Coldfire by Dean R. Koontz

take command of him to a greater extent than The Friend had ever done,

and turn him into a killing machine? That might perversely delight the

mad-child aspect of the entity.

She shook herself as if casting off a pestering wasp.

No. It was impossible. All right, Jim could kill in the defense of

innocent people. But he was incapable of killing someone innocent. No

alien consciousness, no matter how powerful, could override his true

nature. In his heart he was good and kind and caring.

His love for her could not be subverted by this alien force, no matter

how strong it was.

But how did she know that? She was engaging in wishful thinking.

For all she knew, The Enemy’s powers of mental control were so awesome

that it could reach into her brain right now and tell her to drown

herself in the pond, and she would do as told.

She remembered Norman Rink. The Atlanta convenience store. Jim had

pumped eight rounds from a shotgun into the guy, blasting at him again

and again, long after he was dead.

Lub-dub-DUB, lub-dub-DUB. . .

Still far away.

Jim groaned softly.

She moved away from the window again, intent on waking him, and almost

called out his name, before she realized that The Enemy might be in him

already. Dreams are doorways. She didn’t have a clue as to what The

Friend meant by that, or if it was anything more than stage dressing

like the bells. But maybe what it had meant was that The Enemy could

enter the dreamer’s dream and thus the dreamer’s mind. Maybe this time

The Enemy did not intend to materialize from the wall but from Jim, in

the person of Jim, in total control of Jim, just for a murderous little

lark.

Lub-dub-DUB, !ub-dub-DUB, lub-dub-DUB. . .

A little louder, a little closer?

Holly felt that she was losing her mind. Paranoid, schizoid, flat-out

crazy. No better than The Friend and his other half She was frantically

trying to understand a totally alien consciousness, and the more she

pondered the possibilities, the stranger and more varied the

possibilities became. In an infinite universe, anything can happen, any

nightmare can be made flesh. In an infinite universe, life was

therefore essentially the same as a dream. Contemplation of that under

the stress of a life-or-death situation, was guaranteed to drive you

bugshit.

Lub-dub-DUB, lub-dub-DUB. . .

She could not move.

She could only wait.

The tripartite beat faded again.

Letting her breath out in a rush, she backed up against the wall beside

the window, less afraid of the limestone now than she was of Jim

Ironheart. She wondered if it was all right to wake him when the

threenote heartbeat was not audible. Maybe The Enemy was only in his

dream -and therefore in him-when that triple thud could be heard.

Afraid to act and afraid not to act, she glanced down at the tablet in

her hand. Some of the pages had fallen shut, and she was no longer

looking at the HE LOVES YOU HOLLY/HE WILL KILL YOU HOLLY litany.

Before her eyes, instead, was the list of people who had been saved by

Jim, along with The Friend’s grandiose explanations of their importance.

She saw “Steven Aimes” and realized at once that he was the only one on

the list whose fate The Friend had not vocalized during one or another

of their conversations last night. She remembered him because he was

the only older person on the list, fifty-seven. She read the words

under his name, and the chill that had touched her nape earlier was

nothing compared to the spike of ice that drove through it now and

pierced her spine.

Steven Aimes had not been saved because he would father a child who

would be a great diplomat or a great artist or a great healer. He had

not been saved because he would make an enduring contribution to the

welfare of mankind. The reason for his salvation was expressed in just

eleven words, the most horrifying eleven words that Holly had ever read

or hoped to read: BECAUSE HE LOOKS LIKE MY FATHER WHOM I FAILED TO SAVE.

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