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Tessa drew a breath and let it out. "Still here, guys." Hollis's frown deepened. "Tessa, did you consciously drop your s.h.i.+elds at that cemetery?"
She didn't want to answer, but Tessa knew she had to. "No. I opened a door, just a little bit. But I didn't drop my s.h.i.+elds."
"Then something was affecting you? Something that got through your s.h.i.+elds?"
"Maybe."
"Tessa."
"All right, yes. I heard That same presence as before was in my mind. Not the dark one; the one who said, I see you. Only this time, it was warning me. To be careful. To not let my feelings overwhelm me, because heSamuel, I a.s.sumegets in that way. He makes people feel and gets in that way."
"How did you feel?"
It was Tessa's turn to frown as she tried to sort through the fragments of memory and emotion. "It's hard to separate things. At first I felt uneasy, as if someone was watching me. Sawyer felt the same thing."
He nodded when Hollis looked at him. "Tessa said maybe it was the cameras, but.i.t didn't feel like that." He hesitated, then added, "Cameras pointed at me feel a certain way. This was something else."
Tessa nodded. "I felt a tugging, a pull, and when I looked around, I saw something flash at the edge of the pet cemetery. Once we got there, the pain and grief of the people, especially the children, started to overwhelm me. That's when that voice in my mind warned me to shut the door before he got in. So I shut it. Too hard, I guess."
Sawyer frowned at her. "That's why you went out? You did it to yourself?"
"Well, self-preservation. You asked me if I'd know if I was under the sort of attack Samuel is capable of; the insistence in that voice told me I had to protect myself, and fast. So I did."
"We're in trouble," Hollis said.
"Not necessarily."
"Tessa, you were chosen for this a.s.signment partly for the strength of your s.h.i.+elds and the fact that you don't read as psychic. No matter who that insistent voice belongs to, it shouldn't have been able to come through to you so clearly, not through what was in effect only a c.h.i.n.k in your s.h.i.+elds. And you shouldn't have been overwhelmed by the emotions of those people, not with your s.h.i.+elds up. At all. That's new, we both know that, and the new stuff is the hardest to handle. We are definitely in trouble."
"I was tired and distracted before I even went up there, Hollis, and you know it. I felt like I was being pulled long before I reached the Compound. You said I connected to someone or something up there yesterday, and I agree." She reached for the piece of paper lying on the table in front of her and looked at it again, read it again.
Please, take care of Lexie.
can't protect her anymore.
Father's started watching me.
"This was addressed to me. Even more, it was placed in Sawyer's Jeep, not my car, when no one could have logically known I wouldn't be leaving the Compound the same way I came."
Hollis shook her head. "You didn't mention meeting any of the kids yesterday, not by name."
"I was introduced to a whole group of them pretty much at once. I barely spoke to them beyond saying hi. Until you told us about seeing Andrea's spirit and what she said about Ruby, I didn't remember picking up any names. But Ruby was there, a dark girl with really pale gray eyes. I think she's the one who touched me, physically touched me, and I'm almost positive she was carrying this bag."
"Almost?" Sawyer stared at her. "Wouldn't it have been obvious?"
Tessa thought about it and frowned again. "Now that you mention it, it should have, shouldn't it? A big bag for a little girl to be carrying, and unusual since they were all in that playground near the church. None of the other kids was carrying any sort of bag or backpack. But Ruby was. I have to concentrate to remember actually seeing it, but when I concentrate, it's there, clear as day."
Softly, Hollis said, "You need her help to stop him."
"Excuse me?" Sawyer said.
"It's what Andrea said. 'You need her help to stop him.' And she was talking about Ruby."
"How could a twelve-year-old girl help stop someone like Samuel?"
Tessa looked at him for a moment, then returned her gaze to Hollis. "Maybe that's why Sarah was so convinced the children were important."
"Who's Sarah?" Sawyer asked.
Knowing that would be a long and probably difficult conversation, Tessa chose to postpone it. "I'll tell you about Sarah later. Right now I'm more worried about Ruby. Hollis, you said Sarah had managed to get three of the kids out, right?"
Hollis nodded.
