Coldfire by Dean R. Koontz

feeling that he should return home. Rapidly the feeling became a strong

hunch, the hunch became a conviction, and the conviction became a

compulsion. He absolutely had to get home.

He drove too fast, weaving in and out of traffic, taking chances, which

was uncharacteristic of him. If a cop had stopped him, he would not

have been able to explain his desperate urgency, for he did not

understand himself It was as if his every move was orchestrated by

someone unseen, controlling him much the way that he controlled the car.

Again he told himself to flow with it, which was easy since he had no

choice.

He also told himself not to be afraid, but fear was his unshakable

companion. When he pulled into his driveway in Laguna Niguel, the spiky

black shadows of palm fronds looked like cracks in the blazing-white

stucco of his small house, as if the structure had dried out and split

open in the heat The red-tile roof appeared to ripple like overlapping

waves of blood his bedroom, sunlight acquired a coppery hue as it poured

through tinted windows. It laid a penny-colored glow in stripes across

the bed off white carpet, alternating with bands of shade from the half

open plantation shutters.

, Jim switched on a bedside lamp.

He didn’t know he was going to pack for travel until he found himself

taking a suitcase from his closet. He gathered up his shaving gear and

toiletries first. He didn’t know his destination or how long he would

be gone, but he included two changes of clothes. These jobs-adventures

missions, whatever in God’s name they were-usually didn’t require him to

be away more than two or three days. He hesitated, worried that he had

not packed enough. But these trips were dangerous; each could be his

last, in which case it didn’t matter whether he packed too much or too

little.

He closed the suitcase and stared at it, not sure what to do next.

Then he ‘d, “Gotta fly,” and he knew.

The drive to John Wayne Airport, on the southeastern edge of Santa Anta,

took less than half an hour. Along the way he saw subtle reminders at

southern California had been a desert before the importation of water

through aqueducts. A billboard urged water conservation. Gardeners

were planting low-maintenance cactus and ice plant in front of a new

southwestern-style apartment building. between the greenbelts and the

neighborhoods of lushly landscaped properties, the vegetation on

undeveloped fields and hills was parched and brown, waiting for the kiss

of a match in the trembling hand of one of the pyromaniacs contributing

to the annual, devastating wildfire season.

In the main terminal at the airport, travelers streamed to and from

their boarding gates. The multi-racial crowd belied the lingering myth

that Orange County was culturally bland and populated solely by white

AngloSaxon Protestants. On his way to the bank of TV monitors that

displayed a list of arriving and departing flights, Jim heard four

languages besides English.

He read the destinations from top to bottom on the monitor. The next to

t city-Portland, Oregon-struck a spark of inspiration in him, and he

went straight to the ticket counter.

The clerk who served him was a clean-cut young man, as straight-arrow as

a Disneyland employee-at first glance.

“The flight to Portland leaving in twenty minutes,” Jim said. “Is it

full up?”

The clerk checked the computer. “You’re in luck, sir. We have three

open seats.”

While the clerk processed the credit card and issued the ticket, Jim

noticed the guy had pierced ears. He wasn’t wearing earrings on the job

but the holes in his lobes were visible enough to indicate that he wore

then regularly when he was off duty and that he preferred heavy jewelry.

When he returned Jim’s credit card, his shirtsleeve pulled up far enough

on his right wrist to reveal the snarling muzzle of what appeared to be

a lavishly detailed, colorful dragon tattoo that extended up his entire

arm. The knuckles of that hand were crusted with scabs, as if they had

been skinned in a fight.

All the way to the boarding gate, Jim wondered what subculture the clerk

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