Read Touched by Darkness Online
Authors: Catherine Spangler
To his delight,
Farscape
was on the Sci-Fi channel,
and he settled in bed to watch it. Sleepy now, he
was nodding off when the blinds at his window
started rattling. Startled, he sat up and looked at the
window. The blinds banged back and forth like
there was a strong breeze coming in. Only the
window was closed.
His senses tingled, and he felt the crawl of a
foreign energy along his skin. His heart started
racing. It took a moment for him to remember to
raise his shields. A wall photo of him and Mom
tilted sideways, static blared from the TV, and
items skittered along the dresser. The handle of the
door to the hallway began turning back and forth.
Afraid to try to make it through the door, Alex
huddled under the covers. He knew on a logical
level that it was probably just the ghost trying to
talk to him; on a gut level, he was scared stiff.
"W-w-what do you want?" he whispered,
scrunching his eyes closed. He knew from what
Luke had showed him that the ghost was leaving
wavering energy trails, which experienced
Sentinels would be able to see in their minds. But
he couldn't see anything. He pushed his shields up
further, tried to listen, like Luke had told him to.
He heard a high-pitched whisper, barely audible
over the TV static.
"Help... my... say... Say... no.
Help... my... My!"
"Help you what?" Alex asked, afraid to look.
"Stop! My! Say...no... No!"
He tried to make out more words, but he couldn't
figure out the strange hissing sounds. The energies
around him escalated. There was a crash, and his
eyes flew open. His new otter mug was on the floor
in a bunch of pieces. The picture of him and Mom
rocketed to the floor. The blinds were pounding
against the window now. All kinds of stuff went
flying through the air, and the hissing became more
of a wail, like wind in a storm. Only it was inside
the room.
"My. . myyyyyy!"
He knew Grandma and Grandpa wouldn't come to
his rescue. They couldn't hear anything because
Grandma slept with some sort of sleep machine and
a mask over her face, and Grandpa snored real
loud.
The pillow next to Alex levitated and rotated,
spinning faster and faster. Utterly terrified, he
leaped out of bed and lunged to the door, flinging it
open. He ran down the hall, stopped outside his
grandparents' closed bedroom door.
A noise had him looking back toward his bedroom.
He could almost see the flow of energy coming
down the hallway; he heard popping sounds as
pictures on the walls began spinning. Then the
hissing.
"Myyyyyyy!!!"
It was coming straight at him. He turned and ran.
He fumbled with the front door bolt, his heart
pounding furiously. At any second, he expected to
feel fiery claws grabbing him. Then he was out,
racing across the cold grass, gasping for breath. He
looked behind him, fearful that something might be
after him. But he saw only the dim glow from the
lamp Grandma kept on in the family room,
illuminating the open doorway.
He leaped onto Luke's porch, pounded on the door.
He hit the doorbell three or four times for good
measure, heard it chiming inside the house. "Luke!"
he yelled. "Luke, it's me, Alex!"
Dancing back and forth on his icy feet, he looked
back at his grandparents' house. So far, so good, but
he sure didn't feel safe. It seemed like an eternity
before the porch light went on and the door swung
open. Luke stood there in nothing but a pair of
jeans. His long hair was messed up and he looked
kinda sleepy.
"Alex! What the hell's going on?"
"The ghost! It's back and it's
really
upset!"
#
It took Sara Thornton four tries to get her key into
the lock. Of course, it didn't help that the porch
light was broken—another one of David's
uncompleted projects—and that the door seemed to
be moving. On the road, Beth and Mary leaned out
the car windows and hollered comments.
"Hey, Sara, locked out of your own house?"
"Shut up!" she yelled back. "I just can't find the
keyhole."
"It's supposed to be the man who keeps missing the
hole." Both of them dissolved into laughter over
Beth's remark.
"Go get screwed," Sara said, but she was feeling
too good to really care about their comments. She
finally shoved the key home, fumbled the lock and
door open, and swept grandly into the house. Beth
honked the horn twice behind her, then the car
screeched away.
Sara stumbled and almost fell, cursing. Who had
left the rug edge flipped up again? And who was
that asleep on the couch? Oh, yeah. It was Luz.
Couldn't stay awake, the stupid woman. And it was
only. . Sara squinted at her inexpensive gold-toned
Timex—a gift from cheapskate David—but her
vision blurred. Well, it was after midnight— she
knew that much.
"Sara? Are you all right?" Luz sat up and swung
her legs off the couch.
"You fell asleep," Sara said accusingly. "You're
supposed to be watching my kids."
Luz's dark eyes narrowed. "I did watch them. And I
fixed them their dinner, made sure they got their
baths, and put them to bed—after I washed their
sheets. I even cleaned your bathroom and scrubbed
your kitchen floor. They were both filthy." She
stood and began folding the blanket she'd been
using.
"I guess I should be grateful." But all Sara felt was
angry, her alcohol-induced euphoria starting to
fade. How dare Luz insinuate she wasn't a good
housekeeper?
Unable to concentrate on much of anything, she
decided to let the insult pass. "How were the kids?"
There. She sounded perfectly normal.
"They were fine." Luz stared at her. "They are good
children."
When they weren't driving Sara crazy. Swaying,
she pressed a hand against the front door.
