emphasized time for themselves, not requiring constant "face time with each other.

  Yes, Marilena wished Viv would use that facile, if not brilliant, mind of hers for something other than her obsession with the spirit world. But that, after all, ii had been how they met. And Viv had recently met with

  Reiche Planchette and begun to advertise and teach

  ;es in the Cluj area. She was in her element introducing

  new people--skeptics naturally, as Marilena been--to the wonders of the realm beyond.

  Marilena had settled into a routine of taking care of Nicky

  every morning through the lunch hour. Then Viv took over for the next three hours as Marilena did her and research, supplying information to sundry

  rs. While this paid nowhere near what she had as a full professor, it proved more than enough she paid no rent.

  In the evenings, when Viv was out teaching or engaging in her own contacts with the spiritual world, Nicky was Marilena's responsibility again. When Viv returned Nicky was asleep, the women talked. Marilena

  Viva curious sort but generally pleasant and

  While Viv seemed to care about everyone she met, she was not above talking about them behind their backs.

  It was nice to know she wasn't perfect, but Marilena had to wonder what Viv said about her when

  She was not present.

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  163

  ELEVEN

  RAY STEELE neared his twelfth birthday, things began to his mind and body. As he became more ,lar and body hair appeared, his face lost its soft and he suffered from acne, first mildly, full force. While he remained a great athlete, a top student and even popular, he sensed people looked at him differently.

  He grew even taller, found himself clumsy--not on the or the court, just standing or walking around. His

  ; purchases couldn't keep up with his growth and his pants left too much sock showing. Ray was suddenly self-conscious, awkward, shy. He began to avoid he used to revel in. He isolated himself in a group of guys, enabling him to avoid girls. And yet it seemed all he and his friends talked about was girls, and in ways he had never dreamed he would talk.

  165

  People used to like him, to admire him. Now he was just a pimply-faced bumbler whose gangliness made him appear more clumsy than athletic. He didn't like himself and wasn't sure he liked anyone else either.

  Ray had no idea what went on at Steele Tool and Die in Belvidere, Illinois, before he began working there.

  Even when he started, sweeping the floors and taking out the trash twenty-four hours after his thirteenth birthday, the only machine he recognized in the shop was a drill press like the one he had seen in industrial arts class. He was fascinated with the safety precautions built into it. The operator could manually center the piece of steel beneath the huge, ugly cutter, but he could not engage the drill unless each hand was on a separate button, far from the action.

  Ray pledged to attack his job the way he approached his studies and his sportswwith everything that was in him. He wanted to work hard so he could keep his job, make his money, make his dad proud, andmmostlym so he could afford flying lessons when he was fourteen. If in the process he learned the machines and the business and how to interact with working people, so much the better.

  The workerswfour men and two womenmtook to him immediately. They seemed old and mature enough not to care about his out-of-control acne and his fast- growing gangliness. Two seemed to view him with quiet suspicion at first, their expressions making clear they wouldn't kowtow to him just because of who he

  Tim LaHaye & Jerry B. Jenkins

  was. Another seemed overly friendly, as if perhaps he would kiss up to the boy. But eventually, Ray believed he had won them all over with his deference and hard work. He believed they genuinely liked him for himself, artd they were generous with their teaching and advice.

  His dad had a zero-tolerance policy. "No breaks for the boss'S kid. I got to answer to six full-time employees who are gonna be watching you--and me--every day, looking for favoritism." It helped that his father clarified that, while they were to teach Ray the machines, their jobs were not in jeopardy. "Anyway, legally he's too young to operate these alone. And by the time he's old enough, he plans to be on to other things."

  Ray didn't know if his dad had really resigned himself to that, but it was nice to hear him acknowledge it.

  Nicky Carpathia would be required to start school

  When he turned six, and while that was a year away, his mother couldn't wait. Despite her prodigious academic history and doctorate, Marilena felt inadequate to keep up with a child she resisted calling precoce, but precocious he was. As soon as he learned to walk and talk,

  Nicky had soared to heights she couldn't imagine. Even with Viv and Marilena trying to keep him engaged, no

  : amount of teaching and reading and studying proved if:: enough to satisfy him.

  After being read to every night since he was old

  166

  enough to understand, by age four Nicky had insisted on trying to read by himself. He would stop Marilena and point at words, sounding them out. It seemed in no time he was reading. Marilena and Viv took to speaking in Russian or English when they wanted to discuss something in front of him. But he soon caught on to that too. Marilena experimented by buying children's books in various languages, including Chinese. Before she knew it, he understood and could speak--at least rudimentarily-- nearly every language she and Viv knew.

  Now, at age five, Nicky was deeply into nature. He would dig on the property, bringing roots and bugs and other creatures into the cottage, demanding to know what they were. Marilena bought a set of encyclopedias and also showed Nicky how to look things up on the Internet. Within six months he was as proficient as she on the computer.

