Sense of Evil - Kay Hooper [41]
Isabel left the kitchen and went down the short hallway to the bedroom. She stood in the center, looking around. “A medium is the most vulnerable of all psychics to what you called possession. They're the ones who open the doors angry or desperate spirits usually need in order to return to this plane of existence. And the nearest potential host when the spirit comes through.”
“Usually need?”
“We've theorized that an unusually powerful spirit could make its own doorway, if it were determined enough. So far, though, our experience has been that mediums or latent mediums provide the doorways.”
“I can't believe I'm talking about this. Listening to this.”
She looked at him, smiling faintly. “This stuff has always been with us, always been a part of our lives. For most of us, it was simply a case of not seeing what was there. Who knew there were protons and electrons until we found them? Who knew germs were responsible for illnesses until somebody figured it out? Who knew even fifty years ago that we had a chance in hell of mapping the human genome?”
“I get the point,” Rafe said. “Still, this is—or at least feels—different.”
“It's human. And one day, eventually, science will catch up, figure out a way to define, measure, and analyze, and make us legit.”
“It's just . . . it's difficult to wrap my mind around it.”
“I know, but you have to.” Isabel walked over to the bed and rested a hand on it, frowning. “There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio. Get used to it. Here endeth the lesson.”
Rafe accepted the mild rebuke with a nod. “Okay. Though I do reserve the right to ask questions if anything unusual happens right in front of me.”
“I wouldn't expect anything else.”
He had to smile a little at her dry tone. “Picking up anything useful here?”
Touch me there . . . like that . . .
Harder . . .
Christ, you feel good . . .
Years of practice enabled Isabel to keep her face expressionless, but it was unexpectedly difficult with Rafe's eyes on her. He had very dark eyes, and there was something very compelling in them. She hadn't expected that.
Hadn't expected him.
“This is where she kept her sex straight. A few male lovers over the years. No women.”
“So you think the room in the pictures was hers? One of the properties she owned? A place she kept separate and secret for those . . . encounters?”
“Seems likely. She led a very traditional life here, so obviously her secret life was kept a thing apart. Really a thing apart; there are no secrets at all here. In fact, I'm more than a little surprised Emily found the photo box in this apartment.”
“Unless Jamie had lost her most recent lover and hadn't yet found another. In that case, she might have needed to look at those pictures.”
Isabel smiled. “You'd make a fair profiler, know that?”
Rafe was more than a little startled. “I was just guessing, that's all.”
“What do you think profilers do? We make guesses. Mostly educated guesses, and for some of us occasionally psychic ones, but at the end of the day they're still guesses. Speculation based on experience, knowledge of criminals and how their minds work, that sort of thing. A good profiler probably gets sixty to seventy-five percent right if he or she is especially tuned in to a particular subject. A good psychic with solid control gets, maybe, forty to sixty percent in hits.”
“Is that your percentage?”
She shrugged. “More or less.”
He decided not to try to pin her down on that; he had a feeling it was one he wouldn't win. He hadn't known Isabel Adams an hour before reaching the conclusion that she was extremely unlikely to let slip by accident anything she didn't want him to know.
Isabel said, “We have to find the box or that room. Both, preferably. I need to know how Jamie felt about her secret life, really felt about it. And I'm getting nothing about that here.”
“So you're getting no sense of a secret hiding place my people missed?”
“No sense of anything secret. I mean at all; this lady obviously knew how to compartmentalize her life. This was