"But what does this thing mean?" Kaitlyn asked, shaking the paper.
Silence. Kaitlyn turned around. More silence.
"God, you're dumb," Marisol said at last. "Don't you remember the experiment today? Didn't you wonder at all how you got that picture of the grapes?"
Kaitlyn remembered that kaleidoscopic flood of images. "I assume because I'm psychic," she said, but she could hear the stiff defensiveness in her own voice.
"If you were really psychic, you'd figure out why you're here. And then you'd be on the next plane home."
Kaitlyn had had it with innuendo. "What are you talking about? Why can't you say something straight instead of all this secret stuff?" she almost shouted. "Unless you don't really have anything to say-"
Marisol had flinched at the volume of Kaitlyn's voice-and now she suddenly shoved past her, elbowing Kait hard in the arm. As she reached the stairway, she glanced back and snapped, "I came up to tell you you're late for dinner."
Kaitlyn sagged against the wall.
This had been the most confusing roller coaster of a day ... and Marisol seemed to be crazy, that was all.
Except that didn't explain what had happened during Kait's experiment. When Joyce had put that
"electrode" on Kaitlyn's forehead ...
Over my third eye, Kait thought. She looked at the now crumpled paper. The extra eye in the picture stared up at her grotesquely, as if trying to tell her something.
I've got to talk to somebody. I can't deal with this alone. I need help.
The decision made her feel better. Kaitlyn wadded the paper up and stuck it in her pocket. Then she hurried down the stairs to dinner.
"What's it got to do with me?" Gabriel said, flicking the paper back toward Kaitlyn. He was lying on his bed reading a magazine about cars-expensive cars. "It's not my problem."
Kaitlyn caught the paper in midair. It had taken a great deal of control to come here. She probably wouldn't have done it except that she couldn't face Rob alone just now, and Anna had been on the phone with her family since dinner.
Grimly Kaitlyn held on to her precarious calm.
"If there's anything to what Marisol is saying, then it's everybody's problem," she told Gabriel tightly.
"And you were the one who said that there was something wrong here."
Gabriel shrugged. "What if I did?"
Kaitlyn felt like screaming. "You really think something's wrong-but you don't care about finding out?
You wouldn't want to do anything about it?"
A faint smile touched Gabriel's lips. "Of course I'm going to do something. I'm going to do what I do best."
Kaitlyn saw it coming, but couldn't avoid feeding him the straight line. Feeling like Sergeant Joe Friday at the end of a scene, she rapped out, "And what's that?"
"Taking care of myself," Gabriel said smugly. His dark eyes were full of wicked delight at having the last word.
Kaitlyn didn't bother to hide her disgust as she left.
Outside his door, she leaned against the wall again. Lewis was in the study playing Primal Scream's newest CD at tooth-vibrating levels. Anna was still in the bedroom on the phone. And as for Rob . ..
"Did the headache come back?"
Kaitlyn whirled, somehow feeling cornered against the wall. Why didn't she ever hear Rob coming?
"No," she said. "I'm fine. At least - No, I am fine." She couldn't deal with Rob right now, she really couldn't. She was afraid for him-afraid of what she might do to him if she got the chance. It seemed equally likely that she'd kiss him or kill him.
"What's that?" he said, and the next thing Kait knew, he was taking the paper out of her hand. She tried to snatch it back, but he was too fast.
"That's nothing-I mean-"
Rob smoothed the paper, glanced at it, then looked up at her sharply. "Did you draw this?"
"Yes ... but I didn't do the writing. I don't- Oh, it's all so confusing." Kaitlyn had come to the end of her resources. She was tired of fighting, of pushing, of badgering people. She was tired.
"Come on," Rob said gently. The hand that cupped her elbow was gentle, too, but irresistible. He guided her without hesitation to the one room on the second floor that wasn't occupied-the bedroom he and Lewis shared.
"Now, tell me all about it." He sat beside her on the bed, as naturally as if he were her brother, as close as that. And with as little ulterior motive. It was agonizing-and wonderful at the same time.
And his eyes-he was looking at her with those grave golden eyes, extraordinary eyes. Wise eyes.
