Authors: Brian Mercer
****
"Tyson, I think you'd better come over and take a look at this."
I propped myself up from the cot in Tommy's headquarters, where I'd all morning been recuperating. The pressure in my head felt as if it had expanded my skull to twice its natural size. I squinted to where Tommy and Archie sat behind a trio of computer monitors. I felt like that night in Cincinnati, when I'd mixed whisky and tequila.
I slipped on my hat but then thought better of it and set it back down on the nearby coffee table. "Whatda ya got?"
"Something you should hear."
I recognized the sound wave displayed on Archie's computer monitor. It was the output from the digital recorder I'd left running in Emily's room.
"This is what your recorder picked up when you were downstairs getting smacked about by that fiend."
A blast of white noise emanated from the loudspeakers that made it feel like a steel file drilling through the center of my head. I heard the banging piano in the distance and my own howl and then a scratchy noise that was unquestionably a voice.
"Did you catch that?"
"Naw. Play it again."
The raspy whisper repeated, but in my brain-swollen state I couldn't quite make sense of it.
"Listen carefully now. It says, 'The girl is mine.'"
They looped the sound fragment so it played again and again and now the meaning was unmistakable. "The girl is mine. The girl is mine. The girl is mine. The girl is mine."
"Are you sure you don't want to see a doctor?" Archie asked.
"I'll be fine."
"You saw this thing," Tommy said. "What do you think?"
"Honestly? I think we're gonna need some help on this one, Boss. Just you and me ain't gonna be enough. Not against this thing."
Tommy took a deep, thoughtful breath. "I know some people. Let me make a few calls."
"What, a priest?"
"Is that supposed to be funny? No, Alexander Bray is considerably better than a priest. In fact, you might say the spirit world is his specialty. You're going to have to trust me on this one, Tyson."
"I trust you, Boss. Because, right now the only thing I'm sure of is that we're in over our heads."
Becky
Central London
May 5
"I've always wanted to see London," Nicole said as the legendary British Parliament building swung into view, bookended by Victoria Tower and Big Ben.
"We're not far from my home now," Sara blurted excitedly. "You see, just that way is Hyde Park and then some ways beyond is Regents Park, near where I live. Or, er,
used
to live.
"Sean," she called out, "are we staying at Uncle Alex's tonight?"
"I'm afraid not, Miss," our shaved-headed driver replied. "Sir Alex thought you girls might be more comfortable at Dukes."
"
Dukes?
" she said, folding her arms over her chest as she stuck out a pouty lower lip. "Well, I suppose we would be more comfortable there. But I did want to show the girls around Uncle Alex's place in London. Ah, well, perhaps next time."
"I'm told he's reserved the penthouse suite for you," Sean went on, unusually chatty. "It's quite roomy and bright and I'm told the food is exceptional."
The car sped over Westminster Bridge, made a right on Parliament Street and then on to Whitehall, passing one iconic landmark after another. I sat mute next to Nicole, feeling strangely numb and detached. It had been months since I'd ventured into any kind of populated area. The last time that happened I'd been completely overwhelmed by the rush of extrasensory information pouring in from every direction.
At the time it had taken all my will to keep from coming utterly unglued. Now, with my psychic protection tools in place, I found I could tune out the jumble of information that would otherwise have swamped me.
The chaos was still there. I could feel it behind an invisible wall, like an angry mob pounding to get through, everyone shouting at once. My defenses seemed shaky at best and I was terrified what would happen should they all come tumbling down. I dreaded making another scene in front of the girls.
I'd been anxious ever since Sir Alex had called us into his private study three days ago. "Girls," he'd said from the plush chair behind his desk, his fingers steepled in front of him, "I want you to join me on a sort of field trip into London. It will only be for a few days. A week at most."
The girls and I had been expecting information, psychic or otherwise, about the dark apparition that had for so long been troubling us. This was completely unexpected.
"London!" Sara had exclaimed. Then to us, "Oh, you'll love it. There is so much to see and do there." To Sir Alex, "When do we leave?"
