“The police know what our car looks like,” Fana said.
Johnny stared out the window. “I don’t see any police,” he said. “How do you know?”
“I told you,” Fana said. “I know things.”
“Can you do anything about it?” Caitlin said.
“I’ll try.” Fana closed her eyes.
Fana visualized her parents’ Orbit, a deep, dark black. She imagined the Washington State tag instead of the California license tag on the PT Cruiser, and a random jumble of numbers and letters. A heartbeat later, she felt the police car pass them.
Fana opened her eyes in time to see an Arizona highway patrol car speed ahead in the lane to the left. Fana was relieved, but she didn’t allow herself to be distracted from her larger task. The police were not nearly as dangerous as an unknown entity.
“Shit,” Caitlin whispered. “First chance we get, I’m dumping this car.”
“That’s where you can drop me off,” Johnny said. “I’m ghost.”
“We’re staying together,” Caitlin said.
“Nobody’s keeping me anywhere I don’t want to be,” he said. “Believe it.”
Fana sighed and stared out her window again, searching the faces. The bickering between Caitlin and Johnny and the combined mental noise on the highway threatened to swallow Fana, but her mind ducked beneath the noise and kept probing.
Like Teka always said, noise couldn’t hurt her.
I’m going to find you, Fana thought, projecting into the haze.
You can’t hide from me.
Michel slipped on his earpiece.
Telephones were a nuisance, but his father couldn’t be reached any other way. Papa’s telepathic skills were so rudimentary that he might as well have had none, and his two attendants were worse. Only his mate would be able to meet him across the miles for easy conversation.
Michel could barely hear his father’s connection over the wind as he raced after the white car ferrying his precious cargo. The vehicle was out of his sight, but Fana’s vibration was strong. This close to her, sometimes Michel forgot to breathe. He felt her clumsy probes skitter across his consciousness, repelled so gently that she could not feel him. Her probes were delightful.
She fit him. The only one. Their minds would touch over hundreds of miles.
“Where in the world are you, Michel?” his father’s voice said on the flimsy earpiece. “Romero and Bocelli said the family was dead when they got there. And you evaded them.”
“I changed the plan,” Michel said. “Too many would have died. It would have brought her too much pain.”
“Where in the world are you?”
“On my way.”
The car was close. Michel heard the angry thoughts of Fana’s two friends as they argued, misguided but faithful. Michel hoped he would not be cruel to them. Fana swept the road with another probe, and Michel’s toes shivered.
“Fana is brilliant, Papa. I am fully concealed, yet she has taught herself to sense my presence. She cannot find me, and yet she knows I am here. She makes me work like no one else. The things she will learn!”
“Where is she?” his father said.
Michel could see her again. Fana was staring out the window.
Still looking for him.
“I am gazing at her lovely profile right now.”
“Be careful, Michel. Wait until you reach us before any games begin.”
Did all parents treat their offspring like perpetual children?
“Of course, Papa. You’ve said nothing about my triumph!”
Michel had killed the family without entering their rooms, wielding only his thoughts, as precise as lasers. All three had died at the same instant, pleasantly dreaming an identical dream about their last night together. No person could match such a feat except Fana herself.
Stefan sighed. “The bloody writing…was unnecessary.”
It was exactly like Papa to ignore so much success and seek out a fault! Bocelli and Romero had recovered twenty-five bags of diluted Blood at the house. Blood stolen two thousand years ago was being recovered one drop at a time. Had there ever been a more effective servant of the Blood than he?
“If our time has come, why should we hide?” Michel spoke as Most High, not as a son.
“Those are the old ways,” Stefan said, his voice placating. “So much spectacle is distasteful. It’s best not to alienate our friends.”
“They did not suffer, but their example had to be striking. They were thieves. ‘By stealing…they break out…And blood toucheth blood,’” Michel said, reciting from Hosea. Next, he recited the Letter of the Witness: “‘Let he who stands over the Blood…’”
“I’m familiar with the passages,” his father said. “Since you’re quoting the Letter, remember Chapter 4, verse 2: ‘Any hand that toucheth the Blood with impure heart….’”
