Illusion Town (2 page)

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Authors: Jayne Castle

BOOK: Illusion Town
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Chapter 2

The dream walk started the way it always did
 . . .

She rose from the bed and stopped to look down at herself. Over the years she had become familiar with the weirdness of an out-of-body experience but it always sent a psychic shock across her senses. She had been dream-walking since the age of thirteen, yet the sensation of being in two places at the same time was still disorienting, at least in those first few seconds. She was both the dreamer and the doppelgänger—her very own double.

The dreamer was curled on her side, asleep on top of the cheap, faded bedspread. The doppelgänger was relieved to see that she was still wearing the new, pricey little red dress that she had saved for a special occasion. The skirt of the dress was hiked up high on her thigh but at least she wasn't flashing the room. Her high-heeled evening sandals were on the floor beside the bed.

The crystal necklace that she had worn earlier in the evening was gone.

“Not good,” the doppelgänger said in the silent language of dreams.

“I know,” the dreamer replied in the same soundless whisper. “Need to find it.”

“Finding things is what we do.”

“Careful with the ‘we,' pal. Remember, ‘we' were recently diagnosed as having a para-psych personality disorder. Our goal is to try to pass for normal.”

“Grady Barnett is a lying, cheating bastard. We aren't going to pay any attention to his diagnosis.”

“Yeah, yeah. Speaking of finding things, let's try to stay focused here.”

“Right.”

The light filtering in around the blinds was a familiar eerie green.

“We're near the Dead City ruins,” the doppelgänger said. “Probably better than being stranded somewhere in the desert.”

“That's right. Think positive.”

The doppelgänger surveyed the shadowed space, searching for something that was important. She was dream-walking so there had to be a reason. There was always a reason for a lucid dream.

The doppelgänger considered the black evening bag sitting on the room's only chair. It looked as if it had been dropped there just before the dreamer collapsed on the bed.

“My necklace,” the dreamer said. “What happened to it?”

“Check the evening bag,” the doppelgänger said to the dreamer. “It's important. Answer is inside.”

“Okay. Is that all you've got for me?”

For the first time the doppelgänger looked at the man standing by the window.

“He's important, too,” she said.

“I know.”

There was a dust bunny perched on the windowsill. Like the man, his attention was focused on the scene outside the window.

But the dreamer recognized the dust bunny. He was a friend. In her world that made him family.

It was the man who was a mostly unknown factor. His dreamlight prints were all over the room—the floor, the window blinds, everything he had touched. They shimmered with strong, controlled paranormal energy.

His prints were on the bed beside the dreamer, too.

“He slept next to you,” the doppelgänger said. “That's interesting.”

“Drugged or psi-burned, probably. No other explanation.”

Men did not sleep well when they slept next to the dreamer. No one did. The few brave souls who had attempted to do so over the years usually awoke on the currents of a panic-driven nightmare. When the dreamer dreamed normally, the currents radiating from her aura were so strong they had a disturbing effect on anyone in close proximity. When she went dream-walking, no one who had physical contact with her could tolerate the waves of dreamlight for long. It made for a limited love life.

The man at the window gripped a narrow boxlike object in his hand. Even in her dreamstate the dreamer recognized that the device had been shaped for a human hand. It wasn't Alien tech. It looked like a remote control.

“It's a weapon,” the doppelgänger said.

“I know,” the dreamer said. But she did not remember how she had come to know that.

As if he had heard the silent conversation, the man turned his head to look at the dreamer on the bed. He did not see the doppelgänger. No one else ever saw her, which was, of course, one of the reasons why powerful dreamlight talents got saddled with labels like “fragile” and “unstable.”

“Wake up, Hannah,” the man said. The voice was dark, masculine, and infused with a lot of control. It suited the power in his aura. “We need to get moving. It's almost dawn. We have to assume they're looking for us. No way to know how much time we've got before they find this place.”

Elias Coppersmith. His name was Elias Coppersmith.

A rush of relief swept through her. At least he was not a complete stranger. He had been an online client for about two months. Yesterday evening he had walked through the door of her shop, Visions, for the first time. Assuming yesterday was actually yesterday. How much time had she lost?

Okay, so she hadn't awakened in a cheap motel room with a total stranger.

“So much for the good news,” the doppelgänger said. She started to fade, slipping back into the dreamer's physical body.

“Wait,” the dreamer said. “I've got more questions.”

But the dream walk was ending.

For a heartbeat or two the dreamer experienced the usual but always unnerving shock of transition.

And then she was awake.

Hannah West took a deep breath and came back into her normal senses. At least she hadn't screamed the way she still did sometimes when she woke up in an unfamiliar location. She liked to think she had developed good control over her talent but there were still times when she awakened in a semipanic.

She opened her eyes, trying to orient herself. Her dream-walking doppelgänger had been right; the radiant acid green energy at the windows told her that they were near some of the Dead City ruins. The fact that the glow was fading also indicated that dawn was approaching. The natural illumination of the green quartz that the Aliens had used to construct most of their cities and many of their artifacts was barely visible in daylight.

Virgil chortled a cheery good-morning greeting and vaulted off the windowsill. He landed with a thump on the bed and scurried toward her.

