Coldfire by Dean R. Koontz

back.”

“Figured? How?”

He shrugged. “I just sensed it. Besides, he’s one of those guys who

never gets caught at the big stuff Devil’s luck. He might do a fall

every great once in a while, but always for something small-time.

He’s dumb but he’s clever.”

“Why’d you want to go there?”

“Memories.”

“Most people, when they want a little nostalgia, they’re only interested

in good memories.”

Jim did not reply to that. Even before they arrived in Svenborg, he had

settled into himself like a turtle gradually withdrawing into its shell.

Now he was almost back into that brooding, distant mood in which she had

found him yesterday afternoon.

The brief tour had given her not a comfortable feeling of small-town

security and friendliness, but a sense of being cut off at the back end

of nowhere. She was still in California, the most populous state in the

union, not much farther than sixty miles from the city of Santa Barbara.

Svenborg had almost two thousand people of its own, which made it bigger

than a lot of gas-and-graze stops along the interstate highways. The

sense of isolation was more psychological than real, but it hovered over

her.

Jim stopped at The Central, a prospering operation that included a

service station selling generic gasoline, a small sporting-goods outlet

peddling supplies to fishermen and campers, and a well-stocked

convenience store with groceries, beer, and wine. Holly filled the

Ford’s tank at the self service pump, then joined Jim in the

sporting-goods shop.

The store was cluttered with merchandise, which overflowed the shelves,

hung from the ceiling, and was stacked on the linoleum floor.

‘ Wall-eyed fishing lures dangled on a rack near the door. The air

smelled of rubber boots.

At the check-out counter, Jim already had piled up a pair of high

quality summerweight sleeping bags with air-mattress liners, a Coleman

lantern with a can of fuel, a sizable Thermos ice chest, two big

flashlights, packages of batteries for the flashes, and a few other

items. At the cash register, farther along the counter from Jim, a

bearded man in spectacles as thick as bottle glass was ringing up the

sale, and Jim was waiting with an open wallet.

“I thought we were going to the mill,” Holly said.

“We are,” Jim said. “But unless you want to sleep on a wooden floor

without benefit of any conveniences, we need this stuff”

“I didn’t realize we were staying overnight.”

“Neither did I. Until I walked in here and heard myself asking for

these things.”

“Couldn’t we stay at a motel?”

“Nearest one’s clear over to Santa Ynez.”

“It’s a pretty drive,” she said, much preferring the commute to spending

a night in the mill.

Her reluctance arose only in part from the fact that the old mill

promised to be uncomfortable. The place was, after all, the locus of

both their nightmares. Besides, since arriving in Svenborg, she had

felt vaguely. . .

threatened.

“But something’s going to happen,” he said. “I don’t know what.

Just. . . something. At the mill. I feel it. We’re going to. . . get

some answers. But it might take a little time. We’ve got to be ready

to wait, be patient.”

Though Holly was the one who had suggested going to the mill, she

suddenly didn’t want answers. In a dim premonition of her own, she

perceived an undefined but oncoming tragedy, blood, death, and darkness.

Jim, on the other hand, seemed to shed the lead weight of his previous

apprehension and take on a new buoyancy. “It’s good-what we’re doing,

where we’re going. I sense that, Holly. You know what I mean?

I’m being told we made the right move in coming here, that there’s

something frightening ahead of us, yes, something that’s going to shock

the hell out of us, maybe very real danger, but there’s also something

that’s going to lift us up.” His eyes were shining and he was excited.

She had never seen him like this, not even when they had been making

love. In whatever obscure way it touched him, this higher power of his

was in contact with him now. She could see his quiet rapture. “I feel

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