Read Touched by Darkness Online
Authors: Catherine Spangler
played soccer, watched
Star Trek.
He— She
clenched her eyes shut, not wanting to face what
she'd known since Alex was three, what she
desperately wanted to will away.
The sudden presence next to her, the startling feel
of a hand over hers jolted through her like a
burning brand. The stranger sat next to her on the
sofa, having moved with astonishing stealth and
speed— something she well remembered. She
gasped and tried to pull back, but he tightened his
grip on her hand. Currents of energy tingled up her
arm.
"No more games," he said. "I will get to the truth of
the matter, with or without your cooperation. I can
help you. Alex needs protection until he can learn
to shield himself."
What protection had Richard had? If her son was in
danger from the same dark forces... God, why had
she thought all that was behind them?
She pressed her free hand against her mouth,
mortified by the sudden rush of hot tears in her
eyes. "We don't need your help. Just go away."
His face impassive, he manifested a clean
handkerchief in his palm and handed it to her.
"Let's start from the beginning."
#
The fool. He thinks he can hide from me, can keep
his presence in Zorro a secret. But I'm too smart
for him—and too powerful. It's only a matter of
time before I uncover his identity.
Now that I have physical substance, I can't be
defeated. A weakened body has given me
everything I need. It might be diseased, but soon I
will find a stronger body, and then the possibilities
will be endless. The terminations... ah, how
glorious! The rush, the adrenaline, the power.
Praise Belial for my descension into this plane. No
Sentinel can discover or defeat me. There will be
more terminations, more power. I will have it all.
"Your son was fathered by a Sentinel," the man
repeated, a ruthless determination underlying his
deep voice. "Who?"
Kara knew he'd eventually uncover everything—
already had, for the most part, but a deeply
ingrained instinct for survival insisted that she
continue to deny the facts. "What makes you so
sure of that?" she challenged, wiping at her eyes.
"There's no denying Alex is a Sentinel, no matter
how much you might wish otherwise. And there are
only two ways a human can have Sentinel power.
The first is to be born to parents where one or both
have the power. The second is through possession
of a body. I'll bet your son has no indications of
being possessed—and believe me, you would know
if he was. You are not one of us. Therefore, the
transfer of the power came from his father."
She lifted her chin, glaring at him defiantly,
although fear still pounded through her, barely
restrained only through tremendous effort on her
part. "And there are no exceptions to that rule, no
anomalies?"
"None. The mother becomes pregnant only if a
Sentinel soul chooses to enter the physical plane at
that time and through those specific parents."
The soul chose? Both the time and the parents?
This new knowledge skittered through Kara,
adding to the emotional and mental overload.
"You didn't know this." Her surprise must have
been evident, because he said it more as a statement
of fact rather than a question.
Richard had told her there was no need for birth
control, and she'd believed him. She'd been so head
over heels in love with him, that she didn't care if
they did have a child. But she hadn't known any
details of how Sentinels came into the physical
plane.
There was probably a lot more she didn't know,
information that might be necessary to keep Alex
safe. Resignation seeped through her, and she felt
weary and drained. Any denials were futile in the
face of the stranger's perceptiveness. She shook her
head. "I didn't know how Sentinels came into
being. I didn't even know I was pregnant until after
Richard
—
" She paused, closing her eyes against the
pain. "Until after he was murdered."
The stranger leaned closer. "Tell me about
Richard."
Surrendering to the inevitable, Kara steeled herself
against the grief. "I met him in Birmingham,
Alabama. I had just finished my residency in
family practice. He was a medical examiner for the
county coroner's office."
That fateful moment flashed through her mind:
Bored to tears at a stuffy AMA honorarium dinner,
she'd glanced across the room to see a tall,
handsome man staring at her. Normally she would
have ignored him, but the attraction had been
mutual and instantaneous. She'd watched as he
threaded his way through the crowd with a
purposeful tread, his gaze never leaving her, and a
shiver had swept through her body...
"Birmingham." The stranger's voice jolted her out
of the memory. "You must be talking about Richard
Wayman. His physical entity perished after a
mortal encounter with a Belian that had incarnated
as a state trooper. Seven years back, I believe."
A mortal encounter?
No, that was too neat and
clinical. It had been a massacre...
The trooper, his
inhuman eyes shielded behind mirrored sunglasses,
coldly gunning down innocent people as they
screamed in terror and tried to run. Smiling as he
stepped over bodies sprawled around him like
broken, bloody toys. Daring Richard to stop him
—
a challenge no Sentinel could ignore.
With a gasp, Kara tried to shut out the horrific
images that she had witnessed seven years ago. She
channeled her emotional upheaval toward the man
now sitting beside her. She wouldn't allow his
unemotional reduction of Richard to nothing but a
statistic.
