Fear Nothing By Dean R. Koontz

esophagus.

“Rolaids,” I advised him, trying unsuccessfully to cheer myself.

I didn’t see any of the four expended brass cartridges on the front

seat. In spite of the platoons of amateur sleuths waiting to pounce,

and regardless of whether having the brass might help them identify the

murder weapon, I didn’t have the nerve to search the floor, especially

under Stevenson’s legs.

Anyway, even if I found all the cartridges, there was still a bullet

buried in his chest. If it wasn’t too grossly distorted, this wad of

lead would feature score marks that could be matched to the

singularities of the bore of my pistol, but even the prospect of prison

wasn’t sufficient to make me take out my penknife and perform

exploratory surgery to retrieve the incriminating slug.

If I’d been a different man than I am, with the stomach for such an

impromptu autopsy, I wouldn’t have risked it, anyway. Assuming that

Stevenson’s radical personality change-his newfound thirst for

violence-was but one symptom of the weird disease he carried, and

assuming that this illness could be spread by contact with infected

tissues and bodily fluids, this type of grisly wet work was out of the

question, which is also why I had been careful not to get any of his

blood on me.

When the chief had been telling me about his dreams of rape and

mutilation, I’d been sickened by the thought that I was breathing the

same air that he’d used and exhaled. I doubted, however, that the

microbe he carried was airborne. If it were that highly contagious,

Moonlight Bay wouldn’t be on a roller-coaster ride to Hell, as he had

claimed the town was: It would long ago have arrived in the sulfurous

Pit.

Tick, tick, tick.

According to the gauge on the instrument panel, the fuel tank was

nearly full. Good. Perfect. Earlier in the night, at Angela’s, the

troop had taught me how to destroy evidence and possibly conceal a

murder.

The fire should be so intense that the four brass cartridges, the

sheet-metal body of the car, and even portions of the heavier frame

would melt. Of the late Lewis Stevenson, little more than charred

bones would remain, and the soft lead slug would effectively vanish.

Certainly, none of my fingerprints, hairs, or clothes fibers would

survive.

Another slug had passed through the chief’s neck, pulverizing the

window in the driver’s door. It was now lying somewhere out in the

parking lot or, with luck, was at rest deep in the ivycovered slope

that rose from the far end of the lot to the higher I situated

Embarcadero Way, where it would be all but impossible to find.

Incriminating powder burns marred my jacket. I should have destroyed

it. I couldn’t. I loved that jacket. It was cool. The bullet hole

in the pocket made it even cooler.

“Gotta give the spinster schoolteachers some chance,” I inuttered as I

closed the front and back doors of the car.

The brief laugh that escaped was so humorless and bleak that it scared

me almost as inuch as the possibility of imprisonment.

I ejected the magazine from the Glock, took one cartridge from it,

which left six, and then slapped it back into the pistol.

Orson whined fuse in his mouth.

and picked up one end of the gauze

“Yeah, yeah, yeah,” I said-and then gave him the double take that he

deserved.

The mutt might have picked it up solely because he was curious about

it, as dogs tend to be curious about everything.

Funny white coil. Like a snake, snake, snake . . . hut not a snake.

Interesting. Interesting. Master Snow’s scent on it. Might be good

to eat.

Almost anything might be good to eat.

just because Orson picked up the fuse and whined impatiently didn’t

necessarily mean that he understood the purpose of it or the nature of

the entire scheme I’d concocted. His interest-and uncanny timing-might

be purely coincidental.

Yeah. Sure. Like the purely coincidental eruption of fireworks every

Independence Day.

Heart pounding, expecting to be discovered at any moment, I took the

twisted gauze fuse from Orson and carefully knotted the cartridge to

one end of it.

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