Authors: James Rollins,Rebecca Cantrell
Tags: #Mystery, #Thriller, #Horror, #Suspense, #Adventure, #Vampires, #Historical
In the lower right checkerboard, one of the outlines of the subterranean bunkers was in the exact shape of the Odal rune.
And this particular one wasn’t just
next
to a lake.
It lay sunken underwater.
Just like Atlantis.
October 27, 3:55
A.M
., CET
Ettal, Germany
In front of the computer screen, Rhun stood near enough to Erin to smell the simple soap Bernard stocked at his Jerusalem apartments. Her long hair left a trace of warmth in the air when she swung it away from her face.
Jordan stepped between them, blocking his view of her again. Rhun knew it was done on purpose. The soldier kept his hands out at his sides, ready for anything, including a fight.
Irritation flashed through Rhun, but he forced it away. Jordan was correct to enforce a space between him and this young woman. Erin Granger, with her sharp mind and compassionate heart, was a very dangerous woman indeed. And Rhun needed all the distance he could muster.
Rhun turned his attention to Brother Leopold and to the task at hand. “Is there a triad in residence?”
“
Natürlich.
” The monk’s rosary clacked against the desk when he rose. “Nadia, Emmanuel, and Christian are here. Shall I fetch them?”
“Nadia and Emmanuel only,” Rhun said. “I will be the third.”
“What’s a triad?” Jordan asked, eavesdropping on their conversation.
Leopold lifted the receiver of a black telephone and explained. “Sanguinist warriors often work in groups of three. It is a holy number.”
And a perfect fighting unit
, Rhun added silently.
Aloud, he said, “I will go with two others to this bunker and search it.”
Erin crossed her arms. “I’m going, too.”
“We’re a package deal,” Jordan added. “Isn’t that what the Cardinal said?”
Rhun drew himself up straight. “Your orders were to aid me in the search, which you have done. If we are successful, we will return here with the artifact.”
Jordan gave an unconvincing smile. “I believe the Cardinal said that
we
were the trio.
Woman, warrior, and knight
. I’m all for getting reinforcements, but not replacements.”
Brother Leopold dialed four numbers and spoke into the receiver—but his eyes had locked on to the soldier. He had heard what was spoken, knew what it meant, understood now what they sought.
“Rhun,” Erin said. “If the … artifact is in this bunker, my help led you there, and maybe you’ll need my help once you’re inside, too.”
“I have survived for centuries without your help, Dr. Granger.”
She didn’t back down. “If the Cardinal is correct about the prophecy, this is no time for pride. From any of us.”
Rhun blinked. She had blithely named his greatest fault.
Pride
.
Such a fault had once brought him low—he would not let it happen again. She was right. He might very well need their help, and he could not be too proud to accept it.
“We must all do what we were called to do,” Erin said, echoing something the Cardinal had told him.
We must each humbly bow to our own destinies.
Erin added, “The book demands no less.”
Rhun cast his eyes down. If the fulfillment of the prophecy had begun, the three of them together must seek the book. As much as he wanted to, he could not leave Erin behind.
Not even for her own safety.
Or for his.
4:02
A.M
.
A new map covered the large computer screen, a modern road map of the mountainous terrain of Garmisch-Partenkirchen. The lake and its hidden bunker lay about forty miles into that rough terrain. On the glowing monitor, Erin traced the thin white line that threaded between dark green hills and ended at the small alpine tarn.
“Is that a road?” she asked.
“An old dirt track,” Brother Leopold said. “The vehicle you arrived in cannot navigate it. But—”
The office door clicked open behind them.
Jordan’s hand went to the butt of his submachine gun.
Rhun flowed back into a ready stance.
Erin simply turned. Were the others right to be so on edge, even here, where she had felt safe? At that moment she sensed her inadequacy to deal with the dangers ahead.
Two black-cloaked figures swept into the room like an icy wind: swift, relentless, and cold. Only when they stopped moving did Erin recognize them as Sanguinists.
The first, surprisingly, was a woman, outfitted in tailored leather armor, similar to Rhun’s—except she wore a thin silver belt that looked like it was made of chain. She had braided her shiny black hair and pinned it up in a bun. Her severe face was darker-complected than Rhun’s, but equally implacable. She rested a gloved hand on the hilt of a dagger that was strapped to her thigh.
Her eyes swept the room, then she offered the slightest bow of her head to Erin and Jordan. “I am Nadia.”
The other, a man, stood two steps behind the woman.
“And I am Emmanuel,” he said, his accent Spanish.
He wore a black cassock, unbuttoned down the front, revealing leather armor beneath and a silvery hint of hidden weapons. Blond hair hung loose past his shoulders, far too long for a priest, and a pink scar ran down one chiseled cheekbone.
Rhun spoke hurriedly to the two in Latin. Erin listened, not showing that she understood. Jordan maintained his usual guard, his palm resting on the stock of his shouldered submachine gun. He plainly didn’t trust any of them.
Erin followed his example and feigned interest in the map on the screen as she eavesdropped.
Rhun quickly related everything in terse Latin: about the prophecy, about Erin and Jordan, about the book they sought and the enemy they faced. As he mentioned the word
Belial
, both Nadia and Emmanuel tensed.
Once finished, Rhun turned to Leopold. “You’ve readied what I asked?”
Leopold nodded. “Three bikes. They’re already gassed and waiting for you.”
Erin glanced back to the map, to a thin white track that wound through the mountains. It seemed they weren’t going to be traversing that torturous route via car or truck.
“If you are ready,” Rhun asked, taking Erin and Jordan in with a single glance.
