Read Touched by Darkness Online
Authors: Catherine Spangler
"He's dead! Oh God, he's dead! My baby's dead!"
Kara knew that voice. She shoved through the
onlookers and saw Sara Thornton crumpled on the
ground. Officer Allen Spears was on one side and
Nancy Miller on the other. Nancy had her arms
around Sara, but Sara shoved her away and
screamed, "My Michael is dead!"
Michael Thornton?
Mikey was dead?
Kara's legs
went weak. She stumbled back, felt Damien's hands
close over her upper arms. "Steady now," he
murmured.
"Ma'am, I know you're upset, but if you could just
come sit in the cruiser." Officer Spears tried to take
Sara's thin arm, but she wrenched away.
"He was fine last night, before I left." Tears
streaked down her ravaged face. "He was fine, I tell
you! Luz Perez stayed here with them last night.
She killed my boy!"
Another shock wave for Kara to absorb, and she
felt the cold sliding through her. Tightening his
hold, Damien started pulling her back from the
crowd.
"Ma'am," Spears, a young man fresh out of the
police academy, pleaded, "if you could please calm
down and wait, we'll take your statement after
Chief Greer finishes inside—"
But Sara was like a wild woman, and she spun
away from the officer's outstretched hand. "My
baby's inside! I should be with him. I have to go to
him." She scrambled toward the house, but Spears,
his face turning red, grabbed her arm again.
Another officer came to his assistance, and with
one on each side of her, they towed her toward one
of the squad cars.
"She killed him!" Sara wailed. "Luz killed my
baby! He was fine when I left him last night! When
I went in to wake him this morning, he didn't... he
—" She collapsed, sobbing brokenly as the men
placed her in the front seat of the car.
Kara stood there, too shocked to fully process the
situation. Damien leaned down and said in a low
voice, "I'm going around the house to see if I can
pick up anything before the police get more
organized."
"Wait!" She spun around. "I'm going with you."
She followed him to the far side of the house. Most
of the people were clustered on the south side and
in the front, and the area hadn't been cordoned off
yet, nor had the ambulance arrived. Distant sirens
indicated more emergency vehicles would be
arriving soon.
They went around the corner and Damien said,
"Wait here. I've only got a few minutes to work."
Michael Thornton was dead.
She was still trying to
take it in, even as sharp-edged grief slashed
through her. "Let me help. If you can use my
energy, you might pick up more. I'm not letting this
thing get away. He was just a little boy." Her voice
caught, but she forced it under control.
Damien's steel gaze bored into her eyes. "All right."
He took her hand, tugged her further along the side
of the house. Touching his necklace through his
shirt, he inhaled deeply.
She mentally reached for him, and opened herself
to the despised abilities lurking deep within her. A
scene unfolded in her mind.
A distorted image of a person stepped into what
was obviously a child's bedroom. The moonlight
drifting through the window illuminated soccer and
baseball posters on the walls and a soccer ball on
a dresser. But the figure moving toward the bed
was murky, blurred by powerful supernatural
abilities.
Michael was sleeping peacefully on his back, sweet
and innocent. A pillow covered his face, was
yanked down so hard, Kara felt her body jerk.
"Stay with me," Damien ordered. "Don't break the
link."
She dug deep, sheer determination keeping her in
the vision.
Two feminine hands gripped the ends of the pillow,
pushing down. The only color in the nightmare
scene was the glaring white pillow case and the
blood red fingernails on the killing hands. Michael,
obviously a deep sleeper like most children, didn't
move, didn't know he was being suffocated. With a
sigh, the life left his small body. Then the killer
looked right at Kara, as if posing for a picture. The
face was shadowed, but white teeth flashed in a
taunting smile. The face began to come into focus
—
"What are you doing there?"
Kara jolted back to reality, met the glare of a man
in a county sheriff uniform. "I don't know what the
hell you're doing," he growled. "But I can arrest
you for tampering with a crime scene."
"I'm sorry," she said lamely, still stunned from the
vision. "I heard the news and I—I"
"She's a friend of the family," Damien interjected.
"She was so upset when she heard about the boy
that I brought her around here to give her some
privacy. I'm sorry, officer. I didn't realize that
would be a problem."
The sheriff studied Kara. She must have looked like
death warmed over, because he nodded. "Get back
around the house, and go on home. There's nothing
you folks can do for the boy now."
The truth of his words struck like a hammer on an
anvil. Little Michael Thornton was dead, brutally
murdered by a monster. She was barely aware of
Damien leading her around the carnage of people
and vehicles and back to the car. She gave a brief
nod when he asked her if she was all right—a
colossal lie—and tried not to think or feel during
the silent drive home.
He pulled the car into the driveway, his face rigid.
"Damn! I needed just one more minute!" He acted
like he wanted to hit something, thought better of
it, rested his clenched fist on the steering wheel.
"I'll have to go back later."
Kara had been barely holding it together; now she
began crumbling inside. She wrenched open the
door and ran for the house, digging her keys from
her purse. She reached her bedroom, slammed and
locked the door, and collapsed on the bed.
