“What about the thugs who tried to kidnap me? Do you think Frye hired them?”
“No. Whoever murdered Webber sent that pair to keep watch for you.”
“Lander Knox,” Elias said grimly. “He’s still out there.”
“I agree with you,” Sam said. “We’ll find him. But the process of connecting all the dots will have to wait until morning. I can’t think clearly enough to do that tonight.”
“You need sleep,” Willow said.
Abby nodded. “Yes, you do.”
“I’m not arguing.” Sam pushed himself up out of the chair. “If you will all excuse me, I’m going to crash.”
He started toward the bedroom stairs.
“One more thing before you leave,” Elias said.
Sam paused and turned back. “What?”
“You said Frye told you that his mother had an affair with Ray Willis and that Willis entrusted her with that other notebook.”
“Yes,” Sam said. “Willis didn’t want you and Knox to know about those experiments.”
“What about the missing crystals?” Elias asked. “The ones he used in the field tests? Knox and I searched for them after the explosion, but we never found them.”
“I don’t have the answer to that question,” Sam said. “All I can tell you is that Frye made it clear he did not have them. That was one of the reasons he was so desperate to get his hands on the Coppersmith crystals. He felt that he had been deprived of his inheritance.”
“His
“Of course,” Abby said quietly. “It all makes sense now, including the psychic genetics. Ray Willis was Gerald Frye’s father, the father he never knew.”
45
ABBY AWOKE TO THE KNOWLEDGE THAT SAM WAS NO LONGER in the bed. She opened her eyes and saw him standing at the window. His strong, bare shoulders were silhouetted against the moonlight. His hard face was in shadow. He was not alone. Newton was beside him, front paws braced on the windowsill. Together, both males contemplated the darkness.
Abby sat up against the pillows and wrapped her arms around her knees.
“Did you have another one of your nightmares?” she asked.
“No.” Sam looked at her. “I woke up a while ago and couldn’t get back to sleep.”
“You had a rough evening. We all did, but you endured that dreamstate experience and nearly got killed. That kind of stress takes some time to get over.”
“That’s not why I couldn’t sleep. I started thinking about some of the missing answers.”
“You said they could wait until morning. The main thing to focus on tonight is that you solved Cassidy Lawrence’s murder. That should give you some closure.”
“Closure. Good word,” Sam said. He turned away from the window and moved back toward the bed. “It does feel a lot like a door has been closed somewhere, this time for good. But there is another door still ajar. I think your stepbrother is standing on the other side.”
“Dawson?”
“We need to find that investor, the one who is pressuring him to acquire the lab book.”
“You think the investor is Lander Knox, don’t you?”
“I think there’s a strong possibility of that, yes.”
“Even if you’re right, Knox has to know the chase is over and that he lost. The lab book is no longer on the market.”
“If he’s killed two people to get it, he’s unlikely to stop now. We need to find him.”
Abby shivered. “I can call Dawson in the morning, tell him what’s going on. Maybe he’ll believe me and cooperate with us to help find the investor.”
“Yes.”
Newton dropped his front paws to the floor and trotted to the door.
“He wants to go out,” Abby said.
“And then he’ll want to come back in.”
“It’s the way of all dogs.”
Sam went to the door and opened it. “Remind me to install a dog door this week.”
Abby watched Sam and Newton disappear into the darkened hallway.
She listened to the kitchen door open and close. Sam came back to the bedroom alone, got out of his pants and got into bed. He reached for Abby and drew her across his chest.
“Tonight, in the lab,” he said, “when I heard you coming down the hall and realized that I could not stop you, I think I went a little crazy.”
She framed his face between her palms and kissed him firmly on the mouth, silencing him. “No, that’s not what happened. You need to remember events correctly. What
He put two fingers over her mouth. “You didn’t let me finish.”
She sensed his amusement and winced.
“Sorry,” she said. “So what were you going to say?”
“That when I went a little crazy trying to break free of the trance, I suddenly realized that I could use the ring to do it.”
“Really?” She pushed herself up on her elbows and peered at his ring. She could not see it in the shadows, so she jacked up her talent a little and studied the tiny aurora of energy that leaked out of the stone. “You figured out what it can do?”
“I think it acts as a kind of psychic laser.” Sam raised his hand and examined the ring. “At least that’s what happened tonight. I was able to channel my own energy through it and focus it in a way I’ve never been able to do before. I could feel the currents overwhelming Frye, setting his aura on fire.”
“You didn’t say anything to your parents tonight about using the ring.”
“Because I’m still not sure what happened. I’ll talk to Dad in the morning, though. We need to run some experiments.” Sam paused. “Very careful experiments. And I need to contact my brother and sister, warn them that the rings appear to have laserlike properties and that they can be deadly.”
“Maybe you’ll know more when I break the code on the lab book.”
“Yes.” Sam thrust his fingers into her hair and wrapped them around the back of her head. “There’s something we need to talk about.”
“The lab book?”
“Not the damn lab book. The real reason I was able to pull the extra energy I needed to break the trance tonight was you.”
“Me? But I was out in the hall.”
“I knew you were there. And you were running hot. There’s a connection between us, Abby.”
“I know. It’s weird, isn’t it?”
“No, it’s love.”
She froze. Her mouth went dry.
“I needed some additional power, and I drew it from the link between us.”