Read Touched by Darkness Online
Authors: Catherine Spangler
sandalwood blend that permeated his duster. He
smelled enticing, probably a side effect of the
sexual energies swirling between them. There were
definite disadvantages to heightened awareness and
senses, she decided.
"No unpleasant smells," she said, shaking off her
wayward thoughts.
"Another indication this being was benign. Did you
hear anything?"
He was instructing her, she realized, broadening her
knowledge of supernatural occurrences, something
Richard had never done. "Yes. I heard a faint
buzzing sound—not like a bug, but almost like the
sizzle of electricity."
"A good description. That was the sound the
entity's movements created."
"But you said it's gone. How could I hear it?"
"From the residual energy left by the sound. What
you just saw and heard was facilitated by a psychic
vision."
She had to think about that.
"Your
psychic vision?"
she gasped, as comprehension dawned. "I was
seeing
what you see
when you're following a
psychic trail?"
Approval flashed in his eyes. "Right. Our energy
link allowed you to see my vision."
"Amazing," she murmured. She'd never gone with
Richard on one of his preliminary tracking
sessions, where he gathered initial data from a
BCS, the Sentinel term for a Belian crime scene.
She'd only participated in the conductions that
followed later, and could be done from any
location, using the initial psychic signature of the
Belian that Richard had extracted from the crime
scene, and stored in his own psyche.
"I wanted you to see and hear what I did," Damien
explained. "I think you can learn to do this on your
own, and it will help you if the entity comes back."
"But I don't have Sentinel abilities."
"No, but I suspect your psychic abilities are very
strong—or would be if you didn't repress them."
She didn't want to dwell on abilities she considered
a curse; she was far more concerned about the
ghost. "Do you think that thing will come back?"
He shrugged. "I have no idea. I don't know why it
was here in the first place. I suspect it was drawn
here."
Kara felt a sinking sensation. "By Alex?"
"Most likely. Why don't we find out?"
Shaken, she followed him to the kitchen. Luz, bless
her, had Alex working on his homework at the table
while she started dinner. Kara smelled chicken
baking, saw the makings of a fresh salad in the
large glass bowl on the counter.
Luz eyed Damien with animosity as they entered
the kitchen. "Are you going to require me here
much longer?" she asked Kara. "I need to leave."
"I know we've kept you late again. I'm so sorry,
Luz." Kara looked at Damien. "Any reason she
can't go?"
He leaned against the door frame, studying Luz.
"Just a few questions. If you don't mind."
Sullenly, Luz picked up a tomato and a knife.
"What do you want to know?"
"Do you work much with spirits?"
She shook her head, sliced the tomato with more
force than necessary. "No. I deliver babies,
compound herbs."
"But you believe in them," Damien persisted.
Alex, who had abandoned all pretense of doing his
homework, darted his gaze between Luz and
Damien. Kara went to sit next to him and put an
arm around him. If the questioning got much
scarier, she'd take him out of the kitchen.
"Of course I believe in them!" Luz snapped, with
another
thwack
of the knife.
"Do you ever come across evil spirits?"
"A few. But the evil spirits I see are those that cause
illness, bad luck, or a man's
pene
to shrivel up."
Luz stared meaningfully at Damien's crotch.
"Sometimes it is deserved."
"Mom," Alex said in a loud whisper, "do you think
she's talking about his pe—"
Kara clamped her hand over his mouth. "Shhh. You
are interrupting. I'll tell you later."
"But I have never seen
un espíritu
show up from
nowhere to torment a little boy." Luz waved the
knife in the air. "Not until you came." She tossed
the mangled tomato into the salad.
"I've been accused of worse." Damien crossed his
arms over his chest. "Did you sense anything truly
evil in Alex's room today?"
Luz considered, finally looked at Damien. With a
sigh, she shook her head. "No. I'm not certain it
was evil. I did not sense
el Diablo.
But it was wild
—throwing books across the room." She made the
sign of the cross. "I'd never seen such a thing. My
little man was so scared,
me asustó."
She looked at
Kara and Alex. "I'm sorry if I overreacted."
"I'd have done the same thing." Kara tightened her
arm around Alex. "It must have been very scary."
"
Sí
." Luz wiped her hands on her apron and untied
it. "If you are finished with your questions, I really
must go." She dropped a kiss on top of Alex's head
and murmured to him in Spanish. Damien stepped
aside as she swept past him.
"Good night, Luz. Thank you for everything," Kara
called after her.
As they heard the sound of the front door closing
behind Luz, Damien settled into the chair on the
other side of Alex. He tapped the paper lying on the
table. "What are you working on there?"
"Just some homework," Alex muttered.
"Looks like math. Aren't you too young to be doing
that?"
Alex raised his chin. "I'm in first grade. We've been
doing addition and subtraction since November."
"That soon, huh? I guess kids start on the hard
subjects at a younger age these days."
"Math is easy," Alex informed him. "But health is
boring." He shot a glance at Kara. "Sorry, Mom,
but it is."
"I didn't like it, either," Damien sympathized. "Why
don't you tell me what you did today to draw that
discarnate?"
Kara felt Alex tense, saw his chin quiver, a sure
sign he'd been up to something. "What's a dis-car-
nate?" he asked. She knew he was stalling.
