Read Touched by Darkness Online
Authors: Catherine Spangler
house as soon as I can get there."
She clicked off and stared dumbly at the phone, the
blood roaring in her ears. Her chest was so tight,
she couldn't breathe. For a moment she thought she
might black out. But her son needed her. She threw
down the receiver and ran around the desk to
retrieve her purse. Her hands shaking, she dug out
her cell phone, punched the directory pad and
scrolled through the numbers. Where was it? There!
Damien
M. Thank God he had put in his number,
because she wasn't sure she could find his card
right now, much less dial the number.
She hit Send and listened to the rings, rocking back
and forth, terror rolling through her in sickening
waves. Alex, her baby, her child, her life. He was
all right.
He had to be.
"Morgan."
"Alex is missing. Damien, he's
gone!"
"Tell me what happened." As always, he sounded
calm, while her world had just tilted off its axis.
"He wasn't at school when Luz went to pick him
up, and the bus driver said he never got on the bus."
"Have you checked with his friends? Maybe he's
with one of them. Or maybe he found another way
home."
"No, he didn't. He's not at the house, and Luz called
his friends. No one has seen him."
"So he's missing from school."
"What does it matter? He's gone! My son is gone!"
Her voice broke, and she forced a ragged breath.
"Kara, you have to stay calm, and help me figure
this out. I need to know where Alex was when he
disappeared."
Adrenaline and fear had her both jittery and
sluggish, making it hard to think. "He was— He
must have been at school. I dropped him off this
morning."
"Call the school and confirm whether or not he was
there all day. Then call me back."
"I think he was..." A memory nagged at the edge of
her mind, and then she remembered what Luz had
said. "Oh, wait, I know he was. Michael Thornton
told Luz that Alex walked out with him after school
and went toward the bus."
"That's what I needed to know. I'm headed to the
school now."
"I'll meet you there."
"No. Your emotional state will affect my tracking.
Contact the police and make sure they issue an
Amber Alert."
Tracking? An Amber Alert?
The reality of the
situation lanced through her like a spear. Thoughts
of child predators—and worse—ran through her
head. Alex knew better than to go anywhere with a
stranger but if it was someone he knew... "Do you
think the Belian—"
"I don't know what to think yet. Let me do my job,
Kara. Call the police, then go to the house."
"But—"
"Just do it. That's the best way to help Alex."
He disconnected with his usual abruptness. Anger
flared through her, but she welcomed it, preferring
it over the debilitating fear. She knew Damien was
her best hope for finding her son. And his plan—as
terrifying as the implications were—was sound.
She fumbled in her desk for her Rolodex, picked up
her phone, and called the police station.
#
Damien parked in front of the school and turned off
the car. He placed his hand over the quartz crystal
resting beneath his shirt and centered himself,
initiated the flow of power through his chakras. As
he got out, he let his senses flare. Immediately, he
hit a wall of darkness and depravity that signaled
Belian energy.
Damn!
For a moment, fear and concern for Alex gripped
him. He was beginning to bond with the boy, to feel
affection toward him. The thought of the child in
the hands of the Belian sent rage and other
unfamiliar emotions through him.
Stop it,
he told himself. He could not afford to form
emotional attachments to the boy, or to let his
feelings affect his judgment. Emotions could get
him killed, and wouldn't save Alex. He must remain
calm, objective.
He flared his senses again, saw the choppy, murky
images created by a shielded Belian. He saw the
psychic replay of the children coming out of the
school, obviously leaving for the day, as they had
jackets and backpacks and books, the bus and
waiting cars edging the peripheral.
The vision jolted, moving across the kids, as if
searching; the Belian must have been looking for
someone. The focus appeared to be on the children
rather that the adults who were present, raising the
concern that the Belian had indeed picked up Alex
broadcasting. But did it know Alex was the
broadcaster?
The visual scan continued, and Alex walked out of
the school, beside a pale, blond-haired boy. The
scan swept past Alex, slowed, and started back in
his direction. But before it came back to him, the
vision blurred, faded to gray. Something must have
caught the Belian's attention, broken its
concentration.
Damien tried to pick up the ethereal trail again, but
hit a psychic blockade—another indicator of the
power and cleverness of this Belian. There was no
way to tell if it had fixated on Alex or not, and what
had happened after that.
God damn it!
Senses fully alert, Damien walked along the
sidewalk to where the children had been getting on
the bus or in cars. Then he walked to the other end
of the loading area. No other vibrations or twinges.
Frustated, he turned and started back. Outside of
the initial psychic trace from the Belian, there was
nothing. It was as if he were operating in a void.
A very slight wisp of energy brushed his mind; a
faint stirring of something—or someone. He
reached out mentally, carefully, broadcasting only
through the higher chakras.
"Alex? Can you hear
me? If you can, try to send me an answer, like a
thought, but keep your shields up."
He waited, got nothing. He tried again.
"Alex?
Where are you?"
The dead silence felt like a weight dragging him
down. He had absolutely no idea where to look
next, except to drive along River Road and hope he
saw the misshapen oak tree he'd seen during the
conduction—and what were the odds of that? His
failure to keep the boy safe burned in his gut as he
turned toward his car.
