Read Touched by Darkness Online
Authors: Catherine Spangler
"Doris had an amazing vitality and a zest for life,"
she told the group assembled at the Gateway
Funeral Home. "She could do circles around people
half her age, me included." A lot of people smiled
and nodded.
"She had a huge heart and a loving spirit. She cared
about those less fortunate, and was always helping
with church and town fund raisers. She was a
wonderful baker and made the best cakes and
cookies in Zorro. I owe at least five pounds to her."
More wistful smiles and nodding.
"Doris did a lot of things to help others, quietly,
without any fanfare. I've seen her—saw her—load
her car with meals and blankets and clothing and
take them into the poor neighborhoods around
Zorro. She'd also take flowers from her garden—
yes, she was an excellent gardener, too—and books
and magazines to people who were sick.
"She loved children—everyone's kids—and was so
darned proud of her own children and
grandchildren. My son adored her." Kara paused,
feeling tremendous regret that Alex couldn't be
there to say good-bye, but he had written a letter
right after Doris died, and she'd brought it today
and propped it by the urn containing Doris's ashes.
Clearing her throat, Kara continued, "Doris was a
modern woman, and kept up with the changing
technology, despite her age. She surfed the Internet
on her computer, sent and received e-mail, took
yoga classes, and went on ocean cruises. She had a
full and happy life, and I—" Her gaze skittered to
the lovely portrait of Doris on its easel, and the
golden urn beside it, and a sudden rush of tears
filled her eyes. "We're all going to miss her
terribly," she finished in a tear-choked whisper.
She stepped down from the podium, and Sharon,
pale and wan with grief, flashed a thankful smile.
Her heart heavy, Kara returned to her seat beside
Damien. "Well spoken," he murmured.
The tears overflowed her eyes and she fumbled
blindly in her jacket pocket for a tissue. A white
handkerchief appeared out of nowhere. "Here."
"Thanks." She took it, blotted her eyes, feeling
miserable. Losing Doris was painful enough. It was
made worse by the fact that she'd been murdered,
and by a Belian. Added to that was her guilt
because Damien had warned her about the Belian,
but she'd done her ostrich routine until it was too
late.
"You are
not
responsible for Doris's passing," he
said in a low voice, and she wondered if he was a
mind reader.
Needing his strength and warmth, she leaned
against him. She felt the slight hesitation before his
arm came around her. Its reassuring weight was
enough to get her through the rest of the service.
#
"What a day," Kara said later, as they walked across
the grass to her house.
The memorial service had been followed by a get-
together at Doris's house. Neighbors and friends
had brought enough food to feed the entire Texas
National Guard. Damien made impressive inroads
on the food, while managing to stay close to Kara.
It was stressful being in the house where she'd
found Doris, talking to the family and dealing with
the curious stares and whispers aimed at her and
Damien. She was glad when they were able to
leave.
The sun was setting and the temperature dropping.
The chill seeped through Kara's wool pantsuit. "Did
you pick up anything?" she asked.
"Not even a glimmer. If the Belian was at the
funeral home or the house, it was well shielded."
"Belle Williams didn't look very good," Kara
commented. "She must have had a chemo treatment
yesterday."
"Did you notice her legs? Very nice for a woman
her age."
"She square-danced for years, until her husband
died... the Belian has nice legs," Kara said slowly,
remembering the vivid images from last night.
"That's exactly what I was thinking."
"Belle is on our short list of suspects." Kara turned
to look back at Doris's house. Soon it would be
sold, and her things would be distributed among
her children. Kara couldn't shake the soul-deep
sadness. And she missed Alex. Nothing was right in
her world. "God, I need a drink." She felt, rather
than saw, Damien's gaze swing to her.
"We can do that."
She knew his mega-rapid metabolism allowed him
to drink large quantities of alcohol, while she could
drink herself into oblivion— which sounded damn
good right now. "I don't want to go to Jim's tavern,"
she said with a shudder. "Let's just go to the Quik-
Stop drive through and get something to bring back
here."
"Fine." He had the measured tone of someone
trying to soothe an upset or deranged person, but
she simply didn't care.
She insisted on driving, so they took her truck and
bought a twelve-pack of Shiner Bock, which she
also insisted on paying for. She didn't bother to
change her clothes when they returned, just
grabbed two beers, popped the tops, and gave one
to Damien.
She plopped onto the couch and kicked off her
pumps. Damien was wearing that killer black suit,
this time with a silver-and-black striped tie. He set
his beer down to take off the coat and tie and drape
them over a dining room chair, then retrieved the
bottle and settled in the big chair.
She had a fourth of her beer downed before he took
his first sip. His eyebrows lifted when she slugged
another fourth in one long gulp. "You know, you
didn't eat anything at the reception."
"Ask me if I care."
He didn't respond, but she thought she saw his lips
twitch as he raised his beer to his mouth. He took a
healthy swig, his powerful throat flexing as he
swallowed. He'd released his hair from the tie, and
it was loose around his shoulders, a stark contrast
against the white dress shirt. With the sharp angles
and lines of his face, tempered by the sensual
fullness of his lips, he looked like a god. Watching
him made her a little giddy.
