The Face of fear by Dean R.. Koontz

the snow to be pressed into ice. She wasn’t in any danger of sliding

off her perch.

She put her back to the face of the building, staying as far from the

brink as she could.

Surprisingly, with stone under her feet, she was more impressed by the

gulf in front of her than when she was dangling in empty space.

Swinging at the end of the rope, she had not been able to see the void

in the proper perspective. Now, with the benefit of secure footing, she

found the thirty-eight-story drop doubly terrifying; it seemed a

bottomless pit.

She untied the knot at her harness, freed herself of the main line. She

jerked on the rope twice, hard. Immediately Graham reeled it up.

in a minute he would be on his way to her. Would he panic when he got

out here?

I trust him, she told herself. I really do. I have to.

Nonetheless, she was afraid he would get only part of the way out of the

window before he turned and fled, leaving her stranded.

Graham took off his gloves, leaned out of the window, and felt the stone

below the sash. It was planed granite a rock meant to withstand the

ages. However, before the icy wind could numb his fingertips, he

discovered a tiny horizontal fissure that suited his purpose.

Keeping one hand on the crack in order not to lose it, he took the

hammer and a piton from the tool straps at his waist. Balanced on the

sill, leaning out as far as he dared, he put the sharp tip of the steel

peg into the crack and pounded it home.

The light he had to work by was barely adequate. It came from the

aircraft warning lights that ringed the decorative pinnacle of the

building just thirty feet, above him; it alternated between red and

white.

From his upside-down position, the work went more; slowly than he would

have liked. When he finished at’i last, he looked over his shoulder to

see if Bollinger was behind him. He was still alone.

The piton felt as if it were well placed.

He got a good grip on it, tried to wiggle it. It was firm.

He snapped a carabiner through the eye of the piton.

He snapped another carabiner to the center post of the window, above the

one that secured Connie’s safety line.

Next, he pulled the knots out of the belaying rope. He took it from

around his waist and dropped it on the floor by the window.

He closed one of the tall, rectangular panes as best he could; the

carabiners fixed to the center post would not permit it to close all the

way. He would attempt to shut the other half of the window from the

outside.

He hurried to the draw cords and pulled the green velvet drapes into

place.

Eventually, Bollinger would come back to this office and would realize

that they had gone out of the window. But Graham wanted to conceal the

evidence of their escape as long as possible.

Stepping behind the drapes, he sidled along to the window. Wind roared

through the open pane and billowed the velvet around him.

He picked up an eleven-yard line that he had cut from another

hundred-foot coil. He tied it to his harness and to the free carabiner

on the window post. There was no one here to belay him as he had done

Ct)nnie, but he had worked out a way to avoid a singleline descent; he

would have a safety tether exactly like Connie’s.

He quickly tied a figure-eight knot in one end of the forty-five-foot

line. Leaning out of the window once more, he hooked the double loops

of rope through the carabiner that was linked to the piton. Then he

screwed the sleeve over the gate, locking the snap link. He tossed the

rope into the night and watched to be sure that it hung straight and

unobstructed from the piton. This would be his rappelling line.

He was not adhering strictly to orthodox mountain climbing procedure.

But then this “mountain” certainly was not orthodox either.

The situation called for flexibility, for a few original methods.

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