I can trust him, Kait thought. No matter what else happens between us, I can trust him.
"It's Marisol," she said, and then she was telling him everything. About waking up that first night to find Marisol in her room, about the strange things Marisol had said. Watch out or get out. This place is different than you think. About Marisol claiming it was all a joke the next morning. About the experiment today, and how the pictures had come into her mind-after Joyce put the cold thing on her forehead.
About Marisol pushing the drawing under her door.
"And then I tried to get her to explain-but all she talked about was some pilot study, and how if I knew why I was really here, I would be on the next plane home. And how Joyce didn't know what was really going on, either."
She stopped. She half expected Rob to laugh, but he didn't. He was frowning, looking puzzled and intent.
"If Joyce doesn't know what's going on, then who does?"
"I guess Mr. Zetes. But, Rob, it's all so crazy."
Rob's mouth tightened. "Maybe," he said under his breath. "But I wondered about him. . . ."
"That first day? The speech about us psychics being so superior and following different laws?"
Rob nodded. Kaitlyn was meeting his eyes without self-consciousness now, as grim as he was. He believed her, and that made this whole thing much more serious than before. This was business.
"And why he brought Gabriel here," Rob said.
"Yes," Kaitlyn said slowly. Someday she really would have to talk to Rob about Gabriel-but not now.
"But what does it all add up to?"
"I don't know." Rob looked at the drawing again. "But I know we have to find out. We have to talk to Joyce."
Kaitlyn swallowed. It had been a lot easier to threaten to tell Joyce in the heat of anger than it was to consider going to her now. But of course, Rob was right.
"Let's do it," she said.
Joyce's room was off the little wood-paneled hallway under the stairs that led to the front lab. It had originally been a solarium, a glass-enclosed porch. Not only that, but the French-door entrance was so large that anyone in the living room or foyer could see straight in. Only Joyce, Kait thought, could live in a room like this without any privacy. It probably had something to do with the fact that Joyce always looked good, whether she was doing business in a tailored suit or lounging in layered pink sweats-like tonight.
"Hi, guys," she said, looking up from a laptop computer. Light from her bedside lamp reflected off the glass walls.
Kaitlyn sat gingerly on the bed, and Rob pulled up the desk chair. He was still holding the drawing.
Joyce looked from one of them to the other. "Why so serious?"
Kaitlyn took a deep breath at the same time as Rob said, "We need to talk to you."
"Yes?"
Kait and Rob exchanged glances. Then Kaitlyn burst out, "It's about Marisol."
Joyce's eyebrows lifted toward her sleek blond hair. "Yes?"
"She's been saying things to Kaitlyn," Rob said. "Weird things, about the Institute being dangerous. And she wrote ... this ... on a drawing Kaitlyn did."
Still looking puzzled, Joyce took the paper, scanned it. Kait felt her stomach knot. She had stopped breathing completely.
When Joyce threw back her head, Kait thought for a moment she was going to scream. Instead, she burst into laughter.
Peals of laughter, musical and uncontrollable. After a minute she calmed down into snorts, but when she looked at Kaitlyn and Rob, she went off again.
Kaitlyn felt her own mouth stretch into a smile, but it was the polite, unhappy smile of someone waiting to be let in on a joke. At last Joyce collapsed against the mounded pillows, wiping tears from her eyes.
"I'm sorry ... it's not really funny. It's just... it's her medication. She must not be taking it."
"Marisol takes medication?" Rob asked.
"Yes. And she's fine when she does take it; it's just that sometimes she forgets or decides she doesn't need it, and then .. . well. You see." Joyce waved the paper. "I suppose she means it symbolically. She's always been a little worried about psychics misusing their powers." Joyce turned to Kaitlyn, obviously struggling not to grin. "You didn't take her literally, I hope?"
Kaitlyn wanted to drop through the floor.
How could she have been so stupid? Of course, it had all been a terrible mistake-she should have realized that. And now she'd blundered in on Marisol's emotional problems, or mental problems, or whatever.
"I'm sorry," she gasped.
Joyce waved a hand, biting her lip to keep from laughing. "Oh, look."