"Latents. But what if she was picking up the strength of an active psychic and didn't know it, because Ruby has the ability to obscure or disguise what's real?"
"That would be a h.e.l.l of an ability," Hollis said slowly. "And one I've never heard of outside science fiction."
"But possible?"
"Sure, anything's possible. But how likely would it be that Samuel could miss something that unique?"
"Maybe because it's unique. Or maybe because he hadn't been paying attention. Until lately." Tessa looked down at the note and read the last chilling phrase out loud. "Father's started watching me."
"Christ," Sawyer said. "She's twelveshe's. .h.i.tting p.u.b.erty."
Hollis drew a deep breath and let it out slowly. "b.a.s.t.a.r.d. If he's looking for another good source to tap, the chaos of adolescence also produces an enormous amount of energy. s.e.xually and otherwise. It's when a high percentage of latents become active for the first timeusually because of some kind of trauma. Just guessing, I'd say the simultaneous death of almost all the pets and livestock in the Compound would be very traumatic for a little girl. Especially one who loved her dog."
"She had to protect Lexie," Tessa told them. "So, instinctively, she did. Some kind of energy s.h.i.+eld, for sure. But more than that, she must have tapped into her latent ability to hide or disguise an object. And she's been able to continue hiding Lexie all this time, hiding her in plain sight, from everyone in that Compound, including Samuel. She must have thought they were safe. Until she realized he was beginning to look at her the way he looked at the older women. Until she understood."
Quentin Hayes had been a seer most of his life but preferred the official SCU designation of precog or precognitive instead, since the ability to actually see the future was very new to him. Until he had crossed paths with an extremely powerful medium in an extremely dangerous situation not so long ago, all he had been able to claim was an occasional precognitive awareness that something was about to happen.
All that changed when he met Diana Brisco.
So it was less than a year since he'd begun actually seeing visions, and since they were still comparatively rare, he hadn't yet grown accustomed to the sheer power of them.
They still came out of nowhere with no warning, and they still brought him to his knees.
"Christ."
"Quentin?"
He knew Bishop was there with him, in the same roombut after the blinding burst of pain, the room s.h.i.+mmered and then faded, and in its place was h.e.l.l.
Dark clouds rolled and banked heavily above, so dark they shut out the sunlight, and thunder boomed and echoed. The air above his head crackled and sparked with pure energy; acrid smoke stung his nostrils with a smell that turned his stomach and caused his soul to flinch, because it was a smell he recognized.
Burnt flesh.
He didn't want to but forced himself to turn and look at what he only vaguely recognized as the outdoor amphitheater used by Samuel and his congregation. It was a charred and scorched place now, the large boulders intended to be seats blackened, still smoking. And among the rocks were other still-smoking shapes.
Human shapes.
They were twisted and contorted in mute agony, and it was obvious that many of the adults had tried in vain to protect children. But none of them had had a chance, Quentin realized sickly.
He heard a scream and pivoted sharply, finding himself looking up at the area of the granite "pulpit" where Samuel preached.
Samuel stood on the pulpit, staring down at his dead followers, his expression chillingly serene. His hands were smoking.
At his feet, staring up at him, sat a dark-haired little girl, her expression every bit as serene as his.
"Ruby!"
It was Tessa who had screamed, who cried out the little girl's name. She was she was bound to a cross, one of four placed on either side of the pulpit. Ropes at her wrists and ankles would have held her securely; the monstrous iron spikes driven through her hands and feet were clearly intended to maim and torture.
Two of the other three crosses held identically bound figures, but only Tessa was conscious; the others were unconsciousor dead. Hollis and Chief Cavenaugh hung motionless.
There was a lot of blood.
Samuel looked at the little girl, then smiled tenderly. He placed his left hand on the top of her head.
Before Quentin's horrified eyes, she began to smolder and, without a sound, she burst into flames.
Tessa screamed again. Samuel turned his head to look at her, his smile fading, replaced by a slight frown, just barely this side of indifference. He looked at her, Quentin thought, as one would look at a fly that annoyed with its buzzing. Then, with his left hand still on the head of the burning child, he extended his right hand, and a jagged bolt of pure energy shot from his fingers toward Tessa.
