Coldfire by Dean R. Koontz

scary, yeah, dark and strange, but they also knew that it was silly,

that it was meant to be fun, that it was an adventurous journey down a

long road of time to an unknown destination in a far and wondrous place.

Holly Thorne, who suddenly liked her name, knew where she was going and

why.

She knew what she hoped to get from Jim Ironheart-and it was not a good

story, journalistic accolades, a Pulitzer. What she wanted from him was

better than that, more rewarding and enduring, and she was eager to

confront him with her request.

The funny thing was, if he agreed and gave her what she wanted, she

might be buying into more than excitement, joy, and a meaningful

existence. She knew there was danger in it, as well. If she got what

she asked from him, she might be dead a year from now, a month from now

or next week. But for the moment, at least, she focused on the prospect

of joy and was not deterred by the possibility of early death and

endless darkness.

Part TWo Nowhere can a secret keep always secret dark and deep, half so

well as in the past buried deep to last, to last.

Keep it in your own dark heart otherwise the rumors start.

After many years have buried secrets over which you worried no confidant

can then betray all the words you didn’t he say.

Only you can then exhume secrets safe within the tomb of memory, of

memory, within the tomb of memory.

-THE ROOK OF COUNTED SORROWS In the real world as in dreams, nothing is

quite what it seems.

-THE BOOK OF COUNTED SORROWS II ‘I AUGUST 27 THROUGH AUGUST 29 Holly

changed planes in Denver, gained two time zones traveling west, and

arrived at at Los Angeles International at eleven o’clock Monday

morning. Unencumbered by luggage, she retrieved her rental car from the

parking garage, drove south along the coast to Laguna Niguel, and

reached Jim Ironheart’s house by twelve-thirty.

She parked in front of his garage, followed the tile-trimmed walkway

directly to his front door, and rang the bell. He did not answer. She

rang it again. He still did not answer. She rang it repeatedly, until

a reddish impression of the button marked the pad of her right thumb.

Stepping back, she studied the first- and second-floor windows.

Plantation shutters were closed over all of them. She could see the

wide slats through the glass.

“I know you’re in there,” she said quietly.

She returned to her car, put the windows down, and sat behind the

steering wheel, waiting for him to come out. Sooner or later he would

need food, or laundry detergent, or medical attention, or toilet paper,

something, and then she would have him.

Unfortunately, the weather was not conducive to a long stakeout.

The past few days had been warm but mild. Now the August heat had

returned like a bad dragon in a storybook: scorching the land with its

fiery breath.

The palm trees drooped and the flowers began to wilt in the blistering

sun.

Behind all of the elaborate watering systems that maintained the lush

landscaping, the dispossessed desert waited to reassert itself Baking as

swiftly and evenly as a muffin in a convection oven, Holly finally put

up the windows, started the car, and switched on the air conditioner.

The cold draft was heavenly, but before long the car began to overheat;

the needle rose swiftly toward the red section of the arc on the

temperature gauge.

At one-fifteen, just three-quarters of an hour after she had arrived,

Holly threw the car in reverse, backed out of the driveway, and returned

to the Laguna Hills Motor Inn. She changed into tan shorts and a

canary-yellow calypso blouse that left her belly bare. She put on her

new running shoes, but without socks this time. At a nearby Sav-On

drugstore, she bought a vinyl-strap folding lounge chair, beach towel,

tube of tanning cream, picnic cooler, bag of ice, six-pack of diet soda,

and a Travis McGee paperback by John D. MacDonald. She already had

sunglasses.

She was back at Ironheart’s house on Bougainvillea Way before twoù

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