Read Touched by Darkness Online
Authors: Catherine Spangler
rather have pills?"
He made another face. "Yuck."
"Let's run the test first. Why don't you two go ask
Miss Bonnie to let you pick out some stickers while
I do that?" Kara opened the exam room door and
watched the children scamper toward the reception
area. They were thin and dirty, although they
showed no signs of malnourishment or abuse, and
Sara seemed to genuinely love them. The woman
just wasn't coping well.
"Sara, it's been over two years since you came in
for a checkup," Kara told her. "You need to come in
for a Pap smear, at the very least."
Sara brushed her dark hair out of her eyes. "I know,
but money's been tight—and I've been busy."
"You still have the health insurance from David's
job, and I'll waive the co-pay, just like I will today.
But you have to take care of yourself, so you can be
there for the children."
"I know," Sara whispered. "It's just so hard with
David gone—" She sniffed, scrubbed her hands
over her eyes. "I can't stop thinking about him.
Can't sleep, most nights."
Kara would have offered medication to help her
sleep, but she was reluctant to because of the
drinking. "You might try warm milk or herbal tea,
and going to bed by ten every night," she
suggested. "A regular schedule will help. Have you
considered counseling?"
Sara shook her head. "No, I don't have the money,
and it wouldn't help. Nothin' will."
Kara gave her a quick hug. "You can call me any
time you want to talk, any time at all. You have my
home phone number."
"Thank you." Sara drew back and picked up her
purse. "We're lucky to have you, Dr. Kara. You
really care about folks."
Guilt swept through Kara. She didn't feel very
caring. She hadn't done anything about her dream,
hadn't reported it to anyone. But she knew such an
action wouldn't help—if it followed the pattern of
her past visions, it was already too late. She turned
toward the door. "Let me run these tests."
Later, when she got home, she felt tired and
defeated. As much as she adored Doris, she didn't
feel like baking cakes and having to be upbeat and
pretend everything was all right. But she had
promised, and Alex was eager to go. Luz had just
left to deliver a baby, promising to call Kara if
there were any complications. Kara wasn't wild
about home deliveries, but knew many of Luz's
patients were very superstitious and didn't trust
western medicine. At least Luz had been well
trained by her mother.
So Kara put on a cheerful front for Alex. They got
their coats and let Max out in the back yard. Then
they raced each other, laughing, over to Doris's,
with Max barking madly after them. It was a
gorgeous, almost-spring afternoon, and the sun
beamed down benignly. The crisp air and revelry
revived her sagging spirits. Letting Alex beat her to
Doris's house, she collapsed on the front steps,
pretending to be totally winded.
"Beat you!" Alex crowed, his face flushed and his
eyes bright with pleasure.
"Yes, you did." Smiling, feeling better than she had
all day, she rose and dusted herself off. She
admired the pretty pansies bursting out of two
terra-cotta planters on the porch. Doris had an
amazing touch with plants and flowers.
"But I bet I'll decorate more cakes than you," she
teased.
"Uh uh," Alex said. "I'm the fastest helper Mrs.
Burgess has. She told me so."
"Well, then I challenge you to a cake decorating
contest." Kara climbed the steps and opened the
storm door to knock on the ornate wooden door.
She knocked again, then rang the bell. She didn't
hear the sound of footsteps or other activity. "That's
odd. I know Doris was expecting us."
"She's probably in the kitchen," Alex said. "She
told me she doesn't hear too good sometimes."
"Doesn't hear too 'well'," Kara corrected
automatically, a dark twinge niggling her. She tried
the door handle, found the door unlocked. She
opened it and stepped inside. "Doris! It's Kara and
Alex."
The silence that answered had the static sound of
an empty house. Kara walked further in. "Doris?
Are you here?" She heard a plaintive meow, as
Doris's cat, Tom, padded into the room. He
meowed again, twined against Kara's legs, then
moved on to Alex, who squatted down and gave
him the attention he demanded.
A heaviness settled in Kara's body. Something felt
wrong. "Stay here with Tom," she told Alex. "I'll
look for Mrs. Burgess."
"Mom, wait." He stood and scooted to her side. "I
don't want you to go. It feels bad in here."
The fact that he sensed something wrong only
deepened her own uneasiness. "It's all right," she
said, although she didn't believe it. "You'll be fine
right here."
He shook his head. "It feels
really
bad. Kinda like
that time I watched
The Sixth Sense."
"Which you borrowed from Ben Martin without my
permission," Kara reminded him. "Stay here by the
front door, and leave it open. If you see or hear
anything really scary, run next door and get Mr.
Roberts. Okay?"
He nodded reluctantly and squatted by Tom again.
She walked across the living room and through the
dining room to the arched entryway to the kitchen.
A quick glance told her the kitchen was empty. The
table was completely clear and spotless, as were the
counters. No baking items were out. Very strange.
Her apprehension growing, Kara went through the
kitchen and breakfast nook to the neat den, which
was also empty. She headed for a hallway she knew
led to the bedrooms, although she'd never been in
that part of the house. Entering the hall, she froze.
A sense of déjà vu rushed at her. The length of
hallway became distorted, the walls wavering.
