Frankenstein: The Complete 5-Book Collection. Dean Koontz
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Название: Frankenstein: The Complete 5-Book Collection

Автор: Dean Koontz

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Ужасы и Мистика

Серия:

isbn: 9780007525898

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ closes his eyes and imagines threshold printed in blocks from left to right, immediately in front of him. Conveniently, the word garage intersects at the letter r.

      With his eyes closed, he determinedly takes three steps, a-g-e, into the enormous space beyond. The door falls shut behind him, now locked from this side.

      There is no going back.

      The daunting dimensions of the parking garage awe and for a moment nearly overwhelm him. No room of his experience in Mercy has prepared him for this immensity.

      An inner quaking seems to knock bones against bones. He feels like a highly compressed pellet of matter at the instant before the universe’s creation, and with the impending Big Bang, he will expand and explode outward in every direction, racing to fill an infinite void.

      With more powerful reason than he has heretofore been able to apply to his condition, he convinces himself that the void will not pull him apart, will not scatter him to eternity. Gradually his panic subsides, fades entirely.

      He closes his eyes to imagine blocks, and doggedly he spells his way forward. Between each word, Randal opens his eyes to scope the route ahead and to determine the length of the next word that he will need.

      In this fashion, he eventually comes to an exit ramp and climbs to the street. The Louisiana night is warm, moist, droning with mosquitoes.

      By the time he travels the better part of a block and turns right into an alleyway, the brush of dawn paints a faint gray light in the east.

      Panic threatens him once more. In daylight, with everyone awake and on the move, the world will be a riot of sights, sounds. He is certain that he cannot tolerate so much sensory input.

      Night is a better environment. Darkness is his friend.

      He must find a place to hide until the day passes.

       CHAPTER 81

      EXHAUSTED, CARSON SAILED through sleep with no nightmares, only a simple continuous dream of being aboard a black boat under a black sky, knifing silently through black water.

      She had not gotten to bed until well after dawn. She woke at 2:30, showered, and ate Hot Pockets while standing in Arnie’s room, watching the boy at work on the castle.

      At the foot of the bridge that crossed the moat, in front of the gate at the barbicon, at each of two entrances from the outer ward to the inner ward, and finally at the fortified entrance to the castle keep, Arnie had placed one of the shiny pennies that he had been given by Deucalion.

      She supposed the pennies were, in Arnie’s mind, talismans that embodied the power of the disfigured giant. Their mighty juju would prevent entrance by any enemy.

      Evidently Arnie trusted Deucalion.

      So did Carson.

      Considering the events of the past two days, Deucalion’s claim to be Frankenstein’s monster seemed no more impossible than other things that she had witnessed. Besides, he possessed a quality that she had never encountered before, a substantialness that eluded easy description. His calm was of an oceanic depth, his gaze so steady and so forthright that she sometimes had to look away, not because the occasional soft pulse of light in his eyes disturbed her, but because he seemed to see too deeply into her for comfort, through all her defenses.

      If Deucalion was the storied creation of Victor Frankenstein, then during the past two centuries, while the human doctor had become a monster, the monster had become human – and perhaps had become a man of unusual insight and caliber.

      She needed a day off. A month. There were others working on the case now, seeking Harker. She didn’t need to push herself seven days out of seven.

      Nevertheless, by prior arrangement, at 3:30 in the afternoon, Carson was waiting at the curb in front of her house.

      At 3:33, Michael arrived in the plainwrap sedan. Earlier in the day, Carson had experienced a moment of weakness. Michael had driven the car when they left Harker’s apartment building.

      Now, as she got in the passenger’s seat, Michael said, “I drove all the way here and never exceeded a speed limit.”

      “That’s why you’re three minutes late.”

      “Three whole minutes? Well, I guess I just blew every chance we have to find Harker.”

      “The only thing we can’t buy more of is time,” she said.

      “And dodo birds. We can’t buy any of them. They’re extinct. And dinosaurs.”

      “I called Deucalion at the Luxe. He’s expecting us at four o’clock.”

      “I can’t wait to enter this one in my interview log – ‘discussed case with Frankenstein monster. He says Igor was a creep, ate his own boogers.’”

      She sighed. “I was sort of hoping that the concentration needed to drive would mean less patter.”

      “Just the opposite. Driving keeps me mentally fluid. It’s cool being the wheel man.”

      “Don’t get used to it.”

      When they arrived at the Luxe Theater, after four o’clock, the sky had grown as dark as an iron skillet.

      Michael parked illegally at a red curb and hung a POLICE card on the rearview mirror. “Lives in a theater, huh? Is he buddies with the Phantom of the Opera?”

      “You’ll see,” she said, and got out of the car.

      Closing his door, looking at her across the roof, he said, “Do his palms grow hairy when the moon is full?”

      “No. He shaves them just like you do.”

       CHAPTER 82

      FOLLOWING A LONG NIGHT and longer day at Mercy, Victor ate what was either a late lunch or an early dinner of seafood gumbo with okra and rabbit étouffée at a Cajun restaurant in the Quarter. Although not as satisfyingly exotic as his Chinese meal the previous night, the food was good.

      For the first time in nearly thirty hours, he went home.

      Having enhanced his physiological systems to the extent that he needed little sleep and therefore could accomplish more in the lab, he sometimes wondered if he worked too much. Perhaps if he allowed himself more leisure, his mind would be clearer in the laboratory, and consequently he would do even better science.

      Periodically over the decades, he had engaged in this debate with himself. He always resolved it in favor of more work.

      Like it or not, he had given himself to a great cause. He was the kind of man who would work selflessly in the pursuit of a world ruled by reason, a world free of greed and peopled by a race united by a single goal.

      Arriving at his mansion in the Garden СКАЧАТЬ