The Face of fear by Dean R.. Koontz

vanished. He was still afraid, but not unnaturally so. Necessity and

Connie’s love had produced a miracle that no psychiatrist could have

matched.

He was beginning to think they might escape. His left arm ached where

the bullet had grazed it, and the fingers of that hand were stiff. The

pain in his bad leg had subsided to a continuous dull throb that made

him grit his teeth occasionally but which didn’t interfere too much with

his rappelling.

in a couple of steps he reached the seventeenth floor.

in two more jumps he came to rest against the sixteenth-story window

ledge-where Frank Bollinger had decided to set up an ambush.

The window was closed. However, the drapes had been drawn back.

One desk lamp glowed dimly in the office.

Bollinger was on the other side of the glass, a huge silhouette.

He was just lifting the latch.

No! Graham thought.

In the same instant that his boots touched the window ledge, he kicked

away from it.

Bollinger saw him and pulled off a shot without bothering to open the

rectangular panes. Glass sliced into the night.

Although Bollinger reacted fast, Graham was already out of his line of

fire. He swung-back to the wall seven or eight feet below Bollinger,

rappelled again, stopped at the fifteenth-story window.

He looked up and saw flame flicker briefly from the muzzle of the pistol

as Bollinger shot at Connie.

The gunfire threw her off her pace. She hit the wall with her shoulder

again. Frantic, she got her feet under her and rappelled.

Bollinger fired again.

Bollinger knew that he hadn’t scored a hit on either of them.

He left the office, ran to the elevator. He switched on the control

panel and pushed the button for the tenth floor.

As the lift descended, he thought about the plan that he and Billy had

formulated yesterday.

” Yo u’ll kill Harris firs t. Do what you wan t with th e woman, but be

sure to cut her up.”

“I always cut them up. That was my idea in the first place.”

“You should kill Harris where it’ll cause the least mess, where you can

clean up after.

“Clen up? ”

“When you’re done with the woman, you’ll go back to Harris, wipe up

every speck of blood around him, and wrap his body in a plastic tarp. So

don’t kill him on a carpet where he’ll leave stains. Take him into a

room with a tile floor.

Maybe a bathroom.

“Wrap him in a tarp?”

“I’ll be waiting behind the Bowerton Building at ten o’clock.

You’ll bring the body to me. We’ll put it the car. Later, we can take

it out of the city, bury it upstate someplace.

“Bury it? Why?”

“We’re going to try to make the police think that Harris has killed his

own fiancee, that he’s tho Butcher. I’ll disguise my voice and call

Homicide. I’,U claim to be Harris, and I’ll tell them I’m the Butcher.

“To mislead them?”

“You’ve.got it.

,”sooner or later they’ll smell a trick.

“Yes, they will. Eventually. But for a few weeksg maybe even for a few

months, they’ll be after Harzis There wouldn’t be any chance whatsoever

that they follow a good lead, one that might bring them to us.”

“A classic red herring.

“ecisely.”

“It’ll give us time.

“Yes.”

“To do everything we want.

“Nearly everything.” The plan was ruined.

The clairvoyant was too damned hard to kill.

the lift slid apart.

Bollinger tripped coming out of the elevator. The pistol flew out of his

hand, clattered against the wall.

He got to his knees and wiped the sweat out of his eyes.

He said, “Billy?”

But he was alone.

Coughing, sniffling, he crawled to the pistol, clutched it in his right

hand and stood up.

He went into the dark hall, to the door of an office that would have a

view of Lexington.

Because he was worried about running out of ammunition, he used only one

shot on the door. He aimed carefully. The boom! echoed and reechoed

in the corridor. The lock was damaged, but it wouldn’t release

altogether. The door rattled in its frame. Rather than use another

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