SHATTERED by Dean R. Koontz

to Doyle breathe. Occasionally, the man woke from a bad dream and

turned over and wrestled with the bedclothes until he could sleep again.

At least he was dozing. Doyle’s equanimity in these dangerous

circumstances impressed Colin quite a bit.

of course, he had always been impressed with Alex Doyle-more than he had

ever been able to let the man know. Sometimes he wanted to grab hold of

Doyle and hug him and hold onto him forever. He was afraid, all through

the courtship, that Courtney would lose Doyle. He knew how much they

cared for each other and suspected the intensity of their physical

relationship, yet he had been sure Doyle would leave them.

Now that Doyle was theirs, he wanted to hug him and be around him and

learn from him. But he was not capable of that hug, for it seemed too

juvenile a means of expressing what he felt. He had worked too hard and

too long at being an adult to let himself slip now, no matter how much

he loved, liked, and admired Alex Doyle. Therefore, he had to let his

feelings be known in small ways, in hundreds of separate, simple

gestures that would say it all as well as that one hug would say it, if

less forcefully.

He got off his bed when the first morning light found its way around

the edges of the heavy drapes, and he went into the bathroom to shower.

With Alex in the room beyond, with the warm water cascading down on him

and the yellow soap foaming pleasantly against his thin limbs, Colin

worried less and less about the stranger in the Chevrolet van. with

just a little bit of luck, everything would be fine. it had to come out

all right in the end, because Alex Doyle was here to make certain that

nothing really bad happens to him or to Courtney.

By the time George Leland reached the automover which was parked near

the front of the Rockies Motor Hotel, he had forgotten all about Doyle

and the boy. He fumbled with his keys, dropped them. He pawed clumsily

in an inch-deep puddle until he found them again. Unlocking the cab

door, he climbed into the truck, unable to recall the silent chase

through the motel corridors or the ax-swinging madness in the

maintenance room when he had come within seconds and inches of killing a

man. He was too beaten down with pain to care about this sudden

amnesia.

It was the worst headache yet. The pain was most fierce in and area

around the right eye, but now it also fanned out across his entire

forehead and back to the top of his skull. It brought tears to his

eyes. He could even hear his teeth grinding together like sandstone

wheels, but he could not stop the hard, involuntary chewing motion; it

was as if he were possessed, and as if his possessor thought that the

pain could be masticated, shredded into fine pieces, swallowed, and

digested away.

There had been no warning signs. Usually, at least one hour in advance

of the first wave of pain, he grew dizzy and nauseated, and he saw that

spiral of hot multicolored light turning around and around behind his

eye. But not tonight. One moment he had felt just fine, even

exhilarated, and the next, pain had hit him like a hammer blow.

It had been an ugly but comparatively small pain to begin with-hadn’t

it? A small pain at the start?

He could not remember exactly where he had been when it first struck

him, but he was sure the pain had been only mild, initially.

Certainly bearable. However, it had rapidly gotten worse until, now, he

despaired of reaching his own motel before he was completely

incapacitated.

He drove out of the motel lot, slammed off a four-inch curb and onto the

highway, the van’s springs squealing beneath him. He did not feel like

a part of the vehicle tonight. He was no extension of it.

He had lost his usual empathy with machines. He was a stranger in

this contraption, and the steering wheel felt like an alien artifact, an

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