Read Touched by Darkness Online
Authors: Catherine Spangler
She took a deep breath. "What have you got?"
"The Travis County medical examiner's report on
Doris Burgess came in this morning."
Kara fumbled for the chair behind her desk, slipped
into it. "What did it say?"
"Miz Burgess died from an overdose of insulin.
Seems she got confused. Maybe she forgot she'd
already taken her shot."
"An overdose?" Kara shook her head. "That's not
possible."
"Well, that's what happened."
"But Doris was very careful with her medicine."
"She was an old lady!" Tom snapped. "And old
folks forget sometimes. Hell, I forget lots of things.
It was an accidental overdose, doctor. So ruled by
the chief medical examiner."
Kara wanted to argue, to insist Doris would never
forget her medicine, to tell Tom she
knew
Doris had
been murdered. But she held back, knowing he'd
either never believe her, or he'd know exactly what
she was talking about. For all she knew, he was the
Belian. The thought chilled her to the core. "Has
Doris's family been notified?" she asked.
"I reckon they have. The ME's office keeps up with
that stuff." Tom's gruff voice softened. "I'm sorry,
Dr. Kara. I know you really cared for Miz
Burgess."
"Would you mind faxing me a copy of the coroner's
report? For her file."
"I reckon. What's the number?"
Kara gave it to him, then hung up. She stared at the
phone a long time, thinking she'd never feel safe
again.
#
"Doris would never mix up her insulin or give
herself an overdose," Kara told Damien that night.
"She was too sharp and too careful."
They were at the kitchen table, eating stew he'd
started that morning in the Crock-Pot (which she
hadn't even known she had). Tonight, he'd pulled
more of the tossed salad out of the fridge, and
heated store-bought biscuits. The stew was
delicious. Kara decided he could take Luz's place in
a pinch, although she hadn't observed his
housecleaning skills yet.
It felt very strange having him ensconced in her
home, with his laptop and briefcase
commandeering the dining room table, his suitcase
in Alex's room, and his toiletries in the main
bathroom. The house smelled of aftershave,
sandalwood, and primal male. It had been so long
since she lived with Richard, she'd forgotten the
sensual perks of having a man around.
She didn't think she would be so intrigued with just
any man, but then Damien was no ordinary male.
She couldn't help but wonder what it would be like
to have him sleeping in her bed, to be able to reach
out, touch bare skin stretched over taut muscles.
She pulled back from her thoughts, shocked. Two
people were dead and a Belian was stalking the
citizens of Zorro, and here she was, daydreaming
about sex. She looked over at Damien.
He was reading the coroner's report on Doris, his
ebony brows drawn together and making his
sculpted face look even fiercer. "This was no
accident," he growled. "But then we already knew
that." He put the report to the side, dug into the
stew. "You're preaching to the choir here."
"I know." She set her fork down, no longer hungry.
"So what do we do now?"
"You
will eat. You haven't had a solid meal in the
past two days." Damien sat back in his chair, his
gaze steady on her. "As for the Belian, all we can
do at this point is wait for it to make another
move."
Kara had a bad feeling they wouldn't have to wait
long.
The evening progressed quickly, with kitchen
cleanup, a call to Alex and her parents, and
reviewing another stack of lab reports. Even though
she was exhausted when she finally fell into bed,
she tossed and turned, haunted by dark, violent
memories and a premonition something terrible
was about to happen. She finally drifted into a fitful
sleep...
A man was walking away from her. He was outside,
and it was nighttime. The breeze ruffled his thick
hair; with the moonlight reflecting off it, it
appeared to be brown or dark blond. He wore a
heavy suede jacket over Wrangler jeans. His
shoulders were broad, and he moved with a slightly
unsteady gait, like he was stiff or injured.
A sound rustled behind him, and he stopped, turned
his head slightly to look over his shoulder. She
could only see part of his face, and that was
blurred in the darkness. But he was so familiar, she
was certain she knew him.
"Oh, it's you," he said. "Whadda you want?" His
voice, again familiar, was slurred.
He jerked impatiently and turned fully toward her,
but the shadows obscured his face. She knew him,
she was certain. But she couldn't figure out who he
was.
"Look, I'm sorry about everything, " he said. "But I
already told you...
"
He paused, belched. He was
drunk—that must be why his words were slurred.
"I've given you all I can. " He raised his hands,
staggered. "You'll have to settle for that. I'm sorry
it's worked out this way. But that's it. It's over. No
más. "
An arm came up, pointing toward him. The arm
was encased in a bulky sleeve, and it took a
moment for her to realize that whoever it was held
a gun in his black-leathered-gloved hand. Black
malevolence radiated around the arm. No! Not
this!
The first man's reaction was slow, probably blunted
by alcohol. He squinted at the gun pointing toward
him for a moment. "Whoa there!" He stumbled
back a step. "What the hell are you doing? "
No answer, just the gun steadily pointing at him in
silent menace. She already knew what was going to
happen. Please, God, stop this. Stop this thing now.
"Hey!" the man said, alarm edging his voice. "You
can't be serious. After all I've done for you?. We go
way back. Why are you doin' this?
