Read Touched by Darkness Online
Authors: Catherine Spangler
and direct energy. Kara could only watch, knowing
they were locked in mortal combat.
Her breath hissing out, she forced away the
memory—and those that followed.
"Turn around, Kara. I don't want to have this
discussion with your back."
The way Damien said her name in that husky voice
of his was reminiscent of intimate, whispered
conversations in the heat of the night. She refused
to fall under its spell. "There's nothing more to
discuss."
With a sound of exasperation, he grasped her
shoulder, pulled her around. His touch sent tendrils
of sensation spiraling through her. She damned the
innate chemistry that existed between certain
Sentinels and conductors, damned the fate that had
visited such a curse on her.
She jerked away. "Don't touch me."
"Then don't ignore me. And look at me, damn it."
She lifted her chin, glaring at him. "I've heard what
you have to say, Sentinel. I've already made my
contribution. I conducted for two years. The
Sanctioned have gotten more than the designated
pound of flesh from me."
"You haven't heard everything. There's a lot more at
stake here than you realize."
"And you haven't been listening.
It doesn't have
anything to do with me.
Even if you're right, even if
there's a Belian in Zorro, I won't help you."
She
wouldn't watch anyone else she loved die, lying in
a pool of blood.
"What about Alex?"
Everything inside her froze. That was the million-
dollar question, wasn't it? "I don't know. I have to
think about that situation some more."
"He was broadcasting today, as he came out of
school and got on the bus."
Adrenaline churned through her. "He couldn't have
been. We had a long talk about it last night, and he
promised to be more careful—"
"I told him I'm a Sentinel, and that he's one, too."
His words had the impact of a physical blow.
Staggered, she reached out to brace herself against
the house. He definitely knew how to pull the
trigger of an emotionally shattering weapon. Fury
rose swiftly.
"Damn you!"
She swung at him.
He grabbed her arm before she could land a punch
and dragged her to the wooden bench glider at the
east end of the porch. She tried to dig in her heels,
but his superior strength won out.
"Sit," he ordered, backing his words with a small
push. Making contact with the hard seat, she glared
up at him, debating the wisdom of leaping back up
and kicking him. It might be crazy, but she had no
doubt it would be very satisfying.
"Don't do it," he warned. "Stay there and calm
down."
She clenched her fists. Was the man a mind reader
as well? He took his duster off his arm, shook it
out, and tossed it over her. She didn't realize she'd
been shivering until the first wave of warmth hit
her.
The consideration of his action diffused some of
her anger, but didn't diminish the intensity of the
situation. She huddled into the garment, breathing
in the tantalizing scents of sandalwood and male,
and tried to collect her racing thoughts.
What
should she do about Alex?
The glider jolted and swung backward as he settled
next to her, his large body sending another source
of heat her way. The wood creaked as he sat back.
She glanced sideways at him.
He stared straight ahead, his jaw tensed. He
probably hated dealing with overly emotional
females as much as she hated acting like one.
Normally, she was calm, the logical voice of
reason. But after the seismic shocks of the past few
days, she'd been batting zero.
"Are you always this emotional?" he asked.
"No, I'm usually very rational," she shot back. "But
arrogant, domineering men tend to bring out the
worst in me. Are you always such a bastard?"
"Yes, actually, I am."
"I already figured that out," she muttered.
A movement at the comer of her eye caught her
attention. She saw that the blinds in the large
picture window were raised; Luz stood there, still
holding the phone and baseball bat. She looked at
Kara questioningly, held up the phone. Kara shook
her head in the negative, mouthed
"It's okay."
Damien turned his head, stared at Luz, who gave
him an evil-eye look. He shrugged dismissively,
and the glider shimmied as he shifted back to face
Kara. "Calmer now?"
Her anger flared at his condescending remark.
"How would you feel in my place?"
"You need to put aside your personal feelings about
Sentinels and let me help you and Alex."
"I don't want your help."
"How are you going to protect Alex? Keep him in
an insulated, underground chamber?"
Doubts plagued her. "How strongly was he
broadcasting today?" she asked. A terrifying
thought occurred to her, and she leaped to her feet,
the duster sliding to the porch. "What if a Belian
has already picked up on him? I can't let him go to
school any more!"
"Whoa! You're getting ahead of yourself. Alex is
definitely broadcasting, but it's not very strong yet,
and it's still on the higher chakra frequencies. I'm
probably the only one who can pick it up right now.
But if he gets excited or feels threatened, the signal
will project more. As he gets older, his projections
will become stronger and more erratic—unless he
learns how to control them. Eventually, it will only
be a matter of time until a Belian can sense him.
Then he'll become an easy target."
A target... Oh, God...
The Belian/trooper and Richard rolled around on
the bloody street. The Belian was larger, and
Richard was weakened from blood loss. Kara saw
the sudden flash of a knife in the Belian's hand,
saw him plunge it into Richard's chest. Saw her
beloved jerk from the shock. Saw the knife go in
again and again...
