Fear Nothing By Dean R. Koontz

Angela was nowhere to be seen.

A closet door stood open. Perhaps Angela had come upstairs to fetch

something from there. I couldn’t see anything but hanging clothes and

shoe boxes.

The door to the adjacent bathroom was ajar, and the bathroom was

dark.

To anyone in there, looking out, I was a well-lit target.

I approached the bathroom as obliquely as possible, aiming the Glock at

the black gap between the door and the jamb. When I pushed on the

door, it opened without resistance.

The smell stopped me from crossing the threshold.

Because the glow of the nightstand lamp didn’t illuminate much of the

space before me, I fished the penlight from my pocket.

The beam glistered across a red pool on a white tile floor. The walls

were sprayed with arterial gouts.

Angela Ferryman was slumped on the floor, head bent backward over the

rim of the toilet bowl. Her eyes were as wide, pale, and flat as those

of a dead seagull that I had once found on the beach.

At a glance, I thought her throat appeared to have been slashed

repeatedly with a half-sharp knife. I couldn’t bear to look at her too

closely or for too long.

The smell was not merely blood. Dying, she had fouled herself.

A draft bathed me in the stench.

A casement window was cranked all the way open. It wasn’t a typically

small bathroom window but large enough to have provided escape for the

killer, who must have been liberally splashed with his victim’s

blood.

Perhaps Angela had left the window open. If there was a firststory

porch roof under it, the killer could have entered as well as exited by

this route.

Orson had not barked-but then this window was toward the front of the

house, and the dog was at the back.

Angela’s hands were at her sides, almost lost in the sleeves of the

cardigan. She looked so innocent. She looked twelve.

All her life, she had given of herself to others. Now someone,

unimpressed by her selfless giving, had cruelly taken all that was

left.

Anguished, shaking uncontrollably, I turned away from the bathroom.

I hadn’t approached Angela with questions. I hadn’t brought her to

this hideous end. She had called me, and although she had used her car

phone, someone had known that she needed to be silenced permanently and

quickly. Maybe these faceless conspirators decided that her despair

made her dangerous. She had quit her job at the hospital. She felt

that she had no reason to live. And she was terrified of becoming,

whatever that meant. She was a woman with nothing to lose, beyond

their control. They would have killed her even if I had not responded

to her call.

Nevertheless, I was awash in guilt, drowning in cold currents, robbed

of breath, and I stood gasping.

Nausea followed those currents, rippling like a fat slippery eel

through my gut, swimming up my throat and almost surging into my

mouth.

I choked it down.

I needed to get out of here, yet I couldn’t move. I was half crushed

under a weight of terror and guilt.

My right arm hung at my side, pulled as straight as a plumb line by the

weight of the gun. The penlight, clutched in my left hand, stitched

jagged patterns on the wall.

I could not think clearly. My thoughts rolled thickly, like tangled

masses of seaweed in a sludge tide.

On the nearer nightstand, the telephone rang.

I kept my distance from it. I had the queer feeling that this caller

was the deep-breather who had left the message on my answering machine,

that he would try to steal some vital aspect of me with his bloodhound

inhalations, as if my very soul could be vacuumed out of me and drawn

away across the open telephone line. I didn’t want to hear his low,

eerie, tuneless humming.

When at last the phone fell silent, my head had been somewhat cleared

by the strident ringing. I clicked off the penlight, returned it to my

pocket, raised the big pistol from my side-and realized that someone

had switched on the light in the upstairs hall.

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