His ears picked out the twin heartbeats at the back of the church.
He staggered to his feet, shaking with desire, turning inexorably toward the thrum of life, like the face of a flower turning to the sun.
“Do not deny your true nature, my friend,” Grigori whispered seductively behind him. “Such measures of control must always snap. Release the beast within you. You must sin greatly in order to repent as deeply as God demands. Only then will you be closer to the Almighty. Do not struggle to withstand it.”
“I shall withstand it,” Rhun gasped out hoarsely.
His ears rang, his vision dimmed, and the hand at his cross trembled.
“You didn’t always,” Grigori reminded him. “What did you see when you drank my wine? Perhaps the defilement of your Elisabeta?”
Rhun turned and lunged for him, but Grigori’s troops fell upon him, ready for such an assault. Two boys held each of his arms, two encircled each leg, another two pulled at his shoulders.
Still, he fought, dragging them all across the marble floor.
Paces away, Grigori laughed.
“Rhun!” Erin called to him. “Don’t!”
He heard the fear in her voice, in her heart—for them all.
Grigori heard it, too. Nothing escaped him.
“Look, Rhun, how she knows to fear you. Perhaps it will save her, as it did not save your Lady Elisabeta Bathory.”
Rhun heard the gasp behind him, one of recognition, coming from Erin.
Shame finally drew him to a stop, down to his knees.
Grigori smiled over him. “So even your friend knows that name. The woman whom history would curse as the Blood Countess of Hungary. A monster born out of your very love.”
48
October 27, 5:57 P.M., MST
St. Petersburg, Russia
Cold hands clutched and held Erin to the rear pew. Frigid bodies pressed from all sides. She forced herself to stay still, not to yield to fear, and most of all, not to provoke an attack. Jordan leaned against her, his body as tense as hers.
The next moment would determine everything.
Rhun turned from his pursuit of Grigori. He met her gaze. She read the raw hunger there, his eyes almost aglow with it. In the pain of his grimace, the points of his fangs punctured his own lips. He clearly fought a battle against his bloodlust.
From Rhun’s reaction, she assumed that Rasputin had tainted the wine with human blood.
Resist it, she sent silently to him, keeping her eyes locked upon his, refusing to look away, to face the beast inside him and his shame.
At last, Rhun’s shoulders sagged and he sank to his knees. He raised his folded hands before his nose. Past his fingers, he still locked gazes with her. His mouth moved in a silent Latin prayer. She read those bloody lips, knew that prayer of atonement from her days spent kneeling in the dirt as punishment.
She shook off those who held her and sank to her knees at her pew.
In unison with Rhun, she recited that Latin plea for forgiveness.
All the while she stared into Rhun’s eyes.
At the end, his head finally bowed—when he raised it again, his fangs were gone.
He whispered to the church: “You have failed, Grigori.”
“And you have triumphed, my friend. God’s will be done.” Rasputin did not sound disappointed. If anything, he sounded awed and reverential.
Grumbling, the congregants retreated from the pew, from behind Erin and Jordan.
Sergei patted Jordan’s shoulder before stepping away. “Perhaps later.”
Once Jordan was alone with Erin, he turned to face her as she rose from her knees and returned to her seat. His breath whispered warm against her cheek. “Are you all right?”
Not trusting herself to speak, she simply nodded.
She watched Rhun slowly regain his feet, still wobbly.
If she understood what Rasputin implied, it sounded like Rhun had defiled Elizabeth Bathory. Erin knew that name, one that echoed from the bloody legends of the dark forests of Hungary and Romania.
Elizabeth Bathory, also known as the Blood Countess, was often referred to as the most prolific and cruel serial killer of all time. In the 1600s, over the course of decades, the wealthy and powerful Hungarian countess had tortured and killed many young girls. Estimates of the number of her victims ranged well into the hundreds. It was said that she bathed in the blood of her victims, seeking eternal youth.
Such stories smacked of vampirism.
Did Rhun create that monster? Did he have those young girls’ blood on his hands? Was that what haunted him every time he drank his transubstantiated wine?
A tragic sigh drew Erin’s attention to the altar, back to the present. “You mentioned a gift on the car ride over here,” Rasputin said, pointing to the leather tube over Rhun’s shoulder. “Let me see it, and we shall see what it buys you.”
Rhun pulled the tube from his back.
Rasputin motioned to Erin and Jordan like an excited schoolboy. “Come, let us all see.”
As Erin left the pew with Jordan, Rasputin’s acolytes cleared the altar, stripping it down to bare marble. Once finished, they were waved away to make room for Rhun, Erin, and Jordan.
She climbed the altar, the air richer in incense and the scent of burning candles.
Once they were all gathered around the altar, Rasputin rested his fists on his hips and looked avidly at the long brown leather tube. “Show me,” he ordered.
Rhun ran a sharp nail through the papal seal and lifted the top off. He stared inside, his brows pinching together, then shook the contents onto the marble surface. A rolled-up piece of old canvas slid out and landed on the altar, unfurling slightly.
Rasputin leaned closer, and with gentle care, respecting the age of the canvas, he rolled it wide for all to see.
Erin gasped at the painting revealed under the candlelight. She recognized the work immediately. Painted by the deft hand of the Dutch master Rembrandt van Rijn.
It was an original.
It depicted Christ performing his most powerful miracle.
Raising Lazarus from the dead.
6:04 P.M.
Grigori dropped to his knees in supplication before the altar, before the oil painting, and one by one, his dark congregation followed suit.
Rhun remained standing, staring down at the image of Lazarus in his stone tomb.
It was a stunning rendition of that moment, a secret known to Rembrandt and recorded in his painting. The work was one of three known to exist.
In beautiful, evocative strokes, Rembrandt revealed Lazarus, clad in his death shroud, rising from his granite sarcophagus. To the side, family members started back in horror. These spectators to the scene held up their hands as if to protect themselves from the man they had once loved. To them, this was not a joyous moment of resurrection. For they knew what had killed Lazarus.