SHATTERED by Dean R. Koontz

noticed several dark streaks on his face. He rubbed at the stains,

sniffed the residue, then put it on his tongue. Blood. Surprised, he

opened the door and examined himself in the glow of the ceiling light.

Dried blood was spattered over his trousers and smeared all over his

short-sleeved shirt. The soft white hairs on his left arm were now

stiff and purple with dried blood.

Where had it come from?

And when?

He knew he had not hurt himself, yet he could not understand whose blood

this was if not his own. Thinking about it, he sensed the approach of

one of his fierce migraine headaches. Then, in the back of his mind,

something ugly stirred and turned over heavily; and although he still

could not recall whose blood had been spilled on him, he knew that he

dared not attempt to rent a room for the night while he was wearing the

stuff.

Praying that his headache would hold off for a while, he readjusted the

mirror, closed the door, started the truck, and drove away from the

motel. He went half a mile down 78 the road and parked in front of an

abandoned service station. He opened his suitcase and took out a change

of clothes. He undressed, washed his face and hands with paper tissues

and his own spittle, then put on the clean clothes.

He still felt travel-weary and headachy, but he was now presentable

enough to face the night clerk at the motel.

Fifteen minutes later he was in his room in Dreamland. It was not much

of a room. Ten-foot square, with a tiny attaclied bath, it seemed more

like a place where a man was put than like one to which he went

voluntarily. The walls were a dirty yellow, scarred, finger-stained,

even marked with dust webs in the high corners. The easy chair was new

and functional yet ancient. The desk was green tubular steel with a

Masonite work surface darkened with the wormlike marks of cigarette

burns. The bed was narrow, soft, the sheets patched.

George Leland did not really notice the condition of the room. it was

merely a place to him, like any other place.

At the moment he was chiefly concerned with staving off the headache

which he could feel building behind his right eye. He dropped his

suitcase at the foot of the sagging bed and stripped out of his clothes.

In the tiny bathroom’s bare shower stall, he let the spray of hot water

sluice the weariness from him. For long minutes he stood with the water

drumming pleasantly against the back of his skull and neck, for he had

found that this would, on rare occasion, lessen the severity of and even

cure altogether an oncoming migraine.

This time, however, the water did no good. When he toweled off, all the

warning signs of the migraine were still there: dizziness, a pinpoint of

bright light whirling round and round and growing larger behind his

right eye, clumsiness, a faint but persistent nausea . . .

He remembered that he had skipped breakfast and supper and had taken

only half a lunch in-between. Perhaps the headache was caused by

hunger. He was not hungry-or at least he did not suffer the pangs of

unconscious self-denial. Nevertheless, he dressed and went outside,

where he bought food from vending machines by the pay telephones in the

motel’s badly lighted breezeway. He dined on two bottles of Coke, a

package of peanut-butter crackers, and a Hershey Bar with almonds.

He suffered the headache anyway. It pulsed out from the core of him,

rhythmic waves of pain that forced him to be perfectly still lest he

make the agony unbearable. Even when he lifted a hand to his forehead,

the responding thunder of pain brought him close to the edge of

delirium. He stretched out on his bed, flat on his back, twisting the

gray sheets in both big hands, and after a while he was not merely

approaching the edge of delirium but had leapt deep into it. For more

than two hours he lay as rigid as a wooden construction, perspiration

rolling off him like moisture from an icy cold water glass. Exhausted,

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72

Leave a Reply 0

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *