Read Touched by Darkness Online
Authors: Catherine Spangler
they'll never even know it was my handiwork.
I can hardly wait for the rush of the kill. As always.
Belial provides for my needs. Glory to Belial, to the
blood, and to the undefeatable power of the
darkness.
Kara and Damien talked on the front porch because
she didn't want Alex overhearing their
conversation. However, he was anxious about being
in the house alone, so they brought Max inside.
Damien assured Alex that Max would know and
react immediately if any ghosts entered the house.
Kara raised the blinds on the picture window and
turned on the porch light, so Alex could keep them
in sight.
She donned a warm jacket, ensuring Damien
wouldn't have to offer his duster again—and she
wouldn't be subjected to its alluring warmth and
male scent. She sank onto the wooden glider,
waited for him to join her.
"Do you really think that thing won't come back?"
she asked.
"I can't make any guarantees. If it's drawn to Alex
and is trying to tell him something, it could return
any time."
"Is there anything you can do to keep it away? Put
some protective energy around the house or
something?"
"I'm a Sentinel, not an exorcist. I don't go around
chasing away ghosts."
"I'm wondering now if it was a good idea for you to
work with Alex. If you hadn't told him he was a
Sentinel and had powers, maybe he wouldn't have
experimented with them."
Damien's mouth thinned and his gaze bore into
hers. "Wrong. He was bound to use his powers
eventually, which could attract any number of
entities. And there is a Belian in Zorro, whether or
not you admit it. Sooner or later it will pick up on
Alex. It's time to acknowledge the reality of the
situation and deal with it."
The truth of his words deflated her protests, like the
air leaving an inner tube. He was right.
"You don't have any choice in the matter, not with
Alex's powers developing so rapidly," he added
quietly.
"I don't understand how this happened. Alex
promised me he wouldn't do anything with his
mind."
"I'm sure he meant it. He appears to be a fine boy.
But how can he control something if he doesn't
even know what it is, or how it works?" Damien
leaned closer, his gaze intent. "Knowledge is
power. The more Alex knows about his abilities,
the more he can control them. The better he can
protect
himself. That's why every young Sentinel is
assigned a mentor if his or her parents are— If a
Sentinel parent isn't raising the child."
She was certain he had started to say if the Sentinel
parent or parents were dead, a strong possibility, as
she well knew. Chilled, she pulled her knees up and
huddled into her legs.
"I need to work with Alex on using his powers,"
Damien said. "So he can learn how to properly
control them and protect himself from Belians and
discarnate entities."
She could see his point all too clearly, and she
hated it. But denying the reality could only put
Alex in danger. "All right," she said tiredly. "But
only for control and protection—no tracking
energies. I still want to be present whenever you're
with Alex."
"There's one more thing we need to do."
Anticipating him, she was already shaking her
head. "No."
He grasped her shoulders and turned her toward
him, his gaze boring through her eyes and into her
soul. "Yes, Kara.
Yes.
You've got to conduct for me.
It's my best chance of catching this Belian and
keeping it from sensing Alex."
Fear for Alex, and pain from the past, rushed over
her. She was torn between a mother's fierce need to
protect her child, and the preservation of her soul.
She wanted Alex safe more than anything, but how
could she take care of him, be there to protect him,
if she was mentally and spiritually devastated?
Conducting for Damien would take her back down
the path that had almost destroyed her seven years
ago.
She stared at him, paralyzed by the past. "I can't do
it," she whispered. "I just can't. There has to be
another way to protect Alex."
He shook his head with a frustrated growl, released
her. "All right, then. We'll concentrate on Alex. For
now. But the time will come, Kara, when you won't
have any choice in the matter."
She knew he was right—her reprieve from the
terror of Birmingham was just temporary. But as
long as Alex wasn't in the direct path of the Belian,
she simply didn't have the courage to face the past
yet.
Not that her cowardice changed anything. With
Alex's growing powers, they were moving closer to
a Sentinel's existence. And she could only watch
helplessly as their lives were irrevocably altered.
#
The dreams returned that night.
The surreal feel of being suspended out of body
permeated Kara, and she knew on some deep
instinctive level—as she always did, even while
asleep—that this was a precognitive vision in the
form of a dream.
No!
her mind screamed. She
thrashed and tried to break the bubble of the dream.
Tried desperately to force herself to consciousness.
Her efforts were futile—as they had always been.
Trapped within the vision, she could see everything
happening in crystal-clear real time, as if she were
watching a movie, only she was drawn into the
action.
A person was moving down a dark hallway that
looked vaguely familiar. Kara followed behind,
unable to see the person's face. The bulky overcoat
and dark pants and outline of some sort of cap on
the head gave the person a masculine look, so she
assumed it was a man she followed.