…will be damned to walk forever accursed. Michel had memorized every page as a boy. What child would not delight in learning that a two-thousand-year-old Gospel had already been written about him? That burden made his father’s rebuke sting all the more.
“So…I am impure?”
“Of course not, Michel. But do not reveal yourself yet. Your ways are foreign, and you’ll raise questions. Romero and Bocelli should have done the killing. Conventionally.”
Michel’s father’s voice was chopped by the wind, nearly inaudible.
“What kind of ruler, Papa, expects others to stain themselves with blood on his behalf?”
“Most I have known!” Stefan said, and laughed. But why shouldn’t he be laughing? Untold numbers of men over time had awaited the New Days, only to be disappointed. God’s glory would unfold through Michel at last. And Fana.
“Give me your location,” Stefan said. “I’ll send Romero and Bocelli.”
“No,” Michel said. “If I cannot bring her alone, I do not deserve her.”
“Don’t count on hiding from her,” Stefan said. “Find a way to harness her, Michel.”
What else could he expect his father to say? “I have no need to sully her will,” Michel said. “Her every thought is naked to me.”
Soon, the rest of her. Michel knew he could have had her last night if he had persisted, and their union would have been complete. Fana’s body was at its ripest, a newly formed woman. Waiting was excruciating. But soon enough.
“When will I see you?” Stefan said.
“By sunset.”
“I am eager beyond words to meet her. Benedetto sia il Sangue.”
“Papa! I’ve almost forgotten the most exciting news…”
But his father was gone. Michel almost activated Voice Redial, but he decided to wait. He would save the best news for his return.
Michel’s mother refused to look upon Stefan or speak to him unless she was mentally compelled, which caused his father daily regret. But Michel would not be doomed to relive his father’s tragic entanglement. Fana would stay with him willingly. Forever.
Michel sped up, racing in the narrow space between two vehicles. He was so close to Fana that he could hear her heartbeat. Michel revved his engine.
Fana looked around, surprised. Michel grinned at her.
Fana smiled back at him, the very face of Paradise. She lifted her lithe fingers in a small, tentative wave. Hi, Charlie, she mouthed, and her caring eyes brightened every part of him. Be careful, she said, tapping gently on the glass.
Would Papa ever believe it?
His dear Fana loved him already.
SANCTUS CRUOR
And let he who stands over the Blood
Take every worldly Measure
To wrest this Blood from the hands of the wicked…
—Letter of the Witness
Chapter 1, verse 5
Twenty
Outside of Nogales, Mexico
10:30 a.m.
When the knocker sounded against the double doors, Stefan watched from the balcony as the two doorkeepers scattered to greet the visitors. The bright unifor
ms of red and white were the only visual sign of the future splendor of Sanctus Cruor’s first church in North America. The regal coats looked out of place among the debris and tarp that lay in place of pews, but soon this church would gleam with gold, a beacon to visitors worldwide.
When the double doors opened, bright midmorning light unveiled sheets of dust motes floating in the vast space like blizzard snows.
Bishop Ian Paddock was pink-faced, winded from the steep walk outside. Cardinal Amadi Owodunni followed him, his crimson cardinal’s robe aflame on black skin. Paddock lifted his crimson robe at the collar to invite in a breeze but Owodunni was from Nigeria and thus more accustomed to the sun. When the two visitors paused at the bowl to cross themselves, Paddock applied the holy water as if to relieve the heat.
He should take better care of his delicate mortal heart, Stefan thought.
Guided by the doorkeepers, Paddock and Owodunni carefully walked around a pile of lumber left behind by the work crew. The pews would be built of rare, expensive Amboyna burl imported from Southeast Asia. The floors, polished Italian marble.
Paddock and Owodunni were prime Sanctus Cruor followers—one with the media’s ear, the other sitting on the edge of St. Peter’s chair. Owodunni enjoyed worldwide popularity, and Paddock was both a friend of the pope’s secretary and well-liked by a wide array of conclave voters.
