I had this downloaded for ages before getting around to it, put off by that horrible cover – and though the rest of these issues' covers weren't actual Greg Land, they were in much the same vein. The interiors, mercifully, are another matter, quite capable of giving us a gorgeous image of a Mucha-style Domino – but then cutting to her in pyjamas, clutching a pug, looking profoundly morning after. Not that the book is averse to her being sexual, mind; there's something very refreshing in the way the opening annual quite incidentally shows her having flings with friends, exes, random beefcake, without making it anything like a big deal, because...well, it isn't, is it? After that, though, we're back to the story proper which, as in the first volume, doesn't necessarily hang together terribly well. If the mission for which the Wakandan contact is hiring Domino and co. is meant to be deniable, why do they turn up in a massive and unmistakably Wakandan ship to hire her? Why would Domino be so sceptical of the existence of trolls when she's had mutual team-mates with X-Factor's Pip the troll? How come Morbius is against the vampires destroying humanity because it would leave him no food, but the other vampires don't see that as a problem? And so on, really basic holes you wouldn't expect from a writer of Simone's experience and calibre.