Read Touched by Darkness Online
Authors: Catherine Spangler
above the level of most six-year-olds. Even so, she
wouldn't let him play any of the fantasy games that
most young boys indulged in. No magic or
monsters. Those things too closely alluded to dark,
shadowy realms; to otherworld entities that were
very real and far more dangerous than any mythical
monsters, more terrifying than the average person
could even begin to conceive.
A chill shuddered down Kara's spine, but she
quickly shook it away. She had no more
involvement with the supernatural darkness, was
determined that their life from this point forward
would be normal. Except that Alex... She also
shook that thought away before it could fully
congeal.
Our life is normal,
she told herself fiercely. He
—
they—
were safe from such a possibility. She had
made sure of it, moving halfway across the country
to take up residence in Texas. She was fortunate
that she could use her medical skills anywhere.
And she liked the small town of Zorro, liked the
close-knit community, and the simple way of life.
She turned onto the main street of the town,
rumbling past the antique and second-hand shops,
home-style restaurants, hardware and feed stores, a
dress shop with dowdy, "mature woman" fashions
in the dusty display window. Traffic was sparse and
leisurely, matching the laid-back pace here.
Kara pulled into a parallel space in front of Sal's
Grocery and cut the engine. She reached over to
tousle Alex's thick brown hair. "Hey bud, we're
here."
He didn't look up from his game. "Just a minute,
Mom," he wheedled. "I'm about to score."
"Pause it," she advised. "I want to get our errands
done." She pulled the key from the ignition and
dropped it into her sweater pocket, then swung
open her door. "Come on."
She felt it the minute she climbed down from the
pickup. It assailed her, surrounding her like the
treacherous tentacles of a sea monster. Threatening,
suffocating.
The power.
She grabbed the top of the door, suddenly
struggling for breath.
No!
She was just imagining
it, still haunted by the terror of seven years ago.
Still raw from Richard, even now. No one in this
small west Texas town could wield such power.
Alex was too young, and
—
God willing
—
would
never learn to manifest it. She shouldn't have even
let herself think about it on the drive here. That was
the only possible reason she could be imagining the
sensation.
But the feeling persisted, furtive, horribly familiar.
The sensation of the power.
Adrenaline surged,
sending an awful tension through her body. She
slammed the door shut, leaned against the truck,
battling the beginnings of all-out panic. No, no...
no!
Her frantic denial didn't diminish the effect of her
pounding heart—or the insistent barrage of an
outside force. It was coming from across the street,
near Don Mason's feed store. Kara turned that
direction, determined to tame her runaway
imagination.
A man stood on the sidewalk in front of Mason's
Feed, tall, dark, unmoving. A long black duster
flapped around his jean-clad legs. The same breeze
blew his midnight hair around a sharp face with
chiseled features. His steady gaze fixed on Kara, an
all too familiar glow flaring into his eyes. No...
"Mom? What are you doing?"
She felt sweat trickling down between her breasts,
even though the day was chilly enough that she'd
worn a sweater over her shirt. The power was like
that, like an insidious fever that heated the blood,
destroyed balance and rational existence.
Reminiscent of hell.
"Mom!"
Still staring at the stranger, she saw his gaze shift
downward and to her left. Oh, God. Alex.
She looked at her son. He clutched her sweater,
concern on his thin face. Dark brown eyes, sandy
brown hair, and an expression so much like
Richard's, she wanted to cry
—
something she had
refused to do since about two weeks after his death.
Richard.
Her gaze snapped back up. The stranger
was striding toward them, staring intently at Alex.
The
power.
Here, in Zorro. Panic coalesced into
terror.
"Get in the truck!" she gasped, pulling Alex away
from the vehicle and jerking open the door. She
jammed her hand in her pocket, grabbing the keys.
"Get in! Now!"
He stared at her, obviously confused by her
irrational behavior. "But Mom
—
"
"Now!" she screamed, picking him up and heaving
him across the bench seat. She didn't give him time
to slide over, before she leaped in behind him. It
seemed like an eternity before she could right
herself from the sideways angle in which she
landed, while Alex wiggled out from beneath her.
She leaned out to grab the door. The stranger was
almost upon them, moving in steady strides. From
painful experience, she knew his seemingly
moderate speed was deceptive. Her heart battered
her rib cage. She fumbled the key into the ignition
as she swung the door shut.
The engine roared to life, the truck lurching
forward as she floored the gas before the gears had
fully engaged. The jolt snapped her head backward
painfully. For one horrible moment, she thought the
vehicle would stall. Frantically, she stomped the
gas pedal again. Tires shrieking, the truck shot
down the road, fishtailing and nearly crashing into
the right curb, before Kara spun the wheel and got
it under control.
She sped away, exhaust spewing out behind them.
She had to look. Was compelled to look. In her
rearview mirror, she saw the stranger, standing in
the road, watching them. Watching her. Watching
Alex. She began shaking uncontrollably.
And knew her bid for a normal life had just gone
up in smoke.
The terror pressed down on her, the memories
swirling through her frantic mind. Only she feared
memories weren't the only monsters she now faced.
