SHATTERED by Dean R. Koontz

took them west-southwest toward the border of Illinois, a straight

multi-lane avenue carved out of the flatlands of America. It was a

convenient, fairly safe, controlled access throughway made for fast

travel, designed for a nation always in a hurry. Though Doyle was,

himself, in a hurry, anxious to be with Courtney again, he shared some

of Colin’s dissatisfaction with their route. Though simple and quick,

it was characterless.

Fields of spring wheat, short and tender and green, began to fill the

open spaces on both sides of the highway. Initially, these crisp green

vistas and the complex of irrigation pipelines that sprayed them proved

moderately interesting. Before too long, however, the fields grew

boringly repetitious.

Despite his professed pessimism about the long morning which lay ahead

of them, Colin was in a particularly garrulous mood, and he made their

first two hours on the road pass most pleasantly and swiftly.

They talked about what it would be like to live in California, talked

about space travel, astronauts, science fiction, rock-and-roll, pirates,

sailing ships, and Count Dracula-this last, chiefly because Colin was

wearing a green-and-black Count Dracula T-shirt today, his narrow chest

gruesomely decorated with a menacing fierce-eyed, fanged Christopher

Lee.

As they passed the Indiana-Illinois border, there was a lull in the

conversation, at last. With Doyle’s permission, Colin unbuckled his

seatbelt long enough to slide forward and locate a new radio station.

To make certain that nothing was coming up on them too fast while the

boy was in such a vulnerable position on the edge of the seat, Alex

looked in the rear-view mirror at the light flow of traffic on the broad

throughway behind them.

That was when he saw the Chevrolet van He looked quickly away from it,

looked at the road ahead.

At first he did not want to believe what he had seen, he was sure it

must be his imagination. Then he argued with himself that since there

were thousands of Automovers on the roads of America, this was most

likely another of them, not at all the same vehicle that had hung behind

them on the first leg of the journey.

Colin slid back onto his seat and buckled his seatbelt without

argument. As he carefully smoothed down his T-shirt, he said, “Is that

one okay?”

“What one?”

Colin tilted his head and stared curiously at Doyle. “The radio

station, naturally. What else? ”

“Sure. It’s fine.”

But Alex was so distracted that he was not actually aware of what sort

of music the boy had selected for them. Reluctantly he glanced at the

rear-view mirror a second time.

The Automover was still cruising in their wake, no mere figment of his

overworked imagination to be lightly dismissed, hanging back there a

little less than a quarter of a mile, well silhouetted in the morning

sun, nevertheless darkly sinister.

Unaccountably, Doyle thought of the service station attendant whom they

had encountered near Harrisburg, and of the stout anachronism behind the

desk of the Lazy Time Motel. That familiar and uncontrollable shudder,

the embarrassment of his childhood which he had never fully outgrown,

started in his stomach and bowels and seemed to generate, of itself, a

quiet and possibly irrational fear. However, deep down inside, Doyle

admitted to himself what he had been first forced to face up to more

than twenty years ago: he was an unmitigated coward. His pacifism was

not based on any real moral precepts, but on an abiding terror of

violence. When you really thought about it, what danger did that van

pose? What injury or threat of injury had it done? If it seemed

sinister, the blame was in his own mind. His fear was not only

irrational, it was premature and simple-minded. He had no more cause to

be frightened by the Chevrolet than he had to be frightened by Chet or

the woman at the Lazy Time.

“He’s back there again, isn’t he?” Colin said.

“Who?”

“Don’t play dumb with me,” the boy said.

/’Well, there is an Automover behind us.”

“It’s him, then.”

“Could be another one.”

“That’s too coincidental,” Colin said, quite sure of himself.

For a long moment Doyle was silent. Then: “Yes, I’m afraid you’re

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