Odd Thomas

Odd Thomas Read Free Page B

Book: Odd Thomas Read Free
Author: Dean Koontz
Tags: #genre
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of sunshine.
        I was in the middle of the pool, and Harlo was at the edge. He grabbed the coping and jacked himself onto the concrete deck.
        Coughing, venting atomized water from both nostrils, I splashed noisily after him. As a swimmer, I have less potential for Olympic competition than for drowning.
        On a particularly dispiriting night when I was sixteen, I found myself chained to a pair of dead men and dumped off a boat in Malo Suerte Lake. Ever since then, I've had an aversion to aquatic sports.
        That man-made lake lies beyond the city limits of Pico Mundo. Malo Suerte means "bad luck."
        Constructed during the Great Depression as a project of the Works Progress Administration, the lake originally had been named after an obscure politician. Although they have a thousand stories about its treacherous waters, nobody around these parts can quite pin down when or why the place was officially renamed Malo Suerte.
        All records relating to the lake burned in the courthouse fire of 1954, when a man named Mel Gibson protested the seizure of his property for nonpayment of taxes. Mr. Gibson's protest took the form of self-immolation.
        He wasn't related to the Australian actor with the same name who would decades later become a movie star. Indeed, by all reports, he was neither talented nor physically attractive.
        Now, because I hadn't been burdened on this occasion by a pair of men too dead to swim for themselves, I reached the edge of the pool in a few swift strokes. I levered myself out of the water.
        Having arrived at the sliding door, Harlo Landerson found it locked.
        The pajamaed woman had disappeared.
        As I scrambled to my feet and started to move, Harlo backed away from the door far enough to get momentum. Then he ran at it, leading with his left shoulder, his head tucked down.
        I winced in expectation of gouting blood, severed limbs, a head guillotined by a blade of glass.
        Of course the safety pane shattered into cascades of tiny, gummy pieces. Harlo crashed into the house with all his limbs intact and his head still attached to his neck.
        Glass crunched and clinked under my shoes when I entered in his wake. I smelled something burning.
        We were in a family room. All the furniture was oriented toward a big-screen TV as large as a pair of refrigerators.
        The gigantic head of the female host of the Today show was terrifying in such magnified detail. In these dimensions, her perky smile had the warmth of a barracuda's grin. Her twinkly eyes, here the size of lemons, seemed to glitter maniacally.
        In this open floor plan, the family room flowed into the kitchen with only a breakfast bar intervening.
        The woman had chosen to make a stand in the kitchen. She gripped a telephone in one hand and a butcher knife in the other.
        Harlo stood at the threshold between rooms, trying to decide if a twentysomething housewife in too-cute, sailor-suit pajamas would really have the nerve to gut him alive.
        She brandished the knife as she shouted into the phone. "He's inside, he's right here!"
        Past her, on a far counter, smoke poured from a toaster. Some kind of pop-up pastry had failed to pop. It smelled like strawberries and smoldering rubber. The lady was having a bad morning.
        Harlo threw a bar stool at me and ran out of the family room, toward the front of the house.
        Ducking the stool, I said, "Ma'am, I'm sorry about the mess," and I went looking for Penny's killer.
        Behind me, the woman screamed, "Stevie, lock your door! Stevie, lock your door!"
        By the time I reached the foot of the open stairs in the foyer, Harlo had climbed to the landing.
        I saw why he had been drawn upward instead of fleeing the house: At the second floor stood a wide-eyed little boy, about five years old, wearing only undershorts. Holding a blue teddy bear by one

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