The Face of fear by Dean R.. Koontz

left hand and then with his shirt sleeve he wiped his dripping forehead.

Out of sight of anyone who might come to the street doors, he leaned

against the marble wall at the end of the offset that contained the four

banks of elevators. From that position, he could see two white doors

with black stenciled letters on them, one at the north end and one at

the south end of the lobby. These were the exits from the stairwells.

When Harris and the woman came through one of them, he would blow their

goddamned brains out. Oh, yes. With pleasure.

Hobbling along the fortieth-floor corridor toward the light that came

from the open reception-room door of the Harris Publications suite,

Harris saw the fire-alarm box. It was approximately nine inches on a

side, set flush with the wall. The metal rim was painted red, and the

face of it was glass.

He couldn’t imagine why he hadn’t thought of this before.

ILS7 Ahead of him, Connie realized that he had stopped.

“What’s the matter?”

“Look here.”

She came back.

“If we set it off,” Graham said, “it’ll bring the security guards up

from downstairs.”

“If they aren’t dead.”

“Even if they are dead, it’ll bring the fire department on the double.

Bollinger will have the crimps put to him.

“Maybe he won’t run when he hears the bells. After all, we know his

name. He might hang on, kill us, sneak out past the firemen.”

“He might,” Graham agreed, unsettled by the thought of being stalked

through dark halls full of clanging, banging bells.

They stared through the glass at the steel alarm lever that glinted in

the red light.

He felt hope, like a muscle relaxant, relieve a fraction of the tension

in his shoulders, neck and face. For the first time all night, he began

to think they might escape.

Then he remembered the vision. The bullet. The blood. He was going to

be shot in the back.

She said, “The alarms will probably be so loud that we won’t hear him if

he comes after us.”

“But it works both ways,” he said eagerly. “He won’t be able to hear

us.

She pressed her fingertips to the cool plate of glass, hesitated, then

took her hand away. “Okay. But there’s no little hammer to break the

glass.” She held up the lag iL chain that was supposed to secure a

hammer to the side of the alarm. “What do we use instead?”

Smiling, he took the scissors from his pocket and held them up as if

they were a talisman.

“Applause, applause,” she said, beginning to feel just enough hope to

allow herself a little joke.

“Thank you.”

“Be careful,” she said.

“Stand back.”

She did.

Graham held the scissors by the closed blades. Using the heavy handles

as a hammer, he smashed the thin glass. A few pieces held stubbornly to

the frame. So as not to cut himself, he broke out the jagged splinters

before he put one hand into the shallow alarm box and jerked the steel

lever from green to red.

No noise.

No bells.

Silence.

Christ!

“Oh, no,” she said.

Frantically, the flame of hope flickering in him, he pushed the lever

up, back to the green safety mark, then slammed it down again.

Still nothing.

Bollinger had been as thorough with the fire alarm as he had been with

the telephones.

The wipers swept back and forth, clearing the snow from the windshield.

The rhythmic thump-thumptbump was getting on his nerves.

Billy glanced over his shoulder, through the rear window, at the green

garage door, then at the other three doors.

The time was 10: 15.

Where in the hell was Dwight?

Graham and Connie went to the magazine’s art department in search of a

knife and other sharp draftsmen’s tools that would make better weapons

than the scissors. He found a pair of razor-edged scalpel-like

instruments in the center drawer of the art director’s big metal desk.

When he looked up from the drawer, he saw that Connie was lost in

thought. She was standing just inside the door, staring at the floor in

front of a light blue photographic backdrop. Climbing equipment-coils

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