. Rest up.”
“I’m not going anywhere except inside this ring. You can either ring the bell or get the hell out of the way.”
Bob pulled the ropes up, and I ducked through. The small bloodthirsty crowd roared as I walked toward the center of the ring. The clipboard with bets and bills passed through the bleacher seats like a wildfire. I rolled my shoulders, my gaze still burning a hole in my opponent’s back. He had to have caught my scent, too. He had to know a werewolf had gotten into the ring, but he still didn’t turn.
“Next up, our reigning champ, Wolf, will face off with the champ from the Virginia Brawlers Club, Jaguar.”
He called us to the center, and the jaguar finally turned. His aloof smirk stoked my fury. His cultured, deep voice didn’t help, either. “Well, well. Look what we have here…Wolf.”
I couldn’t wait to beat the ever-loving shit out of this guy. While Bob rambled through the rules, we stared each other down. No one else in the club understood the significance, the bad blood between my Pack and the jaguar shifters.
Bob finished his spiel and we bumped gloves. The top of a lion tattoo peered out on the inside of his arm, uncovered by the glove laces. The letter
N
emblazoned on the lion’s forehead.
Fucking Nero. This jaguar was here for Kilani. I’d kill him.
We circled each other. I ground my teeth into my mouthpiece. He was about my height and build. His jaguar nature would mean he’d be light on his feet and tough to go down unless I knocked him out. He landed a jab to my ribs, reminding me they hadn’t healed yet. I answered with a solid right to his chest, bumping him back a step.
He raised a brow in mock amusement, and then unleashed a combination of punches to my abdomen, working me back toward the corner. The post hit me between the shoulder blades as he landed one more punch, growling near my ear. “You should’ve known this ring belongs to me. Eye of the tiger.”
I shoved him. “But I have the heart of the wolf, asshole.”
I pummeled him with jabs to his ribs, then countered with a right to his temple and a left to his midsection. Bob chased us to the other corner. The jaguar’s breathing wheezed past his lips, his elitist smirk gone.
We were through talking.
The bell rang and I forced myself back to the corner. My towel hung off the corner, pinned between the ropes. I snagged it and wiped my face, wishing for the first time that I had a trainer in my corner. This jaguar was the toughest opponent I’d met in this ring, and having someone apply Vaseline to help the gloves slide off on impact made more sense now. Sadly, I was worlds away from that.. Our ring reeked of mildew, sweat, and blood. Our punches were landed for glory, to silence the inner demons, not for cameras or endorsement deals.
My gaze stayed on my opponent as I bounced my weight on the balls of my feet, keeping my muscles loose. Because I was a werewolf, my extra strength gave me an advantage even over guys who outweighed me or had a few inches over my arm reach. But this guy was a jaguar.
Neither one of us had the advantage of our animal natures. This would be a gladiator battle to the end.
Maybe then I’d be able to walk away from this place for more than a day or two. Maybe this would calm the beast inside of me.
The bell rang and we rushed to the center of the ring. No dancing around this time. I landed a left to his gut and a right uppercut to his chin. He staggered back a couple of steps, wiping away a little blood from the corner of his mouth. My wolf growled, agitated by the scent.
I waved him closer with my gloves, taunting. “Come on, Jaguar. That all you got?”
He charged forward, his right hand impacting my ribs so hard, stars ignited at the edge of my vision. I retaliated with a left to the head, and when his hands went up in defense, I attacked his ribs with a solid combination. The assault continued back and forth until the bell finally clanged.
In my corner, I struggled to catch my breath. Exhaustion soothed my temper and left an opening for rational thought to creep in. I had to defend my ribs. If they weren’t already cracked, they would be soon. How could I protect Kilani with a broken body?
Why was I wasting myself on this fight in a ring? I should’ve been with her, keeping her safe.
Shit.
The bell rang, signaling the third round. We walked to the center, no longer fresh, and I contemplated the fastest way to get out of here and back to Kilani. If I got lucky, I could land a solid punch to his jaw and knock him out.
Or I could take a fall.
Pride twisted in my gut. I’d never been knocked out. But none of this mattered. This ring, it wasn’t my world. Kilani was. Right now, she was my priority, and I needed to get a fucking grip on this anger that I’d allowed to become my master.
I charged the jaguar, punching his ribs, waiting for my opening to hit his face. If I could knock him out, I would. Otherwise, I’d take the fall. This fight was about to end, one way or the other.
“Jason. No!”
My head snapped to the right. Kilani ran toward the ring. Before I could reply, the jaguar’s glove hit my temple. My vision wavered. The room tilted.
And I fell into the darkness.
Chapter Fourteen
K
ILANI
J
ason hit the floor, blood trickling from his nose. The same scene from my vision. And my interfering had caused it. He took his eye off his opponent and… Wait a second…I recognized his opponent.
“Sebastian?” I climbed into the ring as the older guy counted. Sebastian narrowed his eyes, but if he meant to caution me, he could stuff it. “Get me a towel. Now.” Sebastian snapped out of his victory daze and went to the other corner. I yanked the rag from his hand. “What are you doing here?”
“We don’t use our names in these clubs.”
“I don’t give a flipping crap what you use here. I need you to find me some ice.”
A young, mousy-looking guy jogged up the aisle with an ice pack. He handed it to Sebastian without looking at him, all his attention on Jason.
“No one’s ever knocked Wolf down. I told him it was too soon to fight again.”
I placed the ice at the back of Jason’s neck while I cleaned the blood from his face. “Don’t feel bad. He wasn’t thinking straight.” The kid didn’t move. I met his eyes. “Wolf will be okay.” I hoped I was right. Glaring up at Sebastian, I asked once more, “What are you doing here?”
“Beating up a wolf, blowing off steam. What are
you
doing here? I thought that doctor was supposed to be protecting you.”
“He found the informant who told your brother I was here. He went ballistic. We had to get him out of there before he ended up in jail.” Jason’s eyes shifted under his eyelids. I stroked his cheek. “Jason?”
“
This
is the Pack doctor?” Sebastian wiped the blood at the corner of his mouth and almost looked…impressed.
Jason blinked and frowned. “Kilani. Where’s—”
“Jared is parking his truck. I jumped out and ran in here to save you from yourself.”
He chuckled, his swollen lower lip curving into a lopsided smile. My heart stuttered. He reached up to touch my cheek. “You got me knocked out.”
“Sorry about that.” I’d tell him about the vision later. I’d seen him on the ground in the third round, but I had no idea my running in screaming at him was what put him there. Visions were tricky like that. I tipped my head up toward Sebastian. “Help me get him up.”
Jason frowned. “You know this guy?”
I nodded. “Yeah. This is Sebastian.”
He shifted his gaze. “You’re Sebastian?”
Sebastian pulled off one of his gloves and offered his hand. Jason stared at it, making no move to accept his help. I did my best not to punch them both.
To his credit, Sebastian didn’t storm off. “I only offer my hand to a worthy opponent.”
Jason iced him for a couple more seconds before he grudgingly took his hand and got to his feet. “You had to wait until I was distracted to get that knockout.”
Sebastian shrugged. “If I see an opportunity, I don’t hesitate. I take it.”
I slid my arm around Jason’s waist and told myself it was to make sure he didn’t fall over, not because I wanted to hug him and make certain he would be all right. Seeing him go down did something to me. I wasn’t sure what exactly it was just yet, but for now, I wasn’t letting him out of my sight.