CHASE By Dean R. Koontz

Chase had no answer. “You’re twisting things.”

“No. Just showing you the straight truth.”

“He’s real.”

Fauvel stood and stretched. “I recommend you go home and forget Judge. You don’t need an excuse to live like a normal human being. You have suffered enough, Ben, more than enough. You made a terrible mistake. All right. But in that tunnel, you were in an incredibly stressful situation, under unendurable pressures. It was a mistake, not a calculated savagery. For the lives you took, you saved others. Remember that.”

Chase stood, bewildered, no longer perfectly sure that he did know what was real and what was not.

Fauvel put his arm around Chase’s shoulders and walked him to the door. “Friday at three,” the doctor said. “Let’s see how far out of your hole you’ve come by then. I think you’re going to make it, Ben. Don’t despair.”

Miss Pringle escorted him to the outer door of the waiting room and closed it after him, leaving him alone in the hallway.

“Judge is real,” Chase said to no one at all. “Isn’t he?”

5

AT SIX O’CLOCK, CHASE WAS SITTING ON THE EDGE OF HIS BED BY THE nightstand and telephone, sipping Jack Daniel’s. He put the drink down, wiped his sweaty hands on his slacks, cleared his throat so that his voice wouldn’t catch when he tried to speak.

At five minutes past six he began to feel uneasy. He thought of going downstairs to ask Mrs. Fielding what time her clocks showed, in the event that his own was not functioning properly. He refrained from doing so only because he was afraid of missing the call while downstairs.

At six-fifteen he washed his hands.

At six-thirty he went to the cupboard, took down his whiskey bottle of the day – which he’d barely touched – and poured a glassful. He did not put it away again. He read the label, which he had studied a hundred times before, then carried his drink back to the bed.

By seven o’clock he was feeling the liquor. He settled back against the headboard and finally considered what Fauvel had said: that there was no Judge, that he had been illusory, a psychological mechanism for rationalizing the gradual diminishment of Chase’s guilt complex. He tried to think about that, to study the meaning of it, but he could not be sure if this was a good or a bad development.

In the bathroom, he drew a tub of warm water and tested it until it was just right. He folded a damp washcloth on the wide porcelain rim of the tub and placed his drink on that. The whiskey, the water, and the rising steam conspired to make him feel as though he were floating up into soft clouds. He leaned back until his head touched the wall, closed his eyes, and tried not to think about anything – especially blocking all thoughts of Judge and the Medal of Honor and the nine months that he had spent on active duty in Nam.

Unfortunately, he began to think of Louise Allenby, the girl whose life he had saved, and in his mind’s eye he saw her small, trembling, bare breasts, which had looked so inviting in the weak light of the car in lovers’ lane. The thought, though pleasant enough, was unfortunate because it contributed to his first erection in nearly a year. That development was perhaps desirable; he wasn’t sure. But it seemed inappropriate, given the hideous circumstances in which he’d seen the girl half undressed. He was reminded of the blood in the car – and the blood reminded him of the reasons for his recent inability to function as a man. Those reasons were still so formidable that he couldn’t face them alone. The erection was short-lived, and when it was gone, he wasn’t certain if it indicated an eventual end to his psychological impotency or whether it had resulted only from the warm water.

He got out of the water when his whiskey glass was empty. He was toweling himself when the telephone rang.

The electric clock showed two minutes past eight.

Naked, he sat on the bed and answered the phone.

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