Dark Visions (33 page)

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Authors: L. J. Smith

Tags: #Young Adult, #Fantasy, #Romance, #Vampires

BOOK: Dark Visions
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He was a master of
chi gong
—that's the art of manipulating
chi
, kind of like what Rob does when he heals."
Gabriel by now was deliberately
not
looking at Kait, all the while willing her fiercely to shut up. Unable to send a reassuring message, Kaitlyn ignored him.
"So it's sort of like blood," she said to Lewis. "And if you lose it, you manufacture more."
"In the Middle Ages people thought blood
was
the life energy," Rob said from the driver's seat. "They thought some people had too much—that's what they had in mind when they bled you with leeches. They thought if they could drain some of the extra blood off, it would relieve the pressure; help you produce better, clearer blood afterward. But of course they were wrong—about blood."
He looked over his shoulder as he said it, and Kait thought his glance encompassed Gabriel as well as her. Alarm shot through her. Rob wasn't stupid. What if he'd guessed… ?
Gabriel was radiating cold fury.
"Well, that's interesting," Kait gabbled. She now wanted to find a boring topic to make them all forget this. Even silence would be fine—but Rob was speaking again.
"Some people think that's how the legends of vampires started," he said. "With psychics that drained their victims of life energy,
sekhem, chi
, whatever you want to call it. Later the stories got twisted and people called it blood."
Kaitlyn sat frozen. It wasn't just what Rob was saying, it was the
way
he was saying it. His disgust and loathing filled the web.
"I've heard legends about that, too," Anna said, and her repugnance was equally clear. "About evil shamans who live by stealing power from others."
"That's sick," said Lewis. "If a
chi gong
master did that, he'd be ostracized. It completely violates the Tao."
Their abhorrence was reverberating in the web, shuddering over Kaitlyn in waves. Very distantly she could sense Gabriel's stony presence.
No wonder he didn't want them to know, she thought, knowing that no one else could sense her through the all-pervading horror and aversion. None of them can understand. They just think it's awful.
She wished she could tell Gabriel she was sorry, but Gabriel was looking out the window, his shoulders tense.
To Kaitlyn's vast relief, Lewis changed the subject. "And of course there are the people whose energy fields are too
strong
," he said with a sly look at Rob. "You know, the people you agree with even when you don't know why. The ones that put you under a spell with their charisma—their energy just knocks you out."
Rob's eyes in the rearview mirror were innocent. "If I see somebody like that I'll tell you," he said.
"Sounds dangerous."
"It is. You can find yourself fighting evil magicians just because some nut thought it was a good idea."
There was an edge to Lewis's voice that showed the remark wasn't entirely benign. Kaitlyn was glad they weren't talking about vampires anymore, but discouraged when everyone lapsed into silence again.
Something's wrong with us, she thought, and shivered.
The silence lasted for endless miles up the coast. The dunes ran out eventually and were replaced by black basalt headlands that plunged down to the sea. Huge waves crashed around strange rocks rising like monoliths out of the water.
At one point they passed a deep fissure in the cliffs, where the pounding sea had whipped the water into a froth like cream.
"Devil's Churn," Lewis said sepulchrally, raising his head from the map.
"Looks like it," Kaitlyn said. She meant to sound lighthearted, but somehow it came out grim.
Silence again. They passed offshore islands, but these were inhabited only by gulls and other birds. No trees, no white house. Kaitlyn shivered again.
"We're never going to find it," Lewis said.
This was so unlike him that Kait felt only surprise, but Anna turned sharply. "I wish you wouldn't be so pessimistic. Or if you have to be, I wish you'd keep your opinions to yourself!"
Kaitlyn's jaw dropped. The next moment she felt a rush of protective anger. "You don't have to be so nasty to him," she told Anna heatedly. "Just because you're so—so
stoic
all the time…" She stopped and almost bit her tongue. What had made her say that?
Hurt flashed in Anna's dark eyes. Lewis scowled. "I can fight my own battles," he said. "You're always jumping in."
