SHATTERED by Dean R. Koontz

Ernie Hoval opened the front door of a thirty-thousand dollar

three-bedroom ranch house in a pleasant middle-class development between

Cambridge and Cadiz, Ohio, just off Route 22, and stepped into an

entrance foyer which was liberally splashed with blood. Long red stains

smeared the walls on both sides where desperate hands had slid down the

plaster. Thick droplets of blood spotted the beige carpet and the

yellow-brocade loveseat by the coat closet.

Hoval closed the door and walked into the living room, where a dead

woman lay half on the sofa and half on the floor. She had been in her

late forties, rather handsome if not pretty, tall and dark. She had

taken a shotgun blast in the stomach.

Newspaper reporters and lab photographers circled her like wolves.

Four lab technicians, as silent as a quartet of deaf-mutes, crawled all

over the big room on their hands and knees, measuring and charting the

spray patterns of the blood, which seemed to have reached into every

nook and cranny. They were most likely fighting to keep from being

sick.

“Christ,” Hoval said.

He went through the living room and down the narrow hall to the first

bathroom, where there was an extremely pretty teenage girl sprawled at

the foot of a bloodstained commode. She was wearing skimpy blue

panties, nothing else, and had been shot once in the back of the head.

The bathroom was even bloodier than the foyer and the living room

combined.

In the smallest bedroom, a good-looking, long-haired bearded boy in his

early twenties was lying on his back in bed, covers drawn up to his

chin, his hands folded peacefully on his chest. The pastel blanket was

soaked with blood and shredded in the center by .

. I shotgun pellets. The poster of the Rolling Stones stapled to the

wall above the bed was streaked with red and curled damply at the edges.

“I thought you were only working on the Pulham case.”

Hoval turned to see who had spoken and confronted the

ineffectual-looking lab man who had lifted the killer’s fingerprints

from Rich Pulham’s squad car. “I heard the report of the initial find

and thought maybe this was tied in. It is kind of similar.”

“It was a family thing,” the lab man said.

“They already have a suspect?”

“They already have a confession,” the technician said, glancing

uninterestedly at the dead boy on the bed.

“Who? ”

“Husband and father.”

“He killed his own family?” This was not the first time Hoval had

encountered a thing like that, but it never failed to shock him. His

own wife and kids meant too much to him, were too intricate a part of

his life for him to ever understand how another man could bring himself

to slaughter his own flesh and blood.

“He was waiting for the arresting officers,” the technician said.

“He was the one who telephoned for them.”

Hoval felt ill.

“Anything on the Pulham situation?”

Hoval leaned against the wall, remembered the blood, pulled away and

checked for stains. But the wall here was clean. He leaned back again,

uneasy, a chill coursing along his spine. “We think we have something,”

he told the technician. “It might have started at Breen’s Cafe back at

the interchange.” He summarized what they had learned from Janet

Kinder, the waitress who had served an unnamed oddball his lunch Monday

afternoon. “If Pulham went after the man-and it looks more and more

like he did-then our killer is driving a rented van on his way to

California.”

“Hardly enough data for you to put out an APB, is there?”

Hoval nodded glumly. “Must be a thousand Automovers going west on I-70.

It’ll take weeks to go through them all, trace the drivers, winnow it

down to the bastard that did it.”

“This waitress give a description?” the lab man asked.

“Yeah. She’s man-crazy, so she remembers these things well.” He

repeated the description they had gotten from the waitress.

“He doesn’t sound like a left-wing revolutionary to me,” the lab man

said. “More like an ex-marine.”

“There’s no way to tell these days,” Ernie Hoval said. “The SDS and

some of these other crazies are cutting their hair, shaving, bathing,

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