Pain rolled through her in great waves. She curled
into a miserable ball and sobbed. So much death, so
much suffering. A lively old lady killed as casually
as one would swat a fly, and now the life of a child
taken. Memories of Richard's death took their place
in the gruesome queue, another layer of grief.
She didn't know how long she lay there; she only
knew that it seemed as if her life force drained out
of her with the tears. Now she was empty inside,
except for the pain. She felt a familiar touch of
energy, followed by soothing warmth.
"I locked that door for a reason," she muttered.
"You've grieved enough." Damien's voice washed
over her with another wave of warmth. "I can feel
your exhaustion. Rest now."
"You can't keep doing this," she protested, feeling
the pull toward nothingness. She rolled over and
glared up at him. "What about free will?"
"Mine is stronger than yours."
Arrogant male,
she thought, battling the pull. She
was going to have to... to... sleep...
She awoke with a start, completely disoriented. It
took her a moment to realize she was in her
bedroom, and that it was late afternoon, judging
from the dim light coming through the partially
open blinds. The quilt from the foot of the bed was
thrown over her.
It took another moment to remember that Michael
Thornton had been murdered. A fresh wave of pain
swept through her, and more tears threatened. She
sat up, blinking them back. She was through
crying. It was time to go after Mikey's murderer.
She went into her bathroom, splashed some cool
water on her face, but there was no help for her red,
puffy eyes. She rinsed her mouth, ran a brush
through her hair and changed into a pair of sweats.
Then she went to find Damien.
He was the only light in the darkness.
#
Damien sat in the large chair in the living room.
The blinds were closed, but the dim room was
bright in comparison to his dark mood. After he'd
sent Kara to sleep, knowing it was the best thing,
considering her fatigue and distraught state, he'd
spent an hour in meditation. He hoped that would
help firm up a psychic imprint from what he'd
gathered at today's BCS. But it wasn't enough,
damn it to Belial and back. He'd need more before
attempting a conduction.
He'd listened to the police scanner as he fixed and
ate two sandwiches, but hadn't garnered any helpful
information. He typed a report of the latest murder
and e-mailed it to Sanctioned headquarters, then sat
down to center himself and think through every
event of the past two weeks. There might be
something, even the tiniest clue, he had overlooked.
But nothing jumped out at him. He thought of
Michael Thornton—just a
child,
about the same age
as Alex—and a mixture of rage and pity roared
through him. He had to stop this thing
now.
A whisper of sound snagged his attention, and he
looked up to see Kara standing just inside the room.
Her hair fell loose and simple around her pale face.
She'd changed into a slate-blue sweat suit. With no
makeup on, and her slender figure, she looked
incredibly young. But he knew from first hand
experience she was all woman beneath that bulky
fabric.
Her gaze locked with his. She looked sad and...
alone. Just as alone as he felt. He should be used to
loneliness by now. He'd been isolated, either self-
imposed or by circumstances, for over thirty years.
But sometimes the emptiness closed in on him,
although he'd always had another hunt to keep him
going. And sometimes... sometimes he wished for
companionship, for a kindred spirit to ease the
barrenness of his existence.
Motivated by emotions he didn't dare examine too
closely, he held out his hand to Kara. Wordlessly,
she came to him, folding that lithe body into his
lap, tucking herself against him. He wrapped an
arm around her and rested his cheek against her
head. She smelled like lavender—from her
shampoo, he knew—and the classic Chanel
perfume she favored. She felt soft and warm and...
wonderful. A dangerous exercise in futility, he told
himself.
Yet the door had been opened when he'd let her get
too close, when he'd taken her—and allowed
himself to be taken—in non-conduction intimacy.
But he wasn't quite ready to close that door. Not
yet. It was hard to return to the loneliness.
He felt her shiver, realized the room was cold. With
a flick of his hand, he ignited the gas logs. Another
gesture and the afghan over the back of the couch
floated to them.
He tucked the cover around her. "Are you feeling
better?"
"I'm not as tired as I was." She placed her palm on
his chest. He wondered if she could feel his heart
speed up. "We're going to have to talk about your
overbearing and macho attitude, Sentinel. You do
not
decide when I go to sleep."
As long as there was danger, and innocents were
involved, he
would
have the final say in everything.
But he merely said, "Let's get through this, then
we'll discuss your sleeping habits."
She sniffed, but didn't argue. "What now?" she
asked. "Shouldn't we do a conduction?"
"Not yet. I need that last bit of the psychic
signature. We can't do much until the activity at the
Thorntons calms down and I can go back over
there."
"I was afraid that sheriff's interruption messed up
the reading." She was silent a minute. "If Michael
was mur—" She shuddered. "If it happened last
night, why didn't I dream it?"
Feeling the tension invading her body, Damien
splayed his hand over her back, rubbed in slow,
calming circles. "I don't know. But you're not going
to dream about everything the Belian does. Or you
might have dreamed about the boy, but your
subconscious buried it. Even if you had dreamed on
a conscious level, you couldn't have stopped it."
"I know." She shifted to look up at him. "Have you