But real flesh-and-blood demons.
Damien Morgan stared after the speeding truck,
noting the license plate, in case he met with any
resistance from the locals. Not that he expected to,
but he preferred to keep mind probes or
subconscious inducement to a minimum.
The surge of power he'd sensed when the blue
pickup had driven past him had taken him totally
by surprise. He watched the slender, auburn-haired
woman climb from the truck, thinking it came from
her. The power hadn't been very strong for a fully
evolved Sentinel, nor had it been shielded.
It took him a moment to realize the energy
emanated from the boy, which had been even more
of a shock. The
woman was obviously not one of
them, but the boy was. Yet there were no other
known Sentinels remotely close. They rarely
overlapped territories. Even so, Damien had sent
out a query before he left for Zorro, getting no
response. He had believed he was the only Sentinel
within miles.
Strange. A child with the power, left unattended,
without guidance. Unheard of. Unless... none of the
Sanctioned knew of his existence. And the
woman... she wasn't one of them, but she had
recognized Damien immediately. Only an initiate or
a conductor could have sensed shielded power.
Turning possibilities over in his mind, Damien
started toward Sal's Grocery. Since it was the only
grocery store in the vicinity, most of the town's
residents would shop there. The employees would
surely know the identities of the auburn-haired
woman and the boy.
Glancing around to be certain no one would see
him, he turned his palms upward, visualizing what
he wanted to manifest. A silk scarf whispered
across his skin, in a gold color that he knew would
complement the woman's coloring. He went up the
cracked cement steps to the store.
A chime tinkled when he opened the door. Inside it
was overly warm, but wonderful aromas permeated
the air: coffee, cookies, cinnamon and other spices.
A checkout area with an ancient cash register stood
in the right corner. Old-fashioned glass cases lined
the first fourth of the store, displaying meat and
cheese on one side; baked goods on the other.
Further down was a small produce section, then a
dairy case.
The limited floor space was crammed with shelves
piled with all sorts of goods. Toward the rear, tools
and work clothing hung on the walls, indicating
this was more of a general store than a grocery.
Damien walked down the right aisle, his booted
feet resounding on the wooden floor.
Halfway down, a man was stacking burlap bags of
flour against the wall. He glanced at Damien, then
took a closer look, apparently pegging him as an
outsider. The man straightened and stepped
forward. He was tall and gangly, with a gaunt face
weathered by years of hard work, and a shock of
white hair. He wore a blue and white plaid flannel
shirt, tucked carefully into faded work jeans.
Damien picked the man's identity from his mind.
He was Sal.
"Can I help ye find anything?" Sal asked in a gruff
voice with a strong country twang.
"You can help me find the owner of this scarf."
Damien held up the gold silk rectangle. "She
dropped it when she was getting into her truck.
Drove off before I could catch her. She was driving
a blue Chevy pickup. She had auburn hair and a
young boy was with her."
Sal's brow furrowed as he took the scarf in his
rough hands. "Well, now. Sure sounds like Dr.
Cantrell ye just described. But I can't see her
wearing nothing like this."
"Dr. Cantrell? Does she have a son?"
"Sure does. His name's Alex, and he's real bright."
Sal considered a moment. "I guess I'll keep this and
ask the doctor if it's hers the next time she comes
in. She shoulda been by, if she was in town this
morning. She usually does her shopping on
Saturdays."
"Does she?" Damien smoothly retrieved the scarf
before Sal could get a firm grip on it. "I'd rather
return it myself. Thank you, though."
A dull red suffused Sal's face. Damien detected
high blood pressure. "I woulda seen she got it."
"Oh, I'm sure you would have," Damien hastened
to assure the old man. He sent a small burst of
calming energy. "But since I'm now a resident of
Zorro, I'd rather give Dr. Cantrell the scarf myself.
It's a good way to meet a pretty woman, if you
know what I mean." He winked conspiratorially at
Sal. "Oh, unless she's married."
Sal didn't take the bait, instead giving Damien a
thorough once over. "New resident, eh? What line
of business are you in, Mr—?"
"Morgan. Damien Morgan." Damien extended his
hand, and Sal slowly accepted it with his own
callused hand. "I'm a crime writer for
Society
Magazine."
"A crime writer? Not much crime around here. Hey,
you investigating those murders over in
Fredericksburg? Naw, you'd be staying over there if
ye was."
There was more criminal activity in Zorro than the
old man could possibly know. "I don't really
investigate murders." Damien lied. "I leave that to
the authorities. I do write about them, though, and I
needed a quiet place to live, where I could find a
slower pace and focus on writing."
Sal considered this. "Zorro ought to be slow
enough for ye. Not much going on. Where you
staying?"
"The Magnolia Bed-and-Breakfast, for the time
being."
Sal nodded. "Belle Willams will take good of ye
there."
"So where can I find Dr. Cantrell?" Damien
persisted. "I'd like to meet her and return the scarf."
"Well, I don't give out other folks' addresses, not
without their say so. But you can catch Dr. Cantrell
at her clinic on Monday. She's usually in from nine
to four, and sometimes later, if she's needed. It's a