“Doesn’t look like the little guy wants to go into that creepy place by himself,” Jordan said. “Can’t say I blame him.”
Rhun tried to resist, but the cub refused to unlatch from him.
The voice returned, slightly softened by amusement. “It seems your companion will not enter without you, priest. So you may all enter, but you may not proceed beyond the first room.”
Jordan patted the cub. “Good going, bud. And here I thought I might get to sit this one out.”
Led by Rhun and his cat, the group edged one by one over the threshold.
Erin studied the antechamber beyond the door. Two torches hung from iron brackets, revealing a space the size of a two-car garage, carved out of the granite of the mountain. An archway opened on the far side, but plainly they weren’t allowed to pass through there.
At least, not yet.
From that archway, a figure stepped out to join them. “Be at ease,” he greeted them, but he kept a wary distance. “I am Hugh de Payens.”
His appearance and demeanor surprised Erin. She had expected to confront a medieval hermit, someone dressed in simple rough robes, someone like Francis of Assisi. Instead, the man wore khaki-colored pants and a thick woolen sweater. He looked like a farmer or a fisherman, certainly not a former priest.
She studied his round face, his wide brown eyes, his mop of curly black hair. In spite of his cautious expression, he looked kind. He held his thin hands clasped loosely in front of him, plainly carrying no weapons.
“It has been long since the Order of the Sanguines has troubled itself with me,” he said, his voice rough and deep, as if he didn’t use it often. He stared at Elizabeth, then gave a slight bow of his head. “And I see you’ve brought someone from my distant past. Be welcome, Countess Bathory.”
“It is Sister Elizabeth now,” she corrected him, touching the cross on her chest.
He lifted an eyebrow in surprise. “Truly?”
She gave him a demure shrug.
“Then these are strange times indeed,” the man said. “And it seems Countess… rather Sister Elizabeth is not your group’s only intriguing companion.”
Hugh de Payens approached, staring down at the cub. Once close to the cat, he eyed Rhun. “May I?”
Rhun backed a step. “He is his own master.”
“Well spoken,” Hugh said, holding out a hand for the cub to sniff.
The lion looked back at Rhun, who gave him a small nod. Only then did the cat lean forward and huff at the man’s outstretched fingers. Seemingly satisfied, the cub licked the hermit’s hand.
Hugh beamed at the lion. “Remarkable,” he murmured. “Something wholly new. A creature tainted not by darkness, but rather illuminated by light. May I ask how you came by him, Father Korza?”
Rhun looked surprised that Hugh knew his name, but Erin suspected the man knew much more than his pleasant demeanor implied. One didn’t survive for centuries, hiding from the Sanguinist order, without honing some talent at subterfuge
“I killed his mother in the desert in Egypt,” Rhun explained. “She was an injured blasphemare.”
Hugh straightened. “I imagine she was one of those unfortunate beasts caught by that holy blast in the desert.”
“That’s right,” Rhun said slowly.
Even this surprised Erin. Only a handful of people knew about that event. Most of them were right in this room. So this hermit was more attuned to current events than anyone would have guessed.
“After I slew his mother, the cub came to me,” Rhun explained. “I brought him away to keep him safe.”
“By the rules of your order, you should have killed the child. Yet, you did not.” Hugh shook his head in mock disapproval. “Did you know that the Buddhists consider lions to be bodhisattvas—sons of the Buddha? They are thought to be beings who have attained a high level of spiritual enlightenment. They stay in this world to free others from their suffering. You are fortunate indeed, Father Korza, that this beast chose you. Perhaps it’s because you wear the crown of the Knight of Christ.”
Hugh eyed Erin and Jordan. “And travel with the Warrior of Man and the Woman of Learning.”
Jordan spoke up. “How come you know so much about us?”
His question was ignored as Hugh ran his fingers along the cub’s side, eliciting a steady purr. Only then did he rise again and face Jordan, but instead of answering his question, he held out a hand.
“May I see the gemstone you carry in your pocket?”
Jordan took a step back, but Erin grabbed his elbow. There was no reason to keep any secrets, especially as this man seemed to know theirs anyway. And they needed any answers that Hugh de Payens might provide.
“Show him,” Erin urged.
Jordan dug around in his pants pocket and pulled out the two pieces of the broken green stone.
Hugh took them and nudged the two halves together in his palm. He held the stone up to the torchlight, as if to verify the design infused into its surface. “It’s been centuries since I last saw this stone, when it was intact, uncorrupted.”
He lowered his hand and passed the pieces back to Jordan. He paused only long enough to cock his head, staring at the design twined across Jordan’s skin. “It seems you are indeed a fitting bearer of this particular gem,” he said cryptically.
Erin used this statement as a way to broach the reason they had traveled here. “We are looking for two more stones. Very much like this one.”
Hugh smiled at her. “You are mistaken. The other two are nothing like this one.”
“So you know of them?” Rhun moved closer. “We believe that they are key to—”
“To fulfilling your latest prophecy.”
“Will you help us?” Erin asked.
Before Hugh could answer, the cub let out a mewling cry of simple hunger.
“It seems there are more immediate concerns to address first.” Hugh gestured toward the archway that led farther into the mountain. “Join me in my home. I have dry towels, along with food and wine for those in need of nourishment.”
He rubbed the lion’s head with one knuckle. “And of course, meat and milk for you, my friend.”
Erin followed Hugh de Payens, as he led them deeper into the mysteries locked within this mountain.
But can we trust him?
31
Rhun dropped his hand on the lion’s head as they followed Hugh through the second doorway, which revealed a winding staircase heading up, cut through the same stone. As the group ascended, they passed landings leading to other levels, each sealed with stout doors. He pictured the labyrinth of tunnels that likely coursed through this mountain.
But their host led them ever upward, holding aloft a smoky torch.
The stairway ended at another door, this one wood strapped in iron.
“Open!” called Hugh through it.
The thick portal swung wide. Rhun followed Hugh over the threshold into what appeared to be a church. To the far left was the tall door they had spotted through the waterfall. It was presently closed, but he still heard the muffled roar beyond, picturing what it must look like when those massive double doors were thrown open upon that cascading veil, the waters lit by the eastern sun when a new day dawned.
Through the windows on either side and above the door, he could catch some glimpse of that spectacle, but the glass was stained, the work of a true master. The circle over the door displayed a perfect rose, its petals blooming in every shade of red. The smaller flanking windows showed flowering trees, their bowers full of doves and ravens, their shadows hiding deer and wolves, lambs and lions, all living in harmony.