The air inside the Cathedral of St. Jude was heavy, a thick tapestry of frankincense, beeswax, and the damp scent of ancient stone. It was an atmosphere designed to make one feel small, to remind the mortal soul of the vast, echoing distance between the earth and the heavens.
Father Jeremiah moved through the sanctuary with the practiced grace of a man who had found his center within these walls. At twenty-nine, he was the youngest priest the diocese had seen in decades, possessed of a voice like cello strings and a devotion that felt, to those who witnessed it, almost frighteningly pure. He believed in the order of things. He believed in the safety of the vow.
But today, the air felt different. It felt electric, charged with a low-frequency hum that made the hair on his arms stand alert.
"The Lord be with you," Jeremiah intoned, his voice echoing up toward the vaulted ribs of the ceiling.
"And with your spirit," the congregation replied.
Jeremiah's eyes swept across the sea of bowed heads, but they snagged—like silk on a thorn—on the third pew.
There sat Celestine.
She was a fracture in the stained-glass perfection of the morning. While the other women wore modest linens and muted tones, Celestine was draped in a dress of deep, midnight velvet that seemed to swallow the candlelight. Her veil was pushed back, revealing features that were too symmetrical to be mere accidents of nature. She didn't bow her head. She didn't clasp her hands. She simply watched him, her lips curved in a phantom smile that felt like a challenge.
In the shadows of the pew, Celestine's fingers danced inside her velvet clutch. She felt the cool glass of a small, teardrop-shaped vial and a lock of chestnut hair tied with a scarlet thread—hair she had surreptitiously snipped from Jeremiah's vestments during a "confession" the week prior.
To Celestine, Jeremiah was the ultimate prize. She didn't see a man of God; she saw a fortress that had never been breached. She was a woman born of a lineage that played with the strings of the heart as if they were harp wires. She had never known a love she couldn't manufacture, and she didn't intend to start now.
"Amor vincit fati," she whispered, her voice a mere vibration beneath the chanting of the choir. Love conquers fate.
As Jeremiah turned to elevate the chalice, Celestine uncorked the vial. A scent, invisible and intoxicating—like crushed jasmine and rain on hot asphalt—wafted toward the altar. She didn't need him to drink it. She only needed him to breathe.
Up at the altar, Jeremiah felt a sudden, violent lurch in his chest. It wasn't pain; it was a vacuum, a sudden emptying of his lungs that required him to gasp for air. The gold chalice felt suddenly, impossibly heavy.
He looked down, expecting to see the wine, but for a terrifying second, the reflection in the silver was not his own face, nor the image of the Christ. It was Celestine. Her eyes, dark and beckoning, stared back at him from the depths of the consecrated wine.
He blinked, and the hallucination vanished, but the sensation remained. It was as if an invisible hook had been buried beneath his ribs, and the string was being pulled—hard—toward the third pew.
The sermon he had prepared, a scholarly reflection on the nature of sacrifice, dissolved in his mind. He looked at the congregation, his throat dry. He looked at his Bishop, who sat in the ornate stall to the side, brow furrowed in sudden concern. Finally, helplessly, his gaze drifted back to her.
Celestine stood up. While the rest of the world remained seated for the liturgy, she rose like a shadow. She didn't say a word, but her eyes whispered: Follow me.
"Father?" a young server whispered, tugging at Jeremiah's sleeve. "The blessing, Father?"
Jeremiah didn't hear him. The sanctuary, his home for ten years, felt suddenly cold and foreign. The only warmth in the universe was radiating from the woman now walking slowly toward the heavy oak doors of the cathedral.
He took a step down from the altar. Then another. The silence in the church became deafening, broken only by the soft thud of his leather shoes on the marble. He was a man walking in a dream, his soul caught in a gilded snare he didn't even realize he had stepped into.
Outside, the sun was setting, casting long, bloody streaks across the sky. As the doors swung shut behind Celestine, Jeremiah followed, leaving the incense and the safety of the shadows behind. He thought he was chasing a woman. He didn't know he was chasing a death sentence.
