The Face

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Authors: Dean Koontz
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citizens.
    Eight-dose giveaways like this would not facilitate the collapse of civilization overnight. Corky was committed to long-term effect.
    He never carried more than fifteen bags, and once he started to hand them out, he made a point of ridding himself of them quickly. Too clever to get caught holding, he was in and out of the arcade in three minutes.
    Because he didn’t need to pause to make a sale, the staff didn’t have an opportunity to notice him. By the time he left the arcade, he was just another shopper: nothing incriminating in his pockets.
    At a Starbucks, he bought a double latte, and sipped it at one of their tables on the promenade, watching the parade of humanity in all its absurdity.
    After finishing the coffee, he went to a department store. He needed socks.

CHAPTER 12
    T HE TREES, A GROVE OF EIGHT, ROSE ON beautifully gnarled trunks, lifted high their exquisitely twisted branches, shook their graceful gray-green tresses in the wet wind, seeming both to defy the storm and to celebrate it. Fruitless in this season, they cast off no olives, only leaves, upon the cobbled walkway.
    Twining through the branches, Christmas lights were unlit at this hour, bulbs of dull color waiting to brighten in the night.
    This five-story Westwood condominium, less than one block from Wilshire Boulevard, was neither as grand as some in the neighborhood nor large enough to require a doorman. Nevertheless, the purchase price of an apartment here would gag a sword swallower.
    Ethan trod the leaves of peace, passed under the extinguished lights of Christmas, and entered a marble-floored and marble-paneled public foyer. He used a key to let himself through the inner security door.
    Past the foyer, the secure lobby was small but cozy, with an area rug to soften the marble, two Art Deco armchairs, and a table with a faux Tiffany lamp in red, amber, and green stained glass.
    Although stairs served the five-story building, Ethan took the slow-moving elevator. Dunny Whistler lived—had lived—on the fifth floor.
    Each of the first four floors held four large apartments, but the highest was divided into only two penthouse units.
    A faint unpleasant odor lingered in the elevator from a recent passenger. Complex and subtle, the scent teased memory, but Ethan could not quite identify it.
    As he ascended past the second floor, the elevator cab suddenly impressed him as being smaller than he remembered from previous visits. The ceiling loomed low, like a lid on a cook pot.
    Passing the third floor, he realized that he was breathing faster than he should be, as though he were a man on a brisk walk. The air seemed to have grown thin, inadequate.
    By the time he reached the fourth floor, he became convinced that he detected a
wrongness
in the sound of the elevator motor, in the hum of cables drawn through guide wheels. This creak, that tick, this squeak might be the sound of a linchpin pulling loose in the heart of the machinery.
    The air grew thinner still, the walls closer, the ceiling lower, the machinery more suspect.
    Perhaps the doors wouldn’t open. The emergency phone might be out of order. His cell phone might not work in here.
    In an earthquake, the shaft might collapse, crushing the cab to the dimensions of a coffin.
    Nearing the fifth floor, he realized that these symptoms of claustrophobia, which he had never previously experienced, were a mask that concealed another fear, to which he, being a rational man, was loath to admit.
    He half expected Rolf Reynerd to be waiting on the fifth floor.
    How Reynerd would have known about Dunny or where Dunny lived, how he would have known when Ethan intended to come here—these were questions unanswerable without extensive investigation and perhaps without the abandonment of logic.
    Nevertheless, Ethan stepped to the side of the cab, to make a smaller target of himself. He drew his pistol.
    The elevator doors opened on a ten-by-twelve foyer paneled in honey-toned, figured anigre.

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