sacred wine. Only then will I listen.”
“If I refuse?”
“My children will not go hungry.”
The disciples moved closer.
Erin’s heart raced. Jordan’s hands formed fists.
Grigori smiled paternally. “But your companions will fight, won’t they? It will be no easy death. The man is a soldier, is he not? Dare I say, he is a
Rhun flinched.
“And the woman,” Grigori continued. “A true beauty, but with hands callused from work in the field, and also, I suspect, from holding a pen. I believe that she is most
Rhun glared across the dark congregation toward Grigori at the altar.
“Yes, my friend.” Grigori laughed his familiar mad laugh. “I know that you are here seeking the Gospel. Only prophecy would send you to my doorstep. And perhaps I will even help you—but not without a price.”
Grigori cupped the tainted chalice in his palms and raised it.
“Come, Rhun, drink. Drink to save your companions’ souls.”
With no choice, Rhun stood. On stiff legs, he walked between the pews, mounted the hard stone stairs, and opened his mouth.
He braced himself against the pain.
Grigori came forward, lifted his chalice high, poured from that height.
Bloodred wine struck and filled Rhun’s mouth, his throat.
To his surprise, this black sacrament did not burn. Instead, a welcoming warmth coursed through his body. Strength and healing surged within him, quickening even his still heart to beat—something it had not done in many centuries. With that quiver of muscle in his chest, he knew what was mixed in that wine, but still he did not turn his face away from the flowing chalice.
It filled him, quieting that endless hunger inside him. He felt the wounds that had been opened in the bunker pull closed. But best of all, he was enveloped in a deep contentment.
He moaned at the rapture of it.
Grigori stepped back, taking his chalice with him.
Rhun struggled to form words as the world around him wavered. “You did not—”
“I am not so holy as you,” Grigori explained, looming over him as Rhun slumped to the marble floor. “Not since my excommunication from your beloved Church. So, yes, any wine that I give my followers must be fortified.
Rhun’s eyes rolled back, taking away the world and leaving only his eternal penance.
Rhun woke to hunger on the cold marble, the points of his fangs sharp on his tongue.
Grigori’s cursed wine had been spiked with human blood. Rhun fought against that treachery. But his body, even now, demanded more, insisted upon release.
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
His ears rang, his vision dimmed, and the hand at his cross trembled.
“You didn’t
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.