Vera was about to sleep sweetly. That was the reason she liked to be in patrol so much: you're at risk, having nothing against this cold world but a gun and a prayer, and nothing more to protect yourself than your tent. You're at risk, every second may be your last, and it makes every second so sweet.
And she knew, that Sanya would soon return after his watch, and throw some firewood in their campfire, so that they could have a few pleasant moments... She always thought of the L-d as of someone kind enough to let His soldiers go a little off the rules sometimes.
Half asleep she heard the snow creaking under someone's foot. She could certainly tell it wasn't Sanya - whoever walked to her tent wasn't walking surely. That someone was sneaking.
Wide awake now, Vera held her breath, and her fingers started a slow and quiet journey towards her Kalashnikov's grip.
“Attention all posts,” the silence exploded with a voxed voice on her radio set. Vera shuddered. Her noise masking was ruined.
“Dagnabbit!”
“We've got report about Snegoorochka in quadrant seven and moving. Full combat readiness. All patrols, report immediately, over.”
The canopy moved apart. Vera grabbed her rifle and pointed it to an ink-black night outside the tent.
“Pavlov, clear.” a radio roll call started.
“Sechenov, clear.”
She saw her. Pale haggard girl, with a beautiful young face, white and blank as snow.
“Vygotsky, clear.”
Barely noticeable nicks on her forehead – someone tried a shotgun on her, but with pseudolife of that level only silver could work, and even then not always.
“Luria, we've got a pseudobear den here, monitoring, over.”
White burial shroud was shabby, even burnt at some places. Someone tried a fire on her, but it takes much more than just a bonfire...
“Leontyev, clear.”
And those eyes. Completely black eyes are already scary by themselves, but when it comes to pseudolife, spirits and everything that has something to do with Nav', a phrase "the eyes are the window to the soul" gets much more literal. Yes, Snegoorochka have a soul - impenetrable like a well, going deep under ground. There are very few creatures in the world more ruthless and more dangerous than the Snegoorochka.
Holding tight to her useless rifle, Vera slowly took her radio:
“Voronina, contact.”
But there was a hope. There's always hope, but especially now it was pretty solid. There's always this forty day gap in which poor undead virgin becomes a monster.
“I...” Snegoorochka's voice was husky, she clearly found it hard to speak “am... sorry...”
She pounced on Vera. Vera tried to fight back, but with no result – it was like trying to bend a frozen log. She tried to cry for help, but the cold fell upon her like a pillow, making her voice just as hoarse. Scalding cold hands slid under her sweater.
“Don' get me wrong” Snegoorochka whispered over her ear “I'm just so cold...”
And then something happened. Snegoorochka recoiled, holding her right hand and groaning in pain. Wasting no time on thinking, Vera took a deep loud breath and sat up, pointing Kalashnikov at the monster.
“I'm sorry,” she creaked again, “I'm so sorry. I didn't want to.”
She started crying with no tears coming out of her eyes. And then she showed Vera her right palm with a cross-shaped burn on it. Snegoorochka never allow her prey to get away alive, but someone did warn folks about her, right? Vera realized that the girl was still fighting.
“Voronina, status!” It appeared the radio was working all that time. “Is Golovanov with you? Voronina, do you copy?”
Despite her name, Vera was never that religious. But she knew, that as the Inquisitor she's bound to have at least one of those moments when a huge forefinger pierces the sky pointing at you, and you hear a thunder-like voice, saying: this is your moment.
Vera had to do it very carefully. She smiled:
“Well ain't y’made a fuss, hoss...”
“You’re local? Like me?”
“Yup. What's your name?”
“Nadya.”
“Vera. Nadya, do you remember your life?”
“Well, I... der was dat... druid an’...”
“We'll find ‘im. Dat's not what I'm askin' 'bout. Do you remember your life?”