Suddenly light headed, Kara braced herself against
one wall with her right hand. She forced air into her
lungs, blinked to clear her vision. And stared down
the same hallway she'd see in last night's dream.
Oh, God, no.
While one part of her wanted to turn and run, she
knew she had to go down that hall,
had to know...
"Mom? Did you find her?" Alex's anxious voice
came from behind her, and she whirled.
"Uh, no, sweetie, but she might be sick." She
crouched down beside him, tried to keep her voice
level. "Do me a favor, and go wait for me on the
front porch. I'm going to see if she's okay."
His expression turned fearful. "It feels even badder
here. What if that ghost came over here and—"
"No," Kara said firmly. "The ghost didn't come
over here. Go sit on the porch. You can take Tom
with you."
"Okay." He turned and tromped back outside, with
a wheedling, "Come on, kitty, kitty, kitty." A
meowing flash of white and gray fur followed him.
Kara turned back and stared down the hallway,
which reverberated with an ominous energy.
"Please be wrong," she whispered.
"Please be
wrong. "
She walked slowly down the hall, barely
able to breathe, terror whipping through her, but
she had to keep going.
Not Doris. No.
Yes,
some inner voice whispered.
You know it's
true.
Her dream visions had never been wrong. Her
feet grew heavier and heavier as she approached
the last door on the left. Her pulse pounded in her
temples; the light headedness returned. The
doorway was just like her dream...
but she had to
find Doris.
She closed her eyes, opened them again,
stepped through the doorway.
And stared at the body in the bed. Stared at the
cream-colored pajamas decorated with colorful
cups and saucers, horror welling inside her like a
tidal wave.
She didn't need her medical training for a
diagnosis.
There was absolutely no life force in the room.
#
Damien browsed through Sal's Grocery. It was
almost six-thirty in the evening, but Sal stayed
open past his usual six-o-clock closing if he had
customers in the store, and apparently it had been a
busy evening. Damien had spent the day in
Fredericksburg, trying to determine if the murders
there were linked to that of David Thornton, but
hadn't found any psychic trails to confirm it. He
was of the opinion that Thornton was the first
victim of this particular Belian, which meant it had
recently come into possession of a body.
Tomorrow, Damien planned to revisit the river and
wooded area where Thornton had gone into the
water. For tonight, he was looking for something to
eat, while listening to the Zorro residents in the
store and simply feeling the energies. He'd also use
a police scanner to monitor violent crimes, but so
far, there wasn't much criminal activity in Zorro.
He got a loaf of bread, a jar of peanut butter, a quart
of milk, and a package of Oreos. It was a lot of
carbohydrates, but he had a super-fast metabolism
and could eat whatever he wanted, which suited
him just fine, as he had a definite sweet tooth.
He caught himself wondering what Kara liked to
eat. She was so slender, he suspected she was a
light eater. She probably exercised regularly, as
there was a hint of substance and muscle beneath
the neat slacks and feminine sweaters she favored.
She'd been in his thoughts a lot, and more than
once, he'd had to redirect his focus back to the boy
and to the Belian he was tracking. It was her
resistance, he told himself, the challenge of gaining
her cooperation that held the fascination. His
mantra of never getting involved with his
conductors was so ingrained, it was virtually
automatic.
He did everything in his power to ensure his
noninvolvement, to the point that he didn't kiss his
conductors, not even in the throes of hot, steamy,
conduction-induced sex. And it was only sex; he
would never allow it to be otherwise. He knew
firsthand and very painfully what happened when
things became personal between a Sentinel and a
conductor.
He'd have to hold a little more firmly to his resolve
around Kara, because they had the strongest
chemistry that he'd ever experienced with any
conductor. The longer they were together, the
stronger it pulsed and tantalized.
When—not if—she finally agreed to conduct for
him, he had no doubt it would be an incredible
conduction, which would require great care,
because this Belian was very powerful, and might
well be able to detect the sexual surge. But the
being wouldn't escape him. Damien had never
failed, and didn't intend to now.
He carried his items to the counter and set them
down. "Hello, Sal."
"Evenin'." Sal started to ring up the food. He
glanced sideways at Damien. "Hey, did ya ever find
Dr. Cantrell to give her back that scarf?"
"As a matter of fact, I did." Damien reached for his
wallet.
"I hear there was some bad news out her way
earlier this evenin'."
Damien froze, his wallet halfway out of his rear
pocket. "What happened?"
"Had a death out there. Your total is $9.71."
Damien's heart speeded up as his senses went on
full alert. "Who died?"
Sal peered over his glasses at Damien. "Dr.
Cantrell's neighbor, an elderly lady. Don't have any
details yet, exceptin' Doc Cantrell's the one who
found her."
Damien tossed a twenty onto the counter and
grabbed the bag of groceries. He strode from the
store, ignoring Sal calling out, "Ya forgot yer
change!"
As he left, an absolute, chilling calm came down
over him like a blanket settling over a bed. His
power began to throb, already tuning itself for the
hunt.
Heading for Kara's house, he slipped into full
Sentinel mode, ready to track and destroy the
enemy.