The Blood Gospel
Suddenly that door opened.
Tommy sat up. He couldn’t stand very well yet.
A familiar figure strode inside, sending a chill through Tommy. It was the boy who had kidnapped him from the hospital. The strange kid walked in and flung himself into bed, sprawling next to Tommy, as if they were best chums.
This time he wore a gray silk shirt and a pair of expensive-looking gray pants.
He sure didn’t dress like a normal kid.
“Hello.” Tommy twisted to face him and held out his hand, not knowing what else to do. “I’m Tommy.”
“I know who you are.” The boy’s accent was strange and stiff.
Still, he shook Tommy’s hand, pumping it firmly, formally. He had the coldest hands that Tommy had ever felt. Had he been shipped to some country above the Arctic Circle?
The boy let go of his hand. “We are friends now, no? So you can call me Alyosha.”
Friends don’t try to kill friends.
But Tommy kept silent about that and asked a more important question. “Why am I here?”
“Is there somewhere else you would rather be?”
“Anywhere else,” he admitted. “This feels like a prison.”
The boy turned a thick gold ring around on his white finger. “As cages go, it is a gilded one, no?”
Tommy didn’t bother pointing out that he didn’t want to be in any cage—gilded or not—but he didn’t want to offend the kid, nor did he want to chase him off by being rude. To be honest, Tommy didn’t want to be alone again. He’d even take this weird kid’s company at the moment—especially if he could learn anything.
“When I was your age, I lived in one of the most gilded cages in the world.” The boy’s soft gray eyes traveled around the room. “But then I was set free, as you are.”
“I don’t call this free.” Tommy gestured around the room.
“I meant free of the prison of your flesh.” The boy sat up, crossed his legs, and reached for a game controller. “Many aspire to that.”
“Are you free?” Tommy reached over and picked up the other controller, as if this were the most natural thing to do.
The boy shrugged and started an Xbox game on the screen. “After a fashion.”
“What does that mean?”
Alyosha faced him as the game bloomed to life on the screen. “You are immortal, no?”
Tommy lowered his controller. “What?”
Alyosha prompted the game—Gods of War—to start. “You know this now, no? It was what I tried to teach you. Out in the desert. So you would understand.”
Tommy struggled to understand, seeking some frame of reference as the game’s theme music began, full of drumbeats and brass chords. “Are you immortal, Alyosha?”
“There are ways that my life can end. But if I avoid them, yes, I will live forever. So we will be friends for a very long time.”
Tommy heard a hint of the loneliness in that voice.
He spoke softly, despairing. “So I’m like you, then?”
Alyosha shifted as if this part of the conversation bothered him. “No, you are not. In all the long history of time, there has only ever been one other like you. You, my friend, are very special.”
“Is this other one still around?”
“Yes, of course, he is still around. Like you, he cannot die or take his own life.”
“Ever?”
“Until the end of time.”
Tommy took another long look around the room. Would he be a prisoner here forever? He wanted to laugh at the absurdity of it, but some part of him knew that Alyosha had told him the truth—but maybe not the full enormity of it.
Tommy understood that on his own.
Immortality was not a blessing.
It was a curse.
40
October 27, 6:55 A.M., CET
Beneath Harmsfeld Lake, Germany
With Piers hauled over his shoulder, Jordan ran several steps sideways, chased down the concrete tunnel by the screams of pursuing strigoi, feral and terrifying.
He yelled back to Erin, who trailed twenty yards behind.
“Hurry!”
“Keep going!” she called back, both irritated and scared.
That was Erin.
To hell with that.
By now, Nadia had reached the far leg and vanished down it, aiming for the air lock with Rhun, limp and poisoned, in her arms. Apparently she felt no obligation to wait for the two, slower humans. And she didn’t seem too fond of Piers either. She probably wasn’t coming back.
Jordan lowered Piers to the concrete and freed his submachine gun. “Sorry, old man.”
Piers opened faded blue eyes. “Meine Kinder.”
My children.
“I’ll come back.” Jordan hoped he’d be able to keep that promise.
Before Jordan could come fully to standing, Piers seized his hand, his grip incredibly strong, still capable of breaking bone. “Icarops. Sie kommen. To help. I send them.”
From the broken doorway of the neighboring vestibule, a black cloud of bats burst forth into the tunnel, churning, squealing, and swooping over their heads.
Thousands poured into the passageway.
Jordan ducked under the wings, overwhelmed by the creatures’ stench, tasting it on the back of his tongue. He crouched with Piers against the wall.
Erin had almost reached him, one arm shielding her face against the winged onslaught.
But this time their fury was not directed at her.
She forged through them, ducking low.
Behind her, the black horde struck the strigoi like a raging torrent. Bats battled monsters in a kaleidoscope of black blood, fur, and pale skin. Amid the chaos, silver flashed like lightning. Some of the icarops fell, but more swooped in to take their places.
Jordan saw one huge bat sweep up and wrap its wings around one strigoi like a monstrous cloak.
Screams rang louder.
Then a jetting flame burst upward in the heart of that dark storm. A whoosh and a crackling filled the air, followed by a terrible screeching. A cloud of foul smoke rushed toward the three onlookers.
Burnt flesh and petroleum.
Flamethrower.
Piers moaned in sympathy for his children as the chorus of screams threatened to burst Jordan’s ears.
But Erin finally reached him.
Jordan grabbed her arm and pushed her around the corner. “Make for the air lock! I’ll be right behind you!”
She nodded, breathing hard.
He collected up Piers and sprinted after her. He prayed that the remaining bats could buy them enough time to get free of this cursed place. After that, the sun ought to protect them.
At least, it was a theory.