Read Touched by Darkness Online
Authors: Catherine Spangler
his powers, and successfully put the matter to rest.
Damn Morgan for coming into her life and putting
all these fears into her mind. She would not live
like this.
"Alex is wonderful," she said evenly.
"Is he still coming on Thursday to help me make
cakes for the town hall bake sale?"
Did she dare let Alex go over to Doris's house? He
was so excited about helping Doris bake. But now...
Kara felt the strong urge to pull Alex from school
and keep him home until the matter of the Belian
was laid to rest.
That was her emotional side. Her logical side knew
that she and Alex couldn't live that way. She had to
accept the fact that evil resided wherever there was
opportunity; there was no place she and Alex could
run to that would ever be completely safe. She had
to allow him to follow his usual routine as much as
possible.
"I'd like to help with the baking, too," she said.
She'd keep life on its regular course, but she would
take extra precautions. "Can we both come over
Thursday afternoon?"
"That would be wonderful. It will be much easier to
make all those cakes with two extra pairs of
hands." Doris picked up her pen. "Now, if you can
tell me what my new insulin dose should be, I'll get
out of your hair, and let you get home to young
Alex."
Kara read Doris's notes to see what doses she'd
been taking, made a copy of the notes to put in the
chart, and calculated the amount of a slightly
higher dosage. Doris wrote down the information,
then read it back.
"The American Diabetes Association web site says
you can't be too careful with insulin," she said,
tucking her notebook into her purse. "And I always
worry about getting too much and going into
insulin shock."
"That's always a concern," Kara told her. "But
you're very conscientious, plus you're on premixed
medication that has both regular and long-acting
insulin, so you don't have to juggle two bottles for
your injections. If you'll be sure to eat within thirty
to forty-five minutes after your injections, you'll be
just fine."
"I always do. I set my stove timer as soon as I have
the shot, and start fixing my meal." Doris rose and
leaned over to give Kara a maternal hug. "Thank
you, Dr. Kara. I'll be looking for you and Alex on
Thursday afternoon." She left, leaving behind the
airy fragrance of the Liz Claiborne perfume she
always wore.
Seeing Doris should have been a pleasant ending to
a stressful day, but Kara couldn't seem to shake the
dark cloud of suspicion hounding her. She closed
Doris's file and was rising to put all the charts away
when the phone rang. She saw on the caller ID it
was from home, and figured Alex was wondering
why she wasn't home yet. Feeling her mood
lighten, she smiled and picked up the receiver.
"Hello there."
"We have a problem here."
Kara's smile faded at the concern in her
combination housekeeper and nanny's voice.
"What's wrong, Luz?"
"There is a man here at the house. I've never seen
him before. He came to the door while I was in the
kitchen, and Alex let him in. He was talking to
Alex, and Alex is very upset."
"Oh, no," Kara murmured, certain of the intruder's
identity. "Has this man threatened you in any way?
Did you tell him to get out?"
"No threats yet," Luz said, her voice shaky and her
accent thicker than usual. "I told him I would call
la policía
if he did not leave immediately. He said
to call you first, that you knew him."
"Did he tell you his name?" Kara asked, although
she knew.
"Damien Morgan. He is very arrogant. He said I
could call the police if I wanted, but he's staying
here until you arrive. I sense that he is
muy
peligroso.
What should I do?"
Kara felt as if a huge hand had closed around her
heart and was squeezing unmercifully. "Don't call
the police," she said sharply. "Mr. Morgan won't
hurt you. I'll be there in a few minutes. Just keep
him away from Alex until I get there."
She slammed down the phone, grabbed her jacket
and purse, and raced out of the building as if a
Belian was pursuing her.
A distinct and horrifying possibility.
#
He thinks he can track me, but I'm far smarter than
he is. I was able to pick up on his power, even with
it shielded. I don't know who he is yet, but I will
find out. I know he was somewhere near the school
today. I wonder what he was looking for. Or maybe
who he was looking for. I did pick up a second,
faint echo of energy. There must be someone else in
Zorro with the power.
I will have to investigate that possibility further.
Since the Sentinel was lurking near the school,
perhaps it's one of the children. Now, that would be
an interesting development
—
and one I would enjoy
remedying. I’ll have to check out the school-aged
brats. Discreetly, of course. I'm far too clever to
ever fall under suspicion.
Before I'm through with this pitiful excuse for a
town, my power will be legendary, and I'll be
unstoppable. The Sentinel, whoever he is, will be
just a fading memory in the chronicles of the
Sanctioned. And these bumbling idiots will never
even know what hit them.
Kara slammed into the house, her heart racing. She
wasn't sure what she had expected to find, but she
stopped short when she saw Damien sitting on the
sofa, idly flipping through her latest
JAMA
magazine. Luz stood in the archway between the
living room and dining area, Alex's baseball bat
gripped tightly in both hands and resting against
her shoulder as if she were preparing to swing at a
ball.
Alex stood just inside the hallway leading to the
bedrooms, his dark eyes wide and fixed on Damien.