Erin could only nod—but even that gesture was false. She hated to leave the familiar territory of dusty books, leather chairs, and the cold certainty of the computer screen. But she was committed.
As Leopold led them back up the stairs, Jordan hung back with her, touching her wrist, allowing his hand to linger.
He bent close to her ear, his breath chasing across her cheek. “Anything I need to know about what they just said?”
Of course, her act hadn’t fooled him. He knew she had been eavesdropping. She struggled to answer his question, but her mind was too busy registering his proximity—and how a part of her longed to close the last inch.
She had to repeat the question in her head before she answered. “Nothing important. He just filled the others in.”
“Keep me apprised,” he whispered.
She glanced over at his eyes, then down to his lips, remembering how they’d felt against hers in Jerusalem.
“Dr. Granger?” Rhun called from the top of the stairs. “Sergeant Stone?”
Jordan gestured for her to proceed ahead of him. “Duty calls.”
Rather breathless—and not only from the climb—Erin hurried toward the Sanguinists.
Once outside, she found the night much colder, the fog much thicker. She could barely make out the outline of their Mercedes sedan.
As they rounded past the car, Jordan whistled appreciatively.
Three black motorcycles, accented with red piping, sat parked on the dried grass ahead. They didn’t seem like much to Erin, but Jordan was clearly impressed.
“Ducati Streetfighters,” he commented happily. “With magnesium rims and what looks like carbon silencers on the exhaust. Nice. Apparently it’s good to be pope.”
Erin had a more practical concern, comparing the number of passengers and the number of bikes. “Who is riding with whom?”
Nadia raised the corner of her mouth in a tiny smile, which went a long way toward humanizing her. “For an even weight distribution, I shall take Sergeant Stone.”
Erin hesitated. She still didn’t fully understand the role of a female Sanguinist. If Rhun was a priest, was Nadia some sort of nun, equally sworn to the Church? Whatever the circumstance, the look she gave Jordan was anything but chaste.
Jordan apparently had his own thoughts on the matter, crossing to one of the bikes. “I can drive.” From the edge to his voice, it was clear that he wanted to drive one of these bikes. “And I prefer that Erin and I stick together.”
“You will slow us down,” Nadia said, her dark eyes twinkling with amusement.
Erin bristled, but she knew, after watching Rhun drive the sedan, that her and Jordan’s reflexes were no match for a Sanguinist’s.
Jordan must have recognized it, too, sighing heavily with a curt nod.
Emmanuel crossed and hooked a leg possessively over one of the bikes, not saying a word. Jordan followed Nadia to another.
“You shall ride with me, Dr. Granger,” Rhun said, motioning to the third motorcycle.
“I don’t know if—”
Rhun stepped past her objection and crossed to the bike, mounting with a flourish of his long coat. Twisting in his seat, he patted the leather behind him with one gloved hand. “I believe you stated ‘the book demands our best.’ Those were your words, were they not?”
“They were.” She hated to admit it and climbed behind him. “Shouldn’t we be wearing helmets?”
Nadia laughed, and her bike roared to life.
4:10
A.M
.
Rhun tensed when Erin’s arms slipped around his waist. Even through his leather, he felt the heat of her limbs wrapped low over his midsection. For a moment he fought between elbowing her away and pulling her closer.
Instead, he stuck to the practical requirements of the moment. “Have you ridden before?” he asked, keeping his gaze fixed to the fog-shrouded dark forest.
“Once, a long time ago,” she said.
He felt her heart race against his back. She was more frightened than her tone indicated.
“I will keep you safe,” he promised her, hoping it was true.
She nodded behind him, but her heart did not slow.
Jordan gave a thumbs-up from the back of Nadia’s bike as she throttled her engine to a muffled roar. Emmanuel simply gunned his bike and tore away, not waiting.
Nadia followed after him.
As Rhun urged his bike forward more gently, Erin’s arms tightened around him. Her body slid forward until it pressed against his. Her animal warmth flowed into his back, and his body fought against leaning into it.
He must not permit baser instincts to control him. He was a priest, and with God’s help, he would fulfill his mission. He murmured a short prayer and focused on Nadia’s rapidly disappearing red taillight.
He sped faster—and faster still.
Black tree trunks whipped past on both sides. The blue beam of his headlight penetrated the heavy blanket of fog. He kept his eyes on the uneven road. One misjudgment, and they would crash.
Ahead of him, Nadia and Emmanuel poured on more speed. He matched it.
Erin buried her face between his shoulder blades. Her breaths came quick and shallow, and her heartbeat skittered like a rabbit’s.
Not panicked yet, but close.
Despite his prayers and promises, his body quickened in response to her fear.
4:12
A.M
.
Jordan leaned hard into the curve. Nearby trees blurred into a long line of black topped by dark green. Wind stung his eyes. His jacket flapped behind him.
Nadia opened up the throttle on the next straightaway, a rare stretch along this twisting dirt course. He flicked a quick glance over her shoulder at the speedometer: 254 kilometers per hour. That came out to a little more than 150 miles per hour.
It felt like flying.
He felt more than heard Nadia’s laugh as she pushed the bike to go faster.
Unable to stop himself, Jordan matched her enthusiasm, laughing along with her, ebullient and feeling free for the first time since Masada.
Nadia leaned the bike over for another curve. His left knee skimmed a fraction of an inch above the gravel, his face not more than a foot from the rocks that tumbled by under them. One wrong move from either of them, and he was dead.
A part of him hated to be at the mercy of her skill.
No more than a spectator to her dexterity.
Still, he smiled into the wind, tucked in tight against her cold, hard form, and simply abandoned himself to the ride.
October 27, 4:43
A.M
., CET