Pain slashed like a physical blow. She felt her
knees go weak, reached out blindly to keep from
falling.
"Kara! Are you all right?" A strong arm grasping
her elbow steadied her and jolted her back to the
present.
But the images lingered on the edges of her
consciousness, like a nightmare in the darkest hours
of the night. Only it hadn't been a dream. It was
real—the reality she'd faced seven years ago, and a
powerful reminder she couldn't allow Alex to be
discovered. He would
never
become a statistic as
Richard had, not while she had a breath in her
body.
Playing ostrich hadn't worked, and she could no
longer selfishly avoid her personal pain. A new
wave of emotion barreled through her— steel
determination that she would do whatever it took to
protect Alex.
Anything
—including accepting the
help of a Sentinel, as much as she hated to.
"I want my son safe," she demanded fiercely,
staring up at Damien. "And I want your word on
that, Sentinel."
"You know there are no guarantees—"
"No!"
she practically screamed. She dug her fingers
into his sweater, pushed against him.
"My son will
be safe!
Do you hear me?"
He clamped his hands over her wrists, pulled her
hands to the side. "I will do everything in my
power to protect Alex. That's all I can promise."
She hated his calmness in the midst of her mental
chaos, hated the cool logic and total lack of
emotions he displayed. But he was a Sentinel,
trained to hunt and destroy evil, a killing machine.
He wasn't human, despite the mortal body he
inhabited. Yet Richard had been different.
Richard was gone.
And this man was Alex's best
chance for survival—at least for the time being.
She pulled her wrists free. "What are you
proposing?"
"That you allow me to act as his mentor, providing
basic instruction, until the Sanctioned can appoint a
permanent one."
"Leave the Sanctioned out of this," she said
sharply, a new concern wedging in with all the
others. "I don't want them involved. They might try
to take Alex away from me."
The resultant silence sent off warning bells and she
looked at Damien in alarm. "Don't tell me you've
already told them."
"I contacted them on Saturday, after I left your
house. It was my duty to do so."
Her body went rigid. She knew how the Sanctioned
operated, knew they were merciless in their quest
to defeat Belians, with no compunctions about
sacrificing their own for what they considered the
'higher cause'. And that would include Alex, if it
suited them. "Why did you do that?"
"It was my sworn duty," he repeated. "It had to be
done." Of course it did, in his mind. Sentinels
fulfilled their purpose of tracking Belians, and kept
compete secrecy and order by adhering to a strict
code of duty and honor. There was no gray in the
Sentinel world—only black and white. Kara felt a
sense of inevitability, like the moon's pull on the
tides.
The fight left her body. She turned and stared at the
dissipating sunset. "You know, when Richard first
told me he was a Sentinel, I thought he was joking.
Up until then, He'd been so serious and down-to-
earth."
Except in bed. The sex had been amazing,
electrifying, incredible bursts carrying them to the
stars. Multiple orgasms that should have left her
utterly exhausted, rather than burning to have
Richard inside her again. It had been exhilarating
—until he blew away her concept of reality.
They were in bed after a marathon lovemaking
session, him on his back, with her curled against
his side, when he dropped the proverbial bomb.
"Kara, there's something I have to tell you. I'm...
different. I'm not really human. "
"Hmmm, you can say that again. You 're definitely
superhuman in some areas."
"No, I'm serious. I'm a Sentinel. My soul originated
in Atlantis. I came into this life to track Belians,
other Atlantian souls, but very evil."
Still seeing the moment as clearly as if it were
yesterday, Kara pulled herself back from the
memory. "Then, when I realized he was totally
serious, I thought he was crazy."
Damien shifted behind her. She was hyper aware of
the heat and strength of his big body. Oddly
enough, his presence was comforting. "I'm sure it's
a shock to realize the world is not as you
envisioned it," he said.
That was an understatement. She let out a ragged
breath. "Yeah, it was a shock, all right." She turned
to face him. "There's so much Richard didn't tell
me, like the fact that Sentinels are born to other
Sentinels, although that's a logical assumption. He
also didn't tell me that sometimes the good guys
lose." She pushed away the sharp rise of pain. "I
guess he wanted to protect me from your world."
"Just like you want to protect your son."
Understanding softened Damien's harsh voice.
"The best way to do that is to educate him."
She hated it that he was so damn right. "That
doesn't mean the Sanctioned need to come
anywhere near Alex. You're the only one I want
working with him."
His face remained impassive. "I will suggest they
let me handle this without interference, at least for
the time being. That's the best I can do."
Kara didn't like it, but it was better than nothing. A
Sentinel's word was pure gold. She turned and
walked to the opposite side of the porch, letting the
cool air wash over her like a blast of chilling
reality. "I want you to show Alex only how to
control his powers. I think we should hold off
giving him information about the Sentinels."
"He already knows he's a Sentinel."
Damien's voice was right behind her. Startled, she
whirled and found herself facing his chest. She kept
forgetting how quickly and quietly they moved. But
it was impossible to forget the ever-present