SHATTERED by Dean R. Koontz

thirteen, touring his father’s fields and loading from the separate

baler beds. Before he was out of high school, he had operated the

power, bailer, plow, and all the other powerful equipment that brought a

farm full circle from planting to harvesting to planting once more. When

he went away to college, he helped pay his tuition by driving a delivery

van much like the one he was now pushing across Pennsylvania. Later,

when he was of age, he drove a full-size rig for a fuel-oil company, and

in two summers of that he had not put a single nick on his truck or any

passing automobile. He had been offered a job with the oil company

after that second summer, but he had turned it down, of course. A year

later, when he received his second degree in civil engineering and took

his first real job, he often hopped up on one of the gigantic

earth-moving machines and ran it through its paces-not because he was

worried that the job was going badly, but because he enjoyed using the

machine, enjoyed knowing that his touch with it was sure.

Now, all Monday morning and then past noon, he nursed the rented van

westward. He stayed the same distance behind the black Thunderbird at

all times. When the car slowed down, he slowed down too. When it

accelerated, he quickly caught up with it. For the most part, however,

the Thunderbird maintained a precise seventy miles an hour. Leland knew

that the top-of-the-line model T-Bird had a speed-set control on the

steering wheel which took some of the effort out of long-distance

driving. Doyle was probably using that device. But it did not matter.

Effortlessly, skillfully, George Leland matched the car’s automatically

controlled pace for hour after hour, almost as if he were a machine

himself.

Leland was a big man, six-three and over two hundred pounds. He had

once been twenty pounds heavier, but lately he had suffered a weight

loss because he forgot to eat regular meals. His broad shoulders were

more hunched than they had once been, his narrow waist even narrower. He

had a square face framed with blond, almost white, hair. His eyes were

blue, complexion clear except for a spray of freckles across his blunt

nose. His neck was all muscle, gristle, and corded veins. When he

gripped the steering wheel with his big hands and made his biceps swell

with the unconscious fierceness of his grip, he looked absolutely

immovable, as if he were welded to the vehicle.

He did not switch on his radio.

He did not look at the scenery.

He did not smoke, chew gum, or talk to himself.

Mile after mile, his attention was on the road, the car ahead, the

machine that hummed satisfactorily all around him. Not once in those

first hours of the journey did he think specifically about the man and

the boy in the Thunderbird. His discordant thoughts, but for his

driving, were vague and undetailed.

Mostly he was riveted by a broad mesmeric hatred that had no single

focus. Somehow the car ahead would eventually become that focus. He

knew this. But for the moment he only followed like a machine.

From Harrisburg, the Thunderbird went west on the turnpike, switched

from that to Interstate 70, and passed across the northernmost sliver of

West Virginia. Past Wheeling, barely inside of Ohio, the car signaled

its intention to take an exit lane into a service area full of gasoline

stations, motels, and restaurants.

The moment he saw the flashing signal, Leland braked and allowed the van

to fall a mile behind Doyle. When he took the ramp a minute after the

Thunderbird, the big black car was nowhere in sight. At the bottom of

the ramp, Leland hesitated only a second, then turned west toward the

heaviest concentration of tourist facilities. He drove slowly, looking

for the car. He found it parked in front of a rectangular aluminum

diner that looked like an old-fashioned railroad passenger car. The

T-Bird was cooling in the shade of a huge sign that proclaimed HARRY’s

FINE FOOD.

Leland drove until he came to Breen’s, the last diner in the chrome,

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