"Yes, she's a real little do-gooder," Gabriel said from the front.
Rage exploded in Kaitlyn. "And you're a coldblooded
snake
!" she shouted. Gabriel gave her a brilliant, unsettling smile.
"She got that one right, anyway," Rob said. The van was swerving erratically. Rob was looking at Gabriel rather than at the road. "And you shut up, Lewis, if you know what's good for you."
"I think you're all horrible," Anna gasped. She seemed on the verge of tears. "And I've
had
it, all right?
You can let me off here because I'm not going with you any farther."
Tires squealed as Rob hit the brakes. A horn blared behind them.
"Fine," Rob said. "Get out."
CHAPTER 8
"G
o on," Rob said curtly. "Don't keep us all waiting."
The horn blared again behind them.
Anna rose without any of her usual grace. Her movements were jerky, full of repressed energy. She snatched up her duffel bag and began to fumble with the door handle.
Kait sat stiffly, her shoulders tense, her head high. Her heart was pounding with defensive fury.
Let
Anna go if she wanted. It just showed she'd never cared for the rest of them in the first place.
Ridiculous.
The thought came out of nowhere, like a tiny glint of light in her mind, there and gone in an instant. It was enough to shock Kaitlyn into some kind of sense.
Ridiculous—of course Anna cared for the rest of them. Anna cared about everything, from the earth itself to the animals she loved to just about any person that crossed her path.
But then why was Kait so
angry
with her? Kait could feel all the physical symptoms. The pounding heart, the shortness of breath—the flushed face and tight feeling at her temples. More, there was a wild need to
move
in her muscles, like the desire to hit something.
Physical symptoms. It was another glint, surfacing from Kaitlyn's subconscious. And suddenly she understood.
"Anna, wait.
Wait
," she said just as Anna wrestled the door open. She tried to make her voice calm, when it kept wanting to come out panicked or seething.
Anna stopped but didn't turn.
"Don't you see—everybody, don't you
see
?" Kaitlyn looked around at the others. "This isn't real. We're all upset, but we're not really upset at each other. We're just
feeling
angry, so our minds think there must be a reason to
be
angry."
"It's just nerves, I suppose," Gabriel sneered. His lip was curled and his gray eyes were savage. "We couldn't possibly really hate each other."
"No! I don't know what it is, but—" Kaitlyn broke off, realizing that in addition to all the other physical symptoms she was shivering. It was
cold
in the van, colder than could be explained by the open door.
And there was a strange odor in her nostrils, a sewer stench.
"Do you smell that? It's the same thing I smelled yesterday when Lewis did his sleepwalking bit. And it's cold like yesterday, too." Kaitlyn could see confusion mingling with the anger in the faces around her, and she turned to the one person she trusted absolutely.
Rob
, she said fervently,
please listen. I know it's hard because you
feel
like you're angry, but just
try. Something's going on
.
Slowly Rob's face cleared. The smoldering fury went out of his amber-colored eyes, leaving them golden and somewhat bewildered. He blinked and put a hand to his forehead.
"You're right," he said. "It's like that psychology experiment—give someone an injection of adrenaline, and then put them in a room with someone acting angry. The first person gets angry, too, but it's not real anger. It's been
induced
."
"Someone's doing that to us," Kaitlyn said.
"But how?" Lewis demanded. He sounded scoffing, but not as exasperated as before. "Nobody's given us any injections."
"Long distance," Rob said. "It's a psychic attack."
His voice was flat and positive. His eyes had gone dark gold. Outside, the blaring horn had given way to several horns sounding continuously.
"Shut the door, Anna," Rob said quietly. "I'll find a place to pull over. There's something I ought to have told you before."
Anna slid the door shut. A few minutes later they had pulled over by the roadside and Rob was looking at the rest of them soberly.
"I should have mentioned it this morning," he said. "But I wasn't sure, and I didn't see any point in you all worrying. Those slug tracks… well, back at Durham I heard stories about people waking up to find those around their house. Slime trails or sometimes footprints of people or animals. They almost always went along with nightmares—people having terrible dreams the night before."
