Coldfire by Dean R. Koontz

it, and that the creature within would seize her.

Jim pulled her back with him into the adjoining bathroom. He kicked the

door shut.

Holly swung around, searching. The only window was set high and was too

small to provide a way out.

The bathroom walls were untainted by the organic transformation that had

overcome the bedroom, but they still shook with the triple bass thud of

the inhuman heartbeat.

“What the hell is that?” he demanded.

“The Enemy,” she said at once, surprised that he didn’t know. “The

Enemy, from the dream.”

Above them, starting from the partition that the bath shared with the

bedroom, the white ceiling began to discolor as if abruptly saturated

with red blood, brown bile. The sheen of semigloss paint on drywall

metamorphosed into a biological surface and began to throb in time with

the thunderous heartbeat.

Jim pulled her into a corner by the vanity, and she huddled helplessly

against him. Beyond the pregnant droop of the lowering ceiling, she saw

a repulsive movement like the frenzied squirming of a million maggots.

The thudding heartbeat increased in volume, booming around them.

She heard a wet, tearing sound. None of this could be happening, yet it

was, and that sound made it more real than the things she was seeing

with her own eyes, because it was such a filthy sound and so hideously

intimate too real for a delusion or a dream.

The door crashed open, and the ceiling burst overhead, showering then

with debris.

But with that implosion, the power of the lingering nightmare was

exhausted, and reality finally, fully reasserted itself Nothing

monstrous surged through the open door; only the sun-filled bedroom lay

beyond Although the ceiling had looked entirely organic when it had

burst in upon them, no trace of its transformed state remained; it was

only a ceiling again. The rain of debris included chunks of wallboard,

flaked and powdered drywall paste, splinters of wood, and wads of fluffy

Fiberglas insulation-but nothing alive.

The hole itself was astonishing enough to Holly.

Two nights ago, in the motel, though the wall had bulged and rippled as

if alive, it had returned to its true composition without a crack. No

evidence of the dream-creature’s intrusion had been left behind except

the scratches in her sides, which a psychologist might have said were

self inflicted. When the dust settled, everything might have been just

a fantastically detailed delusion.

But the mess in which they were now standing was no delusion. The pall

of white dust in the air was real.

In a state of shock, Jim took her hand and led her out of the bathroom.

The bedroom ceiling had not crashed down. It was as it had been last

night: smooth, white. But the furniture was piled up against the door

as if washed there by a flood.

Madness favored darkness, but light was the kingdom of reason. If the

waking world provided no sanctuary from nightmares, if daylight offered

no sanctuary from unreason, then there was no sanctuary anywhere,

anytime, for anyone.

The attic light, a single sixty-watt bulb dangling from a beam, did not

illuminate every corner of that cramped and dusty space.

Jim probed into the many recesses with a flashlight, edged around

heating ducts, peered behind each of the two fireplace chimneys,

searching for. . . whatever had torn apart the bathroom ceiling. He

had no idea what he expected to find. Besides the flashlight, he

carried a loaded revolver. The thing that destroyed the ceiling had not

descended into the bathroom, so it had to be in the attic above.

However, because he lived with a minimum of possessions, Jim had nothing

to store up there under the roof, which left few possible hiding places.

He was soon satisfied that those high reaches of his house were

untenanted except by spiders and by a small colony of wasps that had

constructed a nest in a junction of rafters.

Nothing could have escaped those confines, either. Aside from the trap

door by which he had entered, the only exits from the attic were the

ventilation cut-outs in opposing eaves. which was about two feet long

and twelve inches high, covered with tightly fitted screens that could

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