He felt it then, another faint whisper of energy. He
froze, waited. There it was again—so soft and
distant, he wasn't sure what it was.
"Alex? Is that
you?"
"Help... me...
"
Damien turned full circle, scanning the entire area.
"Where are you?"
Despite his intense concentration, he couldn't pick
up the thought form again. Its weakness, and the
fact the sender hadn't been able to sustain it
convinced him it must have been from Alex, who
didn't yet have the power or the skill to project
clearly. But where was he?
Damien closed his eyes, used his third eye to search
for more energy trails. There! Fading swirls of
brown, orange, and blue—the murky brown
indicative of a lack of focusing skill, and the orange
indicating agitation. The blue told him it wasn't
Belian energy—he'd have seen black instead. The
swirls appeared to be coming from the main doors
of the school. He pivoted sharply and strode toward
the entrance. There, the energy felt more
pronounced.
"Are you inside the school?"
He felt a small energy surge and took that as a yes.
Now it became a question of where in the school.
And was the Belian with Alex? Damien tried the
glass door, found it locked. He focused his mental
will, felt the bolt on the other side turning. Then he
pulled open the door and went in.
"Alex, talk to me.
Tell me where you are. "
"Dark
...
Afraid
..."
Damien strode to the corridor on the right and
turned down it. He followed the energy trail,
feeling it grow stronger. Up ahead, a wizened man
in a rumpled khaki uniform and scuffed work boots
was mopping the tile floor. When he saw Damien,
his head snapped up in surprise. Before he could
react, Damien silenced him with a forceful mental
push. Knowing the man's mind would be
temporarily blanked, he moved past.
He slowed, however, as he approached a closed
door. The energy seemed strongest there. Damien
studied the door. It didn't have a window in it, and
it didn't appear to be a classroom. Some sort of
storage, maybe. And
something
was on the other
side.
Damien grasped his crystal, and called upon the
forces of Earth and water to give him strength and
focus. Then he pulled his gun from the shoulder
holster he'd strapped on after Kara called him.
Grasping the door handle, he turned it and pulled
the door open.
#
Kara watched Luz's white pickup truck drive away
and battled the all-out panic attack that lurked
inside her. Officer Ben Rains had left ten minutes
ago, after taking her statement and telling her he'd
check into activating the Amber Alert. This was the
first child disappearance for Zorro, and they had no
firsthand experience with this.
Then Luz, who had been monitoring the
progression of the labor of one of her patients via
cell phone, told Kara she couldn't stay any longer.
"I must go now,
mi comadre,
or Estella's
bebé
will
birth itself. I am so sorry. I do not want to leave,
especially with no word on my little man." Tears
glistened in her eyes as she picked up her coat and
purse. "But I am
una curandera,
and I must honor
my obligations. Another
chiquito
needs me also.
Promise you will call as soon as you hear
anything."
Kara nodded. "Yes. Yes, I will—" her voice broke,
and she turned away. "I—I'll let you know when I
hear."
"I will pray that
los espíritus buenos,
good spirits,
will watch over our little man, bring him back to
us," Luz said softly, and then left.
There was nothing for Kara to do but pace back and
forth, praying to God to bring her son safely home.
An awful, incessant pit of fear spread through her
until she could barely breathe. Horrific scenarios
kept flashing through her mind, and she couldn't
turn them off.
She felt the frantic need to do something, and
several times, started to reach for her car keys,
determined to go to the school. But each time, she
thought of Damien's words and stopped. She knew
she couldn't control her emotions right now, and
she also knew he had the best chance of tracking
Alex. She couldn't do anything to endanger his
chances.
She felt as though she was going insane as each
interminable minute crawled by. She thought of
calling Chief Greer, but had already spoken with
him twice, and once with Officer Rains.
She desperately wanted to talk to her mother and
stepfather, but didn't want to alarm them. Besides,
they didn't know the truth about Richard, or the
secret life Kara had led in Birmingham for two
years. She didn't have any close friends, having left
her old life behind when she fled to Zorro seven
years ago. One person she might have told, Doris,
was dead.
Feeling sick and dazed, Kara continued to pace and
pray. Time blurred, so she wasn't sure how long
she'd paced when her cell phone rang. Her heart
leaped, and she snatched it up. "Yes?"
"I have Alex," came Damien's deep voice. "He's
fine."
"Thank God." She sagged against the table, weak
with relief, but then doubt dug in its talons. "Are
you sure Alex is okay? You're not just saying that?"
"He's fine, Kara. I promise."
She let out the breath she'd been holding. "Where
was he?"
"Let me get him home, and then we'll figure
everything out. In the meantime, you'd better
contact the police."
"Yes, yes I will."
Alex was all right!
She could leap
tall buildings, could handle anything, even dealing
with Chief Greer. "What should I tell them?"
"That Alex missed the bus and decided to walk
home, and got sidetracked."
"Is that what really happened?" she asked
incredulously. Alex had never missed the bus, and