You can’t understand how important that can be.”
Actually, Hope could. But she said nothing.
He went on. “People hear about cults and they can’t believe anyone would join. But it’s easy. Just offer what’s missing in someone’s life, what they want most. The first year was great. Yes, I was picked for Neala, but it wasn’t like you’d think. I was in love; she was at least in like. I was happy. Twenty-one with a beautiful wife, a good job, a supportive community, a baby on the way . . .”
“Colm.”
“No. Our first son was stillborn. Serious genetic defects. Bringing in fresh blood doesn’t negate generations of cousin marriages. That’s when it started falling apart for me, after he died. The kumpania was so fatalistic about it. Callous even. Neala was heartbroken, but the bulibasha told her to suck it in and try harder next time. She got pregnant right away, with Colm, and that helped her, but it was too late for me. I started asking questions and chasing answers. Young and naive, I thought if I confronted the group with what I knew, the general members would rise up against the phuri—the elders—and we’d fix things.”
A pause, then, “Turn left up here, at the gravel road. We’re almost there.” He picked up his cap and ran the brim through his fingers. “Adele is where it really fell apart for me. She was another durjardo. She was five when she came. Colm had just been born and I was already on my mission, questioning everything. The phuri told Adele her mother gave her to the kumpania. Behind her back, but within earshot, they said her mother sold her.”
“And she overheard?”
“She was supposed to. That was part of the brainwashing. To her face, they were loving and kind, shielding her from the awful truth. But they found ways to let her know her mother didn’t want her. It . . . did things to her. Again, not an excuse. Mitigating circumstances.”
“Did her mother sell her?”
He shook his head. “She brought Adele to the kumpania. She’d heard about them and followed the trail through her clairvoyant contacts. She thought they could both live with the kumpania. But her mother was a pale ’cido—a clairvoyant by blood only, no powers. To the kumpania, that made her a burden. A liability even.”
“So they killed her.”
He nodded.
“Does Adele know?”
“I doubt it. She thinks the big secret is that she was sold, not abandoned. Growing up, thinking your mother sold—” He shook his head. “Mitigating factors. Karl? That’s it up ahead. Slow down so I can get a look, see what’s changed.”
Hope doubted anything had. The place looked like a commune out of the sixties. For the last ten minutes they’d been driving past large houses on lots of an acre or less. In this part of Southern California, those were considered palatial estates. She could only imagine how much the kumpania property was worth.
A fringe of forest hid the property from the neighbors, though it wasn’t anything she’d suspect would offend them—a collection of buildings, neat and pretty, surrounded by flower and vegetable gardens. There was even a small, whitewashed barn with chickens and goats. Picture-perfect commune living. The neighbors probably found it quaint, drove their visitors by for a look, the way Pennsylvanians did with the Amish.
There was a metal gate—painted gleaming white and entwined with vines. From here, it seemed it could be opened by hand. When Hope said as much to Rhys, he nodded. “It’s not locked. But there’s a camera there, in the birdhouse. And an alarm will sound in the main house when the gate opens.”
Hope was about to ask why clairvoyants needed a security camera. Then she answered her own question—their powers fixed on specific people, not locations or objects.
“So we’re going in the front door?” she asked.
“I want to make this visit as civil as possible. I’m here to take Adele and tell the kumpania about her and the Cabal. That’s it.”
“Warn them and let them run.”
“Most of the kumpania is exactly what they purport to be—a peaceful group dedicated to protecting and nurturing clairvoyants.”
“And the rest . . . ?”
He adjusted his cap. “Someday I’ll deal with that. I’ve been working on it for thirteen years, and it’s not an institution I can dismantle today. For now I need to give them an escape route, so they don’t panic. If things go wrong too fast, they have a predetermined course of action to follow, like most cults.”
“Waco?”
“Jonestown.”
Hope