SHATTERED by Dean R. Koontz

He had been shaken when the van pulled behind them again after their

breakfast stop near Harrisburg, but of course that had been merely

coincidence. It had trailed them across all of Pennsylvania and through

a sliver of West Virginia, then into Ohio-but that was because it

happened to be going west on the same Interstate they were using.

The driver of the van, whoever he was, had chosen his route from a map,

just as Doyle had; there was nothing sinister in the other man’s mind

when he outlined ” his trip. belatedly Alex realized that he could

have relieved his own mind at any time during the morning just by

pulling to the side of the road and letting the van go past. He could

have waited for it to build up a fifteen-minute lead and could have

dispensed immediately with the whole crazy idea that they were being

pursued. Well, it did not matter much now. The van was gone, way out

ahead of them somewhere.

“He back there?” Colin asked. “No.”

“Shucks.”

“Shucks?

“I’d really like to know what he was up to,” Colin said. “Now I guess

we’ll never find out.”

Alex smiled. “I guess we never will.”

Compared to Pennsylvania, Ohio was almost a plains state. Vistas of

open green land stretched out on both sides of the highway, marred only

by an occasional shabby town, neat farm, or oddly isolated and routinely

filthy factory. The sameness of it, stretching away into the distance

under an equally bland blue sky, bored and depressed them.

The car seemed to crawl at a quarter of its real speed.

When they had been on the road only twenty minutes, Colin began to twist

and squirm uncomfortably. “This seatbelt isn’t made right,” he told

Doyle.

“Oh? / “I think they made it too tight.”

“It can’t be too tight. It’s adjustable.”

“I don’t know Colin tested it with both hands.

“You aren’t getting out of it with excuses as contrived as that one.”

Colin looked at the open fields, at a herd of fat cows grazing on a hill

above a white-and-red barn. “I didn’t know there were so many cows in

the world. Ever since we left home I’ve seen cows everywhere I look. If

I see one more cow, I think I might puke.”

“No you won’t,” Alex said. “I’d make you clean it up.”

“Is the rest of the country going to be like this?” Colin asked,

indicating the mundane landscape with one slim, upturned hand.

“You know it isn’t,” Doyle said patiently. “You’ll see the Mississippi

River, the deserts, the Rocky Mountains . . . You’ve taken enough

imaginary trips around the world to know it far better than I do.”

Colin quit tugging at his seatbelt when he saw he was not getting

anywhere with Doyle. “By the time we find these interesting places, my

brain will be all rotten inside. If I watch too much of this nothing,

I’ll turn into a zombie. You know what a zombie’s like?”

He made a face like a zombie for Doyle’s benefit: mouth agape, flesh

slack, eyes open wide but taking in nothing.

While he liked Colin and was amused by him, Doyle was also disturbed. He

knew that the boy’s persistent campaign to be let out of his belt was as

much a test of Doyle’s talent for discipline as it was an expression of

real discomfort. Before Alex had married Courtney, the boy obeyed his

sister’s suitor as he might his own father. And even when the

honeymooners came home to tie up their affairs in Philadelphia, Colin

had behaved. But now that he was alone with Doyle and out of his

sister’s sight, he was testing their new relationship.

If he could get away with anything, he would. In that respect, he was

the same as all other boys his age.

“Look,” Alex said, “when you talk to Courtney on the phone tonight, I

don’t want you complaining about your seatbelt and the scenery. She and

I both thought this trip would be good for you. I might as well tell

you that we also thought it would let you and me get used to each other,

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