SHATTERED by Dean R. Koontz

believed what he was saying, but he knew it must sound hollow to the

cop. “I happen to love life. I don’t need drugs. I can make myself

happy without them.”

Ackridge watched him closely for a moment, then leaned back in his

chair, crossed his heavy arms on his chest. “You want to know why I’m

asking all these questions?”

Alex did not respond, for he was not sure whether or not he wanted to

know.

“I’ll tell you,” Ackridge said. “I’ve got two theories about this story

of yours-about the man in the Automover. First one is-none of it

happened. You hallucinated it all. Could be. Could be like that. If

you were really high on something, maybe LSD, you could have given

yourself a real bad spook.”

The thing to do, now, was just to listen. Don’t argue. just let him go

on and, hopefully, get out of here as soon as possible. Still, Alex

could not help saying, “What about the side of my car? The paint’s

gone. The body is all torn up. My door won’t open “I’m not saying that

is imaginary,” Ackridge told him. “But it could be that you side-swiped

a retaining wall or an outcropping of rock-anything.”

“Ask Colin,” Doyle said.

“The boy in the car,’ Your-brother-inlaw? ”

“Yes.”

“How old is he?”

“Eleven.”

Ackridge shook his burly head. “He’s too young for me to touch.

And he’d probably just say anything he supposed you wanted him to say.”

Alex cleared his throat, which was tight and dry. “Search the car. You

won’t find any drugs. ”

“Well,” Ackridge said, purposely emphasizing his drawl, “let me tell you

my other theory before you go getting your dander up. I think it’s a

better one, anyway. Know what it is?”

“No.”

“I think maybe you were tooling along in that big black car of yours,

playing king of the road, and you passed some local boy who was driving

the only broken-down old pickup he could afford.” Ackridge smiled

again, and this time it was a genuine smile. “He probably looked at you

with your loud clothes and long hair and effeminate ways, and he

wondered why you could have the big car while he had to settle for the

truck. And, naturally, the more he thought on it, the madder he got.

So he caught up with you and held a little duel on the highway. Couldn’t

of hurt his old wreck. You were the only one with something fancy to

lose.”

“Why would I tell you it was an Automover? Why would I make up an

elaborate story about a cross-country pursuit?” Doyle asked, barely

able to control his anger but painfully aware that any expression of it

would land him in jail, or worse.

“That’s easy.”

“I’d like to hear it.”

Ackridge stood up and pushed his chair back, walked over and stood by

the flag, his hands clasped behind his back. “You figured that I might

not go after a local boy, that I’d favor one of ours over someone like

you. So you made up this other thing to get me onto the case.

Once I’d gone on record, started a full investigation, I couldn’t have

backed out of it so easily when I learned the real story.”

“That is far-fetched,” Doyle said. “And you know it.”

“Sounds reasonable to me.”

Alex got to his feet, his damp hands fisted at his sides. Once it had

been easy for him to take this kind of abuse and crawl away without

another thought. But now, with the changes that had taken place in him

during the last couple of days, excessive humility was not his best

suit. “Then you aren’t going to help us?”

Ackridge looked at him with real hatred now. For the first time there

was genuine malice in his voice. “I’m not a man you can call a pig one

day-then run to for help the next.”

“I’ve never called any policeman a pig,” Alex said.

But the cop was not listening. He appeared to be looking straight

through Doyle when he said, “For fifteen years or better, this country’s

been like a sick man. It’s been absolutely delirious, staggering around

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