Whispers

Whispers by Dean Koontz Read Free Book Online

Book: Whispers by Dean Koontz Read Free Book Online
Authors: Dean Koontz
and, with jittery hands that nearly failed her, rammed the magazine into the butt. She faced the doorway.
    Frye kicked the lock again. The hardware was flimsy. It was the kind of interior lock primarily meant to keep children and nosey house guests out of a room. It was useless against an intruder like Bruno Frye. On the third kick, the workings burst from the mounting, and the door clattered open.
    Panting, sweating, he looked more than ever like a mad bull as he lumbered out of the dark hall and crossed the threshold. His broad shoulders were hunched, and his hands were fisted at his sides. He wanted to lower his head and charge, smash and destroy everything that stood in his way. Blood lust shone in his eyes as clearly as his reflection glowered back at him from the wall mirror beside Hilary. He wanted to smash his way through the china shop and stomp on the proprietor.
    Hilary pointed the pistol at him, holding it firmly with both hands.
    He kept coming.
    â€œI’ll shoot! I will! I swear to God I will!” she said frantically.
    Frye stopped, blinked at her, saw the gun for the first time.
    â€œOut,” she said.
    He didn’t move.
    â€œGet the hell out of here!”
    Incredibly, he took one more step toward her. It was no longer the smug, calculating, game-playing rapist she had faced downstairs. Something had happened to him; deep inside, relay switches had clicked into place, setting up new patterns in his mind, new wants and needs and hungers that were more disgusting and perverted than any he had revealed thus far. He was no longer even half rational. His demeanor was that of a lunatic. His eyes flashed, not icy as they had been, but watery and hot, fevered. Sweat streamed down his face. His lips worked ceaselessly, even though he was not speaking; they writhed and twisted, pulled back over his teeth, then pushed out in a childish pout, formed a sneer, then a weird little smile, then a fierce scowl, then an expression for which there was no name. He was no longer driven by lust or the desire to utterly dominate her. The secret motor that drove him now was darker in design than the one that had powered him just a few minutes ago, and she had the terrible crazy feeling that it would somehow provide him with enough energy to shield him from harm, to let him advance untouched through a hail of bullets.
    He took the large knife from the sheath on his right hip and thrust it in front of him.
    â€œBack off,” she said desperately.
    â€œBitch.”
    â€œI mean it.”
    He started toward her again.
    â€œFor God’s sake,” she said, “be serious. That knife’s no good against a gun.”
    He was twelve or fifteen feet from the other side of the bed.
    â€œI’ll blow your goddamned head off.”
    Frye waved the knife at her, drew small rapid circles in the air with the point of the blade, as if it were a talisman and he were chasing off evil spirits that stood between him and Hilary.
    And he took another step.
    She lined up the forward sight with the center of his abdomen, so that no matter how high the recoil kicked her hands and no matter whether the gun pulled to the left or the right, she would hit something vital. She squeezed the trigger.
    Nothing happened.
    Please, God!
    He took two steps.
    She stared at the pistol, stunned. She had forgotten to throw off the safety catches.
    He was maybe eight feet from the other side of the bed. Maybe only six.
    Swearing at herself, she thumbed the two tiny levers on the side of the pistol, and a pair of red dots appeared on the black metal. She aimed and pulled the trigger a second time.
    Nothing.
    Jesus! What? It can’t be jammed!
    Frye was so completely disassociated from reality, so thoroughly possessed by his madness, that he did not realize immediately that she was having problems with the weapon. When he finally saw what was happening, he moved in fast, while the advantage was his. He reached the bed, scrambled onto it,

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