Coldfire by Dean R. Koontz

Christine said, “Not the cigarette kind, honey.”

“Oh. Good,” Casey said, then returned to her pop-up storybook.

“The thing is,” Jim said, “I’m new in Los Angeles, been there only eight

weeks, and I’m your classic, original lonely guy. I don’t like singles’

bars, don’t want to buy a gym membership just to meet women, and figure

anybody I’d connect with through a computer service has to be as

desperate and messed up as I am.”

She laughed. “You don’t look desperate or messed up to me.”

“Excuse me, sir,” a stewardess said with friendly firmness, touching

Jim’s shoulder, “but I can’t allow you to block the aisle.”

“Oh, sure, yeah,” he said, standing up. “Just give me a minute.”

Then to Christine: “Listen, this is embarrassing, but I’d really like to

talk to you, tell you about myself, what I’m looking for in a woman, and

see if maybe you know someone. ?”

“Sure, I’d love that,” Christine said with such enthusiasm that she was

surely the reincarnation of either some hillbilly woman who had been a

much sought-after troth-finder or a successful schatchen from Brooklyn.

“Hey, you know, the two seats next to mine are empty,” he said “Maybe

you could sit with me the rest of the way. . . .”

He expected her to be reluctant to give up window seats, and an

unexpressable twist of anxiety knotted his stomach while he waited for

her response.

But she hesitated for only a second or two. “Yes, why not.”

The stewardess, still hovering near them, nodded her approval.

To Jim, Christine said, “I thought Casey would like the scenery from way

up here, but she doesn’t seem to care much. Besides, we’re almost in

the back of the wing, and it blocks a lot of our view.”

Jim did not understand the reason for the wave of relief that swept

through him when he secured her agreement to move, but a lot of things

mystified him these days. “Good, great. Thank you, Christine.”

As he stepped back to let Christine Dubrovek get up, he noticed the

passenger in the seat behind her. The poor woman was evidently

terrified of flying. She was holding a copy of Vis Pis in front of her

face, trying to take her mind off her fears with a little reading, but

her hands were shaking so badly that the magazine rattled continuously.

“Where are you sitting?” Christine asked.

“The other aisle, row sixteen. Come on, I’ll show you.”

He lifted her single piece of carry-on luggage while she and Casey

gathered up a few other small items, then he led them to the front of

the plane and around to the port aisle. Casey entered row sixteen, and

her mother followed.

Before Jim settled down himself, something impelled him to look across

the wide-bodied plane to the aerophobic woman whom they had left behind

in row twenty-three. She had lowered the magazine. She was watching

him. He knew her.

Holly Thorne.

He was stunned.

Christine Dubrovek said, “Steve?”

Across the plane, the reporter realized that Jim had seen her. She

wide-eyed, frozen. Like a deer caught in car headlights.

“Steve?”

He looked down at Christine and said, Uh, excuse me a minute, Christine

. Just a minute. I’ll be right back. Wait here. Okay? Wait right

here.

He went forward and across to the starboard aisle again.

His heart was hammering. His throat was tight with fear. But he didn’t

know why. He was not afraid of Holly Thorne. He knew at once that her

presence was no coincidence, that she had stumbled on to his secret and

had been following him. But right now he didn’t care.

Discovery, being unmasked-that was not what frightened him. He had no

idea what was cranking up his anxiety, but it was escalating to a level

at which adrenaline would soon start to squirt out his ears.

As he made his way back the aisle toward the reporter, she started to

get up. Then a look of resignation slid across her face, and she sat

down again.

She was as easy to look at as he remembered, though the skin around her

eyes was slightly dark, as if from lack of sleep.

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