SHATTERED by Dean R. Koontz

black moods of his made her uneasy.

She was still scared of him. When he said “Go,” she went. She knew

better than to argue. The thoughtless bitch had betrayed him by

marrying this Doyle, and now she would do anything to stay in his good

graces.

He smiled at the darkening highway.

In the last light of day, with the land drenched in almost eerie orange

radiance, Ohio State Police officer Eric lames Coffey drove off

Interstate 70 into a picnic and rest area on the right-hand side of the

road. He went up the slight incline to the pineshielded clearing, and

he saw the empty squad car at once. The dome light still swiveled,

transmitting a red pulse to the trees on all sides.

Since four o’clock, when Lieutenant Richard Pulham had been one hour

late returning his cruiser to the division garage at the end of his

shift, more than twenty of his fellow troopers had been scouring the

Interstate and all the secondary access roads leading to and from it.

And now Coffey had found the car-identified it by the numerals on the

front door-at the extreme west end of Lieutenant Pulham’s patrol

circuit.

Coffey wished he had not been the one to find it, for he suspected what

he would discover. A dead cop. So far as Coffey could see, there was

no other possibility.

He picked up the microphone, thumbed the button. “This is 166, Coffey.

I’ve found our cruiser.” He repeated the message and gave his position

to the dispatcher. His voice was thick and quavery.

Reluctantly he shut off the engine and got out of his own car.

The evening air was chilly. A wind had sprung up from the northwest.

“Lieutenant Pulham! Rich Pulham! ” he shouted. The name came back to

him in whispered imitations of his own voice. He received no other

answer.

Resignedly Coffey went to Pulham’s cruiser, bent and stared into the

passenger’s window. With the sun down, the car was full of shadows.

He opened the door. The interior light came on, weak and insufficient

because the dome flasher had nearly drained the battery.

Still, dim as it was, it illuminated the blackening blood and the body

jammed rudely into the space before the front seat.

“Bastards,” Coffey said quietly. “Bastards, bastards, bastards.”

His voice rose with each repetition. “Cop killers,” he told the

onrushing darkness. “We’ll get the sons of bitches.”

. . .

Their room at the Lazy Time Motel was large and comfortable. The walls

were an off-white color, the ceiling a couple of feet higher than it

would be in any motel built since the end of the fifties. The furniture

was heavy and utilitarian, though not spartan by any means.

The two easy chairs were well padded and upholstered, and the desk, if

surfaced with plastic, gave plenty of knee room and working space. The

two double beds were firm, the sheets crisp and redolent of soap and

softener. The scarred mahogany nightstand between the beds held a

Gideon Bible and a telephone.

Doyle and Colin sat on separate beds, facing each other across the

narrow walk space between them. By mutual agreement, Colin was the

first to talk to his sister. He held the receiver in both hands. His

thick eyeglasses had slipped down his nose and now rested precariously

on the very tip of it, though the boy did not seem to notice. “We were

followed all the way from Philadelphia! ” he told Courtney as soon as

she came on the line.

Alex grimaced.

“A man in a Chevrolet van,” Colin said. “No. We couldn’t get a look at

him. He was much too smart for that.” He told her all about their

imaginary FBI man. When he tired of that, he told her how he had won

a dollar from Doyle. He listened to her for a moment, laughed. “I

tried, but he wouldn’t make any more bets.”

Listening to the boy’s half of the conversation, Doyle was momentarily

jealous of the warm, intimate relationship between Courtney and Colin.

They were entirely at ease with each other, and neither one needed to

pretend-or disguise-his love. Then the envy passed as Doyle realized

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