The Face of fear by Dean R.. Koontz

girls got in touch with Graham on the tenth of November and asked for

his assistance. He arrived in Boston two days later. Although the

police were skeptical of his talents-a number of them were downright

hostile toward him-they were anxious to placate the Havelocks, who had

some political influence in the city. He was taken to the sealed

apartment and permitted to examine the scene of the crime. But he got

absolutely nothing from that: no emanations, no psychic visionjust a

chill that slithered down his spine and coiled in his stomach. Later,

under the suspicious gaze of a police property officer, he was allowed

to handle the pillow that the killer had used to muffle the gunshots-and

then the pajamas and the robes that had been found next to the bodies.

As he caressed the blood-stiffened fabric, his paranormal talent

abruptly blossomed; his mind was inundated with clairvoyant images like

a series of choppy, frothing waves breaking on a beach.

Anthony Prine interrupted Graham. “Wait a minute. I think we need some

elaboration on this point. We need to make it much clearer.

Do you mean that the simple act of touching the bloodstained pajamas

caused your clairvoyant visions?”

“No. It didn’t cause them. it freed them. The pajamas were like a key

that unlocked the clairvoyant part of my mind. That’s a quality common

to nearly all murder weapons and to the last garments worn by the

victims.”

“Why do you think that is?”

“I don’t know,” Graham said.

“You’ve never thought about it?”

“I’ve thought about it endlessly,” Graham said. “But I’ve never reached

any conclusions.”

Although Prine’s voice held not even the slightest note of hostility,

Graham was almost certain that the man was searching for an opening to

launch one of his famous attacks.

For a moment he thought that might be the oncoming trouble which he had

known about, in a somewhat psychic fashion, for the past quarter of an

hour. Then he suddenly understood, through the powers of his sixth

sense, that the trouble would happen to someone else, beyond the walls

of this studio.

‘When you touched the pajamas,” Prine said, ,did you see the murders as

if they were actually taking place in front of you at that very moment?”

“Not exactly. I saw it all take place-well, behind my eyes.”

‘What do you mean by that? Are your visions sort of like daydreams?”

“In a way. But much more vivid than daydreams full of color and sound

and texture.”

F “Did you see the Havelocks’ killer in this vision?”

“Yes. Quite clearly.”

“Did you also intuit his name?”

“No,” Graham said. “But I was able to give the police a thorough

description of him – He was in his early thirties, not shorter than

five-ten or taller than six feet. Slightly heavy. Receding hairline.

Blue eyes. A thin nose, generally sharp features. A small strawberry

birthmark on his chin…. As it turned out, that was a perfect

description of the building superintendent.”

“And you’d never seen him?”

“My first glimpse of him was in the vision.”

“You’d never seen a photograph of him?”

“No.”

“Had he been a suspect before you gave the police this description?”

Prine asked.

“Yes. But the murders took place in the early morning hours of his day

off – He swore that he had gone to his sister’s house to spend the

night, hours before the Havelock girls were killed; and his sister

supported his story. Since she lived over eighty miles away, he seemed

out of the running.”

“Was his sister lying?”

“Yes.

“How did you prove it?”

While handling the dead girls’ clothing, Graham sensed that the killer

had gone to his sister’s house a full two hours after the murder had

taken place-not early the previous evening as she insisted. He also

sensed that the weapon-a Smith & Wesson Terrier .-was hidden in the

sister’s house, in the bottom drawer of a china closet.

He accompanied a Boston city detective and two state troopers to the

sister’s place. Arriving unannounced and uninvited, they told her they

wanted to question her on some new evidence in the case. Ten seconds

after he stepped into her house, while the woman was still surprised at

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