Brother Odd

Brother Odd by Dean Koontz Page A

Book: Brother Odd by Dean Koontz Read Free Book Online
Authors: Dean Koontz
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Russian stared at me.
    He had the least readable eyes of anyone I had ever met. From his eyes, I could learn nothing more about him than a paramecium on a glass slide, gazing up at the lens of a microscope, would be able to learn about the examining scientist’s opinion of it.
    After a silence, Rodion Romanovich changed the subject: “What book are you looking for, Mr. Thomas?”
    “Anything with a china bunny on a magical journey, or mice who save princesses.”
    “I doubt you will find that kind of thing in this section.”
    “You’re probably right. Bunnies and mice generally don’t go around poisoning people.”
    That statement earned another brief silence from the Russian. I don’t believe that he was pondering his own opinion of the homicidal tendencies of bunnies and mice. I think, instead, he was trying to decide whether my words implied that I might be suspicious of him.
    “You are a peculiar young man, Mr. Thomas.”
    “I don’t try to be, sir.”
    “And droll.”
    “But not grotesque,” I hoped.
    “No. Not grotesque. But droll.”
    He turned and walked away with his book, which might have been about poisons and famous poisoners in history. Or not.
    At the far end of the aisle, Elvis appeared, still dressed as a flamenco dancer. He approached as Romanovich receded, slouching his shoulders and imitating the Russian’s hulking, troll-like shamble, scowling at the man as he passed him.
    When Rodion Romanovich reached the end of these stacks, before turning out of sight, he paused, looked back, and said, “I do not judge you by your name, Odd Thomas. You should not judge me by mine.”
    He departed, leaving me to wonder what he had meant. He had not, after all, been named for the mass murderer Joseph Stalin.
    By the time Elvis reached me, he had contorted his face into a recognizable and comic impression of the Russian.
    Watching the King as he mugged for me, I realized how unusual it was that neither I nor Romanovich had mentioned either Brother Timothy being missing or the deputies swarming the grounds in search of him. In the closed world of a monastery, where deviations from routine are rare, the disturbing events of the morning ought to have been the first subject of which we spoke.
    Our mutual failure to remark on Brother Timothy’s disappearance, even in passing, seemed to suggest some shared perception of events, or at least a shared attitude, that made us in some important way alike. I had no idea what I meant by that, but I intuited the truth of it.
    When Elvis couldn’t tease a smile from me with his impression of the somber Russian, he stuck one finger up his left nostril all the way to the third knuckle, pretending to be mining deep for boogers.
    Death had not relieved him of his compulsion to entertain. As a voiceless spirit, he could no longer sing or tell jokes. Sometimes he danced, remembering a simple routine from one of his movies or from his Las Vegas act, though he was no more Fred Astaire than was Abbot Bernard. Sadly, in his desperation, he sometimes resorted to juvenile humor that was not worthy of him.
    He withdrew his finger from his nostril, extracting an imaginary string of snot, then pretending that it was of extraordinary length, soon pulling yard after yard of it out of his nose with both hands.
    I went in search of the reference-book collection and stood for a while reading about Indianapolis.
    Elvis faced me over the open book, continuing his performance, but I ignored him.
    Indianapolis has eight universities and colleges, and a large public library system.
    When the King gently rapped me on the head, I sighed and looked up from the book.
    He had an index finger stuck in his right nostril, all the way to the third knuckle, as before, but this time the tip of the finger was impossibly protruding from his left ear. He wiggled it.
    I couldn’t help smiling. He so badly wants to please.
    Gratified to have pried a smile from me, he took the finger from his nose and wiped

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