Coldfire by Dean R. Koontz

she’s in the lap of the dead man, in the arms of the dead man and no way

to get out of there because the crazyman is coming. The crazyman looks

so scary, so bad and scary, that she can’t watch him coming, doesn’t

want to see the gun in her face the way the red-haired girl saw it, so

she turns her head away, turns her face to the dead man She woke from

the dream as she had never awakened from another, not screaming, not

even with an unvoiced cry caught in her throat, but gagging. She was

curled into a tight ball, hugging herself, dry-heaving, choking not on

anything she had eaten but on sheer throat-clogging repulsion.

Jim was turned away from her, lying on his side. His knees were drawn

up slightly in a modified fetal position. He was still sound asleep.

When she could get her breath, she sat up. She was not merely shaking,

she was rattling. She was convinced she could hear her bones clattering

against one another.

She was glad that she had not eaten anything after the doughnuts last

evening. They had passed through her stomach hours ago. If she had

eaten anything else, she’d be wearing it now.

She hunched forward and put her face in her hands. She sat like that

until the rattling quieted to a shudder and the shudder faded to spasms

of shivering.

When she raised her face from her hands, the first thing she noticed was

daylight at the narrow windows of the high room. It was opalescent

graypink, a weak glow rather than a sunny-blue glare, but daylight

nonetheless.

Seeing it, she realized that she had not been convinced she would ever

see daylight again.

She looked at her wristwatch. 6:10. Dawn must have broken only a short

while ago. She could have been asleep only two to two and a half hours.

It had been worse than no sleep at all; she did not feel in the least

rested.

The dream. She suspected that The Friend had used its telepathic power

to push her down into sleep against her will. And because of the

unusually intense nature of the nightmare, she was convinced it had sent

her that gruesome reel of mind-film.

But why?

Jim murmured and stirred, then grew still again, breathing deeply but

quietly. His dream must not be the same one she’d had; if it was, he

would be writhing and crying out like a man on the rack.

She sat for a while, considering the dream, wondering if she had been

shown a prophetic vision. Was The Friend warning her that she was going

to wind up in a Dixie Duck Burger Palace scrambling for her life through

food and blood, stalked by a raving maniac with an automatic carbine?

She had never even heard of Dixie Duck, and she couldn’t imagine a more

ludicrous place to die.

She was living in a society where the streets were crawling with

casualties of the drug wars, some of them so brain-blasted that they

might well pick up a gun and go looking for the rat people who were

working with the CIA, running spy networks out of burger restaurants.

She had worked on newspapers all her adult life. She had seen stories

no less tragic, no more strange.

After about fifteen minutes, she couldn’t bear to think about the nightù

mare any more, not for a while. Instead of getting a handle on it

through analysis, she became more confused and distressed the longer she

dwelt on it. In memory, the images of slaughter did not fade, as was

usually the case with a dream, but became more vivid. She didn’t need

to puzzle it out right now.

Jim was sleeping, and she considered waking him. But he needed his rest

as much as she did. There was no sign of The Enemy making use of a

dream doorway, no change in the limestone walls or the oak-plank floor,

so she let Jim sleep.

As she had looked around the room, studying the walls, she had noticed

the yellow tablet lying on the floor under the far window. She had

pitched it aside last evening when The Friend had resisted vocalizing

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