Teeth sank into Jordan’s forearm, fangs grinding down to bone.
But rather than crippling pain, Jordan felt a blaze of fire erupt along his arm.
The strigoi screamed, releasing Jordan’s arm. It stumbled back, clawing at its face. Jordan watched as flesh blistered and burned, black blood boiling out. It fell, convulsing to the floor as that conflagration spread, swiftly burning through its body.
Jordan stared down at his wounded arm, then over to the giant.
My blood is poison.
Rather than fear, calm suffused him, growing even stronger, reducing the movement in the room to slow-motion. Sounds became muffled. The light took on a golden hue, turning everything hazy.
The strigoi battling Sophia panicked at what had happened to the giant and fled toward the burning tunnel. Christian took advantage of the surprise to cleave the other’s head clean from its shoulder.
Jordan picked up a piece of broken glass from the table, and without a thought, he was upon the fleeing strigoi. He grabbed it by the back of the neck and sliced its throat open from ear to ear, then let the body drop.
Jordan turned to find Erin yanking on his arm, coughing from the smoke, trying to get him to move.
“It’s all coming down!” she yelled at him, her voice sounding like they were both submerged under water. “The rooms above are starting to collapse into the basement level.”
He followed her, collecting Christian and Sophia along the way.
Out in the tunnel, Elizabeth held the first strigoi in a bear hug from behind, while Rhun lashed out with his knife. To Jordan’s eyes, the priest’s arm moved slowly, the blade in his hand catching each mote of light. The splash of black blood seemed to hang in the air.
As that last body fell, Erin drew Jordan along. She pointed past Rhun, toward the door near the base of the stairs. “We have to make for the tunnel to the old town square!”
As he watched, an oak rafter broke away from the roof and crashed to the stone floor, scattering fiery embers. More smoke washed into the tunnel.
“We’re too late!” Erin yelled.
Erin choked on the smoke, her lungs burning, her eyes weeping. Then Rhun was there, sweeping his jacket over her. Luckily, the Sanguinists did not need to breathe.
“Stay low,” Rhun warned her.
She obeyed and lifted the edge of her rain-soaked collar, breathing through the damp fabric. Ahead, Christian and Sophia led the way, using their strength to forge a path through fiery timbers and tumbles of stone. More debris rained down as the rooms above collapsed into the tunnel.
Farther down the passageway, Elizabeth crouched by the door to their only exit, clearly struggling to get the way open. Beyond the woman’s shoulders, flames filled the stairwell, turning it into the mouth of a massive fireplace.
Erin glanced behind her, coughing hoarsely. Jordan walked leadenly in her wake, seemingly oblivious to the smoke and heat. She remembered what had happened to the huge strigoi, picturing that flesh boiling forth with blood. She had observed such damage before, when angelic blood touched a strigoi.
Was that further proof of Jordan’s angelic nature? And what did it mean for the man she loved?
A loud tearing of metal drew her gaze forward.
Elizabeth had ripped the door off its hinges. “Hurry!” she called out, brushing fiery embers from the shoulders of her habit. The countess immediately set off into the waiting darkness, vanishing away.
Erin feared the woman might very well use this opportunity to escape.
And I wouldn’t blame her.
They all rushed into the tunnel and fled along it, chased by the smoke.
Shoulder to shoulder, Christian and Sophia kept the lead, following Elizabeth’s path, clearly watching for any new dangers, any new attack.
Rhun continued to shadow her, followed by Jordan.
As the light faded behind them, Erin dug into her pocket and removed a metal flashlight. She clicked it on, and a small beam of light pierced the darkness.
She coughed hard, her lungs still aflame, bobbling the light. A crashing rumble echoed from behind. She pictured that alchemists’ tunnel collapsing completely.
Finally, a door banged up ahead, and light flowed into the tunnel.
Sunlight… glorious sunlight.
She sped toward it. With each step, the air was fresher, cleaner, colder.
Once close enough, Erin spotted Elizabeth holding the door open for them.
So she hadn’t fled.
They tumbled gratefully out into a sunlit alley — bloody, half-burnt, but alive.
She immediately swung around to face Jordan, concerned that he had not spoken a single word during their entire escape from the tunnels.
She touched his cheek, but his blue eyes were unfocused, staring off into some middle distance. Panic rose up inside her, but she fought it back down.
She kept her palm on his burning cheek. “Jordan, can you hear me?”
He blinked once.
“Jordan… come back.”
Jordan blinked again, a shudder passing through him. Slowly focus returned to his eyes. He stared down at her. “Erin…?”
He sounded unsure, as if he didn’t truly know her.
“That’s right,” she said softly, wounded and scared. “Are you okay?”
He finally shook himself once like a dog, then swept his gaze across the others. “I’m fine… I think.”
“Perhaps he was disoriented from the smoke,” Elizabeth offered.
Erin wasn’t buying it. Whatever was wrong with him, it had nothing to do with the smoke. She took his arm, parting his torn sleeve to examine the ragged bite mark. Already the wound had begun to heal, the flesh knitting together as if he had been attacked days before, not mere minutes.
More disconcerting, she discovered a red line that curled from his biceps down to the wound, forming curlicues around the edges of the healing flesh. She tugged the remains of his sleeve higher, revealing the source.
It extended from the old scarring from when Jordan was struck by lightning. When he was a teenager, he had that fractal pattern tattooed over as a reminder of his close call, creating an almost flowery decoration.
But this crimson tendril was new.
She ran her finger along it, feeling the heat along that trail. “Your tattoo is growing…”
Jordan pulled his arm back and shook his sleeve down.
“Tell me what’s happening,” she demanded.
“I don’t know,” he mumbled, turning slightly away. “It started back when Tommy touched me, healed me. At first, it was just a burning sensation.”
“But since then?”
“It’s been stronger since that strigoi stabbed me in Cumae. And stronger again when I was bitten just now.” Jordan wouldn’t meet her eyes.
She took his hand. At least, he let her hold it.
As if he sensed her distress, Rhun touched her gently on the back.
“We must leave,” Elizabeth warned as sirens wailed in the distance. “The sun will soon be down.”
But where could they go?
Legion studied the burning building as the fires set by his forces spread. He watched red flames dance against a gray sky, remembering this place. It was in a room in this structure that he had been trapped inside that green diamond. Through the tracery of smoke from the six hundred and sixty-six inside him, he drew out snatches of memory of that time.
… an old man with a white beard walks on the other side of green glass…