Phantoms

Free Phantoms by Dean Koontz

Book: Phantoms by Dean Koontz Read Free Book Online
Authors: Dean Koontz
Tags: Fiction, Suspense, Thrillers
anxiously.
    “So do I. But we’ve got to act responsibly. Let’s go,” Jenny said, turning toward the open window through which they had entered.
    The phone rang.
    Startled, Jenny turned toward the strident sound.
    The phone was on the same table as the radio.
    It rang again.
    She snatched up the receiver. “Hello?”
    The caller didn’t respond.
    “Hello?”
    Icy silence.
    Jenny’s hand tightened on the receiver.
    Someone was listening intently, remaining utterly silent, waiting for her to speak. She was determined not to give him that satisfaction. She just pressed the receiver to her ear and strained to hear something, anything, if even nothing more than the faint sealike ebb and flow of his breathing. He didn’t make the slightest sound, but still she could feel, at the other end of the line, the presence that she had felt when she’d picked up the phone in the Santinis’ house and in the sheriff’s substation.
    Standing in the barricaded room, in that silent house where Death had crept in with impossible stealth, Jenny Paige felt an odd transformation overtaking her. She was well-educated, a woman of reason and logic, not even mildly superstitious. Thus far, she had attempted to solve the mystery of Snowfield by applying the tools of logic and reason. But for the first time in her life, they had utterly failed her. Now deep in her mind, something . . . shifted, as if an enormously heavy iron cover were being slid off a dark pit in her subconscious. In that pit, within ancient chambers of the mind, there lay a host of primitive sensations and perceptions, a superstitious awe that was new to her. Virtually on the level of racial memory stored in the genes, she sensed what was happening in Snowfield. The knowledge was within her; however, it was so alien, so fundamentally illogical, that she resisted it, fighting hard to suppress the superstitious terror that boiled up.
    Clutching the telephone receiver, she listened to the silent presence on the line, and she argued with herself:
    • It isn’t a man; it’s a thing.
    • Nonsense.
    • It’s not human, but it’s aware.
    • You’re hysterical.
    • Unspeakably malevolent; perfectly, purely evil.
    • Stop it, stop it, stop it!
    She wanted to slam down the phone. She couldn’t do it. The thing on the other end of the line had her mesmerized.
    Lisa stepped close. “What’s wrong? What’s happening?”
    Shaking, drenched with sweat, feeling tainted merely by listening to the despicable presence, Jenny was about to tear the receiver away from her ear when she heard a hiss, a click—and then a dial tone.
    For a moment, stunned, she couldn’t react.
    Then, with a whimper, she jabbed at the 0 button on the phone.
    There was a ringing on the line. It was a wonderful, sweet, reassuring sound.
    “Operator.”
    “Operator, this is an emergency,” Jenny said. “I’ve got to reach the county sheriff’s office in Santa Mira.”

9
    A Call for Help
    “Laundry?” Kale asked. “What laundry?”
    Bryce could see that Kale was jolted by the question and was only pretending not to understand.
    “Sheriff, where is this supposed to lead?” Bob Robine asked.
    Bryce’s hooded eyes remained hooded, and he kept his voice calm, slow. “Gee, Bob, I’m just trying to get to the bottom of things, so we can all get out of here. I swear, I don’t like working on Sundays, and here this one is almost shot to hell already. I have these questions, and Mr. Kale doesn’t have to answer a one of them, but I will ask, so that I can go home and put my feet up and have a beer.”
    Robine sighed. He looked at Kale. “Don’t answer unless I say it’s okay.”
    Worried now, Kale nodded.
    Frowning at Bryce, Robine said, “Go ahead.”
    Bryce said, “When we arrived at Mr. Kale’s house last Thursday, after he phoned in to report the deaths, I noticed that one cuff of his slacks and the thick bottom edge of his sweater both looked slightly damp, so as you’d hardly notice. I

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