Coldfire by Dean R. Koontz

own time trying to stop the stuff from percolating up.”

The snarl of traffic began to loosen, but Jim did not take full

advantage of opportunities to change lanes and swing around

slower-moving vehicles.

He was more interested in her answers than in making better time.

He said, “And in the dream, when you got to the top of the stairs-or

when this woman got to the top of the stairs-you saw a ten-year-old boy

standing there, and somehow you knew he was me.”

“Yes.”

“I don’t look much like I looked when I was ten, so how’d you recognize

me?”

“Mostly it was your eyes,” Holly said. “They haven’t changed much in

all these years. They’re unmistakable.”

“Lots of people have blue eyes.”

“Are you serious? Honey, your blue eyes are to other blue eyes what

Sinatra’s voice is to Donald Duck’s.”

“You’re prejudiced. What did you see in the wall?”

She described it again.

“Alive in the stone? This just gets stranger and stranger.”

“I haven’t been bored in days,” she agreed.

Beyond the junction with Interstate 10, traffic on the San Diego Freeway

became even lighter, and finally Jim began to put some of his driving

skills to use. He handled the car the way a first-rate jockey handled a

thoroughbred horse, finessing from it that extra degree of performance

that won races. The Ford was only a stock model with no modification,

but it responded to him as if it wanted to be a Porsche.

After a while Holly began to ask questions of her own. “How come you’re

a millionaire but you live relatively cheap?”

“Bought a house, moved out of my apartment. Quit my job.”

“Yeah, but a modest house. And your furniture’s falling apart.”

“I needed the privacy of my own house to meditate and rest between. . .

assignments. But I didn’t need fancy furniture.”

Following a few minutes of mutual silence, she said, “Did I catch your

eye the way you caught mine, right off the bat, up in Portland?”

He smiled but didn’t look away from the highway.” So are you, Miss

Thorne.'”

“So you admit it!” Holly said, pleased. “It was a come-on line.”

They made excellent time from the west side of Los Angeles all the way

to Ventura, but then Jim began to slack off again. Mile by mile, he

drove with less aggression.

Initially Holly thought he was lulled by the view. Past Ventura, Route

101 hugged beautiful stretches of coastline. They passed Pitas Point,

then Rincon Point, and the beaches of Carpinteria. The blue sea rose,

the blue sky fell, the golden land wedged itself between them, and the

only visible turbulence in the serene summer day was the white-capped

surf, which slipped to the shore in low combers and broke with a light,

foamy spray.

But there was a turbulence in Jim Ironheart, too, and Holly only became

aware of his new edginess when she realized that he was not paying any

attention to the scenery. He had slowed down not to enjoy the view but,

she suspected, to delay their arrival at the farm By the time they left

the superhighway, turned inland at Santa Barbara, crossed the city, and

headed into the Santa Ynez Mountains, Jim’s mood was undeniably darker.

His responses to her conversational sallies grew shorter, more

distracted.

State Route 154 led out of the mountains into an appealing land of low

hills and fields painted gold by dry summer grass, clusters of

California live oaks, and horse ranches with neat white fencing. This

was not the farming-intense, agribusiness atmosphere of the San Joaquin

and certain other valleys; there were serious vineyards here and there,

but the occasional farms appeared to be, as often as not, gentlemen’s

operations maintained as getaways for rich men in Los Angeles, more

concerned with cultivating a picturesque alternate lifestyle than with

real crops.

“We’ll need to stop in New Svenborg to get a few things before we head

out to the farm,” Jim said.

“What things?”

“I don’t know. But when we stop. . . I’ll know what we need.”

Lake Cachuma came and went to the east. They passed the road to Solvang

on the west, then skirted Santa Ynez itself Before Los Olivos, they

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