The guard stepped aside, revealing the first visitor: the pudgy shape of Friar Patrick entered. Rhun stood up, raising his arm in welcome.
So who else had the friar—
A snowy shape bounded past the friar’s legs, almost bowling the man over.
Jordan blinked in surprise at the sight. The creature was a half-grown lion, the size of a German shepherd, with snowy fur, silvery claws, and golden-brown eyes.
As the lion charged toward them down the short hall, Jordan shifted to protect Erin. But the cat immediately pounced on Rhun, knocking him to the floor, licking the priest’s face.
Jordan heard a most peculiar sound.
Rhun was laughing.
Then the cub looked up at Jordan and bounded in one leap, sniffing around his ankles, up his legs. Jordan had to push the inquisitive lion’s nose from his crotch.
“Yeah, hello to you, too.” Jordan swung to Bernard, remembering his story about Hugh de Payens’s love of animals. “Let me guess. Here is your key to your friend’s heart.”
Bernard gazed upon the animal with clear longing. “This beast is so much more than that.”
Jordan dropped down to one knee and rubbed his fingers into the scruff of its immature mane. He would be a stunning adult. The cat responded, bumping his head against Jordan’s forehead.
When their heads touched, a jolt shot through Jordan’s body. The scarring across his shoulder and chest flared with fire.
What the hell?
The golden eyes locked on to his, and Jordan couldn’t look away, sensing a kindred spirit, one similarly touched by the angels.
Bernard was right.
You certainly are much more than you seem, little guy.
Then the lion growled at him, baring fangs.
9:04 A.M.
Rhun reached for the young lion, surprised by his sudden aggression toward Jordan. But before his fingers could grab the animal, the cat twisted and bounded away. Trailing a growl, the animal stalked back out into the hall. The hackles along his snowy back stood on end.
Friar Patrick watched his behavior and held up a hand. “Leave him be! He’s caught some scent!”
The lion turned off the hall into one of the dark bedrooms.
“I was just in there to get a blanket,” Jordan said. “Room’s empty.”
In case his friend was wrong, Rhun retrieved his karambit from the floor and followed the hunting cat. The others hovered behind him.
“Patrick,” Rhun called to the friar, “fetch the guards.”
The lion padded low to the ground, tail swishing angrily. He led the way to a standing antique wardrobe on one side of the bed. The growl died as its gaze remained fixed on the doors.
Something’s in there.
Rhun waited until he heard the guards join them, then edged past the cat.
Jordan came up on the cub’s other side, his sword in one hand. He reached his free hand to the wardrobe’s handle. He glanced to Rhun, his eyes questioning.
Rhun nodded.
Jordan tugged the door open — and a small, dark figure burst out at them. It shouldered hard into Jordan, knocking him back against the bed’s frame. Rhun lashed out with his curved blade, slicing flesh, but only dealt it a glancing blow.
The attacker moved with the preternatural speed of a strigoi . But Rhun caught a flash of a white collar. A Sanguinist.
Bernard shoved Erin to the side, then spun — grabbing one of the guard’s swords and swinging full around, catching the lurker in the neck. The head went flying into the hall, while the body toppled to the floor. Rhun glanced around the room to make sure there were no other threats.
“Lights!” Bernard shouted and pointed his sword. “Open those hall drapes!”
The two guards stripped the heavy silk from the windows. Fresh sunlight flowed into the hall.
Bernard crossed and turned over the head to view the face of their attacker. The cardinal fell back a step in shock. “It’s Father… Father Gregory.”
Rhun drew Bernard away, pulling him toward the office, away from the head of his former assistant. Rhun called to the guards. “Search the rest of the apartment. And the body. Look for any black marks upon his skin.”
The others followed Rhun back into the office, even the cat.
Erin stood, hugging her arms around her chest, her eyes shining with the knowledge that nowhere was safe any longer. Rhun wished that he could comfort her, but she was right.
Bernard spoke, his voice slightly trembling. “Could… could it be the drops of Lucifer’s blood? Maybe he was afflicted like I was. Gregory did bring them to me.”
“No,” Erin said with certainty. “Your assistant would’ve been freed when I destroyed the stones. Like you were. I think it more likely that he brought you those stones on purpose last night knowing the evil would claim you. Some other darkness held him in thrall.”
Confirmation came when one of the guards returned to the door. “The other rooms are clear. But we found a black handprint on the base of Father Gregory’s spine.”
“Legion,” Erin said.
“So his evil still lives.” Rhun had feared as much.
“Apparently so.” Erin stared down the hall. “And if he was spying on our conversation, we have to assume he now knows as much as we do.”
Jordan crossed to her side. “Then we need to get to Hugh before Legion reaches him.”
Bernard nodded. “You have one advantage.”
“What’s that?” Jordan asked.
The cardinal stared down at the lion. “He is a blessed creature.”
Surprised, Rhun glanced to Patrick.
“I did not divulge our secret,” the friar said.
“That is the truth, Rhun,” Bernard said, as if Rhun would trust the cardinal. “But nothing is far from the eyes and ears of those loyal to me, both here and at the Vatican. Besides, a lion on the papal premises is not something to pass unnoticed. Especially this one.”
Bernard placed a hand on the cub’s head, but the animal shook it off.
A clear sign of good judgment .
“He is a creature utterly new,” Bernard said, “and that is why he will fascinate Hugh de Payens.”
The lion rubbed against Rhun’s thighs, a loud purr rising from his chest. Rhun touched his silky head. Smiling, Erin held out a hand. The cub sniffed, then bumped his nose playfully into her palm.
“Where did you find him?” she asked.
Rhun told a quick version of the story, ending with, “I believe it was that angelic fire that spared the cub in the womb and blessed his current form.”
“If you’re right,” Jordan said, his gaze thoughtful upon the beast, “then that would mean it was that same fire that healed me, a gift from Tommy.” He looked down at the cub. “Sort of makes us blood brothers, little fella.”
Rhun stared between Jordan and the lion. Both were indeed blessed from the same font. Perhaps there was a reason they were brought together in the same room. He took hope from that small bit of providence.
But at the same time, he felt a trickle of fear, knowing their adversary was still out there, the dark mirror to the brightness found here. The enemy had managed to infiltrate the very heart of their order, to poison it.
So whom could they trust?
Rhun stared at Erin and Jordan, knowing one certainty.
I can place my trust in them, in their hearts .
March 19, 10:01 A.M. CET
Prague, Czech Republic
Legion felt the severing of that black tendril, cut by silver. As it withered and retracted, it returned his awareness to the darkness of an icy cellar beneath an old building in Prague. Those that lived in the floors above were already dead, their heartbeats forever silenced.
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