Read The Twilight Before Christmas Online

Authors: Christine Feehan

Tags: #General, #Contemporary, #Fiction, #Romance

The Twilight Before Christmas (26 page)

BOOK: The Twilight Before Christmas
13.17Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Matt wanted to comfort her. The feeling was so strong he actually stepped toward her before he realized he was feeling the emotions of Elle’s sisters. They rushed to her side, Sarah pulling the book from her hands, Kate putting her arms around Elle. The others touched her, helping to absorb the long ago, very strong emotions still clinging to the pages of the journal.

“I’m sorry, honey,” Sarah said gently, “I should have thought of that. You’ve been through so much already. Kate, do you think you can get an idea of what happened next? I wouldn’t ask, but it’s important.” She held the book out to Kate.

Matt wanted to yank the book out of her hands and throw it. “Kate’s been through enough with this thing, Sarah. You can’t ask her to do anymore.” He was furious. Enough was enough. “Elle almost died out there. Without Jackson, she would have. You have no idea what a miracle it was that she didn’t end up at the bottom of the ocean.”

Kate put a restraining hand on his arm. Sarah simply nodded. “I do realize what I’m asking, Matthew, and I don’t blame you for being angry. I don’t want Kate to touch the journal, but the truth is, if we don’t know why this spirit is doing the things he’s doing, someone very well could die. We have to know.”

Kate took the book from Sarah’s hand. Matt muttered a string of curses and turned away from them, feeling impotent. All of his training, his every survival skill, seemed utterly useless in the unfamiliar situation. Not wanting to look at Kate, not wanting to witness the strain and weariness on her face, he stared hard at the cranberry candle and the eerie flow of wax. He stared and stared, his heart suddenly in his throat. He took a step closer, stared down in a kind of terror. “Katie.” He whispered her name because she was his world, his talisman. Because he needed her.

Kate put her arm around him, held him. He couldn’t take his eyes from the face in the wax, praying he was wrong. Knowing he was right. She looked down and gasped. “Danny. It’s Danny.”

Chapter
13

 

My last gift now, is a special one,

A candy cane for a special son,

 

He watches and tends and knows the land,

But not enough to evade my hand.

 

Matt took Kate by the shoulders and set her aside. She made a grab for him, but he was already moving swiftly for the front door.

“Danny’s at the pageant rehearsal,” Kate reminded him. She ran after him, tossing the journal onto the floor, trying to keep up with him. Hannah grabbed Kate’s coat and hurried after both of them.

The fog obstructed Matt’s vision, but he could hear the women. “Go back, stay in the house, Kate. It’s too dangerous.” His voice was grim. Authoritative. It made Kate shiver. He didn’t sound at all like her Matthew.

“I’m coming with you. Stay to the left. The path leads down the hill to the highway. If we cross right beside the three redwood trees, like we did the other night, we’ll end up quite close to the shortcut to town.” Kate followed the sound of his voice. Hannah took her hand and held on tightly.

“Kate, dammit, this one time, listen to me. I have to find Danny, and I don’t want to have to worry about what’s happening to you.”

Kate wished he sounded angry, but Matt’s tone was chillingly cold. Ice-cold. She tightened her fingers around Hannah’s hand but continued hurrying along the narrow path. “Hannah’s with me, Matthew, and you’re going to need us.” She kept her voice very calm, very even. She ached for him and shared his rising alarm for the safety of his brother. The features in the wax had definitely been Daniel Granite. She had a strong feeling of impending doom.

Hannah pressed closer to her. “It’s going to happen tonight, Katie.” Her voice shook. “Should we try to clear the fog now?”

Matt loomed up in front of them, startling both of them, catching Kate by the shoulders. “It has never gone after me. Only you. Go with your sisters and work your magic. Clear the fog out of town, and this time get rid of it. I’ll do what I can to keep Danny alive. I’m safe, Kate.” His gray eyes had turned to steel. “I need to know you’re as safe as possible in this mess.”

She clung to him for just one moment, then nodded. “We’ll be up on the captain’s walk, where we can better bring in the wind.”

Matt dropped a hard kiss on her upturned mouth, turned, and hurried down the narrow, well-worn trail. His mind was racing, working out the route the actors in the pageant used. Had they noticed the fog rolling in and taken shelter in one of the businesses along the parade route, or had they gone ahead with the rehearsal plans? Matt made it to the highway and stood listening for a moment in silence. He couldn’t hear a car, but the fog seemed capable of muffling every sound. Still, he didn’t want to wait. He felt a terrible sense of urgency, of his brother in acute danger. He cursed as he ran, nearly blind in the fog. It was only his training that kept him from being completely disoriented. He moved more from instinct than from sight, making his way toward the town square. Most of the committee meetings were held at the chamber of commerce building near the grocery store. The players were supposed to be rehearsing, though, and he doubted whether Inez would let a heavy fog and some entity she couldn’t see change her plans.

He heard a shrill scream, the sounds of panic, and his heart stuttered. “Danny!” He called his brother’s name, using the sheer volume of his voice to penetrate the cries coming out of the fog. He followed the sound of the voices, not toward the square, but away from it, back toward the park on the edge of town, where the river roared down through a canyon to meet the sea. The wall along the river was only about three feet high, made of stone and mortar. He nearly ran into it in his haste to reach Danny. At the last moment he sensed the obstruction and veered away, running parallel with it toward the cries.