If these servants proved wise and true, mortal concerns would trouble them no more.
The doorkeepers drew pearl-handled handguns from the white leather shoulder holsters they wore above their robes, a ceremony that was as practical as it was theatrical. The guns startled Paddock and Owodunni. They did not yet understand.
If Stefan had known that Michel was bringing the girl today, he never would have scheduled a meeting with Paddock and Owodunni. But despite Fana’s importance, this meeting could not wait. The New Days could not wait.
Michel would be ready to lead when the girl walked beside him. The Letter had prophesied it. Soon, miracles would be broadcast for the world over to see, and there would be only one church. After that day, all weapons could be laid to rest. All the world would bow in obedience and give thanks, at last, to its proper Master.
Until then, there was much business to attend to.
Stefan waved to his guests from above. “Do not judge us by our disarray,” he called in English, their common language. “There is much left to do here. Please follow my good men to our temporary rectory.”
The rectory was more finished, with gleaming African mahogany walls that still smelled of the wood’s motherland. Scrolls of lambskin parchment lined the walls, written in Ge’ez. The sole painting was a ten-foot rendering of the golden Sanctus Cruor cross with a fist-sized ruby at its heart, representing the Blood. The painting stilled Stefan’s heart with its beauty.
The men’s eyes were hungry as they studied the rectory from his doorway.
“Do come in,” Stefan said.
Owodunni sank to both knees, presenting himself in the manner reserved for the pope. Paddock followed the African’s bow. “Most Excellent,” they said, heads lowered.
Stefan knew enough about both men to have them excommunicated—even arrested, in Paddock’s case. Paddock had curbed his taste for rough carnal games with prostitutes only recently, after being named bishop. Owodunni was a corrupt thief, and he defied doctrine by working secretly with African leaders to distribute condoms throughout the continent; Stefan couldn’t guess which actions his church would frown on more. Both men were flawed in their church’s eyes, but they were believers in the Blood. Both had tasted the Blood’s healing.
“Please rise, my friends,” Stefan said, lifting his arms to fan out the sleeves of his crimson robe. Stefan sat in the leather chair beside his library table and crossed his legs. “For the moment, let us forget ceremony. I’m sorry your trip was such a hardship.”
Both men protested that their travels had been no trouble, although Stefan knew they had spent hours stranded at the airport in Mexico City, and the mountain road to the church from Nogales was dusty and bumpy, still unpaved. Both of them were lying and didn’t realize it. Casual sin was so easy, even to the vigilant.
“The conference went well?” Stefan said. The International Health Alliance meeting in Mexico City had been attended by religious leaders from throughout the world, the occasion that had brought the two men to Stefan’s doorstep.
Owodunni grinned. “Praise God, there is finally cooperation from the United States.”
“My calls are returned immediately, Most Excellent,” Paddock said. “Extraordinary.”
Stefan’s friends at the CDC had helped mend relations between the U.S. and the clergy-led health alliance—for a price. Stefan and the CDC had history: The same friends had helped manufacture the U.S. government’s case against Glow, fanning talk of bioterrorism. Stefan had learned the art of recruiting mortal allies a hundred years ago. The United States government and Sanctus Cruor had widely separate agendas, but it was always useful to have friends.
Paddock and Owodunni were two of his favorites.
“I owed you thanks for my last visit with His Honor,” Stefan said. “Lolek was so ill. If not for your assistance…” He gestured delicately that it would have been too late.
Paddock’s jowl trembled. “I am only grateful to have been of service. God rest his soul.”
Lolek’s death still grieved Stefan. The pointlessness of it all! If Lolek had embraced the Blood when he’d met him in Poland, Sanctus Cruor would have had the papacy years ago. But Lolek had been stubborn from the start, with no stomach for talk of Cleansing.
Stefan opened the crystal decanter on the library table beside him. He poured three shots of tequila, a drink he far preferred to wine. Stefan flung back his glass and basked in his throat’s stinging. His visitors drained their glasses too, although their faces told Stefan that they loathed the taste. They were natural followers.
