The Face of fear by Dean R.. Koontz

farther lights appeared to be closer together than the sets of nearer

lights. It was a long way to the bottom.

His voice wavered when he said, “This is a way out?”

She hesitated, then said, “We can climb down.”

T “No.”

“We can’t use the stairs. He’ll be watching those.”

“Not this.”

it won’t be like mountain climbing.”

I His eyes shifted quickly from left to right and back again.

“No.”

“We’ll have the ladder.”

“And we’ll climb down thirty-one floors?” he asked.

“Please, Graham. If we start now, we might make it. Even if he finds

that the maintenance room is unlocked, and even if he sees this red

door-well, he might not think we’d have enough nerve to climb down the

shaft. And if he did see us, we could get off the ladder, leave the

shaft at another floor. We’d gain more time.

“I can’t.” He was gripping the railing with both hands, and with such

force that she would not have been surprised if the metal had bent like

paper in his hands.

Exasperated, she said, “Graham, what else can we do?

He stared into the concrete depths.

When Bollinger found that Harris and the woman had locked the fire door,

he ran down two flights to the thirtieth floor. He intended to use that

corridor to reach the far end of the building where he could take the

second stairwell back up to the thirty-first level and try the other

fire door. However, at the next landing the words “Hollowfield Land

Management” were stenciled in black letters on the gray door: the entire

floor be T RK longed to a single occupant.

That level had no public corridor; the fire door could be opened only

from the inside. The same was true of the twenty-ninth and

twenty-eighth floors, which were the domain of Sweet Sixteen Cosmetics.

He tried both entrances without success.

Worried that he would lose track of his prey, he rushed back to the

twenty-sixth floor. That was where he had originally entered the

stairwell, where he had left the elevator cab.

As he pulled open the fire door and stepped into the hall, he looked at

his watch. 1 S. The time was passing too fast, unnaturally fast, as if

the universe had become unbalanced.

Hurrying to the elevator alcove, he fished in his pocket for the dead

guard’s keys. They snagged on the lining. When he jerked them loose,

they spun out of his hand and fell on the carpet with a sleighbell

jingie.

He knelt and felt for them in the darkness. Then he remembered the

pencil flashlight, but even with that he needed more than a minute to

locate the keys.

As he got up, angry with himself, he wondered if Harris and the woman

were waiting here for him. He put away the flashlight and snatched the

pistol from his ocket. He stood quite still. He studied the darkp

ness. If they were hiding there, they would have been silhouetted by

the bright spot farther along at the alcove.

When he thought about it, he realized that they couldn’t have known on

which floor he’d left the elevator.

Furthermore, they couldn’t have gotten down here in time to surprise

him.

The thirty-first floor was a different story. They might have time to

set a trap for him up there. When the elevator doors slid open, they

might be waiting for him; he would be most vulnerable at that moment.

Then again, he was the one with the pistol. So what if they were

waiting with makeshift weapons? They didn’t stand a chance of

overpowering him.

At the elevator he put the key in the control board and activated the

circuit.

He looked at his watch. 9:19.

If there were no more delays, he could kill Harris and still have twenty

minutes or half an hour with the woman.

Whistling again, he pushed one of the buttons: 31.

The lab technician disconnected the garbage disposal, wrapped it in a

heavy white plastic sheet, and carried it out of the apartment.

Preduski and Enderby were left alone in the kitchen.

in the foyer, a grandfather clock struck the quarter hour: two soft

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