"In a few days," he'd explained. "My apologies for the short notice. I received a call last night from a friend whose sister was once a student here at Waltham. He's a London-area paranormal investigator with whom I work on occasion to train students. He presently finds himself in a rather sensitive situation with a high-profile client that requires the utmost discretion. He's requested my assistance in the investigation and I thought, in this particular instance, it might be a good idea to take along a few students to see what they pick up."
"That sounds interestin'," said Nicole.
"I'm curious, Sir Alex, why us?" This came from Cali, whose eyes had narrowed skeptically. "Why not take students with a little more experience?"
"I fear there is a young girl involved in these disturbances not much younger than yourselves. Well, she's near Sara's age, but I thought together you would be in an excellent position to connect with her on a more fundamental level than I or your more mature colleagues."
It had sounded harmless enough, but I'd had to work to hold back panic. The thought of traveling into an immense city with a population of over seven and a half million, packed with centuries of intense and sometimes violent history, filled me with horror. It conjured memories of last summer's trips into Manhattan with Mom. I'd gotten so stressed out that I'd ended up sobbing on the cab floor without even caring how truly disgusting it was.
Jenny only added to my anxiety. The night Sir Alex told us about London, I'd been lounging alone in our sitting room. The sun was setting, casting a ruddy pink glow over the gardens. The windows on either side of me had been open to let in a spring breeze laced with the perfume of newly fallen rain and just a hint of cedar chips. I was just starting to doze when Jenny's familiar disembodied voice said,
"He's co-o-o-o-oming.
"
This had startled me but not like it used to. By now Jenny's
he's-comings
had become a familiar refrain. I thought about my usual reply â "Who's coming?" â but Jenny's answer was always the same
: "You know! The one you've been waiting for, silly."
The first time Jenny made this pronouncement had been at the evening mixer where I'd had my freak out. At the time she'd said it just before Jean Paul was about to ask me to dinner, so I'd assumed she'd been referring to him. But in the five or six times since Jenny had repeated the prediction, Jean Paul hadn't been anywhere around. In fact, ever since our past-life meditation session a few days ago, he'd been totally ignoring me.
Only then did it occur to me that, despite her rather playful, singsong delivery, "he's coming" might actually be a warning. Could Jenny be referring to the old man or men who dressed in black, the ones haunting our rooms? But, no, that didn't seem quite right either.
"He's the one you've been waiting for."
Why would I be waiting for the man in black?
"Who's coming?" I'd demanded. "Tell me, Jenny! I'm not kidding around. Who am I waiting for?"
"You'lllll seeeee,"
she'd sang, giggling.
The limousine rounded the corner from St. James Place and into Dukes' little front courtyard. Dukes Hotel rose five stories in layers of red brick and white woodwork, with a large Union Jack flying over its arched front entrance in crisp red, white, and blue. As Sean opened the car door for us, porters advanced from the black wrought-iron gate to collect our bags.
Sean's description of the hotel was accurate: white, bright, fresh, immaculate; stylish décor that was both modern and classic, soft curves accented with darkly stained antiques and vases with strikingly colorful bouquets. Our rooms in the penthouse suite were on the fifth floor, with a spacious sitting room, a dining area, and a private balcony overlooking Green Park and Buckingham Palace.
A large basket of fresh fruit sat on the table with a card from Sir Alex, who'd arrived in London the night before. The card said he would show up at the hotel at ten the next morning. He advised comfortable clothing and a full breakfast.
After freshening up, we had dinner in the hotel dining room â mushroom risotto and raspberry tarts â before taking our first excursion outside. We walked up the Mall from the Palace to Trafalgar Square, then through Piccadilly Square and the theater district. In Soho we browsed Chinese restaurants, each boasting the superiority of their crispy aromatic duck; in Leicester Square we ate ice cream; and at Covent Garden we watched street performers juggle fire and perform magic.
All night I felt the presence of unseen spirits crowding around me, lingering just at the border of my awareness. It made me think of wild animals crouched at the shadowy edge of a campfire. I managed to stay centered and calm until the girls and I got back to our hotel, but I wondered how long I could stay in London without suffering a compete meltdown.