  Nicky was generally even-tempered but distant. At times he scared Marilena, seeming so old for his age. She never spanked or disciplined him, though she often wanted to. When he resisted going to bed, she insisted and tucked him in, turning off his light and shutting the door. She would check on him later and frequently find him standing on his bed, and when she turned on the light she could see his fierce look, arms folded, eyes smoldering.

  He was already telling Marilena and Viv when he wanted to eat, what he wanted to eat, and refusing anything else. His schedule was his schedule, and nothing they did could dissuade him. It wasn't long before Marl-

  Tim LaHaye & Jerry B. Jenkins

  realized he was running the show. She had wholly control, but fortunately, when left alone, he was sat-

  isfied to stay out of trouble. He read, he logged time on computer, he explored outside.

  Then came the day he read a book of short stories about a girl who had her own horse. He badgered and

  .,red until Marilena and Viv agreed to buy him a horse and a saddle and a bridle. Marilena told him he have to wait until an expert could come teach to ride, but Nicky would have none of it. She

  watched in horror as he entered the makeshift corral

  . the animal stiffened and backed away.

  Nicky stood in front of the pony and spoke to it. our name is Star Diamond, and I am going to ride

  Somehow he managed to get the saddle on and bridle and reins in place, and within minutes he

  Was walking the horse in circles. A week later Nicky riding it about the property.

  He read everything he could find about horsemanship

  began to look as if he had been born in the saddle, the reins between his fingers just so. Still average i size for.his age, he controlled Star Diamond, fully in of a beast eight times his weight.

  Marilena had read that teenagers could be difficult, their parents and authority figures wrong on issue, countering their every suggestion. It seemed

  Nicky was a five-year-old teenager. He argued and and crossed her. Fie refused to do anything he want to, and he spoke disrespectfully to both her

  Aunt Viv.

  168

/>   His only interaction with other children came when Viv's spiritualist classes brought their families together for outings, sometimes at the cottage. To Marilena's amazement, Nicky somehow got along with other kids. She didn't understand it. He was so much brighter than even those older than he. And he was an only child used to getting his own way and not having to share toys or attention. But he showed qualities of a diplomat: flattering, complimenting, feigning interest, and manipulating others for his benefit. Marilena had been certain some parent would complain about her impossible child, but the opposite happened. She was bombarded with invitations for him to visit other kids in their homes.

  He steadfastly refused to go. "They can come here," he said. And they did. Marilena wasn't aware of everything he did or said, but the kids were either intimidated or impressed, because they seemed to enjoy Nicky and were content to do what he wanted.

  When he discovered soccer on television, Marilena could barely pull him away. He begged for a soccer ball and taught himself to dribble it with his feet and boot it around the property. He set up a goal and looked amazingly fast to Marilena. But he was wearing her out. When flat-out honest with herself, she admitted that he scared her. What had she gotten herself into? She looked forward to letting someone else be responsible for him for the better part of each day once he started school.

  Nicky's energy was exhausting. Marilena and Viv took him to the mountains for hiking and climbing.

  Tim LaHaye & Jerry B. Jenkins

  The first time he saw ski slopes he demanded to be taught to ski. In the summer they drove to the Black Sea coast, where she and Viv sunbathed and read and he swam all day.

  One day, when Marilena simply needed a break, Viv agreed to watch Nicky while Marilena drove to some country art fairs. But when Nicky caught wind of where she was going, he begged until she felt obligated to take him, so all three went. The boy amazed adults with his questions and studying of their homemade crafts. He wanted to know everything that went into making blan- and carvings and knickknacks, and soon he was asking Marilena for the tools and resources to start

  fashioning his own pieces.

  Marilena feared the start of school in the fall. "Oh,

  I don't know, Viv. He's so young."

  "His soul is as old as the universe, Marilena. Surely

  you can see that."

  "All I know is that he scares the life out of me." "That's where we differ," Viv said. "I'm already in !:awe of him. He thrills me to death. Reiche is eager to see

  him start his training."

  " "Well, he's not Mr. Planchette's child."

  "Careful, Marilena. In a sense, he is."

  Marilena would not argue that point, but she would

  concede Nicky to Planchette, even if she had given her word about his spiritual training. "Flow do you pro- to start?"

  "Just by talking to him," Viv said. "With that curious

  he'll eat up stories of the origin of the universe."

  169

  As a high school freshman, all Ray Steele had going for him was that he had finally begun to get used to his new height. He was over six feet tall, and the athleticism that had been his hallmark in elementary school began to catch up with his new size--at least on the fields and courts. He was still awkward in social situations. He didn't really fit the chairs in the classrooms, and he tripped and stumbled and bumped into things enough to elicit laughs.

  On the positive side, Ray was largely an A student and stayed out of trouble. He worked more and more hours at the tool and die, mostly after school and sports, because the more money he made, the more flying lessons he could afford. His parents made him attend church and Sunday school and youth group, but Ray mostly tuned that out.

  There were a couple of girls he liked to see at church, but with his acne flaring worse than ever and having never returned to his status as the attractive jock he had been in grade school, Ray couldn't bring himself to talk to them.

