The Face of fear by Dean R.. Koontz

extremely important tonight. Here, they would drop to the bottom of the

well, and that would ruin the scheme that he and Billy had come up with

this afternoon. He wasn’t here just to kill them any way he could; he

had to dispose of them in a certain manner. If he brought it off just

right, the police would be confused, misled; and the people of New York

would begin to experience a spiraling reign of terror unlike anything in

their worst nightmares. He and Billy had worked out a damned clever

gambit, and he wouldn’t abandon it so long as there was a chance of

bringing it off as planned.

it was a quarter of ten. In fifteen minutes Billy would be in the

alleyway outside, and he would wait on y until ten-thirty. Bollinger

saw that he probably wouldn’t have time for the woman, but he was pretty

sure he’d be able to carry out the plan in forty-five minutes.

Besides, he didn’t know what Harris looked like, and he felt there was

something cowardly about killing a man whose face he’d never seen.

It was akin to shooting someone in the back. That sort of killingven of

an animal, even of a louse like Harris-Aidn’t fit Bollinger’s image of a

superman. He liked to meet his prey head-on, to get close, so that

there was at least a hint of danger.

The trick was to force them out of the shaft without killing them; to

herd them to other ground where the plan could be carried out. He

pointed the pistol down, aimed wide of the woman’s head and squeezed the

trigger.

The shot exploded; ear-splitting noise assaulted Connie from every side.

Over the diminishing echoes, she could hear the bullet ricocheting from

one wall to the other, farther down the shaft.

The situation was so unreal that she had to wonder if it was transpiring

in her mind. She supposed it was possible that she was in a hospital

and that all of this was the product of a fevered imagination, the

delusions of madness.

Descending the ladder, she repeatedly caught herself murmuring softly:

sometimes it was jumbled phrases that made little sense, sometimes

strings of utterly meaningless sounds. Her stomach rolled over like a

fish on a wet boat dock. Her bowels quivered. She felt as if a bullet

had already ripped into her, already had torn apart her vital organs.

Bollinger fired again.

The shot seemed less sharp than the one before it. Her ears were

desensitized, still ringing from the first explosion.

For a woman who had experienced little emotionaland no physical-terror

in her life, she was handling herself surprisingly well.

When she looked down, she saw Graham let go of, the ladder with one

hand. He grabbed the railing that ringed the platform. He took one

foot off the ladder; hesitated, leaning at a precarious angle; started

to bring his foot back; suddenly found the courage to put it on the edge

of the platform. For a moment, fighting his own terror, he stayed that

way, crucified between the two points of safety. She was about to call

to him, urge him on, when he finally freed himself of the ladder

altogether, wobbled on the brink of the platform as if he would fall,

then got his balance and climbed over the railing.

She descended the last dozen rungs much too fast and reached the

platform as Bollinger fired a third shot. She hurried through the red

door that Graham held open for her, into the maintenance supply room on

the twenty-seventh level.

The first thing she saw was the blood on his trousers. A bright spot of

it. As big as a silver dollar. Glistening on the gray fabric.

“What happened?”

“Had these in my pocket,” he said, holding up the scissors. “A couple

of floors back, when I almost fell, the blades tore through the lining

and gouged my thigh.

“Is it bad?”

“No.”

urt?

“Not much.”

“Better get rid of them.”

“Not just yet.”

Bollinger watched until they left the shaft.

They had gotten out two platforms down. Because there was only a

service entrance at every second floor, that put them on the

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