Lucifer's Daughter. V. J. Banis
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Lucifer's Daughter - V. J. Banis страница 7

Название: Lucifer's Daughter

Автор: V. J. Banis

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Зарубежные детективы

Серия:

isbn: 9781434447715

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ forced herself to smile. “Of course I can. Please, Liz, go along. I can manage. I’m really feeling quite all right. Honest I am.”

      Elizabeth hesitated. “You’re sure?”

      “I’m sure. Go along with the others. I insist.”

      Margaret was the first to walk away. She walked to the far side of the boardwalk and stood looking out at the ocean. Allyson turned, but a little reluctantly. She glanced back at Julia. “Don’t pay any attention to that silly old gypsy woman,” Allyson said. “Get into bed, Julie. I’m sorry I suggested that roller coaster ride.” Then she too hurried away, going toward Margaret at the rail.

      It was Elizabeth who stood there debating with herself. “Oh, really, Julie. I feel terrible about all this. I insist I come with you back to the hotel. You may have another dizzy spell. You shouldn’t be left alone.”

      “Please, Liz. I’d rather be by myself. You go along with the others.” She glanced toward Margaret and Allyson. “Don’t keep them waiting.”

      Julia waited until the three had walked out of sight. She had no intention of returning to the hotel. The woolly mess had cleared up inside her head and she was thinking rationally again. And with the return of her rationality came the return of her strange little voices. She hadn’t realized they’d deserted her during her ordeal with the gypsy fortune teller until they started bickering among themselves. She wanted them to stop because their wrangling was interfering with her resolve.

      Forcing herself to ignore them, she fumbled in her purse and made certain she had what she needed. With hurrying steps she went back in the direction from which she’d come.

      The old gypsy wasn’t seated outside the tent. Julia found her huddled over the shattered crystal ball. She was mumbling to herself and handling the crystal fragments as though they were precious diamonds. Julia stood just inside the tent flap, waiting for the old woman to acknowledge her presence. When she did not, Julia cleared her throat.

      The old crone looked up. When she saw Julia standing there, she gave a start and got to her feet so quickly that the stool on which she had been sitting tipped over backward. The gypsy averted her eyes and swept her arm. “Go away.”

      “You must tell me what you saw,” Julia insisted.

      “No. I cannot. I will not. Go. Go.”

      “You called me evil. You say I am trouble. You’ve embarrassed me in front of my friends and even a stranger, and now you refuse to explain. I have no intention of going anywhere until you tell me what you believe to have seen.”

      “I saw what I saw. It was real enough. It was evil. You are evil.”

      Julia glowered at her. “Stop saying that! Tell me what you saw in that crystal ball. Why did it shatter?”

      “It shattered from the impact of the evil that was implanted into its depth. You brought Him into it.”

      “Him?” Julia frowned at her, remembering vaguely the image of the man’s face reflected in the dim glow of the ball. “Who was he? Who was the man?”

      “I cannot tell you that.”

      “You must. It was my future you saw. It had to do with me. I paid your fee. You owe it to me.”

      “Go away, child,” the gypsy said, her voice softening. Her words came out more in the tone of a plea than an order.

      Julia fumbled in her handbag and pulled out a large bill. “You must help me. Here, take this and tell me whatever it was you saw.”

      The old woman looked at the bill. Her hand trembled, then moved toward it. Suddenly she snatched her hand back. “No. You must never know the evil that lurks in your future. I cannot tell you. I will not tell you. It is for your own sake.”

      “I saw a strange man’s face in the crystal just before it shattered. Also, there was someone—a man—standing just behind me while you were entranced. Was it a trick you employed? You must tell me if this is all trickery. I must know.”

      The gypsy shook her head. “There is no trickery here. You saw what you saw. I cannot vouch for any strange being who might have taken shape near you. I have nothing to do with conjurations; they can only be accomplished by your own patterns of thought and with your own mind power...or by those more powerful than I.”

      Julia pulled another bill from her purse and shoved it into the gypsy’s hand. “If you will not help me, then please tell me who can. You see, I have never had a father or mother. My past is a blank. You are the first person who has given me any insight into my real self. All my life I have wondered who I was or what I am. You say I am evil. You say I am trouble. If that be the case, then at least put me on the right path so that I may be given the opportunity to avoid the evil you say I will do, the trouble I will cause. Help me. You must. You have the power. Please, help me.”

      The gypsy woman had been staring down at the dirt floor. When Julia finished her plea, the old woman slowly raised her eyes and gazed into Julia’s. She stared at her for several full minutes.

      “When I first laid my eyes on you,” the gypsy said, “I felt I’d seen you before somewhere, and I was afraid. I do not know why. There is something in your eyes to fear. I wanted nothing to do with you. The image in the crystal ball confirmed my fears. But now that I look upon you again I see yet another face...a face that does not disturb me. You are another girl suddenly. You seem to be the personification of both good and evil. Which is the stronger of the two, I do not know. That is for you to determine.”

      The old woman stared more closely into Julia’s eyes. “I believe I know someone who might help you.” Her eyes wandered away, as though debating as to whether she should continue. They returned quickly. “Yes,” the gypsy decided. “I will send you to someone who will be able to direct you. Perhaps that will not be an easy path to follow, but she will show you the way, and you will then have to decide for yourself.” The gypsy turned and went toward the back of the tent. She disappeared behind a canvas partition.

      Julia shook her head. She wasn’t an evil person. She had never caused anyone any trouble. Yet, as she thought back over her young life, she began remembering those many, many individuals who had shied away from her. She had never succeeded in befriending anyone except for an occasional frightened little child who was in her charge at the orphanage. But once she befriended them, the matrons always removed the charges from her care. Perhaps all those people who avoided her saw something in her that she did not know was there. Perhaps others saw what the old gypsy had seen.

      Was she an evil being? she began to wonder. She’d often felt evil just behind her, but she thought she’d managed to keep ahead of it at all times. Perhaps it had finally caught up with her.

      The seeds of doubt were planted. She’d have to find out the true nature of those seeds before permitting them to bear fruit, she told herself.

      CHAPTER FOUR

      A ramshackle old house sat at the farthermost end of a cul-de-sac. The hour was late and the fog rolling in from the sea made the place look brooding and ominous. Julia sat in the back seat of the taxi with the little piece of paper the gypsy had given her. She glanced down and then up at the house number, confirming that she was at the right place.

      “Do you want me to wait?” the cab driver asked.

      “Yes, СКАЧАТЬ