Cali
Dukes Hotel, Central London
Later That Night
I turned off the bathroom light and slid between the cool, soft sheets. Nicole was already in bed, asleep on her back, surrounded by her luxurious red hair. Before she'd dozed off she had arranged her arms neatly over her chest. Even asleep, she seemed to be posing for a portrait. Man, she was gorgeous.
For a long time I stared up at the ceiling in the dark, listening to her breathe, feeling the movement of the bed every time she inhaled and exhaled. Once upon a time, closing my eyes and relaxing was all I needed to do to have an out-of-body experience. But not anymore. It was hard to even remember the last time I'd consciously projected.
I wasn't sure what was stopping me now, when for so long I'd been projecting against my will, but I had my theories. The first time I remember going out of body was last August, but my sleep troubles had started over a year ago, around when Mom moved to Idaho. Becky claimed to have seen me wearing my hooded sweatshirt on the side of the road last May, so I'd probably been projecting even then, I just don't remember doing it.
It occurred to me that my out-of-body experiences might have originally started because I'd been really stressed out. Maybe now that I was at Waltham Academy, where the atmosphere was calm and my living situation stable, my stress levels had gone down and, with it, the out-of-body experiences.
It might also have something to do with my new outlook about the projections. Before Waltham, I'd been resisting them with everything I had. Now that I
wanted
them to happen, they'd stopped. Maybe something about tensing up to prevent them had actually
helped
me get out.
Who knew? Maybe it was all of the above.
I felt more and more like a charlatan. Sir Alex had brought me halfway around the world, apparently because I had some kind of special ability, and now I couldn't even do that.
I
had
learned stuff at Waltham. I could see auras now, but not all the time, like Becky. To see them I had to get very relaxed and purposefully look for them. I'd also become more connected to my inner voice. More than once my intuition had coughed up a bit of otherworldly information that later proved accurate. I'd even seen a spirit, if you counted the man in black beneath the old Waltham ruins. But unlike Nicole and Becky, who seemed to be routinely in contact with the Other Side, I just sat in morning meditation, taking deep breaths and trying to stay awake.
Lessons with Arika and Robert hadn't been as easy as I thought they'd be. Conscious astral projection involved an exact balance of relaxation, focus, the right degree of drowsiness and wakefulness, and the ability to carry out complex and sometimes monotonous visualization techniques without the mind spiraling into a muddy half-sleep.
Several times I'd been able to get the vibrations going, the vibrations that usually happened just before I separated from my body, but I hadn't yet been able to take the final step and consciously get out. Either the vibrations would be so extreme that I'd lose focus, or the chair or bed I was practicing on would seem to disappear out from under me and I'd tense up to stop myself from falling. The few times I managed to get past that, an intense sexual energy rushed through me, like the one during my out-of-body experience where I'd seen the man in black making out with the young, blond, kitchen girl. The sexual energy had been so strong that twice it had shaken me completely out of my balanced state.
I felt like such a fraud.
"You're tryin' too 'ard!" Arika screamed at me during a break one afternoon. "You don't need trauma to be a Dream Walker." She grabbed my arm to stop me as we walked along, stabbing her finger into my forehead. "You live too much 'ere." She pointed to my chest. "And not enough 'ere. It's about lettin' go. When you learn to let go, you'll find what you're lookin' for."
What was that supposed to mean? A bunch of Yoda crap, if you ask me. I'm pretty sure I was still having out-of-body experiences at night. I'd wake with hazy, seemingly random memories of them: flying with others; bits of cryptic conversation; symbols that I couldn't make any sense of. And there were still those déjà vu moments, two and sometimes three a day, as if I'd either been projecting into my future or taking actions in life that I'd already carried out on the astral planes.
It took me a long time before I drifted off to sleep and even then I only dozed fitfully. I wasn't sure if London's frenetic energy had me all keyed up or if I kept thinking about tomorrow's field trip. Sir Alex had kept us in the dark about the paranormal disturbances we'd be investigating and there was something ominous about not knowing what we'd gotten ourselves into. I didn't think Sir Alex would purposefully put us in danger, but I did get a sense that where we were going wasn't completely safe, either.