Coldfire by Dean R. Koontz

media for the past six months. Perhaps he had saved lives in Italy,

France, Germany, Japan, Sweden, or in Pago Pago for all she knew.

The word “psychic” definitely was inadequate. Holly couldn’t even think

of a suitable one-word description of his powers.

To her surprise, a sense of wonder had possessed her, like nothing she

had felt since she was a kid. Now, an element of awe stole over her as

well, and she shivered.

Who was this man? What was he?

Little more than thirty hours ago, when she had seen the story about

young Nicholas O’Conner in Boston, Holly had known she was on to a big

story. By the time she examined the material that Newsweb found for her

she felt it might be the biggest story of her career, regardless of how

long she worked as a reporter.

Now she had begun to suspect that it might grow into the biggest story

of this decade.

“Everything okay?”

Holly said, “Everything’s weird,” before she realized that she had not

asked the question of herself The waitress-Bernice, according to the

name embroidered on her uniform blouse-was standing beside the table,

looking concerned. Holly realized that she had been staring intently at

her plate while she’d been thinking about Jim Ironheart, and she had not

taken a bite in some time.

Bernice had noticed and thought something was wrong.

“Weird?” Bernice said, frowning.

“Uh, yeah-it’s weird that I should come into what looks like an ordinary

coffeeshop and get the best blueberry pancakes I’ve ever eaten.”

Bernice hesitated, perhaps trying to decide if Holly was putting her on.

“You. . . you really like ’em?”

“Love them,” Holly said, forking up a mouthful and chewing the cold

sodden pancakes with enthusiasm.

“That’s nice! You want anything else?”

“Just the check,” Holly said.

She continued to eat the pancakes after Bernice left, because she was

hungry and they were there.

As she ate, Holly looked around the restaurant at the colorfully decked

out vacationers who were absorbed in discussions of amusements

experienced and amusements yet to come, and the thrill of being an

insider coursed through her for the first time in years. She knew

something they did not. She was a reporter with a carefully husbanded

secret. When fully researched, when written up in crystalline prose as

direct and yet evocative as Hemingway’s best journalism (well, she was

going to try for that, anyway), the story would earn front-page, top-of

the-page exposure in every major newspaper in the country, in the world.

And what made it so good, what made her tingle, was that her secret had

nothing to do with a political scandal, toxic dumping, or the other

myriad forms of terror and tragedy that fueled the engine of modern news

media. Her story would be one of amazement and wonder, courage and

hope. a story of tragedy avoided, lives spared, death thwarted.

Life is so good, she thought, unable to stop grinning at her fellow

diners.

First thing after breakfast, with the aid of a book of street maps

called the Thomas Guide, Holly located Jim Ironheart’s house in Laguna

Niguel.

She had tracked down the address via computer from Portland, by checking

the public records of real-estate transactions in Orange County since

the first of the year. She had assumed that anyone winning six million

dollars in a lottery might spend some of it on a new house, and she had

assumed correctly. He hit the jackpot-presumably thanks to his

clairvoyance-in early January. On May 3, he finalized the purchase of a

house on Bougainvillea Way. Since the records did not show that he had

sold any property, he apparently had been renting before his windfall.

She was somewhat surprised to find him living in such a modest house.

The neighborhood was new, just off Crown Valley Parkway, and in the

neat, well-landscaped, precision-planned tradition of south Orange

County. The streets were wide, gracefully curved, lined with young

palms and melaleucas, and the houses were all of compatible

Mediterranean styles with roofs in different shades of red and sand and

peach tiles. But even in such a desirable south-county city as Laguna

Niguel, where the per-square-foot cost of a tract home could rival that

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