"Richard Wayman was more than
a physical
entity,"
she snapped. "He was a flesh and blood
man, and he cared about people, really cared what
happened to them."
So much so, that he had answered the Belian's
challenge. Had stepped forward so no more
innocents would die.
She clenched the
handkerchief, dug her nails into the fabric.
The stranger appeared unaffected by her outburst.
"And you conducted for him?"
Other memories swirled forward, heated and erotic:
Richard rising above her, stroking inside her deep
and hard.
"That's it, baby. That's it. Just let yourself go, and
don't worry about the energy. I'll handle it. "
Light flashed around them, electricity arced
between them, and her body began convulsing, in
the throes of the most powerful orgasm she'd ever
experienced. "Oh, God, Richard... oh my God!"
Then the light and feelings became so intense, she
couldn't see, couldn't think, could only be swept
away by sensation.
"Kara?"
Her heart was pounding again, and her breasts felt
painfully swollen. She drew a deep breath, looked
into the stranger's glittering eyes. "Yes. I conducted
for him."
"Did you work together long?"
Worked together, lived together, loved together.
"Almost two years," she murmured.
"Yet you had no idea what to expect, or that your
child would have the power."
She blew out her breath. "No, but we've handled it
without any problems."
"You can't continue to do it on your own. Alex
needs to be initiated into the Law of One. He needs
to be instructed in the proper use of his power and
the fulfillment of his purpose on this plane."
"We've been fine until now," she insisted
stubbornly. "I want my son to live a normal life."
"You can't keep denying the reality, Kara. An
unshielded initiate can draw discarnate entities, or
worse. The Belian I'm hunting could eventually
pick up Alex's power and prey upon him."
"What are you talking about? There can't be any
Belians in this area. There haven't been any
murders. No crime at all, in fact."
"You're wrong about that. There has already been at
least one murder in Zorro. But the authorities
labeled the death as accidental."
Another chill swept through her, and she clenched
the handkerchief until her hand ached. "I don't
believe it. David Thornton was the only recent
death, and he drowned six weeks ago. He never
could swim, but he always insisted on going out in
the water to fish, even in January."
"He didn't drown. I believe an autopsy would show
that he died from other causes."
"What other causes?"
"A blow to the head."
She knew when a Sentinel visited the scene of a
crime or a death, and was able to pick up a psychic
trail, the Sentinel could often 'see' what had
happened. But she couldn't bring herself to accept
what the stranger was telling her.
"He was battered badly because the current carried
him over several dams, and it was two days before
they discovered his body," she said.
"That was the official report. But Thornton was
dead before he entered the water."
It didn't surprise her that this man had been able to
access the police reports, just as she understood
why, even if he had 'seen' David's death, he didn't
know who had committed the alleged murder. A
highly advanced Belian could obscure its presence,
so it would only appear as a blur in a psychic
vision.
But she still wouldn't accept that David had been
murdered. Couldn't accept it, because it would
herald the end of the normal existence she'd carved
out for Alex and herself.
"No," she persisted. "The medical examiner would
have discovered the blow to the head, and the death
wouldn't have been ruled accidental. There are no
Belians in Zorro. The population has hardly
changed since I've been here. Besides Alex and me,
nobody new has moved to Zorro in a number of
years."
His expression hardened; impatience again flashed
in his eyes. "You're not that naive, Kara. We just
talked about it. Not all Belians come to Earth
through physical birth."
Horrific possibilities flashed through her mind.
"Possession," she murmured, feeling even sicker.
"Exactly. You probably also know such a thing is
easier if the possessed person's body or mind is
weak." He leaned forward, his frigid gaze fixed on
her. "There are two things you will do for me. You
will give me a list of your patients with serious
physical or mental conditions. And you'll help me
track down this entity."
"I won't do either of those things. I'm not going to
allow you to terrorize innocent people."
"I can get the medical records, with or without your
help," he informed her grimly. "And you will
conduct for me."
She knew she couldn't keep him from accessing her
patient records, unless she destroyed them, and she
would give that serious consideration after she got
rid of him.
As for the conducting, although he possessed the
power to force her compliance, the code of honor
that all Sentinels followed did not allow him to use
his power that way. A conductor had to be willing
to be called into service.
"I won't conduct for you, or anyone else." She rose
from the sofa, finding strength from her resolve.
"We've talked. Now you can leave."
He rose, too, and she instinctively took a step back
from his intimidating frame. "You must conduct for
me. This Belian is eluding me. I need you to
provide the focus and magnify the energy. Like you
did with Richard."
Another emotional blow, added to the staggering
overload of the day. "Richard and I
—
It was
different. We loved each other."
"Love has nothing to do with conducting. It is the
physical bodies that are the conduit, and the
balancing of female and male energies." He closed
the gap between them, grasping her shoulders.