She sat up slowly and reached out to give him a quick hug. “Good morning to you, too, pal.”

“How do you feel?” Elias asked.

She tried to summon up the facts she could be sure of. She was in a strange room with a man who had, according to the dreamlight evidence, slept next to her on a lumpy, rock-hard mattress.

And her necklace was gone.

But Virgil was there and he seemed to approve of Elias Coppersmith. So there was that.

“Disoriented,” she said. “I feel very, very disoriented. I can't remember anything after you walked through the front door of my shop yesterday.”

“Same here after I first woke up. But I'm starting to get a few flashes of memory, so hopefully the effects will wear off.”

“Do you think we were drugged?”

He shook his head, his jaw set in a grim line. “I don't know. But we were running from someone. I recall that much.”

She examined him carefully. He looked as if he had used his fingers to rake his dark hair straight back from a sharply defined widow's peak. His face was all hard planes and angles and covered with the dark shadow of a morning beard. His eyes were a dangerous shade of amber.

He wore a crewneck T-shirt, expensively tailored dark trousers that showed signs of having been slept in, and a pair of low, recently polished boots. There was a crumpled white dress shirt and a tie draped over the back of the chair and a dark gray sports coat.

He had navigational amber set into his belt. She was willing to bet that there was more concealed in the heels of the boots. He also wore a ring on his right hand. It was unusual in several respects. The first was that it was a simple Old World design, made of some strong black metal and set with a green crystal. There was nothing particularly
attractive about the ring. It looked functional, not decorative. She assumed that Elias could use the strange crystal to focus his talent—whatever that was.

She knew something about the ring because she was the one who had tracked it down for him in the underground market, where powerful crystals and gemstones with a paranormal provenance were bought and sold by collectors, most of whom preferred to remain anonymous.

“My necklace,” she said. She touched her throat. “It's gone.”

Elias frowned. “I noticed that earlier after I woke up. Must have lost it on the way here.”

“No.” Panic rushed through her. “No, that can't be possible. The clasp was specially designed to be very secure.”

“I'm no judge of fashion when it comes to jewelry but I do know crystals. No offense, but the ones in your necklace didn't appear to be particularly valuable.”

She stiffened. “It was a family heirloom. Pretty much my only family heirloom.”

His mouth tightened. “Sorry. I understand.”

“Under the circumstances, it's a good thing I know who you are,” she said. “Otherwise I might be very concerned.”

Grim amusement came and went in his eyes.

“Don't worry. There's still plenty of reason to be worried,” he said. “I can't remember much of what happened last night but my gut tells me that someone is hunting us. We need to find out what's going on, and fast. That means we need to get moving.”

“Right.”

First things first. Get out of the damn bed
.

Layers of dreamlight had soaked into the old mattress as well as the sheets and the bedspread. A lot of the paranormal residue was infused with the added heat of sexual energy.

She hated old beds. She hated sleeping where others had slept. And motel room beds were the worst.

She swung her feet to the floor, trying not to think about the bed.

She grabbed the stilettos and slipped into them, squelching another wave of anxiety with an effort of will. Then she got to her feet.

She suddenly remembered what the doppelgänger had said about the answer being in the evening bag. She hurried to the chair, picked up the clutch, and unfastened it. There was the usual paraphernalia inside—her cell phone, some spare navigational amber, a packet of tissues, and a lipstick. There was also a small, square piece of paper.

But there was no necklace.

“Damn,” she whispered. She was afraid she might actually burst into tears. “It can't be lost. I just found the missing crystal a couple of weeks ago.”

“It's okay,” Elias said. He came toward her and patted her somewhat awkwardly on her shoulder. “I'll help you look for it.”

She pulled herself together. She could have a nervous breakdown later, she told herself.

She was about to close the bag when she noticed the slip of paper again. She took it out, thinking it was a receipt of some kind that might give them a clue about what had happened.

It wasn't a receipt.

“Weird,” she said.

“What is it?”

“It's a fortune,” she said.

“What the hell?”

“You know, the kind you get at a fortune-teller's booth. You put in a few coins and out pops a fortune.”

“I have never, in my entire life, bought a fortune at a fortune-teller's booth.”

“Well, evidently I did last night,” she said.

“What does it say?”

She read the words and winced. “Just the usual generic stuff.”

“Read it to me. Maybe it will help point us in the right direction.”

She braced herself.
“You will find true love soon.”

He considered that briefly. “You're right. Not very helpful.”

She took a deep breath. “Well, it does indicate that we visited a fortune-teller last night.”

“Good point.”

She started toward the bathroom but paused as another thought occurred.

“What day is it?” she asked.

“Tuesday,” Elias said. “We checked in here very early this morning—shortly after one a.m. I paid cash.”

“We get a lot of cash business here in Illusion Town. Some people don't want to leave an electronic trail when they patronize places like this.”

Elias shook his head. “I wasn't trying to hide the room from a wife or a girlfriend. I'm sure of that much.”

That news lifted her spirits somewhat.

“As soon as I woke up, I left Virgil here with you and took a look around,” Elias continued. “I had to find out just what we were dealing with. The night clerk is still on duty downstairs. He remembers checking us in. He also said no one showed up asking questions about us.”

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