“Our departed friend was misguided,” Stefan said. “Lolek misunderstood God’s will. But times will soon be different, and God’s will won’t be mistaken. One day, the pope will never die.”
“By the Lord’s grace,” Paddock said. His eyes were afire.
“What a blessing,” Owodunni whispered.
Stefan poured a second round. “Our sitting pope is a ship’s captain with neither map nor compass. He revels in his ignorance of the Witness.”
Owodunni shook his head. “Such a sad dilemma.”
Paddock sighed, exasperated. “His rigidity is notorious, Most Excellent.”
“So when he, too, passes away from us…” Stefan said, “…the New Days will begin.”
The construction workers pounded below, and Michel and his bride were on their way to lead the future church. The moment was a marvel, as much as the day the Letter of the Witness had first come to his hands. His acquisition had been as unlikely as the farmer’s unearthing of the Coptic Gospels in Nag Hammadi, Egypt, or the goat herders’ discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls in the West Bank. Those frivolous texts were dwarfed by the prize Stefan had found in Ethiopia.
Stefan had spent hundreds of hours in prayer to ask God why he had been chosen. When he’d found the Letter, he had not attended church since he was a boy, having run away to fish the Red Sea when he was fourteen. A series of ventures had taken him from France to Yemen and, finally, to Ethiopia, where he had made a living in the coffee trade in Harer.
But guns had sold better than coffee. It had been 1894, and war had been on the horizon. Italy had been encroaching upon Ethiopian soil, and Stefan had sold guns to all customers with currency or barter.
One day, Stefan and an Englishman who’d smuggled Remingtons with him had been ambushed by bandits. The mortally wounded Brit had begged Stefan to take him by horseback to a shaded area near Harer’s wall, where he’d said he had buried a chest. The man had never given his name, only repeating that he’d wanted to retrieve something his father had given him. His father, he’d said, had been a soldier and
a man of God, at odds with his conscience after the Battle of Maqdar in 1868.
Return what you find to its people, he’d said. And then he’d drawn his last breath.
Stefan had dug to retrieve a chest from the earth, hoping for treasure. Instead, he’d found a document so old that its parchment had felt like dust to his fingers. The pages had been written in Ge’ez. Stefan had realized that it must have been one of the sacred texts taken by English troops during the battle twenty-six years earlier. Hidden somehow.
Stefan had planned to take the document to London to have its value assessed, but one night his houseboy had seen him studying the parchment, and he’d offered to translate the ancient, holy script. For four hours, by lamplight, Stefan had first heard the Letter of the Witness.
And his life had been forever changed.
I am only a storyteller, not worthy of worship, the document had begun.
I was trading in the Jewish city of Jerusalem in the days before Passover with my stores of wine, grapes, figs and sheaves. I bought an ass to ride to Alexandria, but the beast was ill. I was arguing with the farmer when there came a commotion. There are many executions during Passover, to bring fear to the people. That day, the Romans executed two thieves and a rabbi. I was sorry for their agony, and I wished I could set their feet down on the earth to relieve their suffering. But what could one man do?
I slept against a wall because I had no lodging. A Roman soldier came to me in the night, running and short of breath. I expected him to berate me, but he treated me as a brother, showing me a goatskin skein full of blood. When I held out my finger, he poured a drop of blood to my fingertip that was as cold as rainwater. “Is this blood from a man or a beast?” I asked the man in great wonderment, very much afraid that the blood he carried would soon be mine.
The man said to me, “I woke from sleep with a message from God: The crucified Jew named Jesus will walk again. His Blood must be preserved.”
The soldier said he knew not what the vision meant, but he had felt a great Spirit pushing him to the place where the rabbi still hung in the dark. His arms were no longer his own. His legs were not his own legs. He climbed on stones to be near the corpse, which did not move or make a sound. He punctured the rabbi’s thigh and drained Blood into his pouch. All the while, he said he trembled like a dried leaf in the wind. And there his story ended.