He was getting closer to the sounds of the screams and calls. He heard Inez trying to calm everyone. He heard someone shout for a rope. The river, rushing over the rocks, added to the chaos in the heavy fog. “Danny!” Matt called again, trying to beat down his fear for his brother. Danny would have heard him, would have answered.

Right in front of him, Donna, the owner of the local gift shop, suddenly appeared. Her face was white and strained. He caught her shoulders. “What happened, Donna? Tell me!”

She grabbed both of his arms to steady herself. “The wall gave way. A group of the men were sitting on it. Your brother, the young Granger boy, Jeff’s son, I don’t know, more maybe. They just disappeared down the embankment, and all the rocks followed like a mini-avalanche. We can’t see to help them. There were some groans, and we heard cries for help, but we can’t see them at all. We tried to form a human chain, but the bank is too steep. Jackson went over the side by himself. He was crawling. I heard a terrible crack, now he’s silent. I was going to try to find a telephone to call for help. The cell phones just won’t work here.”

“What was Jackson doing here?” He knew the deputy never participated in the town pageant. “Is Jonas here?” As he talked he was moving along the wall, feeling with his hands for breaks, taking Donna with him.

“Jackson happened to be driving by when the fog thickened. He was worried about us, I think, so he stayed. I haven’t seen Jonas.”

“Don’t wander around in this fog. Hopefully, Kate and her sisters will move it out of here for us.” He patted her arm in reassurance and left her, continuing the search for the break in the wall with an outstretched hand. When he found it, he swore softly. He knew the section of wall was over a steep drop and the river below had a fast-moving current running over several submerged boulders. The bank was littered with rocks of every size, with little to hold them in place should something start them rolling.

“Danny! Jackson!” His call was met with eerie silence. He began to crawl down the bank, distributing his weight, on his belly, searching with his hands before sliding forward. It was painstakingly slow. He didn’t want to displace any more of the rocks in case his brother or any of the others were still alive and in the path of an avalanche.

Matt’s fingertips encountered a leg. He forced himself to remain calm and used his hands to identify the man. Jackson was unconscious, and there was blood seeping from his head. In the near-blind conditions, it was impossible to assess how badly he was injured, but his breathing seemed shallow to Matt.

Something moved an arm’s length below Jackson. Matt followed the outstretched arm and found another body. The Granger boy. Matt knew him to be sixteen or seventeen. A good kid. The boy moved again, and Matt cautioned him to stay still, afraid he would disturb the rocks.

“You okay, kid?” he asked.

“My arm’s broken, and I feel like I’ve been run over by a truck, but I’m all right. The deputy told me not to move, and the next thing I knew he was somersaulting and smashed hard into the rock right there. He hasn’t moved. Is he dead?”

“No, he’s alive. What about the others? What about Danny?” He crawled around Jackson to get to the boy, to take his pulse and run his hands over him to examine him for other injuries.

“Tommy Dockins fell too. Danny tried to push him clear when the slide started. We didn’t really have any time. I didn’t see either of them, but Tommy’s yelled for help a couple of times. I couldn’t tell from which direction though.”

The kid sounded tinny and distorted in the fog, and his voice shook, but he lay quietly and didn’t panic. “Your name’s Pete, right? Pete Granger?” Matt asked.

“Yes, sir.”

“Well, I’m going to slide on around you and see if I can locate Danny and Tommy. Don’t move. The fog will be gone soon, and Jonas is on the way with the rescue squad. If you move, you’ll send the rest of those rocks right down on top of the others and me. Got it?”

“Yes, sir.”

“I’ll be back as quick as I can.” Matt glanced in the direction of the cliff house, where the Drake family had lived for over a hundred years. He needed the modern-day women to work their magic, to remove the fog so he had a semblance of a chance to save his brother and Tommy and to get Jackson and Pete to safety.

“Come on, baby,” he whispered, hoping the swirling clouds would take his voice to her. “Do this for me. Clear this mess out of here.”

As if they could hear his words, the seven Drake sisters moved together out onto the battlement and faced the sea. Libby and Sarah both had their arms wrapped around Elle to aid her as they stood in the midst of the swirling fog.

Sarah looked up at the sky, to the roiling clouds gathered over Sea Haven and back to her sisters. “This troubled spirit is in terrible pain and does not believe there can be forgiveness for his mistake. He cannot forgive himself for what he believes to be bad judgment. I am certain his motive was to save others his sorrow. He believes that by halting the pageant, history will not repeat itself. He has lived this unbelievable nightmare repeatedly and needs to be able to forgive himself and go to his rest.” She looked at Kate. “Your gift has always been your voice, Kate. I think the journal is referring to you. One born who can bring peace.”

Kate could think only of Matt, somewhere out in the fog. She didn’t want to be up on the captain’s walk facing another struggle, she wanted to be with him. It was the first time in her life she had ever felt so divided around her sisters. She knew at that moment that she belonged with Matthew Granite. It didn’t matter that she was an observer and he was a doer, she loved him, and she belonged with him.

BOOK: The Twilight Before Christmas
13.17Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Human Blend by Alan Dean Foster
The Maestro by Tim Wynne-Jones
The Viceroys by Federico De Roberto
Kristin Lavransdatter by Undset, Sigrid
The Book of Small by Emily Carr