Adam thought she was crazy, but Patty was convinced that Brandon had a special gift.
He had always been an intensely sensitive child, filled with wordless terrors and
worries, but now that his language skills were better developed, he was able to communicate
his thoughts and fears more clearly than he had as an anxious toddler.
Poor little Brandon was frequently afraid. He didn’t like the dark, or closets, or
scary movies, and there was one place in the upstairs hallway of their old house that
upset him terribly.
“There’s a lady, Mommy. She keeps crying.”
That was all Patty could get out of him. She’d never believed in ghosts, but she
now gave that particular spot a wide berth.
Brandon had also startled her more than once by carrying on casual conversations with
“the people.” The people were not, apparently, connected to this house, since he talked
to them on the playground and at his cousins’ house and even at the Atlanta church
where she took him to Sunday school. And they didn’t seem to be threatening people,
since Brandon displayed no anxiety at all about them.
But the flesh-and-blood people around him were beginning to notice. Her sister had
made a remark just the other day about Brandon and his imaginary friends. And some
of his little friends were beginning to tease him. Brandon, always a shy child with
a mostly solitary nature, was becoming reluctant to get out of sight of his mother.
Adam said she was spoiling him, catering to his “childish fears and overactive imagination”
by sticking close to him, but Patty didn’t care. She was worried. Brandon was convinced
that the “bad men” were coming to take him away, and it frightened him so much that
it frightened her even more.
He could never tell her who these bad men were or even what they looked like, and
since Patty’s questions had only upset him further, she had stopped asking. Just bad
men, was all he knew or could say. Bad men in the dark.
That thought sent Patty back to the window. And as soon as she looked out, her throat
closed up and shards of ice stabbed at her heart.
“Brandon?”
She rushed out the back door, staring at the empty sandbox and then looking wildly
around the backyard. The gate was still closed; she could see the lock still fastened.
But Brandon was nowhere to be seen.
“Brandon!”
Sarah gazed out the car window and murmured, “A nice, normal little house in a nice,
normal little neighborhood. I guess Neil Mason’s neighbors don’t know he’s psychic.”
“Or don’t care,” Tucker said.
“If they know—they care,” Sarah said out of bitter experience.
The Jeep was parked across the street and half a block down, where they could look
at the house without
attracting undue attention. The neighborhood was quiet on this Wednesday morning,
and so far they had seen no sign of life at Neil Mason’s house.
“Anything?” Tucker asked, even more wary after their tense standoff of the night before.
Sarah wanted to snap at him to stop pushing her, but she was all too aware that this
time he was right to do so. She studied the rather plain but pleasant two-story house,
and hesitantly tried to “listen” to what her senses might attempt to tell her.
She felt…odd. The pressure she had been so conscious of was all but gone, only a whisper
of it remaining. And what she heard was only a whisper, so quiet and distant that
focusing on it was like straining to hear someone breathing on the other side of a
vast room.
…he knows…he knows…he knows you’re coming. He knows what they want of you. He has
the answers you need. He knows…
“He knows.” Sarah was hardly aware of speaking aloud.
“Knows what?”
The whisper faded to silence, and Sarah turned her head to meet Tucker’s guarded gaze.
“He knows we’re coming.”
“Is he on our side? Or with them?”
“I don’t know.”
After a moment, Tucker nodded. He opened the storage compartment between the Jeep’s
bucket seats, took out his automatic, and leaned forward to place it inside his belt
at the small of his back. His jacket covered the gun so that its presence was hidden.
“Okay. Let’s go find out.”
Sarah was reluctant to leave the vehicle, where there was at least the illusion of
safety, but she knew they had no choice. She got out and walked with Tucker across
the street. All the way across and up the walkway, she tried to listen, but heard
nothing. She was dimly surprised, when they reached the porch, that Tucker had to
ring the bell. It bothered her somehow, though the feeling was no more than vague
disturbance.
The man who opened the door was big. That was the first impression. Easily six and
a half feet tall with shoulders to match, he had the appearance of a man of immense
physical strength, even though approaching middle age had given him a belly that his
belt rode beneath and the fleshy look of indulgence around the once-clean jawline
of his rugged face.
The second impression Sarah got was that he wasn’t nearly as happy to see them as
his smile indicated.
“Hello.” His eyes tracked past Tucker and fixed on Sarah. They were blue and very
bright. “Hello, Sarah.”
“Hello, Neil.” Sarah drew a breath, and added, “I recognize you.”
“Yes, of course you do,” he said matter-of-factly. He stepped back and opened the
door wider. “Come in, come in.”
Tucker caught Sarah’s arm when she would have moved forward. “Recognize him?”
She nodded. “Bits and pieces of my vision keep coming back to me. There were faces.
His is one of the faces I saw.”
Without letting go of her arm, Tucker looked narrow-eyed at Mason, who stood patiently,
smiling, waiting for them to come in. “Do you trust him, Sarah?”
Her smile reminded him oddly of Mason’s—the tolerant amusement of a parent for a child.
He didn’t like it.
“Of course not, Tucker.”
“Then we’ll find someone else.”
“It’s all right,” she said. “We’re safe here. For now.”
Tucker released her arm when she started forward again. He didn’t like this—all his
instincts were screaming at him—but he followed her into the house nevertheless. In
this situation, he felt he had to defer to Sarah, to accept her lead. She was the
psychic, not him.
Still, he was uneasily aware that her belief in fate was strong enough to place them
both in danger; Sarah was, he thought, perfectly capable of walking into a house she
knew was dangerous only because she was utterly sure fate intended her to be there.
