Frankenstein: The Complete 5-Book Collection. Dean Koontz

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Название Frankenstein: The Complete 5-Book Collection
Автор произведения Dean Koontz
Жанр Ужасы и Мистика
Серия
Издательство Ужасы и Мистика
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9780007525898



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of water and the clouds of steam had masked the movements of the intruder.

      On the mat lay a scalpel. Stainless steel. Sparkling.

      The scalpel must be one of Victor’s. He owned collections of surgical instruments acquired at various times during his two-century crusade.

      Victor, however, had not put this blade on her bath mat. Nor had any member of the household staff. Someone else had been here. Something else.

      Steam swirled around her. Yet she shivered.

       CHAPTER 46

      FOLLOWING THEIR STOP at the morgue, Michael made a play for the car keys, but Carson as usual took the wheel.

      “You drive too slow,” she told him.

      “You drive too asleep.”

      “I’m fine. I’m cool.”

      “You’re both,” he agreed, “but you’re not fully awake.”

      “Unconscious, I wouldn’t drive as slow as you.”

      “Yeah, see, I don’t want to test that claim.”

      “You sound like your father’s a safety engineer or something.”

      “You know he’s a safety engineer,” Michael said.

      “What’s a safety engineer do, anyway?”

      “He engineers safety.”

      “Life is inherently unsafe.”

      “That’s why we need safety engineers.”

      “You sound like probably your mother was obsessed with safe toys when you were growing up.”

      “As you know perfectly well, she’s a product-safety analyst.”

      “God, you must have had a boring childhood. No wonder you wanted to be a cop, get shot at, shoot back.”

      Michael sighed. “None of this has anything to do with whether you’re fit to drive or not.”

      “I am not only fit to drive,” Carson said, “I am God’s gift to Louisiana highways.”

      “I hate it when you get like this.”

      “I am what I am.”

      “What you are, Popeye, is stubborn.”

      “Look who’s talking – a guy who will never accept that a woman can drive better than he can.”

      “This isn’t a gender thing, and you know it.”

      “I’m female. You’re male. It’s a gender thing.”

      “It’s a nut thing,” he said. “You’re nuts, I’m not, so I ought to drive. Carson, really, you need sleep.”

      “I can sleep when I’m dead.”

      The day’s agenda consisted of several interviews with friends of Elizabeth Lavenza, the floater without hands who had been found in the lagoon. After the second of these, in the bookstore where Lavenza had worked as a clerk, Carson had to admit that sleep deprivation interfered with her ability as an investigator.

      Returning to the sedan, she said, “Okay, I gotta grab some sack time, but what’ll you do?”

      “Go home, watch Die Hard.”

      “You’ve watched it like fifty times.”

      “It just gets better. Like Hamlet. Give me the car keys.”

      She shook her head. “I’ll take you home.”

      “You’ll drive me head-on into a bridge abutment.”

      “If that’s what you want,” she said, getting behind the wheel.

      In the passenger’s seat, he said, “You know what you are?”

      “God’s gift to Louisiana highways.”

      “Besides that. You’re a control freak.”

      “That’s just a slacker’s term for someone who works hard and likes to do things right.”

      “So I’m a slacker now?” he asked.

      “I didn’t say that. All I’m saying, in a friendly way, is you’re using their vocabulary.”

      “Don’t drive so fast.”

      Carson accelerated. “How many times did your mother warn you not to run with scissors in your hand?”

      “Like seven hundred thousand,” he said. “But that doesn’t mean you’re fit to drive.”

      “God, you’re relentless.”

      “You’re incorrigible.”

      “Where’d you get that word? The dialogue in Die Hard isn’t that sophisticated.”

      When Carson stopped at the curb in front of Michael’s apartment house, he hesitated to get out. “I’m worried about you driving home.”

      “I’m like an old dray horse. I know the route in my bones.”

      “If you were pulling the car, I wouldn’t worry, but you’re gonna drive it at warp speed.”

      “I’ve got a gun, but you aren’t worried about that.”

      “All right, all right. Drive. Go. But if you get behind a slow motorist, don’t shoot him.”

      As she drove away, she saw him in the rearview mirror, watching her with concern.

      The question wasn’t whether she had fallen in love with Michael Maddison. The question was how deeply, how irretrievably?

      Not that love was a sucking slough from which a person needed to be retrieved, like a drowner from the wild surf, like an addict from addiction. She was all for love. She just wasn’t ready for love.

      She had her career. She had Arnie. She had questions about her parents’ deaths. Her life didn’t have room for passion right now.

      Maybe she’d be ready for passion when she was thirty-five. Or forty. Or ninety-four. But not now.

      Besides, if she and Michael went to bed together, departmental regulations would necessitate a new partner for each of them.

      She didn’t like that many other homicide detectives. The chances were that she’d be paired with a fathead. Furthermore, right now she didn’t have the time or patience to break in a new partner.

      Not that she always obeyed departmental regulations. She wasn’t a by-the-book i-dotter and t-crosser.

      But the rule against cops copulating with cops and then sharing an assignment struck Carson as common sense.

      Not that she always deferred to her common sense. Sometimes you had to take reckless chances if you trusted your instinct and if you were human.

      Otherwise you might as well leave the force and become a safety engineer.

      As for being human, there was the fright figure in Allwine’s apartment, who claimed not to be human, unless he believed that being cobbled together from pieces of criminals and being brought to life by lightning was not a sufficient deviation from the usual dad-makes-mom-pregnant routine to deny him human status.

      Either the monster – that’s what he called himself; she was not being politically incorrect – had been a figment of her imagination, in which case she was crazy, or he had been real, in which case maybe the whole world had gone crazy.

      In the midst of this gruesome and impossible case, she couldn’t just unzip Michael’s fly and say, I know