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Jeffrey testified first. He flashed me a smile and a thumbs-up before he went to the table. If he had a lawyer with him, he kept the attorney hidden. He had a prepared statement, speaking carefully and nonthreateningly about being open to strangeness in the world, to mysteries we didn’t understand and might possibly fear. He stated a belief that the universe was basically good, and if we approached each new encounter with the unknown with that attitude, we would be rewarded with knowledge and understanding. It sounded a little metaphysical and New-Agey for my tastes. He’d obviously never encountered a hungry werewolf in the middle of the night. Wasn’t much knowledge and understanding at the end of that meeting.

Either the television celebrity garnered more respect from the panel of senators, or Jeffrey did a better job of winning them over with his charisma and amiability. He treated them like a talk show audience, engaging them, telling jokes.

He did what Duke probably brought him here to do, which was to testify to the existence of the supernatural, at least his own little branch of it. To think, a couple months ago anyone with a rational thought in his head would have written Jeffrey off as a New Age kook at best, or a manipulative charlatan at worst. But in this context, this new frame of reference, where vampires were real, the U.S. Congress had to take him seriously. I wondered if he felt at all smug or vindicated by the turn of events, the change in attitude. He just looked calm.

I leaned forward when Elijah Smith took the stand.

Smith never left his caravan. People who wanted to join him were screened before they were let inside to meet him. He’d never spoken publicly, until now. Finally, I got to see him in the flesh.

Whatever Jeffrey saw in him that indicated he wasn’t human, I didn’t see it. He moved with confidence, holding himself with a somber poise. His werewolf bodyguards stayed behind, seated in the first row among the audience. They kept their gazes focused on him, refusing to let him out of their sights.

“Heaven’s Gate,” Ben whispered to me. I looked at him, raising my eyebrow to invite him to explain. He said, “The suicide cult. He’s got that suicidal calm thing going. Jim Jones, David Koresh, you know?”

That didn’

t reassure me.

He didn’t have a statement, so the committee launched right in to basic questions: where did he reside, what was his profession. Smith claimed to be based in California. I’d never been able to trace him to any permanent place of residence. His caravan was nomadic. Maybe he kept a post office box somewhere.

As to profession, he answered, “Spiritual adviser.”

Which was about as surreal as when Jeffrey had said “communications facilitator.” For some reason no one felt they could come before the Senate and say he was a professional medium or a faith healer.

Duke said, “I understand that you serve as a spiritual adviser to a specific group of people. Could you describe them?”

“They’re vampires and lycanthropes, Senator.” He spoke coolly, with maybe a hint of amusement.

I’d heard him before, from a distance over a tenuous phone connection. Even then his voice had had a haunted quality, hypnotic. He drew listeners to him, like any good preacher could. There was something else, though, in the way his voice hinted at mysteries to be revealed, at the dark secrets he would tell.

In person, that sense was doubled, or more. I leaned forward, head cocked, determined to hear every word. I wished the room’s ambient noises—papers rustling, people coughing—would stop.

“And how do you advise them, Reverend Smith?” Duke said. This was the most respectful Duke had been of any of the witnesses. Did he actually think Smith was a good Christian preacher?

“I help them find their way to the cure.”

Henderson spoke next. “Earlier this week, Dr. Flemming testified that he’d had some difficulty discovering a cure. Are you saying you’ve had better luck than medical science?”

“Senator, these states of being cannot be fully explained by medical science. They have a spiritual dimension to them, and the cures lie in the spiritual realm.”

That was what I’d always thought. I wondered if it would be rude of me to move chairs so I was sitting closer. I didn’t want to miss anything Smith had to say.

“I’m not sure I understand you.”

Senator Duke turned to his colleague. “He’s saying what I’ve been telling you, these people are cursed, possessed, and they need to be exorcized.”

“We’re not living in the Dark Ages, Senator Duke.” Henderson returned to his witness. “Reverend Smith?”

He said, “I believe that those afflicted may look within to purge themselves of the taint of their . . . diseases.”

“Through prayer,” Duke prompted.

“In a manner of speaking, yes.”

Prayer, yeah. That was all I had to do, it sounded so simple. I wanted to talk to him, to learn from him, because I’d struggled all this time to find some kind of peace in this life but he made it sound so simple—

“Kitty!”

My brain rattled. I blinked, disoriented. Jeffrey was shaking my arm. He’d hissed into my ear loud enough that the people in front of us looked back.


Tags: Carrie Vaughn Kitty Norville Fantasy