Coldfire by Dean R. Koontz

knew he would have had the ghastly face of a rotting corpse and a rictus

for a smile.

The noise was intolerable, though the passengers’ screaming was not the

worst of it. For the most part their voices were drowned out by the

scream of the aircraft itself as its belly dissolved against the

pavement and other pieces of it were torn loose. Maybe dinosaurs,

sinking into Mesozoic pits of tar, had equaled the volume of that dying

cry, but nothing on the face of the earth since that era had protested

its demise at such a piercing pitch and thunderous volume. It wasn’t

purely a machine sound; it was metallic but somehow alive, and it was so

eerie and chilling that it might have been the combined, tortured cries

of all the denizens of hell, hundreds of millions of despairing souls

wailing at once. She was sure her eardrums would burst.

Disregarding the instructions she had been given, she raised her head

and looked quickly around. Cascades of white, yellow, and turquoise

sparks foamed past the portholes, as if the airplane was passing through

an extravagant fireworks display. Six or seven rows ahead, the fuselage

cracked open like an eggshell rapped against the edge of a ceramic bowl.

She had seen enough, too much. She tucked her head between her knees

again.

She heard herself chanting at the deck in front of her, but she was

caught in such a whirlpool of horror that the only way she could

discover what she was saying was to strain to hear herself above the

cacophony of the crash: “Don’t, don’t, don’t, don’t, don’t, don’t. ”

Maybe she passed out for a few seconds, or maybe her senses shut down

briefly due to extreme overload, but in a wink everything was still. The

air was filled with acrid odors that her recovering senses could not

identify.

The ordeal was over, but she could not recall the plane coming to rest.

She was alive.

Intense joy swept through her. She raised her head, sat up, ready to

whoop with the uncontainable thrill of survival-and saw the fire.

The DC-10 had not cartwheeled. The warning to Captain Delbaugh had paid

off But as Jim had feared, the chaotic aftermath of the crash held as

many dangers as the impact itself Along the entire starboard side of the

plane, where jet fuel had spilled, orange flames churned at the windows.

It appeared as if he was voyaging aboard a submarine in a sea of fire on

an alien world. Some of the windows had shattered on impact, and flames

were spouting through those apertures, as well as through the ragged

tear in the fuselage that now separated economy class from the forward

section of the airliner.

Even as Jim uncoupled his seatbelt and got shakily to his feet, he saw

seats catching afire on the starboard side. Passengers over there were

crouching or dropping down on their hands and knees to scramble under

the spreading flames.

He stepped into the aisle, grabbed Holly, and hugged her as she

struggled to her feet. He looked past her at the Dubroveks. Mother and

child were uninjured, though Casey was crying.

Holding Holly by the hand, searching for the quickest way out, Jim

turned toward the back of the aircraft and for a moment could not

understand what he was seeing. Like a voracious blob out of an old

horror movie, an amorphous mass churned toward them from the hideously

gouged and crumpled rear of the DC-10, black and billowy, devouring

everything over which it rolled. Smoke. He hadn’t instantly realized

it was smoke because it was so thick that it appeared to have the

substance of a wall of oil or mud.

Death by suffocation, or worse, lay behind them. They would have to go

forward in spite of the fire ahead. Flames licked around the torn edge

of fuselage on the starboard side, reaching well into the cabin, fanning

across more than half the diameter of the sliced-open aircraft.

But they should be able to exit toward the port side, where no fire was

yet visible.

“Quick,” he said, turning to Christine and Casey as they came out of row

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