Dangerous Intuition by Tasha Kessler (best novel books to read TXT) đ
- Author: Tasha Kessler
Book online «Dangerous Intuition by Tasha Kessler (best novel books to read TXT) đ». Author Tasha Kessler
I had mulled all this over in my mind nonstop for the past two weeks. I needed to find some answers- but the only way to get them was to ask the one person I didnât want anything to do with. There had to be another way. If this thing was genetic, and not a freak accident that had happened to only me like I had thought, then there must be others out there. There must be someone, besides my father and I, that was like me. Someone that could do the same things that I could do. There had to be others, but I didnât know how to find them.
I had called as many psychic as I could find, hoping to find someone who was real. Something tangible aside from myself that could do the things I could do, finding nothing but a large bill linked to my hotel room that I knew I couldnât pay. My time and money were running out. My vision would come true at some point this fall. This I knew as fact. It was late August, and I didnât have much time left until fall. I needed to find out who or what I was. I needed to know who I was looking for and why. More importantly I needed to know what I could do and how to control it. Before this fall.
Time to Google. I got out my laptop and began my search. I was going to find out whatever I could and avoid my father at all costs. I didnât like him. There wasnât anything that he could ever do to change that. I started my search in Google, looking under the key word psychic, getting at first only the normal every day garbage about crystal balls and magic along with a few porn sights. Getting equally as far searching the word telepathic. All the pages on the world wide web and only one word caught my attention. Twins.
I would have been a twin had my mother not had an abortion. One that resulted in only one of us living, and only accidentally at that. This was the only trigger or connection to me I could find, and most of the websites connected to twins and telepathy were still mostly mumbo jumbo theories. Theories linking twins to each others mind waves but nothing linking twins to having a generic telepathic power outside of that genetic link. Looking at pictures of psychic hands and horoscope signs wasnât helping me. Not even close. The only thing that this was giving me was a headache. I was going to have to find something more substantial than all of this.
Time Benders? Is that what he called us? I Googled âTime Bendingâ and got back a host of science and scientific research ranging from Einsteinâs theories to actual successful tests with small particles and objects in time travel. Was this my source then? I went on digging deeper into the depths that was the internet searching for any link I could find that went beyond scientific theory and into what I did the other night. I switched to âTime freezingâ and went right back to the bunk I had found with my earlier searches on psychics and telepathy, only adding Harry Potter to the mix of crapola thatâs out there. I went over my conversations with my mother and my father from that night taking apart everything I could to come up with my own answers.
Something had been bothering me for the past 2 days. A connection that I had made and almost immediately ignored. It woke me up that night. Origins. They had both said it to me. Both speaking of my family. They had both used the word, with the same accent, one heavier than the other, caressing the word with such tender affection to its underlying worth. One was speaking of my father, and the other was my father. They had both given me the creeps. Both set off my âwarning signalsâ as my father had put it, letting me know they were dangerous. I couldnât ignore this connection. It was too strong.
I wasnât going to go to my father. I was angry and confused and stubborn. It would take an act of God to make me go willingly to him for anything. But my curiosity at the connection and my lack of a connection anywhere else had me pointing my steps in the very direction I had run from. As much as I tried to talk myself out of this my feet kept walking in the direction of the one place I had been willing to die to escape.
It would take an act of God to get me to go to my father, but I would walk willingly into hell to get the answers I craved. I was going to walk right back into my own personal hell and ask the Devil himself.
Dr. Argyros
I stood for what must have been hours outside the driveway to the mental hospital, just outside of view from the front doors. I couldnât make myself go any farther. I was deathly afraid that if I went back in they wouldnât let me out again. Especially considering what I was planning on going in there for. I had waited there until it started to get dark outside and was in the middle of debating on whether or not to go in or turn tail and run back to my hotel room before it got too late, when the Devil himself walked out of the hospital and started for his car. Last chance.
âDr. Argyros!â I yelled out, jogging over to his car to catch him before he got in and drove way. Had I startled him? He was pressing his back against his car as if I were a wild dog running up to attack him or something. âMeganâŠ.?â He greeted me with a confused furrow in his brow and his back ramrod straight against his car. Did he think I was some delusional ex-patient that was stocking him or something? âItâs good to see you.â I lied. In fact those warning signals were sounding more and more fiercely in my head by the minute. He said nothing, just stood there waiting for me to continue. âCan I ask you a few questions?â best to get straight to the point, right? âWhatâs this concerning?â He seemed like he was more afraid of me than I was of himâŠ. Than I was of anything. âQuite a lot actually? Can we go someplace to talk?â His fear was doing strange things to me. I liked it. I was enjoying the face that now, with me outside of those confining hospital walls, he was the one that was afraid and not me.
Another part of my brain kicked in just then and reminded me that I needed for him to not be afraid of me. I wasnât really some creepy stalker, and I just needed some answers. I needed him to go with me to talk, but in order for him to do that he needed to trust me. Right. Make him feel safe⊠âAnywhere is fine. You pick?â I said. This seemed to put him more at ease, but not by much. He nodded in agreement. All I need is answers. All I need is answers. I chanted this to myself to keep from yelling âBOO!â at him and falling over in hysteric laughter. He was afraid of Me. STOP IT! I yelled at myself. Geez, maybe I am crazy. All I need is answers.
âI donât have a car soâŠ..â I waited for him to offer me a ride, but obviously that wasnât going to happen tonight so I continued with: âSo I guess Iâll meet you there. Whereâre we going?â So much for hoping he was a gentleman. âCan we not go into my office?â Ugh. Why did I tell him to pick. I glanced nervously between him and the building and the direction of my hotel room and back again. He must have caught on to my reluctance because then he opened the car door for me gesturing me into his car and said âI understand. Iâm sorry. We can go someplace else.â Wait⊠he was a nice guy? No. 'Trap! Trap!' my head screamed out at me. âThatâs okâŠ. Iâll walk. Just tell me whereâŠâ I said backing away from the open car door. âThereâs a gas station about two blocks down. It has a few picnic tables outside by the side of the buildingâŠ?â I nodded and started to walk off in the direction he pointed me in.
About fifteen minutes later I walked up to a well lit gas station that had a decent amount of people wandering about. The tables were far enough away from everybody that we could have a private conversation, but close enough where neither one of us could do anything to the other one that wouldnât be seen by the people walking to and from the gas pumps. I ran in and got myself a bottle of water and a bag of chips before settling down at the table he had been waiting at when I got there.
âSo.â I didnât know what to ask him, or how to even start. What was I even doing? Why donât I ever think things thought before hand? âYou said you needed to talk to me?â He said taking a sip of his coffee. Who drinks coffee at this time of night anyway? âYes. I was locked in that hospital for two years, why did you let me go? Right after trying to kill myself at that. I donât understand.â Thatâs not what I had been planning to ask him. In fact that wasnât even on my list. Itâs just the first thing that came out, but now that Iâve asked it, I really wanted to know. Itâs seemed like a pretty good place to start. âI didnât let you go. Not really. Your father, he is a very influential man.â So he did know my father. âWhy didnât you tell me? Why ask me all those questions about my father, and my family origins, if you knew?â This question made him uncomfortable. He looked around like he was checking to see if we were being watched. âAnd what is it that you know, young one?â Young
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