Pyotr met him at the door. The tall man looked stricken, his face white. “No one has seen her.”
Vadeem stifled a curse and instead pushed past the man of God and stalked out into the street. “Kat!”
A scream rent the night sky and speared right into his soul.
Kat had bit the man, right through his leather glove. He cursed, let go.
She screamed.
His hand came back hard against her face, crushing her teeth against her lips. “Tiha!” He yanked her head to his chest, sour breath in her ear. “I’m in a very bad mood, and you don’t want to make it worse.”
Her knees buckled, leaving her heart in her throat. She fought the muzzle of his hand, very aware of his cruel grip on her upper arm, dragging her back, away from the church, into the dark web of trees and vines tangled behind the church property.
Away from Vadeem and any chance of rescue.
Branches tore at her face, her jacket, her backpack as he finally packed her in a headlock and dragged her along, his other hand still clamped over her mouth, clogging her breathing. He’d dressed appropriately in black, at least from his jeans to his squared-off shoes, and his legs were moving fast.
Her heartbeat roared in her ears as she stumbled against his strides, her muscles void of strength. He yanked and hissed at her to keep up. His fingers bore into her face, the pain burning her cheeks as the forest closed around them. After a moment, she heard only his heavy breaths and the sound of her own panic raging in her chest. Wildly, she shook her mouth free, then realized, with dread, he’d released her easily.
They were so far into the claw of forest, no one would hear her if she screamed.
“What do you want?” Her voice rasped tight and high.
“Answers.”
He dragged her along, deeper into the forest. The night sky winked out as the tree line tightened above them.
“I don’t know anything.”
He stopped and threw her down in a snarl of brush. Twigs scraped her face, her wrists. The backpack thudded to the earth.
“Where is the necklace, the crest?”
Her mind blanked. She shook her head. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
He towered over her, the biggest man she’d ever seen, dark bulk against a midnight forest. Anger gnarled his face, hooded in shadow, yet vivid in her horrified imaginations. He leaned forward, and the wind washed the smell of alcohol and repugnant body odor across her face. She turned away, gasping.
“The Crest of St. Basil. You know where it is. Tell me.”
She shook her head, fear consuming her words, her breath.
He knelt beside her, and she turned cold when he touched her hair. “I know you have the book. You know where it is, and you will tell me.”
“I… I haven’t read it.” Her whisper disintegrated in the torrent of his anger. She braced herself as he bent even closer, his lips next to her ear. “Are you ready to die? I don’t think Brother Papov was.”
Shock clogged her chest. The image of the young monk, his hands twisting as he talked about his sheltered, safe life hit her like a slap. Oh, God! Save me now, if ever!
Mercifully, the man backed away, began pacing, looking back toward their broken trail, as if expecting someone.
Oh, please let him think Vadeem is hot on his tail!
Kat gathered her feet under her.
“Give me the book.” The hulk turned, and she bristled. Adrenaline had already flushed into her legs. She sucked in a breath, and forced herself to pick up the backpack, the bag that held something more precious than Anton’s journal, the one book that might hold the sketchy answer fragments to her piecemeal past. It held her Bible, the only book that held answers without end—and her heirloom picture.
“You want it?” She asked as she pounced to her feet. “Here!” She flung the bag at him, not waiting to see where it landed, and bolted.
The branches whipped her face, bushes tore at her jacket, but darkness was her ally. Terror ignited her muscles. She flew through the dark woods, one step behind her heart.
Crashing and the curses of a man hampered by bulk spurred her to recklessness. She ran without thought. She slammed into trees, tripped, scrubbed her palms, tore her pants. Her mouth bled from the hard slap of a branch. But, as distance muffled the threats, she knew she’d won.
Thank the Lord, she’d inherited speed from one of her ancestors.
The clasp of forest eased. She shot toward a gray patch of light. Victory filled her lungs. She burst out of the brush, onto pavement, into freedom.
Brakes squealed. Burning rubber reeked the air. Kat turned into the headlights of an oncoming car and froze.
She left her scream to echo and dove for the ditch, knowing she wouldn’t make it.
“You can stop pacing.”
Vadeem turned, jabbed a finger in Pyotr’s face. “Back off.”
Pyotr didn’t flinch, obviously accustomed to dealing with people strung tight with stress. Instead, he gripped Vadeem’s shoulder “She’s going to be fine.”
Vadeem shrugged him off. “She’s not going to be fine. Look at her.” He didn’t have to turn around and point at the pale woman on the rickety wooden hospital bed to know he’d made his point. Kat looked like she’d been through a war, and beyond. Swollen lips, one of them cut, a scrape along the other side of her face to match the now yellowing bruise from the Moscow thug, bloodied hands, and a spidering of red welts and scratches up her arms and along her neck. It turned him inside out to look at her. He braced two hands on the wall and shuddered.
But she was alive. Thank heaven, she was alive. And he’d done some thanking today. Need brought him to his knees beside her bed, trembling. He didn’t actually address the Almighty, just a general gratefulness to the Being up there who had delivered her safely out of the Zhiguli’s path. Obviously, she’d hit the ditch, hard. Two hours had passed and she hadn’t roused. But the CAT scan showed no brain swelling. He touched his forehead to the cool wall. “I don’t get it. What was she doing out on that road?”
The driver of the car had called the ambulance. It wasn’t hard to connect the dots when the ambulance screamed by the church, toward the dirt road outside of town. On a hunch, Vadeem had followed it.
He’d nearly cried when he saw them lifting her crumpled body onto the stretcher.
Pyotr sighed and sat down on the bed opposite Kat’s. The bed groaned with his bulk. “Maybe the person who attacked her in Moscow came after her—”
“1000 miles away?” Vadeem turned, wincing. Kat moaned and he skidded to his knees beside her bed. “Kat?”
Her chest rose and fell in the rhythm of a deep sleeper. Vadeem curled his fists into the sheets. Despair stretched his voice thin. “What if she doesn’t wake up?”
“She’s a Christian, Vadeem. She has faith in God, and God is not going to abandon her—on either side of heaven.”
Vadeem looked up and met Pyotr’s gaze. The pastor had his hands folded, elbows on his knees. He leaned forward, earnest. “I am the Resurrection and the Life. He who believes in me will live, even though he dies.”
Vadeem glared at him, not needing Pyotr’s religious rhetoric at the moment. He needed reassurance, not platitudes. He struggled for breath in his constricting chest, unable to find a comeback.