Vera sat a bit closer to the girl. She felt goosebumps covering her skin, and her hair covering with rime. The closer Snegoorochka was to maturity, the closer she was to mastering her main weapon – the cryokinesis. Nadya looked in her eyes. And Vera saw a dim flare of a moonlight on Kalashikov's barrel behind her back. That was Sanya. Trying very hard not to let Snegoorochka notice him, Vera as if between times put her finger on her lips.
“It's... hard... fog... cold. I don't. Dey took it. My life. Betrayed me. Dey were warm. Like you. Need warmth. Inside 'em. Cootchie-cootchie-coo, ya lil' one...”
Vera saw a terror in her eyes. She knew it wasn't really Nadya who was slowly reaching her arm towards her neck.
“God's Name!” she said loud and confidently. There was a big chance, that this girl didn’t even taste human. That meant that she was weaker against forces of Heaven, that a pseudolife usually is.
Nadya shuddered, looking like she was going to puke.
“Sorry, hoss. I know what it is. I know how you feel. An' I must say, I envy you. Your strength. You’re very strong. An’ you’re still a human bein', no matter what y’tink you are. An' dis cold, dat tortures you, dis lust for blood – it's not you.”
“But...”
“An’ y’might tink dose people who sacrificed you – y’tink dey deserve hell, right? Well, maybe dey do. But it's only for de Lord...”
Nadya curled up into a ball, moaning silently in pain.
“...to decide.”
Outside the tent Sanya was gathering all the minimum they were going to need to chant Nadya off.
“And y’might tink, dat de Lord...”
“Hisssss-s-s”
“...hates you. But it's not Him, who hurts y’now. Y’ight tink He turned away from you, but it's really you, who've been forcefully turned away from Him.”
Slowly, like she was disarming a bomb, Vera touched Nadya's hair. A painful freezing pierced her fingers, but at this time there was nothing more important, than the lost child to be caressed and consoled. With her left hand, Vera took off a chain with her cross.
From the darkness outside the tent Sanya looked at her and showed a thumb up. They were ready.
“Y’did good, girl. Y’did good. An' we'll save you. An' I'm sorry.”
Vera lassoed her by her neck with a silver chain with a cross and pulled her out of the tent. Nadya's new nature resisted, she was twisting and turning and swinging her limbs, trying to bite or scratch Vera and screaming smothered. Vera knew it wasn't her, and that the cross around Nadya's neck weakened her enough so she could be handled.
“Circle?”
“Check!” Sanya rushed in and grabbed Nadya by her legs.
“Candles?”
“Check! Are we really doing this?!”
“Yeah! De Book?”
“Check!”
They pushed her to the ground. Vera knelt over Snegoorochka, pushing her shoulders to the ground. Holding a chain in her left hend, Vera crossed herself.
“Well, God help us.”
Sanya passed here a little old textbook opened on a page with a funeral anaphora, crossed himself too and grabbed a radio.
“God help us. Command, this is Golovanov, we got her, beginning liturgy, over.”
“I got dis. Watch de perimeter, last time folks tried it, sometin' killed 'em.”
“Roger. I remember my part, begin.”
Vera took a deep breath.
“It's gonna be over soon, girl. Помилуй мя, Боже, по велицей милости Твоей, и по множеству щедрот Твоих очисти беззаконие мое.”
They started it wrong, right from the 51st psalm. But when those chants were being composed no one thought they were going to be used on something that just doesn't want to stay dead. Sanya fought an urge too look back at Vera and help her hold this monster. But she was right: the last time inquisitors tried to chant away the Snegoorochka, the next day they were found dead, frozen and skinned.
“Се бо, в беззакониих зачата есмь, и во гресех роди мя мати моя. Се бо, истину возлюбила еси; безвестная и тайная премудрости Твоея явил ми еси.”
So as she sang he had to hold his rifle tight and hold his ground. No sign of danger was seen yet though.
“Господи, устне мои отверзеши, и уста моя возвестят хвалу Твою.”