Read Touched by Darkness Online
Authors: Catherine Spangler
porcelain skin.
"I'll bet."
A smile tugged her lips. "You're such a guy."
"So you noticed."
She turned and punched him lightly in the arm.
"You actually have a sense of humor. Hard to tell,
though, with all that macho attitude and
testosterone swirling around you."
She became pensive again. "Richard rarely
laughed. He was so serious all the time. Alex is so
much like him. I wish Richard had lived to see his
son."
"Unfortunately, being a Sentinel is a very
dangerous occupation. Which is why I don't get
involved with anyone." Now why the hell had he
said that?
"Sometimes it's worth the risk," she said quietly. "I
wouldn't trade what I had with Richard for
anything. I'd do it all over again, even those last
moments—"
Hearing the catch in her voice, he glanced over at
her, but she was staring out at the road again. "Must
have been tough."
She blinked rapidly. "It was horrible. But now I
have Alex. And I have some wonderful memories."
Sometimes the horrors overrode the good
memories,
he thought.
They made the rest of the drive back to Zorro with
very little conversation, He dropped her off at her
office, over her protest that she needed to get her
truck. "I'll pick you up when you're ready," he told
her. "Just call my cell phone."
"I can drive myself. Besides, people will start to
talk if they see you chauffeuring me around."
"And they're not going to talk when they see my
car parked at your house all night?"
"They most definitely will," she said. "We'll
become the center of town gossip. With Alex safe
now, there's no reason you can't return to the
Magnolia Bed-and-Breakfast."
"That's not an option. I can't—and won't—take the
chance that the Belian might have identified Alex.
Not to mention that, as the town's resident stranger,
I'm automatically suspect, and we've already been
seen together. I'm not going to risk anything
happening to you."
Her eyes narrowed. "Oh, that's right, then you
wouldn't have a conductor."
He felt a flare of unidentifiable emotion from her,
but before he could respond, she said, "I'm sorry.
I'm tired, and I miss my son, and I'm more than a
little scared. I shouldn't be taking it out on you."
"Like I said, it goes with the territory. Do you have
your gun with you?"
"No. I don't have a permit to carry it yet."
"That's right. Damn. I'll get you some police-grade
pepper spray. You can keep that in your lab coat
pocket."
"That will barely slow down a Belian, as you keep
pointing out."
"It will cause any human body to react and cough
and gag. That will buy you some time to escape."
"All right." She jerked open the car door, obviously
unsettled.
"Call me when you're ready to leave. I won't be far.
And Kara, be very careful."
She turned to look at him. "The same goes for you
Sentinel. Watch your back out there."
Her concern shouldn't have mattered to him... but it
did.
#
That evening, Kara brought home a stack of lab test
results she said she needed to read before they were
filed. She also brought medical files on her patients
with serious health problems, as Damien had
requested. They sat at the dining room table and
went over the files.
There was Belle Williams with her breast cancer;
Sal with his heart condition; Katie Woodward, an
ovarian cancer survivor; Mary Roberts, who was
battling lung cancer; and Police Chief Tom Greer,
who'd had prostate cancer. There were also fifteen
other patients whose names Damien didn't know,
but would be checking out. And there was one
surprise: Luz, who had severe asthma, and had to
carry an inhaler with her at all times.
He tapped Luz's file. "This is very interesting."
Kara's eyes were troubled. "I brought Luz's records
because you requested all those with ongoing
serious medical conditions. But she's not the
Belian. I can't believe that."
"The Belian could be
anyone,"
Damien said.
"They're very adept at hiding their true natures."
"But surely Luz would have picked up on Alex
before now. He's had to be broadcasting from time
to time."
"Maybe. But the Belian might not pick up on it if it
wasn't consciously tuning in."
"I don't even want to consider the possibility." Kara
closed the file and tossed it onto the pile. "At least
not tonight. I'm too tired to think straight. And I
still have to read those lab reports. I've been leaving
the office early, and going in late, and I'm getting
behind."
"I want to look through these records again,"
Damien said, pulling the stack over. "We might
have missed something."
He studied the files, while Kara perused lab reports
and initialed them and made notes on a legal
yellow pad about the patients she needed to call.
After a while, his stomach started demanding food.
"I think I'll putter around in the kitchen and see
what there is to eat."
"Good luck finding anything," she said absently,
her brow creasing as she studied a report. "That
cholesterol level is way too high. I'll have to call
Bill Donovan tomorrow."
Her concentration appeared formidable, and it was
matched by an impressive intelligence. Damien left
her to it and went to the kitchen. Mac, apparently
having decided he was a friend rather than a foe,
followed him and settled by the back door,
watching expectantly.
Damien found a well-stocked pantry and fridge,
probably thanks to Luz. He also found leftovers in
the fridge—a chicken and tomato sauce dish that
looked very similar to the Chicken Cacciatore his
father used to make, and tossed green salad. In the
pantry, he found rice and packaged dinner rolls. He
got to work heating up the chicken and rolls and
cooking rice.