His clenched fists were the only visible sign of his
agitation. Mac lay on the floor in front of Alex, his
gaze on Damien, his ears and his hackles up.
The scene, and this man's invasion into her home,
spiked Kara's fury to a new level. Damien calmly
turned a magazine page, looked up when she
stormed toward him. "What the hell do you think
you're doing here?" she demanded, surprised at
how hard she was shaking.
He tossed the magazine onto the coffee table, sat
back. "I wanted to talk with Alex about his..." he
glanced at Luz. "Situation." His steel blue gaze
shifted to Kara, piercing her with its intensity. "And
I wanted to continue our discussion."
She forced herself to take a breath and speak
calmly. "I told you Saturday that I don't want you
anywhere near Alex. You're not welcome here."
"Then maybe you should have let your maid call
the police." He rose, towering over her, and stepped
closer.
Resisting the automatic reflex to back up, she stood
her ground. "She's not a
maid.
Get out.
Now."
He didn't move. "Did you check on David Thornton
today?"
The doubts flooded her again. She glanced at Alex
and Luz. The young woman reached over to the
dining room table and picked up the portable
phone. "I can call the police."
"No, Luz, that won't be necessary. Mr. Morgan is
leaving. I'm going to see him out. Alex, get started
on your homework." Kara looked back at Damien,
jerked her head toward the open front door.
"Outside." She whirled and strode through the
doorway, certain he would follow.
The pulsing waves of energy behind her were the
only indication that he was behind her. Absurdly,
she wondered how so large a man could move with
such utter stealth.
The cool afternoon air flowed over her, and she
shivered, thinking she might never be warm again.
Over her shoulder, she watched Damien close the
front door behind them. Mentally bracing herself,
she turned to face him. The relentless electrical
static that surged between them only agitated her
more. "Can't you shut that off?"
"Shut what off?"
"That damned energy. It's... disconcerting."
His brows arched. "Is it now? Well, I suggest you
go with the flow here, and acclimate yourself to it.
You should know I can't do anything about the
conductor/Sentinel reaction."
"I know you can stay the hell away," she snapped,
wanting to advance on him like a boxer on an
opponent; to crowd his personal space and throw
his own tactics back at him. But she knew that
would be a bad move, so she opted to stay where
she was.
He stood motionless on the porch, his duster draped
over his arm. He was dressed in a black turtleneck
and black jeans and boots. His midnight hair was
tied back, denying any relief to his stark features.
In the fading sunlight, he looked dark and
menacing, like a secret agent for Satan.
He appeared oblivious to the chill in the air,
radiating a body heat she could feel even across the
three or four feet separating them. Richard had
been like that, too, with a super human metabolism
and higher body temperature.
"You checked on
David Thornton," he said.
There was no sense lying to him when he could
readily obtain the information. Telling him she
knew the truth, but still had no intention of helping
him, might be a stronger offensive tactic than
playing dumb. "I tried to locate an autopsy," she
said. "One was never ordered."
He didn't appear surprised. "Who made that
decision?"
She didn't want to have this conversation, didn't
want to consider the ramifications. But what she
wanted didn't change the facts. "The police chief,
Tom Greer, decided it was an accidental drowning,
and that an autopsy was unnecessary." That would
put Tom at the top of Damien's list of suspects.
"So now you know I'm right about Thornton."
"All I know is that an autopsy was never done.
There's still no evidence David was murdered." But
her words were sheer bravado, because she knew
on an intuitive level that Damien's suspicions were
correct.
"My psychic visions are never wrong," he said. "A
Belian killed David Thornton. I need your help to
track it."
She rubbed her chilled arms, kept them folded
protectively across her chest. "I won't do it."
He watched her a moment. "You're stronger than
you realize, Kara."
"Yeah, I'm familiar with the Sanctioned company
line." She turned away from the eerie blue glow of
his eyes. "Tell me, is there some sort of pain meter
you Sentinels use as a gauge? Do you compare
notes to see which conductors can endure the most
pain, the most stress, the most horror? Who's
strong, and who's weak? Who can take on the most
powerful and terrifying demons from hell? I've got
a news flash for you, Morgan. I'm no longer on the
list of candidates."
Not that she owed him an explanation. She'd
already paid her dues. She had faced unspeakable
monsters and a shadowy void so immense, she
could only pray God was strong enough to win, that
the light could prevail, and the world wouldn't be
plunged into the abyss of darkness . .
The state trooper laughed as Richard struggled to
get to his feet, slipping on the blood from his gun-
wounded leg. "What's the matter, Wayman? You
letting a little thing like a bullet keep you from
saving this human here? Maybe this will help. "
He pressed the gun barrel to the terrified woman's
swollen abdomen, oblivious to her pleas to spare
her baby. Before he could pull the trigger, Richard
flicked his hand toward them. The gun jerked away
from the woman and fell, skidding between lifeless
bodies.
With a roar, the trooper threw his victim aside and
went after the gun. Richard channeled more energy
to send the gun flying further away, and the Belian
charged him. They both hit the ground, rolling.
Sparks flew in the air as each battled to manipulate