"Besides, you ate enough for the two of us," she
muttered in an attempt to divert her wayward
thoughts.
"Yeah, there was some great food there."
She almost laughed at the reverence in his voice.
He might be an all-powerful Sentinel, but he was
such a
guy.
And what a guy—with all the right
parts, slot A fitting perfectly into slot B. Damn, her
thoughts were definitely unruly.
She drank more beer and pondered her reactions to
Damien. Part of it was the sexual attraction that
raged between them when they were in close
physical proximity to one another, and that was
nothing more than chemistry.
Yet even when there was distance between them,
when she was away from the mind-clouding
hormonal surge of the Sentinel-conductor link, she
had lingering thoughts of Damien. His honor and
integrity, his compassion and strength, his
gentleness and easy affection with Alex— his basic
goodness—
all combined inside a gorgeous face and
body to form one hell of a package.
One that was becoming harder to resist.
And maybe
she shouldn't even try.
Gulping the rest of her beer,
she rose from the couch. "You ready for another
one?"
"Sure." He drained his bottle, handed it to her.
In the kitchen, she leaned against the sink, staring
sightlessly out the window. She knew she was
navigating treacherous waters, at a time when she
was vulnerable. Her life was off course, everything
she'd worked for threatened, and now she had
inexplicable,
dangerous
feelings. They were
probably just the result of the upheaval in her life.
Yet, didn't she deserve some happiness, however
fleeting? Deciding the answer was yes, she got two
more beers.
She rejoined Damien in the living room, sipped the
second beer more slowly. Her thoughts returned to
last night's conduction, and to something that had
nagged at her since then. "You didn't kiss me," she
said.
"What?"
"Last night. You didn't kiss me during the
conduction."
She'd caught him off guard, judging from his
expression. "Kara—"
"Don't give me some bullshit answer! I asked a
simple question. A straightforward reply would be
nice, for a change."
His jaw tightened. "No, I don't kiss my conductors.
It makes things too personal, raises... expectations."
Ah,
emotion, commitment.
She understood
Sentinels couldn't get involved with every one of
their conductors. But many took mates and had
families—to propagate the species, if nothing else,
as she had just learned. Yet she sensed there was
something else underlying Damien's isolation.
"Does this have anything to do with what happened
to your parents?"
The pain flashed across his face before he could
hide it. Then he schooled his features into an
unreadable expression. "That has nothing to do
with any of this."
But she knew it did. He had done the same thing
she had, she realized. His pain from his personal
loss had been so great, he'd shut down emotionally.
In that regard, they were kindred souls. Both
wounded spirits.
She was so damned tired of being wounded.
She was on her feet without a conscious decision,
her legs carrying her to Damien of their own
volition. His eyes flared, but before he could react,
she leaned down, trapped his face between her
hands and kissed him.
He jerked back as if he'd been burned. "What the
—"
She pressed her fingers against his mouth. "Shut
up. This isn't a conduction, Damien, where you can
keep your distance by claiming it's for a higher
cause. There's no Sentinel and conductor business
tonight. Right now, we're just two people who need
one another."
He grabbed her wrist, pulled her hand from his
mouth. "That's the alcohol talking. You don't know
what you're doing."
It wasn't the beer—she could drink at least three
before she got tipsy. She felt as if she'd made a
monumental decision, had already taken the leap
off the cliff. She couldn't go back now, didn't want
to go back.
So she reached for her wings and took control of
the fall. "The hell I don't! You keep telling me that
life goes on, that we do have free will in some
things. Well, I'm choosing to
live.
I guess you're
going to hide behind your Sentinel heritage, instead
of facing life head on. You're a coward, Morgan."
Anger sparked in his eyes. "You know that's not
true."
"Really? You're letting the past dictate your life,
and you're refusing to let yourself feel. I'd call that
cowardice."
Maybe her words were the pot calling the kettle
black, since she'd done exactly what she accused
him of, but at least she had finally been willing to
take the leap. And her wings seemed to be working
just fine.
"You don't know anything about my life," he said,
and started to move her back so he could stand.
She shoved him hard, catching him off balance, and
he fell back into the chair. "I know you're a man,
with feelings and needs, just like any other human
male. And I'm assuming you want me.
So kiss me,
damn it!"
Not giving him another opportunity to protest, she
grabbed his head and kissed him again. She felt his
resistance, his hands coming up to her shoulders to
push her away. She angled her head, teased her
tongue between his lips.
Please,
she thought,
please, please don't reject me.
She needed this right
now, needed to feel alive and maybe cared for, even
if only for one night.
As if again reading her mind, his hands cupped her
shoulders, and she sensed him wavering. With a
groan, he took command of the kiss, began
ravishing her mouth with devastating finesse. Dear
God, he kissed every bit as good as she had
fantasized, and then some. With a little hum, she
crawled on his lap, straddled him. Felt him leap to
life between her legs, the immense hardness of him