“I’ll be fine,” he said. “And you’re perfectly safe here.”
Glad to be doing something besides stewing, he headed out of the tent and across the sand. But the night felt different now. Gooseflesh rose up on his arms that had nothing to do with cold.
Just spooked by Amy, he told himself.
Still, he tightened his grip on the pistol and strode faster—until a shadow rushed by on his right.
He stopped and whirled.
Out of the corner of his eye, he caught a glimpse of something large sweeping past. He didn’t get a good look at it, couldn’t tell what it was, only that it was bigger than any jackal he’d ever seen, the size of a yearling calf, but moving fast and smooth like a predator. It vanished so quickly he wasn’t sure he saw anything.
He looked back at the well-lit tent. It seemed far away now, a single lamp in the darkness.
Behind him, a horse screamed.
8:36 P.M.
Under the cover of the stallion’s cry, Bathory poked the tip of Farid’s dagger through the tent’s fabric and dragged the blade down. Its finely honed edge sliced through the taut material with barely a whisper.
All the while she kept an eye on Amy, who remained seated at the laptop, her focus fully on the tent’s door, her back to the new door opening up behind her.
Bathory pushed sideways through the sliced fabric, slipping silently into the tent. Once inside, she stood behind the frightened young woman, who remained oblivious to her presence. One earbud was still seated in Amy’s ear, the other dangled loosely. Bathory heard the tiny buzz of the CNN report playing on the laptop’s screen.
She was struck by how unconsciously most people moved through their lives, unmindful of the true nature of the world around them, safely ensconced in their cocoon of modernity, where news came 24/7, filtered and diluted, where jolts of caffeine were needed to nudge them blearily through their ordinary lives.
But that was not living.
Deep in her heart, Magor’s hunt stirred inside her, a distant haze of blood, adrenaline, and predatory glee.
That was the true face of the world.
That was living.
Bathory stepped forward, and with a single savage slash under the woman’s chin, she snuffed out that feeble flicker of the young woman’s wasted life. She tipped the body off the camp stool before the spray of blood doused the laptop.
Amy twitched on the floor, too stunned to know she was dead. She managed to squirm a few feet toward the tent’s door before finally slumping in defeat, crimson pooling under her.
Bathory worked quickly. She closed the laptop, slipped it into her backpack, along with the pair of cell phones on the table.
To the side, the tent flap twitched.
She turned to see Nate stepping inside. He took in the scene with a glance, his pistol jerking up to point at her. “What the hell … ?”
Bathory straightened, smiling warmly.
But she was not greeting the young man.
Behind Nate’s shoulder, shadows shifted to reveal a pair of red eyes, shining with bloodlust.
The night’s hunt was not yet over.
She cast her will to her bond mate, a desire summarized by one word.
Fetch.
19
October 26, 8:37 P.M., IST
Desert beyond Masada, Israel
Jordan scanned the sand and rocks one more time, seeking a place to hide, but there was no true cover, especially from the air.
Overhead, the chopper closed in, its blades cutting through the night. He studied it, recognizing the sleek silver nose and smooth lines. He’d only seen pictures of the EC145 online, advertised as the most luxurious helicopter that eight million dollars could buy. It was basically a Mercedes-Benz with rotors.
Whoever was backing Korza had money.
The priest moved to the side to meet the helicopter.
If Jordan remembered correctly, the aircraft could seat up to eight, including a pilot and a copilot. So he faced a potential of eight opponents with no defensible ground. Recognizing that hard truth, he holstered his pistol. He couldn’t fight and win, so he’d have to hope Korza wasn’t lying and they wouldn’t be harmed.
He turned to Erin. “Can you stand?” he asked quietly. He wanted her on her feet in case they had to move fast.
“I can try.”
When she stood, she winced and shifted her weight to her right leg. A wet patch of blood darkened the left leg of her pants.
“What happened?” he asked, kicking himself for failing to note her injury earlier.
She glanced down, looking as surprised as he was. “The wolf. Scratched me. It’s nothing.”
“Let me see.”
She raised an eyebrow. “I’m not about to take my pants off here.”
He freed his dagger from its ankle sheath. “I can cut your pant leg just above the wound. It’ll ruin your pants, but not your dignity.”
He smiled.
She returned the smile as she sat back down on the boulder. “That sounds like a better plan.”
Jordan sliced through the seams with his dagger, careful to keep the blade away from the soft skin underneath. He tore the fabric, then threaded the pant leg down over her sneaker. It was an intimate gesture. He focused on getting it off without hurting her, and keeping his hands from lingering on her bare leg, which looked fantastic in the moonlight. Not that he noticed.
He turned his attention to her injury. The wound ran down her thigh—not deep but long. He stared suspiciously at it and called over to Korza, yelling to be heard as the helicopter reached them.
“Padre! Erin got scratched by that grimwolf. Anything we need to know about that kind of wound?”
The priest glanced at Erin’s bare leg, then back out at the desert, clearly uncomfortable. It was the most priestlike thing Jordan had seen him do in a while. “Clean it properly, and you need have no concerns.”
Erin wiped at her thigh with the scrap of her pant leg.
Before he had time to dig out his first-aid kit, the sleek helicopter landed. Rotor wash pushed sheets of sand in their faces. Jordan cupped his hand over the wound on Erin’s leg to protect it.
Crouched at her side, he stared back over his shoulder.
Three figures, all dressed in black, jumped out of the chopper’s cabin, exiting before the skids had even settled to the ground. Hoods obscured their faces, and they moved impossibly fast, like Korza did in battle. Jordan wanted to run, but he forced himself to stand still when they swept up and surrounded them.
The trio conversed with Korza, whispering in a language that sounded like Latin. Jordan noted the Roman collars of the priesthood.
More Sanguinists.
Erin stood up, and Jordan stood by her.