Luz tossed the folded blanket on the couch. "You
are drunk. Again."
Another insult. "I deserve a drink now and then."
Sara sauntered over to the slat-back rocking chair
and tossed her purse at it. She missed, and the purse
slid to the floor.
"I knew you would come home in this condition.
Like old times, eh?"
The bitch.
But Sara forced herself to smile. She
needed Luz, who was one of the few people willing
to come to the poorest part of Zorro, and to put up
with Sara's kids. Without Luz, Sara would never be
able to escape her miserable life.
"Oh, yeah, like always," she muttered, staggering
over to pick up her purse. She got so dizzy, she
almost fell, but she used the arm of the rocker to
heave herself back up. She dug around in her purse,
pulled out two crumpled twenties—which her
mother had sent her to buy clothes for the kids—
and held them out to Luz. "Here."
"One is enough." Luz shoved the other twenty back
into Sara's shaking hand. "Use the rest to buy
los
niños
something more to eat than peanut butter and
macaroni."
One of these days, Sara wouldn't need Luz. Then
she could blow off the bitch. "Sure," she muttered.
"Thank you, and all that stuff. Good-bye."
Luz's eyes glittered for a minute, and then she
smiled. That smile chilled Sara to the bone.
"Buena
noche,
Sara." She picked up her coat and purse
from the end of the couch and sauntered to the
door. She looked back over her shoulder, her eyes
still gleaming. "May your dreams be... sweet"
"Good riddance," Sara muttered as the door closed
behind her. She started for her bedroom, but the
floor was uneven, and she couldn't seem to keep
her balance. Besides, the couch was so much closer
than her bed. It had a pillow and a blanket, except
Luz had folded the blanket. Now why the hell had
she done that?
Sara made it to the couch, sank down with a groan.
She dropped her purse again, kicked off her shoes,
giggling as they hurtled off into the darkness
edging the dimly lit room, and fell back on the
couch. She managed to get her head on the pillow,
grabbed the square of blanket and plopped it, still
folded, over her middle.
And passed out cold, oblivious to the edge of
darkness creeping over her.
On Sunday morning, Kara and Damien sat at the
breakfast table, lingering over a second cup of
coffee while he worked on his laptop. She was
reading the semiweekly Zorro paper, and she
couldn't help herself—she turned to Matt's obituary.
"He was so young," she murmured as she read it,
her heart going out to Matt's father, Glen.
Damien looked up. "Who are you talking about?"
"Matt Brown." Kara folded the paper. "Do you
think there will be another murder soon?"
"Absolutely." His eyes turned arctic. "The Belian is
definitely escalating, and enjoying the kills way too
much. We won't have to wait long. We'll take the
scanner with us today."
Nowhere to run from the darkness,
she thought,
carrying her mug to the sink and dumping her
unfinished coffee. "I'm ready when you are."
They began driving by the homes of the women on
their list of suspects. They parked a discreet
distance away and walked back, getting as close as
they could without drawing attention. Damien did
psychic readings around each residence. He asked
Kara to link with his third eye to enhance the
energies, just as they had with the ghost.
"I didn't know a Sentinel could use a conductor like
this," she commented as they walked through the
wooded area behind Katie Woodward's house.
Richard had certainly never done it, but then he'd
also never taken her to a Belian crime scene.
"Not many do. They either haven't realized it can
be done, or they want to spare their conductors the
physical and mental drain, to reserve their energies
for actual conductions." Damien shot Kara an
apologetic look. "I'm sorry to use you like this,
because I know it's draining. You'll be tired later."
She already was, but how could she complain,
when three people had already lost their lives? "I'll
be fine. Are you picking up anything?"
"Nothing of note. Who's next on the list?"
"Mary Roberts," she said as they walked back to
the car. She looked up at the overcast sky. It was a
dreary day, cool and damp and gray. An ominous
presence seemed to drift in the chilled air, or maybe
it was just a reflection of her macabre mood. If the
grim set of his face was any indication, Damien felt
the same.
They got in the car and he started it. Instantly, the
police scanner, which was plugged into the car
power outlet, hissed to life with static and voices.
He turned up the volume and they heard the
dispatcher say: "Adam Six, code three."
"Adam Six, code three, go ahead."
"We have a DB at 1021 River Road, juvenile,
possible homicide."
"Copy. I'm headed that way."
"What exactly did they just say?" Kara asked,
although she'd picked up the alarming words
'
juvenile
'
and '
homicide
'.
"They have a body, and it might be a minor. Do you
recognize the address?" Grimly, Damien swung the
car around with a screech and floored it toward
River Road.
"Not off the top of my head. Oh, not a child."
Sickness and the presence of evil seeped through
Kara.
Damien let the scanner run through the channels,
and they heard more jargon: Blanco County
Sheriffs also being dispatched, along with an
ambulance and other emergency vehicles. It was
like a replay of Matt Brown's murder. The actual
scene was similar, too, with two police cruisers,
Chief Greer's white pickup truck, and a jumble of
onlookers filling the road.
When Kara saw which house it was, she didn't wait
for Damien. She leaped out and raced toward the
people, her heart hammering. She heard the
screaming before she saw the woman.