He reached back, pulled his cassock’s hood low over his eyes, and faced the silent desert—hoping they hadn’t seen his fangs begin to lengthen.
16
Dying along with Hunor, Bathory writhed in pain, curled over her stomach, straining against the helicopter’s straps. Her fingers clutched hard to her belly, trying to stanch the flow of blood, the tumult of gore through rent flesh.
She felt her blooded bond mate’s life escape. She longed to follow it, to gather that spirit to her bosom and comfort it in its journey.
But he was already gone, his pain fading from inside her. She stared down at her pale palms. She was whole—but not unwounded. Hunor’s last whispery howl of release had left her hollowed out as surely as if she, too, had been gutted.
That last cry was answered by another.
Magor mourned loudly in the cargo hold behind the cabin, calling out for his twin, the anguished mewling of one littermate for another. The two pups had been cut from the belly of a dying she-wolf. They were a gift from Him, blood-bonded to her during a dark rite, becoming as much a part of her as the black tattoo on her throat.
She twisted in her seat and placed her palm against the wall that kept her from Magor, wanting to go to him, to pull him close, to hold together what they once shared, as if cupping a feeble flame against a stiff wind.
How could she?
Three were now two.
The words from an old Hungarian lullaby crooned through her, bringing with it the promise of security and peaceful slumber. She gave that to Magor.
Magor calmed, his love entwining with her own, merging them together.
Two would survive.
For one purpose.
Vengeance.
Fortified, she collected herself and stared across the cabin.
The helicopter fled through the deep night, leaving the ruin of Masada far behind. Her remaining men sat subdued and silent in the seats across from her. Although spattered with blood, none of them had been wounded.
Tarek muttered Latin prayers, a reminder that long ago he had been a priest. As his lips moved, his cold eyes stared at her, having witnessed her prostration and grief. He knew what that meant.
Only one creature was capable of slaying a grimwolf in his prime.
Korza was still alive.
Tarek’s gaze flicked to her shoulder. Only then did she note the fear burning there. She touched her fingers to her upper arm—they came back wet.
With blood.
Lost in Hunor’s agony, she must have ripped herself against a bolt sticking out of the neighboring wall, tearing her shirt and skin.
It was a shallow wound.
Still, Tarek jerked back warily from her bloody fingers.
Scarlet tinged with silver.
Even a drop of her blood was poison to him and all others like him, a curse born out of the mark on her throat. Another of His gifts. The curse in her blood both protected her from the fangs of His armies and was the source of that constant pain in her veins, dull but always there, never abating, never forgotten, flaring with every beat of her heart.
She wiped her fingers and bound her wound one-handed, using her teeth to tighten the knot.
Next to Tarek, his brother, Rafik, bowed his head in clear reverence as Tarek resumed his Latin prayers.
Others simply stared at their bloodstained boots. Their bonds with the fallen soldiers went back decades, or longer. She knew that the men blamed her for those deaths, as would He. She dreaded the punishment He would mete out.
She stared out the window, picturing Korza down there.
Alive.
Anger burned hotter than the pain in her blood.
Magor responded, growling through the wall.
But first she had a duty in Caesarea. She pictured the archaeologist waving her cell phone in the tomb. She had recognized that look on the woman’s face: excitement mixed with desperation. The archaeologist knew something.
But what? A clue about the book’s whereabouts? If so, had she been able to transmit that information out before the mountain dropped on her?
The only answer lay in Caesarea.
Where again blood would flow.
This time, with no Sanguinist to stop her.
17
“Korza?”
The soldier’s harsh and impatient voice broke through Rhun’s thoughts as he faced the desert, hidden in the depths of his hooded cassock. He struggled to hear over the wet, beckoning sound of the man’s heart.
“Turn around,” the soldier said, “or I will shoot you where you stand.”
The woman’s heart beat faster now, too. “Jordan! You can’t just shoot him.”
Rhun considered allowing the sergeant to do just that. It would be easier. But when had his path ever been easy?
He faced them, showing them his true nature.
The woman stumbled back.
The soldier kept his gun leveled at Rhun’s chest.