That was one reason he continued to try to convince her that her choices could determine
her own future—though he didn’t flatter himself that he’d made much headway.
Sarah’s blind spot was her belief in destiny, and until she could see past that, she
was so vulnerable it was terrifying.
So Tucker walked into Neil Mason’s house with all his senses wide open, as alert to
possible danger as he’d ever been in his life. Even so, the first few minutes seemed
to be designed to put him at his ease. Mason showed them into a pleasant living room
and invited them to sit down, then went away briskly to fetch coffee. Music played
softly in the background, unobtrusive but soothing. A fire crackled brightly in the
rock fireplace, dispelling the chill of the morning here at the end of September.
It was all very…pleasant. Very ordinary.
It made Tucker extremely wary.
“If you don’t trust him,” he said to Sarah, “then why are we here? There are other
psychics we can try, including two more right here in Syracuse.” He stood near the
leather couch watching her move restlessly around the room.
Sarah paused to scan the titles of some books on shelves near the fireplace and answered
him in an absent tone. “It’s important that we talk to him.”
“Why?”
“Because he knows.”
Tucker drew a breath and held on to his patience. He thought that Sarah was being
deliberately vague and uninformative, and it bothered him. She claimed that trust
was not an issue with them, yet ever since the lake he’d had the feeling that she
knew more about this situation than she was willing to say; if it wasn’t a lack of
trust that kept her silent, then what?
“Knows what, Sarah? You said he knew we were coming here. Is that all?”
“No.” She moved back to the fireplace and looked at the flames for a moment, then
lifted her gaze to meet his. “He knows why they’re after me.”
Tucker refused to get too excited. “Will he tell us?”
She tilted her head a little as though listening to a
distant voice. “I don’t know. Probably not.” Her reply was matter-of-fact.
“And you still don’t know if he’s with the other side?”
“No. But leave this to me, Tucker. I have to handle him my own way. It’s important.”
Before Tucker could say anything else, Mason returned with a tray and the opportunity
was lost. But Sarah had told him nothing to reassure him, so Tucker refused coffee
and remained on his feet when Sarah came over to sit on a chair across from the couch.
He moved to where she had been standing at the fireplace and turned his back to the
flames so he could keep an eye on Mason as well as have a clear view of the door and
windows.
“He’s very cautious,” Mason said to Sarah, handing her a cup of coffee and sitting
down on the couch.
“He has reason to be. We both do.”
“I imagine so. But I’m harmless. You might reassure him of that.”
Sarah smiled. “Today, he’s a guard. And a guard should always be wary.”
Tucker elected to remain silent, as much as he disliked being discussed as though
he’d left the room. He leaned his shoulders back against the mantel, crossed his arms,
and watched them. And within a very few minutes, it occurred to him that what he was
seeing was a performance where each word and gesture was both meticulous and deliberate.
A dance where each knew the steps and the music, and where only one would remain standing
when it was all over.
“How did you choose me?” Mason sipped his coffee.
Sarah set her cup on the coffee table untasted. “We have a list of surviving psychics
in this general area. You were at the top.”
Mason smiled at her, that curiously tolerant smile of a parent for a child, a master
for a neophyte. “Ah. Then you didn’t hear me calling to you?”
“No.” Sarah appeared undisturbed by this. “Was I supposed to?”
“Well…if your abilities are genuine, I would have thought…However, it’s no matter.
You’re here. Where you were supposed to be.”
This time, Tucker had to bite his tongue to remain silent.
“Was I supposed to be here?” Sarah was innocently surprised.
Mason’s smile widened. “Of course. You must know that. The visions and dreams, the
voices in your head—they must have told you.”
“Destiny.” Sarah nodded thoughtfully.
“Exactly.”
“So those are the voices I should listen to? The ones whispering that what must be—is?”
Sober now, Mason nodded. “Those are the truest voices, Sarah. It’s why you—we—hear
them the clearest.”
“Then I can change nothing I foresee?”
He hesitated, those bright blue eyes searching her face. Then he shrugged almost offhandedly.
“There is a difference between prediction and prophecy. When you see what is fated
to happen, it will. No matter what you
or anyone does to try and change it. That is prophecy. But you may also see a possible
outcome in a given situation, and that may be influenced by the actions and choices
of yourself and those around you. That is prediction.”
“How can I tell the difference?”
“With practice. They feel different.”
Sarah didn’t appear to find that response inadequate; she merely nodded and changed
the subject. Abruptly. “So which is of the greatest value—prediction or prophecy?”
For the first time, Mason seemed caught off guard. “I—don’t understand, Sarah.”
“Of course you do.” Sarah smiled. “It’s a simple question. With a very simple answer.
Why are my abilities important, Neil? Because I can make predictions? Or prophecies?”
His smile was gone and his eyes were not nearly so bright. But he replied readily
enough. “Each has its own sort of value.”
“Ah. And they have a use for both?”
Mason leaned back in his chair suddenly, and Tucker had the distinct feeling it was
because he needed to put distance between himself and Sarah. And there was, now, something
wary in his eyes.
“They? Who are you talking about, Sarah?”
“The other side.” Her voice was casual, almost indifferent.
“Other side? You talk as if there’s a battle going on.”
“Isn’t there? Isn’t it very simply a battle—between good and evil?”
Mason frowned. “Nothing is simple. And nothing is purely good, or purely bad.”
“I think some things are simple. Some truths.”
“For instance?” He was a bit impatient now.
“For instance, the truth that children abducted from their families is an evil thing.
Wouldn’t you agree with that?”
“I suppose so.”
“And the truth that anything done to protect them—anything at all—is a good thing.”