Winter Moon. By: Dean R. Koontz

week, the lack of privacy in those matters became more rather than less

humiliating.

It was even worse to be trapped in bed, in the rigid grip of the cast,

unable to run or walk or even crawl if a sudden catastrophe struck.

Periodically he became convinced that the hospital was going to be

swept by fire or damaged in an earthquake. Although he knew the staff

was well trained in emergency procedures and that he would not be

abandoned to the ravages of flames or the mortal weight of collapsing

walls, he was occasionally seized by an irrational panic, often in the

dead of night, a blind terror that squeezed him tighter and tighter,

hour after hour, and that succumbed only gradually to reason or

exhaustion.

By the middle of May, he had acquired a deep appreciation and limitless

admiration for quadriplegics who did not let life get the best of

them.

At least he had the use of his hands and arms, and he could exercise by

rhythmically squeezing rubber balls and doing curls with light hand

weights.

He could scratch his nose if it itched, feed himself to some extent,

blow his nose. He was in awe of people who suffered permanent

below-the-neck paralysis but held fast to their joy in life and faced

the future with hope, because he knew he didn’t possess their courage

or character, no matter whether he was voted favorite patient of the

week, month, or century.

If he’d been deprived of his legs and hands for three months, he would

have been weighed down by despair. And if he hadn’t known that he

would get out of the bed and be learning to walk again by the time

spring became summer, the prospect of long-term helplessness would have

broken his sanity.

Beyond the window of his third-floor room, he could see little more

than the crown of a tall palm tree. Over the weeks, he spent countless

hours watching its fronds shiver in mild breezes, toss violently in

storm winds, bright green against sunny skies, dull green against

somber clouds. Sometimes birds wheeled across that framed section of

the heavens, and Jack thrilled to each brief glimpse of their flight.

He swore that, once back on his feet, he would never be helpless

again.

He was aware of the hubris of such an oath, his ability to fulfill it

depended on the whims of fate. Man proposes, God disposes. But on

this subject he could not laugh at himself. He would never be helpless

again. Never. It was a challenge to God: Leave me alone or kill me,

but don’t put me in this vise again.

Jack’s division captain, Lyle Crawford, visited him for the third time

in the hospital on the evening of June third.

Crawford was a nondescript man, of average height and average weight,

with close-cropped brown hair, brown eyes, and brown skin, all of

virtually the same shade. He was wearing Hush Puppies, chocolate-brown

slacks, tan shirt, and a chocolate-brown jacket, as if his fondest

desire was to be so nondescript that he would blend into any background

and perhaps even attain invisibility. He also wore a brown cap, which

he took off and held in both hands as he stood by the bed. He was

soft-spoken and quick to smile, but he also had more commendations for

bravery than any two other cops in the entire department, and he was

the best natural-born leader of men that Jack had ever encountered.

“How you doing?” Crawford asked.

“My serve has improved, but my backhand’s still lousy,” Jack said.

“Don’t choke the racket.”

“You think that’s my problem?”

“That and not being able to stand up.”

Jack laughed. “How’re things in the division, Captain?”

“The fun never stops. Two guys walk into a jewelry store on Westwood

Boulevard this morning, right after opening, silencers on their guns,

shoot the owner and two employees, kill em deader than old King Tut

before anyone can set off an alarm. No one outside hears a thing.

Cases full of jewelry, big safe’s open in the back room, full of estate

pieces, millions worth. Looks like a cakewalk from there on. Then the

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