  At school he was enamored with girls too. How he would have loved to have been able to brag to a girl about learning to fly. But the thought of conversing with one, let alone asking one out, was beyond him.

  TWELVE

  "FREDERICKA, transmit this via secure e-mail to R.P., please. Then destroy it."

  "Certainly, Mr. S."

  He slid the handwritten note across his mahogany desk and spun in his chair to peer out over Manhattan.

  Have the discussion posthaste. Report soonest. Your call on revealing my identity.

  Regards, J.

  Marilena should have known something was up. Reiche Planchette had tried to influence her raising of Nicolae from the beginning, but he had bothered to get to the

  170 171

  cottage only once since the boy was born. All Planchette's influence had otherwise come via Viv Ivins, and Marilena had done her best to ignore it.

  But now Planchette had requested an audience with her, and Marilena was already regretting acceding to it.

  "I'm sure it has to do with Nicky's schooling," Viv said. "There's no sense getting defensive until you

  knowW."

  "What does he think, that I don't know how old Nicky is? that I wouldn't have already preregistered him? Is he going to remind me to pack him a lunch?"

  Viv smiled. "Let's give him the benefit of the doubt. He and the society have been nothing but helpful so far."

  Intrusive was more like it. And as much as Marilena protested, there was a dark, inner part of her soul that felt some relief she would never acknowledge--especially to Viv. The fact was that while she still desperately loved her son, the gift of motherhood had satisfied only half her deep need. She remembered clearly that longing to have someone to love who would also love her. Sadly, Marilena had never felt loved by her son.

  From infancy Nicky had treated her like a necessary evil. He needed her and wanted her only for nursing the first several months. He was not a cuddler, constantly stiffening and pulling away. Marilena had read enough parenting books to know that she should never give up, never stop showing Nicky physical love, whether he responded or not. She believed he would one day begin to turn, to change, to need and want her touch and be willing to return it.

  Tim LaHaye & Jerry B. Jenkins

  Worse, Marilena found herself jealous of Viv. It was .as if the boy didn't really understand the difference between an aunt and a mother. Besides, Viv wasn't really his aunt. Marilena had tried to tell him that she herself had carried him in her body and had delivered him

  He took this in, asked questions, insisted on lookup childbirth issues in the encyclopedia and online. it didn't change his apparent attitude toward :ilena.

  The women were treated equally, and he seemed to ulate each. When he wanted something to eat or help with his reading or the Internet, he would consult

  happened to be closest. Marilena wanted to be priority. She believed she had earned it. Anyway, if he had the brain she thought he had, shouldn't he recognize that she was the more intelligent, more widely of the two? Maybe someday.

  got her way--and Marilena conceded that she had Nicky's best interests at heart--she would begin

  him in spiritualism. If he took to that the way he did to most other new topics, Viv would again gain edge. The more Marilena thought about it, the more she was tormented.

  There was no way out of it. She had agreed that Nicky

  be raised in spiritualism, and as things stood now, Viv was the logical choice for that. She had many years

  discipline, plus she was a true disciple, a believer, :lover of the chief spirit. li,I Marilena took some solace in remaining true to her-

  She had no question that Lucifer was real and that

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  Luciferianism was valid. But she had not become a devotee or a serious student of it, only because she didn't feel the emotional tug toward the personalities--specifically Lucifer himself.

  Marilena regularly attended Viv's classes and considered herself a believer. But she was getting tired
of the weekly warnings from the spirit world that there was someone among them--a chosen one who still withheld full loyalty. It was her; of course it was. But if Lucifer was a true deity, would he not value honesty and transparency above all? Or was there something to the charges from the other side that Lucifer was actually Satan, the prince of darkness, the father of lies? Marilena didn't want to believe itmdidn't believe it--but why all this badgering to get her on board against her will? She certainly wasn't an opponent or an antagonist. She simply had logged too many years revering the human mind and the material world to be able to easily surrender her emotions to a suitor from the great beyond.

  Marilena, however, was considering a fresh look, a new approach. If Nicky was going to be schooled in spiritualism, she should take the lead. That would solidify her role as his mother and his true guardian. She would count on Viv for input, of course, but in no way could she cede her full responsibility for the spiritual training of her own son.

  That was Marilena's mind-set when Mr. Planchette visited for dinner that evening. From the moment he arrived, she worked on her attitude. In the past she had never hidden her aversion to his style and approach. When he was the visiting dignitary at Viv's meetings, didn't offer any cordial or emotional connection, their history.

  They seldom had words, though she rarely hesitated to challenge him, disagree with him, or speak her mind. was due some respect, but this night she wanted to

  ..ar a changed woman. It wasn't that Marilena was 'willing to take the last step toward full devotion, but she wanted to become more of a team player to make herself the clear choice to become Nicky's spiritual mentor. As

  stood now, that made no sense.

  "How do you like your friptur, Mr. Planchette?" she

  "Medium rare, thank you. I love steak!"

  I had heard that. But I would have guessed you for done." Marilena felt phony, small talking nonsense this, but it was working. He appeared to devour the