"It's another word for ghost." Damien leaned
forward, his gaze intent. "What did you do to call
it?"
Alex stared down at his homework. "Nothing."
"Alex," Kara said in a warning tone.
"Nothing much." He raised his head and looked at
her. "I was just playing with... things."
What had her son done? She felt herself starting up
the roller coaster slope again, driven by returning
panic. "What things?" she demanded.
"Just thoughts, just... moving some stuff around."
"With your mind?" Damien interjected.
Alex nodded mutely.
"But Mr. Morgan and I told you not to do that!"
Kara forced herself to speak calmly, although fear
churned inside her. "He explained this to you last
night. You promised you wouldn't use your
powers."
Tears welled up in Alex's eyes. "I know, Mom, I
know," he said, his voice wobbling. "And I kept my
thoughts in the box all day at school, just like Mr.
Morgan showed me." He sniffled. "I waited until I
got home and I was alone in my room. I only
wanted to 'speriment, to see what I could do." The
tears overflowed, and tracked down his cheeks. "I
would never have done anything outside the house.
Honest!"
Kara knew she was too upset to speak calmly and
rationally right now. She shoved away from the
table, and strode over to stare out the back door
window, willing herself to calm down. The sun had
set, and it was gray outside, not yet fully dark. She
vaguely heard Max barking in a far corner of the
yard.
"Alex," came Damien's calm voice from behind
her. "Tell me what you were doing, and what
happened after that."
"Well.. ." Alex paused, and Kara could tell he was
reluctant to tell Damien, probably afraid he was
going to be punished.
"Tell Mr. Morgan what he wants to know," she said,
turning from the door. "I won't get mad again."
"Okay. I was just playing around with moving
stuff."
Damien leaned closer. "Tell me what you can do."
Alex's eyes lit up. "I can move lots of stuff. I look
at something and imagine it in another spot. Like I
'drove' my model car across my desk without
touchin' it. I made my book slide over to me. I
moved my shoe and scared Max. It was really
frigid!" He looked at Kara, seemed to belatedly
remember their earlier conversations. He looked
down at the table. "Sorry, Mom."
She didn't need the cool warning glance Damien
shot her to remind her not to overreact. "Just tell us
everything, son."
"Well." He fiddled with his pencil. "I was trying to
shoot my thoughts to the tree outside my window
to see if I could move the branches from inside the
house."
"Did it work?" Damien asked.
Alex brightened. "Yeah! It was iced. So I kept doin'
it for a while."
Kara walked to the table and sat down. She felt
utterly drained. Why had she thought a six-year-old
boy would be able to resist the lure of such powers?
"What happened then?" Damien pressed.
"I don't know." Alex looked at him with big eyes. "I
was just watching the tree limbs shaking back and
forth, and all at once, a book went flying off my
shelf. It was lots faster than I could have moved it.
Then my poster fell down, and my soccer award
things started turning on the walls. Max went crazy
and barked at lot. It was freaky."
"Did you see or hear anything?"
"I didn't see a form or a white blob, or anything like
that. But I kept hearing a noise, like whispering.
Like something was trying to talk to me."
"What did it say?"
"I don't know," Alex's voice dropped to a whisper.
"I was too scared to listen. But it felt—" he
hesitated.
"What did it feel like?" Damien urged.
"It felt like it was real excited or stirred up—like
Max is when he sees you."
"Kind of upset?" Kara suggested.
"Yeah. That's it." Alex nodded solemnly. "The
ghost was upset, maybe frightened. Only ghosts
don't get frightened, do they?"
"I think ghosts can have the same feelings they had
when they were alive," Damien told him.
Alex considered that. "Will it come back?"
"Probably not if you don't use your mind to move
objects. That's most likely what attracted its
attention."
"Oh." Alex's lower lip trembled. "Mom told me it
was bad to move things or try to do any stuff with
my mind."
"It can be bad, if you don't know how to properly
control your powers or shield yourself. But we're
working on the shielding, aren't we?" Damien gave
Alex's shoulder a reassuring squeeze. "I know you
didn't mean to draw it here."
Damien was good at that, Kara thought, knowing
when it was appropriate to touch, when to offer
physical comfort. He was a strange, dual
combination of arrogance and sensitivity. But then,
the Sentinel nature was chameleon like and crafty, a
necessity in dealing with both humans and Belians.
"How do I control my powers?" Alex asked.
Damien looked at Kara, his steely gaze locking
with hers. "That's something else we're going to
work on. But right now, I need to talk to your
mother."
Kara knew she wouldn't have any valid arguments,
or be able to counter his demands to work with
Alex on his powers this time.
#
I picked up another energy surge this afternoon,
stronger than the previous ones. As before, it was
not the pattern of a full-fledged Sentinel. It
certainly wasn't the other unknown Sentinel, may
Belial curse his soul. But the power was there, and
it came from the general vicinity of Virginia
Avenue. And there was that energy spike yesterday,
at the school. Interesting...
It appears we do indeed have a fledgling Sentinel
in this backwash town. While my power is growing,
I am limited by this pitiful shell of a body that I
must endure. A fledgling would provide me with
more power, and then I could get a new body.
Belial will make it so.
Until then, I must have more energy. It is time to
claim my next victim and shake up that Light
spawn Sentinel. I will make my move tonight, and