Nightmares. Now Kaitlyn remembered. "I had a terrible dream last night," she said. "There were all these people leaning over me. Gray people—they looked like pencil sketches. And it was cold—just the way it was a few minutes ago." She looked at Rob. "But what
is
it?"
"They said all those things were signs of a psychic attack."
"A psychic attack," Gabriel repeated, but his tone was less sarcastic than it had been.
"The stories were that dark psychics could do things even over long distances. They could visualize you and use PK, telepathy, even astral projection." His troubled eyes turned back to Kait. "Those gray people you saw—I've heard that astral projections are colorless."
"Astral projections as in letting your mind do the walking? Leaving your body behind?" Lewis asked, cocking an eyebrow. The atmosphere had changed; the web was no longer quivering with animosity.
Kait thought that everyone looked like themselves again.
Rob was nodding. "That's it. And I've heard that psychic attacks can make you weak or nervous—even make you think you're going crazy."
"I thought
I
was going crazy just now," Anna said. Her eyes were large and bright with unshed tears.
"I'm sorry, everybody."
"I'm sorry, too," Kaitlyn said. She and Anna looked at each other a moment and then simultaneously reached forward to hug each other.
"Sure, everybody's sorry," Gabriel said impatiently. "But we've got more important things to think about.
A psychic attack means one thing—we've been found."
"Mr. Zetes," Rob said.
"Who else? But the question is, who's he gotten to do it? What psychics are attacking?"
Kaitlyn tried to visualize the faces in her dream. It was impossible. The features had been too blurred.
"Mr. Z had a lot of contacts," Rob said wearily. "Obviously he's found some new friends."
Anna was shaking her head. "But how can he have found such powerful ones so fast? I mean,
we
couldn't do what they're doing, and we're supposed to be the best."
"The best of our age group," Rob began, but Kaitlyn said, "The crystal."
Understanding flared immediately in Gabriel's eyes. "That's it. The crystal is amplifying their power."
"But it's
dangerous
," Kaitlyn started, and then she shut up at an ominous glance from Gabriel.
Intent on his own thoughts, Rob didn't seem to notice. "Obviously, they don't care about the danger, and while they're using the crystal they're much stronger than we are. The point is that we've got to be prepared. They're not finished with us—and the attacks will probably get worse. We've got to be ready for anything."
"Yeah, but ready how?" asked Lewis. "What can you do against that kind of attack?"
Rob shrugged. "At the Durham Center I heard people talk about envisioning light—protective light. The problem is that I never really listened. I don't know how you do it."
Kaitlyn let out her breath and sat back. The others were doing the same, and a sense of apprehension ran through the web. Apprehension—and vulnerability.
There was a long silence.
"Well, I suppose we'd better get back on the road," Kait said finally. "It's no good sitting around and thinking about it."
"Just everybody be on the lookout for anything unusual," Rob said.
But nothing unusual happened on the rest of the drive. Anna took the wheel and they resumed their beach-scanning, agreeing that nothing on the Oregon coast looked like the place in their dreams. The rock was too black—volcanic, apparently—and the water too open.
"And it's still not north enough," Kait said.
They stopped that night at a little town called Cannon Beach, just below the Washington border. It was already dark by the time Anna pulled the van into a quiet street that dead-ended on the beach.
"This may not be legal, but I don't think anybody's going to bother us," she said. "For that matter, I've hardly seen anybody around here."
"It's a resort town," Rob said. "And this is off season."
It certainly seemed like off season to Kaitlyn. The sky was clouding over, and it was cold and windy outside.
"I saw a little store back there on the main street," she said. "We've got to buy something for dinner—we ate the last of the bread and peanut butter for lunch."
"I'll go," Anna said. "I don't mind the cold."
Rob nodded. "I'll go with you."
It was only once they were gone that Kait wished Lewis had gone, too. She was getting worried about Gabriel.

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