The black-gloved thumb cocked the trigger. "Wait!"
he shouted. "I'll do more. I'll
—"
The blast hit him right between the eyes. Blood and
brain matter flew toward her, splattering as if
hitting a glass wall, obscuring her vision. All she
could see was red, crawling downward in a
sickening pattern.
She knew the man hadn't survived the shot between
the eyes. And the blood, the blood...
She heard the screams without realizing they were
hers. She felt hands on her shoulders, gripping
them tightly. "Kara! Kara, wake up!"
"No!" she cried, trying to wrench away. She
couldn't let it catch her, or it would kill her, too.
"Let me go!"
"Kara, it's just a dream. Open your eyes."
She did, but everything was blurry. All she could
see was a sinister dark shape bending over her.
It
had found her.
Panic resurged, and she kicked
wildly and rolled to the side.
"Kara!" Hands clamped onto her shoulders again,
pinned her to the mattress. "It's me, Damien. You're
in your house, in your bed. You're safe."
Lucid thought seeped slowly into her
consciousness, and she sank down. Damien
released her and stood back. Light streamed in
from the hallway, illuminating the lower end of the
bed. But her surroundings didn't seem real. She felt
like she was still in that horrifying other world.
"Oh, God. Damien, I saw it."
He sat on the edge of the bed. "Saw what?"
"Another murder." She struggled to sit upright, and
he angled the pillow behind her so she could lean
back.
"Tell me everything." His low voice was utterly
calm and devoid of emotion.
"I saw the back of a man. He was outside, wearing
a suede coat. He was staggering a little, and his
words were slurred. I think he'd been drinking. I
felt certain I knew him, but I couldn't see his face."
She took a deep breath to calm her stomach, closed
her eyes. The dream flashed back into her mind, the
grotesque splatter of blood and matter sliding
slowly down the invisible barrier. Gasping, she
opened her eyes.
"What is it?"
"It's like I'm still linked somehow to the place." She
raised a trembling hand to push her hair from her
face. "Or... to the Belian." Her whole body began
shaking then, as if she had a horrendous chill.
Damien's hand went to the crystal resting against
his chest. She belatedly realized he wasn't wearing
a shirt, just a pair of jeans that weren't snapped, but
she was too shell-shocked to appreciate the
impressive masculine view. Holding the crystal, he
closed his eyes. Energy, fueled from unimaginable
power, surged and circled around them.
Kara felt a faint tingling flow along her skin and
knew she was enveloped in a protective Sentinel
shield. She managed to draw in a breath, tried to
relax. But the shaking didn't ease.
"You're safe. The Belian can't reach you through
the ethereal now. And on the physical plane, it will
have to go through me to get to you. Tell me the
rest of the dream."
She did, and then he made her tell him everything
again. "You can't think of any other details that
might tell us who this man is or where this took
place?"
She thought it through, shook her head. "No, I
can't." She wrapped her arms around herself to still
the shaking.
"You're fairly certain the dream was accurate?"
She nodded, feeling both miserable and frustrated.
"I
know
it is. And it probably just happened.
Shouldn't we call the police and tell them? Maybe
the man is still alive." She thought of all the blood
and brain matter she'd seen. "No, he's not."
"If you can't identify the man in your dream, or the
place where it occurred, there's not much we can
do. We can't just call the authorities and tell them
we 'think' a murder has occurred, but we don't
know where. We'll have to wait until it's reported."
He stood, leaving her feeling oddly vulnerable. "I
have a police scanner set up in Alex's room. I'll
keep listening through the night. Once the body is
discovered, we can take action."
Kara looked at the clock by her bed, the red
fluorescent numerals reminding her of the blood.
Twelve forty-four in the morning. Funny, it seemed
she'd been asleep longer than that. Another big chill
rolled through her.
Damien tugged the comforter up around her. "You
all right?"
She hated being needy. She and Alex had been
completely on their own up until now, and had
done just fine. But she still had that sick feeling and
the violent shaking.
"I'm cold. And I'm scared." She hesitated, pride
warring with fear, but she didn't want to be alone
tonight. "Please stay with me a little longer."
"Let me get the scanner and set it up here."
She was inordinately relived. Right now, she felt
like an easily spooked child instead of the rational
adult she prided herself on being. She'd feel foolish
in the morning, but in the aftermath of the dream
and in the dark bowels of the night, she was
grateful for Damien's steady presence.
He returned a moment later with the scanner. It was
smaller than the radio scanner Richard had used,
but then technology was seven years more
advanced. Damien set it up on the nightstand on the
opposite side of the bed and turned it on. It emitted
a burst of faint static.
He settled onto the bed, sitting against the
headboard, his legs crossed at the ankles. He was
still barefooted, but he had pulled on a black T-shirt
that fit him like a second skin, stretching across an
impressive display of muscles.
His beautiful physique wasn't enough to distract her
from the nausea, cold, and uncontrollable shaking.
It was all she could do to keep her teeth from
chattering.
He finished setting the scanner, looked down at her.
"Are you better?"
"A little." She clutched the comforter as another
spasm of shivering racked her. "I j-just can't seem