Coldfire by Dean R. Koontz

thirty. She tried the doorbell again. He refused to answer.

Somehow she knew he was in there. Maybe she was a little psychic.

She carried the ice chest, folding lounger, and other items around the

side of the house to the lawn in back. She set up the chair on the

grass, just beyond the redwood-covered patio. In a few minutes, she was

comfy.

In the MacDonald novel, Travis McGee was sweltering down there in Fort

Lauderdale, where they were having a heatwave so intense it even took

the bounce out of the beach bunnies. Holly had read the book before she

chose to reread it now because she had remembered that the plot unfolded

against a background of tropical heat and humidity.

Steamy Florida, rendered in MacDonald’s vivid prose, made the dry air of

Laguna Niguel seem less torrid by comparison, even though it had to be

well over ninety degrees.

After about half an hour, she glanced at the house and saw Jim Ironheart

standing at the big kitchen window. He was watching her.

She waved.

He did not wave back at her.

He walked away from the window but did not come outside.

Opening a diet soda, returning to the novel, she relished the feel of

the sun on her bare legs. She was not worried about a burn. She

already had a little tan. Besides, though blond and fair-skinned, she

had a tanning geno that insured against a burn as long as she didn’t

indulge in marathon sunbathing.

After a while, when she got up to readjust the lounger so she could lie

on her stomach, she saw Jim Ironheart standing on the patio, just

outside the sliding glass door of his family room. He was in rumpled

slacks and a wrinkled T-shirt, unshaven. His hair was lank and oily. He

didn’t look well.

He was about fifteen feet away, so his voice carried easily to her.

“What do you think you’re doing?”

“Bronzing up a little.”

“Please leave, Miss Thorne.”

“I need to talk to you.”

“We have nothing to talk about.”

“Hah!”

He went back inside and slid the door shut. She heard the latch click.

After lying on her stomach for almost an hour, dozing instead of

reading, she decided she’d had enough sun. Besides, at three-thirty in

the afternoon, the best tanning rays were past.

She moved the lounger, cooler, and the rest of her paraphernalia onto

the shaded patio. She opened a second diet soda and picked up the

MacDonald novel again.

At four o’clock she heard the family-room door sliding open again.

His footsteps approached and stopped behind her. He stood there for a

while, evidently looking down at her. Neither of them spoke, and she

pretended to keep reading.

His continued silence was eerie. She began to think about his dark side

-the eight shotgun rounds he had pumped into Norman Rink in Atlanta, for

one thing-and she grew increasingly nervous until she decided that he

was trying to spook her.

When Holly picked up her can of soda from the top of the cooler, took a

sip, sighed with pleasure at the taste, and put the can down again all

without letting her hand tremble even once, Ironheart at last came

around the lounge chair and stood where she could see him. He was still

slovenly and unshaven. Dark circles ringed his eyes. He had an

unhealthy pallor.

“What do you want from me?” he asked.

“That’ll take a while to explain.”

“I don’t have a while.”

“How long do you have?”

“One minute,” he said.

She hesitated, then shook her head. “Can’t do it in a minute. I’ll

just wait here till you’ve got more time.”

He stared at her intimidatingly.

She found her place in the novel.

He said, “I could call the police, have you put off my property.”

“Why don’t you do that?” she said.

He stood there a few seconds longer, impatient and uncertain, then

reentered the house. Slid the door shut. Locked it.

“Don’t take forever,” Holly muttered. “In about another hour, I’m gonna

have to use your bathroom.”

Around her, two hummingbirds drew nectar from the flowers, the shadows

lengthened, and exploding bubbles made hollow ticking sounds inside her

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