Coldfire by Dean R. Koontz

nature. It was a place. The windmill.

He looked at the bedside clock. Three-forty-five in the morning.

, In just his pajama bottoms, he got out of bed and padded into the

kitchen.

The fluorescent light seared his eyes. Good. He wanted to evaporate

what residue of sleep still clung to him.

The damn windmill.

He plugged in the coffeemaker and brewed a strong Colombian blend.

He sipped half the first cup while standing at the counter, then

refilled it and sat down at the breakfast table. He intended to empty

the pot because he could not risk going back to bed and having that

dream again.

Every nightmare detracted from the quality of rest that sleep provided,

but the windmill dream actually took a real physical toll.

Whenever he woke from it, his chest always ached, as though his heart

had been bruised from hammering too hard against his breastbone.

Sometimes the shakes took hours to fade away completely, and he often

had headaches that, like now, arced across the top of his skull and

throbbed with such power that it seemed as if an alien presence was

trying to burst out of him. He knew that if he looked in a mirror, his

face would be unnervingly pale and haggard, with blue-black circles

around the eyes, like the face of a terminal cancer patient from whom

disease had sucked the juice of life.

The windmill dream was not the most frequent of those that plagued him,

and in fact it haunted his sleep only one or two nights a month.

But it was by far the worst.

Curiously, nothing much happened in it. He was ten years old again,

sitting on the dusty wooden floor of the smaller upper chamber, above

the main room that held the ancient millstones, with only the flickering

light of a fat yellow candle. Night pressed at the narrow windows,

which were almost like castle embrasures in the limestone walls. Rain

tapped against the glass. Suddenly, with a creak of unoiled and half

rusted machinery, the four great wooden sails of the mill began to turn

outside, faster and faster, cutting like giant scythes through the damp

air. The upright shaft, which came out of the ceiling and vanished

through a bore in the center of the floor, also began to turn, briefly

creating the illusion that the round floor itself were rotating in the

manner of a carousel. One level below, the ancient millstones started

to roll against each other, producing a soft rumble like distant

thunder.

Just that. Nothing more. Yet it scared the hell out of him.

He took a long pull of his coffee.

Stranger still: in real life, the windmill had been a good place, never

the scene of pain or terror. It had stood between a pond and a

cornfield on ù his grandparents’ farm. To a young boy born and raised

in the city, there mill had been an exotic and mysterious structure, a

perfect place to play and fantasize, a refuge in a time of trouble. He

could not understand why he was having nightmares about a place that

held only good memories for him.

After the frightening dream passed without waking her, Holly Thor slept

peacefully for the rest of the night, as still as a stone on the floor

the sea.

Saturday morning, Holly ate breakfast in a booth at the motel

coffeeshop.

Most of the other customers were obviously vacationers: families dressed

almost as if in uniforms of shorts or white slacks and brightly colored

shirts. Some of the kids wore caps and T-shirts that advertised Sea

World or Disneyland or Knott’s Berry Farm. Parents huddled over maps

and brochures while they ate, planning routes that would take them to

one of the tourist attractions that California offered in such

plenitude. There were so many colorful Polo shirts or Polo-shirt

knockoffs in the restaurant that a visitor from another planet might

have assumed that Ralph Lauren was either the deity of a major religion

or dictator of the world.

As she ate blueberry pancakes, Holly studied her list of people who had

been spared from death by Jim Ironheart’s timely intervention:

May 15 Sam (25) and Emily (5) Newsome-Atlanta, Georgia (murder)

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