Page 23 of Cunning Revenge


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“Thought you wanted to keep moving, put more space between us and whoever else is coming. He won't stop. Dr. Gardner is crazy, delusional. He keeps rambling about needing his own army of super soldiers. You, your team, youarethat army of super soldiers, and he has to know you're here with me.”

Voodoo wasn't denying any of that, but at the same time, Indigo was weak, sick, battling infections that were healing way slower than he would have liked, and walking on a broken leg just to prove to him that she was worth not tossing aside.

She would also tell him to ditch her as soon as she felt like she was a liability.

“I can go further. I’ll tell you if I can't,” she offered.

“Liar,” he muttered, but he started walking again. If she wanted to be stupid and cause herself more damage, then that was up to her. Indigo was an adult, she was capable of making her own decisions and facilitating that seemed important.

For a while they walked in silence.

Each step Indigo took made him cringe. It was the weirdest thing because he knew that she wasn't in any pain. While she’d winced when she took that first step with the makeshift crutch, that was it. He hadn't heard her cry or moan or groan or anything. It wasn't the walking on the broken leg that had him worried, it was the fact that she was still running a high fever, still had wounds oozing pus, and was nowhere close to well.

Actually, strike that.

What had his gut tied in knots was that he hadn't been able to heal her.

Somehow, he’d managed to make her a little better, but Voodoo was pretty sure that had nothing to do with him and his extraordinary abilities. The IV antibiotics and fluids had helped to ease back the infections ravaging her system enough to get her somewhat functional, the antibiotic ointment he’d been slathering on her wounds, and the near obsessive cleaning of them he’d done had all worked to make her a little less sick.

Medicine was helping her, not him.

That hadn't happened to him in a decade.

Of course, they had a well-stocked medical supply closet at the mansion. He had pretty much everything a hospital would have, and he used it whenever his teammates needed it. But more often than not, he didn't need what any doctor would have to use.

Had something happened to him? Did he still have his ability? It wasn't that it didn't work on other people who had received Dr. Gardner’s experimental drugs because he’d healed all five of his teammates before. It just didn't seem to work with this particular woman. Had something been changed in the drugs over the intervening ten years that made her immune?That didn't seem to make sense since Dr. Gardner wanted a team of super soldiers, then he wanted one of them to be able to heal the others.

Once they got back home, he was going to have all seven of them, him, his team, and Indigo, get some blood samples taken so Whitney could analyze them, try to figure out why Indigo couldn’t be cured. Figure out if something was wrong with his ability.

Figure out how he did what he did.

For ten years he’d wondered how it worked, and when they’d gotten Whitney, realized she was on their side, he’d thought that those answers were within reach.

Only she had no idea how his healing worked.

Worse, she’d told him that was never supposed to be a side effect of the drugs. That they were supposed to help him heal himself, not other people.

Lost in thought as he was, keeping only a sliver of attention on his surroundings because he knew that they likely wouldn’t be alone out there, he wasn't paying as much attention as he should be.

So he wasn't prepared for Indigo to cry out.

Spinning around, Voodoo reached for her, but didn't catch her in time, and she crumpled to the ground, the makeshift crutch falling down beside her.

“Sorry,” she whispered, her hands massaging somewhat tentatively at her broken leg.

“Pain?” he asked, concerned that the infection was somehow messing with her system and letting her feel pain she would usually be immune to.

“No. Of course not. It just … gave out,” she said, seeming surprised, although he had no idea why. Her leg was broken, and she didn't seem to be comprehending that.

“Because you shouldn’t be walking on it,” he rebuked, nudging her hands out of the way so he could take over. “Here, let me take a look.”

“Do you think you can heal it more? I don’t want to slow us down, and I'm scared more of them are coming.” As she spoke, her gaze darted about as though she expected one of those men to come rushing at them at any second.

“No one is close by, I'd know if they were,” he assured her. While she nodded, she didn't look convinced. Placing his hands on her leg, he tried to do what he normally did, but from the way Indigo was watching him, it wasn't working.

“I don’t feel that warmth this time,” she told him.

“It should be working, it always works.” He huffed. Concentrating, he tried harder, but since he didn't know how he did what he did, didn't understand the mechanics behind it, he didn't really know how to force it.