Coldfire by Dean R. Koontz

lasting and favorable influences on his life.

“Why don’t we go in and say hello to her?” Holly suggested.

Jim frowned. “Oh, I’m sure she’s not the librarian any more, most

likely not even alive. That was twenty-five years ago when I started

coming here, eighteen years ago when I left town to go to college.

Never saw her after that.”

“How old was she?”

He hesitated. “Quite old,” he said, and put an end to the talk of a

nostalgic visit by slipping the Ford into gear and driving away from

there.

They cruised by Tivoli Gardens, a small park at the corner of Main and

Copenhagen, which fell laughably short of its namesake. No fountains,

no musicians, no dancing, no games, no beer gardens. There were just

some roses, a few beds of late-summer flowers, patchy grass, two park

benches, and a well-maintained windmill in the far corner.

“Why aren’t the sails moving?” she asked. “There’s some wind.”

“None of the mills actually pumps water or grinds grain any more,” he

explained. “And since they’re largely decorative, no sense in having to

live with the noise they make. Brakes were put on the mechanisms long

ago.”

As they turned the corner at the end of the park, he added: “They made a

movie here once.”

“Who did?”

“One of the studios.”

“Hollywood studio?”

“I forget which.”

“What was it called?”

“Don’t remember.”

“Who starred in it?”

“Nobody famous.”

Holly made a mental note about the movie, suspecting that it was more

important to Jim and to the town than he had said. Something in the

offhanded way he’d mentioned it, and his terse responses to her

subsequent questions, alerted her to an unspoken subtext.

Last of all, at the southeast corner of Svenborg, he drove slowly past

Zacca’s Garage, a large corrugated-steel Quonset hut perched on a

cement-block foundation, in front of which stood two dusty cars. Though

the building had been painted several times during its history, no brush

had touched it in many years. Its numerous coats of paint were worn in

a random patchwork and marked by liberal encrustations of rust, which

created an unintended camouflage finish. The cracked blacktop in front

of the place was pitted with potholes that had been filled with loose

gravel, and the surrounding lot bristled with dry grass and weeds.

“I went to school with Ned Zacca,” Jim said. “His dad, Vernon, had the

garage then. It was never a business to make a man rich, but it looked

better than it does now.”

The big airplane hangar style roll-aside doors were open, and the

interior was clotted with shadows. The rear bumper of an old Chevy

gleamed dully in the gloom. Although the garage was seedy, nothing

about it suggested danger. Yet the queerest chill came over Holly as

she peered through the hangar doors into the murky depths of the place.

“Ned was one mean sonofabitch, the school bully,” Jim said. “He could

sure make a kid’s life hell when he wanted to. I lived in fear of him.”

“Too bad you didn’t know Tae Kwon Do then, you could’ve kicked his ass.”

He did not smile, just stared past her at the garage. His expression

was odd and unsettling. “Yeah. Too bad.”

When she glanced at the building again, she saw a man in jeans and a

T-shirt step out of the deepest darkness into gray half light, moving

slowly past the back of the Chevy, wiping his hands on a rag. He was

just beyond the infall of sunshine, so she could not see what he looked

like. In a few steps he rounded the car, fading into the gloom again,

hardly more material than a specter glimpsed in a moonlit graveyard.

Somehow, she knew the ghostly presence in the Quonset was Ned Zacca.

Curiously, though he had been a menacing figure to Jim, not to her,

Holly felt her stomach twist and her palms turn damp.

Then Jim touched the accelerator, and they were past the garage, heading

back into town.

“What did Zacca do to you exactly?”

“Anything he could think of. He was a regular little sadist. He’s been

in prison a couple of times since those days. But I figured he was

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