Read Touched by Darkness Online
Authors: Catherine Spangler
living room talking to his officers, Chief Greer
looked up and glared at them as they went by, but
had nothing to say to them.
The cold outside air hit them like a slap, but
Damien found it refreshing, a welcome change
from the oppressive stuffiness of the house and the
smell of death, tainted with the stink of evil. Kara
seemed uncertain in her direction, so he steered her
toward her house, across the grass and away from
the curious onlookers. Fortunately, Chief Greer had
just come out on the porch, and the crowd's
attention focused on him.
Damien maintained his hold on Kara's arm as they
walked. He could feel her tension. "I'm sorry for
your loss," he said, knowing words were never
enough, yet all he could offer.
"Yeah." She stared straight ahead, the thick fall of
her hair framing her face.
He couldn't see her features. Like most small-town
roads, Virginia Avenue had no street lights; the only
illumination came from lighted windows, and the
stars and nearly full moon above. She stumbled as
they walked across the uneven yard, and he
tightened his grip on her arm to steady her.
"Where's Alex?"
"Oh, no! How could I have forgotten him? He's
with the Roberts family, on the other side of Doris.
He took her cat over there." She tried to twist back
the way they had come. "I have to get him."
He tugged her forward. "Not right now. You need a
little time to pull yourself together, and to decide
what to tell him."
"No, I—" She dug in, turned to face him, her face a
pale oval in the moonlight. "This is my fault. I
dreamed about Doris's murder last night. I should
have done something."
Her words went though him like an electric shock.
She had
dreamed
about the Belian crime? "Did you
see the Belian's face?"
"No." She pulled free of his grasp. "I didn't even
realize it was Doris in my dream, because I'd never
been in the back of her house, and she was turned
away in the bed. But I should have known.
I should
have known!"
"There was no way you could know," he said. "This
is not your fault. Surely you realize that."
"When I had that dream vision last night, I knew
what it was—that it would come true. And I didn't
do anything. Not a damned thing! I should have
called the police, should have told someone." She
wrapped her arms around herself. "And all this
time, Doris was just lying there, all alone."
She started toward her house. He followed,
knowing she was suffering both grief and shock.
He'd seen it enough times to recognize the signs. It
didn't matter how many powers he had, he couldn't
heal a wounded, grieving human spirit. He didn't
speak until they were on the porch and she was
opening the front door.
"Kara, listen to me." He waited until she angled her
head and met his gaze, tear trails glistening on her
face. "Even if you'd known for sure it was Doris in
the vision, by the time you had the dream, it was
already too late to help her. The best way you can
help her now is work with me to catch her killer.
We've put this off longer than we should have. This
thing is escalating, and we have to stop it. You
must
conduct for me."
She slowly turned toward him, anger flaring in her
eyes. "You
would
use Doris's death to your
advantage. You bastard!"
"Yeah, you're right, I would. I would use anything
to catch this Belian."
"And that's all you care about, isn't it? It doesn't
matter to you that an innocent woman is dead. That
she probably had ten good years left, that she's
leaving behind three children and five
grandchildren, who all adore her."
In his mind, he saw the pitiful, bent body of Doris
Burgess. Any death of an innocent was
unacceptable. He felt a chasm in his tightly held
control, felt the simmering rage slip through.
"Yes it matters," he said fiercely. "God damn it, it
matters! How do you think I feel, knowing there's a
monster within my reach, and if I don't stop it,
more innocents will die?"
Fury ripped through him, and he whirled away, his
fists clenched, needing to tear something apart. He
settled for stomping down the steps and picking up
a thick branch that had fallen off the nearby pecan
tree. He snapped it like it was a twig, and hurled
the pieces away. "I have to live with two murders
already, knowing it's
my duty, my responsibility,
to
stop this monster, and that I've failed so far. And
every day that goes by is more time for it to destroy
someone else."
He kicked at another branch, set it flying. His chest
heaved and he fought to bring himself under
control. The red haze receded, but the frustration
and knowledge that he was no closer to stopping
this Belian continued to torment him. He raked his
hands through his hair, vaguely aware of his leather
binding falling off and the feel of hair flowing
against his face.
Damnation.
Somehow Kara managed to get
beneath his skin, to shake up his control. He looked
up to find her standing mute on the porch, her eyes
huge and dark as she stared at him.
"And to know," he continued, "that for every
person who dies, others are devastated by the loss.
That a human life touches many other lives, that
one single violent action has an exponential ripple
effect, the potential of causing pain on many
levels."
As well he knew, from personal experience.
He exhaled deeply, tossed his hair from his face,
and mounted the steps to the porch, willing himself
to calm. He felt his Sentinel persona returning,
slipping into place like a weapon into a holster.
"Yeah," he said, his gaze locked with Kara's. "I'm a
bastard, all right. But, as The One is my witness, I
will hunt down and destroy this Belian."
Her expression hardened. "Good." She turned and
went inside.
He followed her to the kitchen, leaned against the
counter while she telephoned Mary Roberts and
told her she'd be over for Alex within the hour.