"No, I'm really sorry. It was just-it was kind of spooky, and I didn't understand.... I thought there must be some simple explanation, but..." Kaitlyn took a breath. "Oh, God, I hope we haven't gotten her into trouble."
"No-but maybe I should let Mr. Zetes in on this," Joyce said, sobering. "He was the one who recruited her, she was actually hired before I was. I think she's a friend of his daughter's."
Mr. Zetes had a daughter? She must be pretty old, Kaitlyn thought. It was surprising she would have a friend as young as Marisol.
"Anyway, don't worry about it," Joyce said. "I'll talk to Marisol about her meds tomorrow and get everything straightened out. By the way, Kait, when did you draw this?"
"Oh-yesterday, during the remote viewing experiment. I dropped it when I heard that guy with the Mohawk screaming."
"How is that guy?" Rob asked softly. He was looking at Joyce with steady golden eyes.
"He's fine," Joyce said, and Kaitlyn thought she sounded slightly defensive. "The hospital gave him a tranquilizer and released him."
"Because," Rob went on, "I still think you should be careful with Ga-"
"Yes, right. I'm going to change the protocol with Gabriel's experiment." Joyce's tone closed the subject and she glanced at her clock.
"I'm so embarrassed," Kaitlyn said as she and Rob walked back up the stairs.
"Why? After what Marisol did, you had every right to ask what was going on."
It was true, but Kait still felt that somehow she should have realized. She should have more faith in Mr.
Zetes, who, after all, had paid a lot of money to give the five of them a new life. She should have known that Marisol was having paranoid delusions.
The new life felt a bit lonely as Kait and Rob parted in the hallway. It was maddening to have him say good night so cheerfully, as if he enjoyed being her big brother. As if being anything else had never crossed his mind-which, in his view, it probably hadn't. He seemed to have wiped the entire incident this afternoon out of his consciousness.
Anna sat up as Kaitlyn came in the bedroom. "Where've you been?"
"Downstairs." Kaitlyn wanted to talk to Anna, but she was very, very tired. She fumbled in a drawer for her nightgown. "I think I'll go to sleep early-do you mind?"
"Of course not. You're probably still sick," Anna said, instantly solicitous.
Just before falling asleep, Kaitlyn murmured, "Anna? Do you know what a pilot study is?"
"I think it's a kind of practice experiment-you do it first, before the real experiment. Like a pilot episode for a TV show comes first."
"Oh. Thanks." Kaitlyn was too sleepy to say more. But it occurred to her that maybe Marisol had told the truth about one thing. Marisol had claimed to have been "around for the pilot study," and Joyce had said that Marisol had been recruited before her.
The rest was nonsense, though. Like the idea that Joyce had put something weird on her forehead- God, she was glad Rob hadn't mentioned that to Joyce. Joyce would have thought Kaitlyn needed medication, too.
And Rob . . . But she wouldn't think about Rob now. She'd deal with him tomorrow.
All that night she had strange dreams. In one she was on a windswept peninsula, looking out over a cold gray ocean. In another she was with Marisol and a group of strangers. All of them had eyes in their foreheads. Marisol smirked and said, "Think you're so smart? You're growing one, too. The seed's been planted." Then Gabriel appeared and said, "We've got to look out for ourselves. You see what can happen otherwise?"
Kaitlyn did see. Rob had fallen into a deep crevasse and he was shouting for help. Kaitlyn reached out to him, but Gabriel pulled her back, and Rob's voice kept echoing. . . .
All at once she was awake. The room was full of pale morning light, and the shouting was real.
CHAPTER 10
T
he shouts were distant and muffled, but unmistakably hysterical. The clock said 6:15 a.m.
Gabriel, Kait thought wildly, jumping out of bed. What has he done now?
Anna was up, too, her long black hair loose. Her eyes were alert, but not panicked. "What is it?"
"I don't know!"
She and Kait spilled out into the hallway without bothering to put on robes. Rob was just emerging from his room, wearing a tattered pair of pajama bottoms. Kait felt a surge of relief that he wasn't the one doing the shouting.
"It's coming from downstairs," he said.
He took the stairs two at a time, with Kait and Anna right behind him. Kait could hear words in the shouting now.
"Help! God! Somebody help! Quick!"