It felt strange to be preparing a meal for more than
one. He often stayed in hotel suites where he had a
microwave and fridge, so he was used to putting
together informal meals. But Kara's bright, homey
kitchen carried him back to his parents' big blue-
and-white kitchen in Syracuse, New York, and
resurrected memories of helping his father prepare
family meals—and with them, emotions best left
buried.
He didn't know why the memories were so vivid,
because they were from over thirty years ago, and
because he'd managed to keep them obscured, for
the most part, until now. Maybe it was the
surprising punch of nostalgia, or the cozy kitchen,
or the easy familiarity of Kara working in the other
room—as if they were a family unit—but he felt
more at home here than he'd felt anywhere since his
parents' deaths.
After they'd died, the family duplex in Syracuse
had been sold, and he'd been sent to live with his
newly appointed Sentinel mentor. He'd gone from a
warm and loving family environment to a sterile,
utilitarian condominium and a man who had no
experience with ten-year-old boys, especially one
who was inconsolable with grief.
All of that was in the past, Damien told himself
firmly, and every event had a reason, was a part of
the Divine plan. He was right where he was
supposed to be, and his focus needed to be solely
on tracking and dispensing the Belian. Nothing
more, and certainly no emotional involvement.
Resolute, he pulled the chicken and rolls from the
oven and took the rice off the stove. He got out the
salad and some salad dressings, put everything on
the kitchen table that he had set with plates and
silverware, and poured iced tea, which was served
year-round in Texas.
"Kara," he called out, heading for the dining room.
"Dinner's ready. Prepare to be impressed by my
culinary abilities—" He stopped, seeing her
slumped over the table, her pen still clutched in her
hand.
A soft snore verified she was asleep. He gently
shook her shoulder. "Kara, wake up. The food is
ready."
She didn't move. He knew she was exhausted, and
maybe rest was more important than food right
now. Pulling her chair back, he lifted her up. She
settled against him with an incoherent murmur. Her
breath was warm on his chest, and her musky,
feminine scent wafted upward, assailing his senses.
The peach silk blouse she wore gaped away from
her chest, revealing the lacy low-cut bra she wore
beneath it. A dainty gold locket on a delicate chain
was nestled between her breasts, which swelled
enticingly above the cups. He knew from last night
that her smooth skin would be soft and warm
beneath his fingers, her breasts exquisitely
sensitive.
Lowering his head, he inhaled deeply. Damn, she
smelled good. His body hardened in reaction,
causing him to suck in another breath. Even as he
told himself he shouldn't let his libido get the better
of him, he was remembering how Kara's lithe body
had responded last night.
Cut it out,
he ordered
himself.
As he turned to carry her to her bedroom, he was
struck with the sudden image of his father carrying
his mother. He'd only seen that once, when his
parents thought he was asleep. He'd come quietly
from his room, hoping to sneak a snack from the
kitchen, and he'd seen his father carrying his
mother to their bedroom. Even though he'd only
been eight at the time, he'd noticed the incredible
tenderness and caring between his parents, seen the
way his father held his mother as if she were a
precious treasure, and how her head rested against
his shoulder.
His Sentinel mother had been far stronger than his
human father, and could have carried
him
ten miles
without breaking a sweat. Yet his father had always
been protective toward her—even though it
ultimately got him killed.
Just another reminder of a past that was long gone.
Damien strode to Kara's bedroom, mentally
opening the door. She murmured again when he
placed her on the bed and slipped off her shoes. Her
toenails were painted a glossy red, a feminine touch
that sent another punch of desire through him.
Damn, he definitely needed to get laid—but that
required a willing party.
Determinedly he pulled the comforter and bedding
from beneath her, and resettled it over her. She
curled onto her side and sighed. Her auburn hair
fanned over the pillow like flowing silk. She
looked vulnerable and innocent—and sexy as hell.
And very human, Damien reminded himself. Off
limits, except for conductions—and that was
another murky issue.
He headed to the kitchen, where he and Mac would
share dinner and celebrate their bachelorhood.
Then, if the lust ravaging his body hadn't abated,
he'd take another cold shower.
#
The next morning, Kara stepped out of examining
room three and walked into the nearby nurse's
alcove to make a few notes on Betty Libby's chart.
Mrs. Libby was the grandmother of one of Alex's
soccer buddies, and was often at soccer games.
Seeing the elderly lady had nudged Kara's thoughts
of Alex into even higher gear. He'd only been gone
one day, and she missed him terribly.
"Dr. Kara? Are you at the nurse's station?" came
Bonnie's voice over the intercom. The receptionist
had an amazing sixth sense when it came to
knowing where Kara was at all times.
"You tracked me down, as usual."
"Chief Greer is on the phone. Line one."
Kara didn't think any phone call from Tom Greer
could be good. She strode to her office, fingering
the small metal cylinder in the pocket of her white
coat. Pepper spray, courtesy of Damien. She'd gone
outside early this morning and practiced the correct
way to hold it, flip up the plastic shield, and
discharge it. She just hoped an innocent patient
didn't make a wrong move; her nerves were frayed
to the point she felt like she might snap at the least
little thing.
She picked up line one. "Hello, Chief."
"Kara. I have some news."