Then she put two mugs of water in the microwave
and dug out some tea bags. He'd have preferred
coffee, and that laced with something with an
alcoholic kick, but was willing to go with the flow,
especially if it soothed Kara.
She remained silent while she fixed the tea, and he
welcomed the time to ensure his own emotions
were again deeply buried. She was still pale, her
eyes haunted, and her hands shaking slightly as she
handed him his tea and then seated herself at the
table. He slid into the chair next to her and waited
for her to work through the trauma of the evening.
He would still push for—insist on—a conduction,
but he'd give her time to settle down first.
She stared down at her mug. "Doris was my friend.
And these past few days, I doubted her. I thought
she might be the—" She shook her head, looked
him, tears glinting in her eyes. "I thought she might
be possessed. How could I think such a thing?"
"Because anything is possible with a Belian,
especially one this strong. It could have possessed
any number of bodies. Old or sick people are easier
targets. Your logic was sound."
She dropped her gaze back to her tea. "I know that,
but still."
Chaos, doubt, suspicion, hatred, despair.
Belians
had that effect on everything around them. They
were the spawn of Belial, may his soul burn in the
Fires.
He leaned forward. "What can you tell me about
your dream?"
She relayed what she'd dreamed, methodically and
with an astonishing amount of detail, although her
voice shook at times. He was amazed at how
closely her vision resembled the physic picture
he’d 'seen' at Doris's house.
"What do you think was in the syringe?" he asked.
"I don't know." She thought about it a moment. "It
could have been insulin. An insulin overdose would
be fairly quick acting and could produce symptoms
of heart failure. A needle mark in her arm wouldn't
be suspicious, because she is—was— Oh, God."
Her voice broke again, and she took a deep breath
before continuing. "Doris was diabetic and took
insulin injections."
"So that would be a logical way to take her out, and
if that proves to be the case, then the Belian wants
the deaths to look accidental—for now," Damien
mused. "It also means it knew Doris well enough to
know she took insulin, and how to get around her
house."
"Which reinforces the theory about the Belian
possessing the body of someone who lives in
Zorro," Kara said. "I didn't want to believe it."
"But it sure looks that way." Damien noted the
time. "I'm going back to Doris's house later tonight.
I didn't have a chance to gather all the information,
but I suspect it's going to be very close to your
vision."
"Oh, it will be." She gripped her mug, her knuckles
white. "My cursed dreams are accurate right down
to every bloody detail."
"Kara, you should have called me immediately
when you found the bod—Doris. You knew, or
suspected, the Belian had killed her. You also know
it's very important that I scan a Belian crime scene
as soon as possible."
"I didn't think." She stared sightlessly at the
opposite wall. "I couldn't think of anything, except
how she looked, lying there in that bed. Then... I
grabbed my phone, and it was an automatic reflex
to dial 9-1-1. It was all I could manage."
"I know it was hard. But it's crucial that I know
right away if anything else happens. Is that your
phone?" He pointed to the leather case clipped on
her belt, and she nodded. "Let me have it a
moment."
She unclipped it and handed it to him without
comment, watched as he entered his mobile number
into her directory, then handed the phone back to
her. "My number is in there now, and if anything
happens, I want you to call
me
first. Don't call
anyone else until you talk to me. Understand?"
"Sure, whatever," she said dully.
They sat in silence a few moments, Damien
mulling over how to convince her to cooperate on a
conduction, without having to use coercion.
Suddenly she turned toward him, determination
firing her gaze. "I'm not going to let Doris's death
go unchallenged. And I'm not going to let this—this
thing
hurt anyone else. I'll help you track this
monster."
He came to full attention. "You'll conduct for me."
She held up a warning hand. "Only on one
condition."
"And that is?"
"There will be no physical intimacy. No
unnecessary touching, no kissing, and
no sex."
He started to protest. Sexual intercourse created the
most powerful conduction and would be more
effective with this strong Belian. But he saw the
resolve on Kara's face, knew her past experiences
as a conductor had put her through hell. She
wouldn't capitulate. He was lucky he wouldn't have
to go against the Sentinel code of honor and force
her. He'd take what he could get.
"All right," he said. "We'll do it tonight."
Kara stared down at her son. He was sprawled on
her bed, one hand tangled in Mac's fur. Both were
sound asleep, courtesy of a mental push from
Damien. She hadn't been wild about that, but knew
Alex was too wound up to sleep. She told him
Doris had died in her sleep and hadn't suffered any
pain—probably true, although it glossed over the
fact Doris had been murdered.
Alex had still been upset and clingy, and worried
that now Doris's ghost would join that of the other
ghost and come to their house. Which Kara
supposed was a disturbingly real possibility, given
the way things had gone lately.
She felt a brush of heated energy behind her, knew
Damien was there. Apprehension and physical
awareness swept through her. She leaned down to
smooth Alex's hair and kiss his cheek before she
straightened and faced Damien. He had returned to
Doris's house to finish examining the crime scene,