He radiated malevolence; a black, terrifyingly
familiar aura surrounded him. Kara had seen
auras like that on several occasions, when she had
been conducting for Richard. This man
—
this
monster
—
was a Belian. She wanted to turn and
run, to escape this essence of pure evil, but she was
under the dictates of the dream. She could only
follow; would be an observer no matter how much
she resisted.
His feet, encased in boots, made no sound on the
lush carpet. He reached an open doorway, paused,
listened. She listened, too, heard the sound of
steady breathing. Someone sleeping, so it must be a
bedroom. He entered, and she followed. A night
light was plugged into the right wall, sending a low
glow over the furniture and a figure in the bed.
She didn't recognize the room. The man moved to
the figure in the bed. A woman with light-toned
hair lay there, facing the opposite wall, her
features hidden.
Familiarity stirred, yet Kara couldn't place the
woman. The man turned slightly, and she saw he
wore a baseball cap, pulled down low over his
face. She could see only his silhouette in the dim
lighting, couldn't identify him.
"Who are you?" she asked, horror crawling
through her. He might have a human body and a
human name, might be someone she knew. But he
was really the Devil incarnate. "What are you
doing here?"
Ignoring her, he reached into the pocket of his coat
with a hand encased in a flexible black leather
glove, and drew out two objects. He deftly popped
something off one object, then held up a small
bottle, and placed the object against one end. Kara
realized it was a syringe and some sort of drug he
held. Dread pounded with every beat of her racing
heart.
"What are you doing?" she demanded.
He leaned over the sleeping woman, pushed up the
sleeve of her gown. The material was a light-
colored background, Kara noticed absurdly,
covered with little cup-and-saucer motifs. The man
placed the hypodermic against the woman's upper
arm.
"Stop!" Kara ordered sharply, panicked. "You have
no right to do this!" But she was frozen in place,
unable to move or impede his actions in any way.
Giving no response, the man injected the woman's
arm. Oh God, oh God, oh God, don't let this
happen, Kara implored as she watched, impotent in
the throes of the vision. She knew, with every fiber
of her being, that she was witnessing an atrocious
act. And she could do nothing, nothing...
Gasping for breath, Kara surged upright in bed. Her
heart was pounding. She shook uncontrollably. Still
unable to catch her breath, she looked around
wildly. She was in her own bed, in her own room.
Alex, too frightened to sleep alone, was sprawled
next to her, his covers kicked off. Numbly, she
covered her son, then curled around him, trying to
console herself with his warmth and life energy. He
didn't stir.
She prayed fervently to an ambiguous, distant God,
asking for protection against the evil forces
epitomized by the man in her vision. She prayed for
the soul of the woman in the vision, knowing that
soul was likely now winging its way from the Earth
plane. She hadn't been able to see the woman's
face, had no idea who had just been the latest
victim of a Belian. Just as bad, she didn't have a
clue on the identity of the Belian.
Basically, her vision was worthless—although she
had no doubt of its accuracy. Despite her adherence
to scientific data and logical explanations, her
dream visions had always been eerily prophetic.
This was just another horrific experience to add to
those of the past few days.
She cursed the return of her psychic dreams, cursed
Damien Morgan's appearance, which had probably
been the impetus for shaking loose her carefully
buried psychic abilities. And she mourned the loss
of the life she had so carefully built for Alex and
herself over the past six years.
More than ever, she felt she was barely balanced on
the edge, and the slightest push would send her into
the abyss.
#
It had been years since she'd had a psychic
experience, but she hadn't forgotten the physical
aftermath, the nausea and nagging headache
reminiscent of a hangover. But that wasn't the
reason Kara moved through the next day with a
sick feeling in the pit of her stomach.
She couldn't stop thinking about the woman in her
dream, kept steeling herself to hear about another
death. It crossed her mind to call Damien, but she
shrugged the thought away. There was nothing he
could do now, and she was determined to keep her
contact with him to a minimum. They had agreed
he would come over two nights a week to work
with Alex, but that would be the extent of her
cooperation.
"Dr. Kara?" said a soft voice, breaking into her
thoughts. "Are you okay?"
Kara forced her focus back to the present, and
managed to smile at Sara Thornton. "I'm fine, Sara.
Sorry, but I was just... thinking about Alex."
Sara, a short, thin woman with a heart-shaped face
and straight dark brown hair stared back at Kara.
Her thick bangs emphasized her large brown eyes
—and the circles beneath them. Kara had smelled
alcohol on her when she came in with her two
children, and her heart ached for the family. She
knew they were struggling to survive after David's
death.
"Well," she said briskly, lifting ten-year-old Julie
down from the exam table. "I'm pretty sure both
Julie and Michael have strep." She picked up the
two cotton swabs lying on the stainless tray. "I'll
run the test, but I expect it to be positive."
Seven-year-old Michael scrunched up his face.
"Ah, bubble gum medicine
again?"
"What, you don't like it?" Kara teased. "Would you