"Quentin."
Blinking, drawing in a gulp of blessedly normal air, Quentin looked down at the hand gripping his arm, then up to meet Bishop's concerned gaze. "Jesus. How do you and Miranda stand this?" The hoa.r.s.e sound of his own voice startled him.
"Practice." Bishop helped him to his feet, and into a nearby chair. "What did you see?"
"I sawh.e.l.l. Listen, I need to get to the Gray house. Like ten minutes ago."
"Why?"
"Because they're about to make a very, very, very bad decision. Trust me on that. And I don't think anything short of an unexpected visit will dissuade them."
Bishop reached immediately for a phone. "The chopper can land in that clearing between the house and the road; that should get you close enough without alerting the farmhands."
"Can he get away this time of day?"
"He'll have to. I can't risk getting that close to the Compound, and we don't have another pilot available right now. Bring them back here."
"Sure?"
"Quentin, you're white as a sheet. I don't need it described to me to know you saw something we do not want to happen. So it's time we pool our resources. All of them."
Chapter Thirteen.
SAMUEL WAS ALWAYS careful, when he used Ruth, not to drain her to the point of unconsciousness. Partly because he preferred to take the energy of younger women, and partly because Ruth's energy wasodd. He wasn't sure what was different about her, but over the years had come to understand that her role in his life and his ministry was different from the role other women played.
Perhaps it was because she had been with him longest and had known him through all the stages of his journey. Or perhaps it was simply that G.o.d had decreed she would stand with him in order to remind him, again and again, of the devil who had borne him.
Because he could never draw Ruth's energy without remembering He was nearly twenty before he truly began to master the gifts G.o.d had bestowed with that bolt of lightning years before. Until then, he was erratic, uncertain when he would be able to hold a congregation spellbound with his power and when he would be forced to rely on the knowledge and tricks he had gained when preaching had been merely a means to earn enough for a bed and a meal or two.
But that day, that particular day, had been one of the more frustrating he'd endured, with his gifts eluding his grasp, and in the dark night he had found himself walking the streets of a cold and dirty city a lot like the one in which he had last seen his mother alive.
Perhaps that was why.
The wh.o.r.es were easy to find, as they always were, and he chose one with little thought beyond the knowledge that she was cleaner than most and promised him a room.
The room turned out to be at a rundown motel that brought back too many ugly memories, and in a rage, in the middle of the furtive act for which he'd paid, Samuel put his hands on her throat and began to strangle her.
He probably wasn't the first John to like his s.e.x rough, but she must have seen something on his face or in his eyes, because she choked out a quick protest before he could cut off her breath completely.
"Waitdon't! I cando something for you. Something better"
"You can die," he grunted, fingers tightening.
"No! I canshow you death."
That got his attention. And earned her a reprieve. But he finished with her first, his hands still at her throat, just tight enough so that the sight of her red, sweating face and panicked eyes brought him to o.r.g.a.s.m.
He got off her once he was done, stripping the condom off and tossing it into a corner, then using his own handkerchief to clean himself. He straightened his clothing, then sat on the bed beside her and stared down at her. She was no longer gasping, but watched him warily, as if afraid to even move.
"What did you mean? That you could show me death?"
She licked her lips nervously. "It's justmy grandma could see spirits. So can I. Is there anybody you want to talk to, honey? Anybody from the other side? Because I can make it so's you can talk to them."
Disgusted, he said, "You really think I'm going to fall for that bulls.h.i.+t? Where do you keep your crystal ball?"
"It ain't like that, honey, I swear! I'm no phony. I think about it, about opening a door to the other side, and the spirits almost always come through. I can see them and hear them."
"Can you?" He laughed and, obeying an impulse, lunged to once again grip her throat. "I think I want to be able to do that, honey. I think you're going to give me that. Aren't you?"
This time, she couldn't answer, because he was strangling her in earnest. And as he choked the life out of her, he reached. Reached with his mind, thrusting into her as his body had thrust into her just minutes before. Thrust and thrust and thrust "Sammy! What're you up to now, you little b.a.s.t.a.r.d?"