Velocity. Dean Koontz

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Velocity - Dean  Koontz

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the north flank.

      The possibility existed that this entire thing had in fact been a hoax and that Lanny was the hoaxer.

      Billy did not know for a fact that a blond schoolteacher had been murdered in the city of Napa. He had taken Lanny’s word for it.

      He had not seen a report of the homicide in the newspaper. The killing supposedly had been discovered too late in the day to make the most recent edition. Besides, he rarely read a newspaper.

      Likewise, he never watched TV. Occasionally he listened for weather reports on the radio, while driving, but mostly he relied on a CD player loaded with zydeco or Western swing.

      A cartoonist might be expected also to be a prankster. The funny streak in Lanny had been repressed for so long, however, that it was less of a streak than a thread. He made reasonably good company, but he wasn’t a load of laughs.

      Billy didn’t intend to wager his life—or a nickel—that Lanny Olsen had hoaxed him.

      He remembered how sweaty and anxious and distressed his friend had been in the tavern parking lot, the previous evening. In Lanny, what you saw was what he was. If he’d wanted to be an actor instead of a cartoonist, and if his mother had never gotten cancer, he would still have wound up as a cop with a problematic ten card.

      After studying the place, certain that no one was watching from a window, Billy crossed the lawn, passed the front porch, and had a look at the south flank of the house. There, too, every window glowed softly.

      He circled to the rear, staying at a distance, and saw that the back door stood open. A wedge of light lay like a carpet on the dark porch floor, welcoming visitors across the kitchen threshold.

      An invitation this bold seemed to suggest a trap.

      Billy expected to find Lanny Olsen dead inside.

       If you don’t go to the police and get them involved, I will kill an unmarried man who won’t much be missed by the world.

      Lanny’s funeral would not be attended by thousands of mourners, perhaps not even by as many as a hundred, though some would miss him. Not the world, but some.

      When Billy had made his choice to spare the mother of two, he had not realized that he had doomed Lanny.

      If he had known, perhaps he would have made a different choice. Choosing the death of a friend would be harder than dropping the dime on a nameless stranger. Even if the stranger was a mother of two.

      He didn’t want to think about that.

      Toward the end of the backyard stood the stump of a diseased oak that had been cut down long ago. Four feet across, two feet high.

      On the east side of the stump was a hole worn by weather and rot. In the hole had been tucked a One Zip plastic bag. The bag contained a spare house key.

      After retrieving the key, Billy circled cautiously to the front of the house. He returned to the concealment of the plum tree.

      No one had turned off any lights. No face could be seen at any window; and none of the curtains moved suspiciously.

      A part of him wanted to phone 911, get help here fast, and spill the story. He suspected that would be a reckless move.

      He didn’t understand the rules of this bizarre game and could not know how the killer defined winning. Perhaps the freak would find it amusing to frame an innocent bartender for both murders.

      Billy had survived being a suspect once. The experience reshaped him. Profoundly.

      He would resist being reshaped again. He had lost too much of himself the first time.

      He left the cover of the plum tree. He quietly climbed the front-porch steps and went directly to the door.

      The key worked. The hardware didn’t rattle; the hinges didn’t squeak, and the door opened silently.

       11

      This Victorian house had a Victorian foyer with a dark wood floor. A wood-paneled hall led toward the back of the house, and a staircase offered the upstairs.

      On one wall had been taped an eight-by-ten sheet of paper on which had been drawn a hand. It looked like Mickey Mouse’s hand: a plump thumb, three fingers, and a wrist roll suggestive of a glove.

      Two fingers were folded back against the palm. The thumb and forefinger formed a cocked gun that pointed to the stairs.

      Billy got the message, all right, but he chose to ignore it for the time being.

      He left the front door open in case he needed to make a quick exit.

      Holding the revolver with the muzzle pointed at the ceiling, he stepped through an archway to the left of the foyer. The living room looked as it had when Mrs. Olsen had been alive, ten years ago. Lanny didn’t use it much.

      The same was true of the dining room. Lanny ate most of his meals in the kitchen or in the den while watching TV.

      In the hallway, taped to the wall, another cartoon hand pointed toward the foyer and the stairs, opposite from the direction in which he was proceeding.

      Although the TV was dark in the den, flames fluttered in the gas-log fireplace, and in a bed of faux ashes, false embers glowed as if real.

      On the kitchen table stood a bottle of Bacardi, a double-liter plastic jug of Coca-Cola, and an ice bucket. On a plate beside the Coke gleamed a small knife with a serrated blade and a lime from which a few slices had been carved.

      Beside the plate stood a tall, sweating glass half full of a dark concoction. In the glass floated a slice of lime and a few thin slivers of melting ice.

      After stealing the killer’s first note from Billy’s kitchen and destroying it with the second to save his job and his hope of a pension, Lanny had tried to drown his guilt with a series of rum and Cokes.

      If the jug of Coca-Cola and the bottle of Bacardi had been full when he sat down to the task, he had made considerable progress toward a state of drunkenness sufficient to shroud memory and numb the conscience until morning.

      The pantry door was closed. Although Billy doubted that the freak lurked in there among the canned goods, he wouldn’t feel comfortable turning his back on it until he investigated.

      With his right arm tucked close to his side and the revolver aimed in front of him, he turned the knob fast and pulled the door with his left hand. No one waited in the pantry.

      From a kitchen drawer, Billy removed a clean dishtowel. After wiping the metal drawer-pull and the knob on the pantry door, he tucked one end of the cloth under his belt and let it hang from his side in the manner of a bar rag.

      On a counter near the cooktop lay Lanny’s wallet, car keys, pocket change, and cell phone. Here, too, was his 9-mm service pistol with the Wilson Combat holster in which he carried it.

      Billy picked up the cell phone, switched it on, and summoned voice

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