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City of Night

City of Night

Titel: City of Night Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Dean Koontz
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second-floor hall in time to see some guy slam his shoulder into a bedroom door as a woman stood to one side, watching.
    He surprised the woman, tore the pistol out of her hand, threw it aside even as he lifted her and pitched her farther than the gun.
    As the guy hit the door again and it appeared to break off its last pins, Deucalion grabbed him by the nape of the neck and the seat of the pants. He lifted him, turned him, and slammed him into the wall across the hall from the room that he’d been trying to enter.
    The force of impact was so tremendous that the guy’s face broke through the Sheetrock and hammered a wall stud hard enough to crack it. Deucalion kept shoving, and the stud relented, as did the rest of the wall structure, until the killer’s head was in Arnie’s room even as his body remained in the hall.
    The woman was crawling toward her gun, so Deucalion left the guy with his neck in the wall as if in the lunette of a guillotine, and went after her.
    She picked up the pistol, rolled onto her side, and fired at him. She hit him, but it was only a 9mm slug, and he took it in the breastbone without serious damage.
    He kicked the gun out of her hand, probably breaking her wrist, and kicked her in the ribs, and kicked her again, sure that even New Race ribs could be broken.
    By then, the guy had pulled his head out of the wall. Deucalion sensed him coming and turned to see an angry gypsum-whitened face, a bloody broken nose, and one eye bristling with wood splinters.
    The killer was still game, and fast, but Deucalion didn’t merely sidestep him. In the same way that he had traveled from the parsonage kitchen to the O’Connor kitchen in a single step, he went twenty feet backward, leaving his assailant to stumble forward, grappling only with air.
    In retreat, having abandoned her pistol, the woman had scrambled toward the stairs. Deucalion seized her and assisted her by pitching her down the first flight to the landing.
    In spite of being the future of the planet and the doom of mere humanity, the New Race superman with the plaster-powdered face and the toothpick holder for a left eye had had enough. He fled the hall for Arnie’s room.
    Deucalion went after the guy just in time to see him plunge through a window into the backyard.
     
    Standing in Vicky’s room, listening to the ruckus in the hall, Michael said, “What—are they fighting with each other?”
    Carson said, “Somebody’s kicking ass.”
    “Vicky?”
    They didn’t lower their shotguns, but they moved closer to the barricading dresser, against which the loose door was now merely propped.
    When sudden quiet followed the uproar, Carson cocked her head, listened, then said, “What now?”
    “Apocalypse,” Deucalion said behind them.
    Carson turned with a jump and saw the giant standing beside Arnie. She didn’t think he had come in through the open window.
    The boy was shaking as if with palsy. He had covered his face with his hands. Too much noise, too much new and strange.
    “It’s all coming apart,” Deucalion said. “That’s why I was brought to this place, at this time. Victor’s empire is blowing up in his face. By morning, nowhere in the city will be safe. I must move Arnie.”
    “Move him where?” Carson worried. “He needs quiet, peace. He needs—”
    “There’s a monastery in Tibet,” said Deucalion, effortlessly lifting Arnie and holding him in his arms.
    “ Tibet? ”
    “The monastery is like a fortress, not unlike his castle, and quiet. I have friends there who’ll know how to calm him.”
    Alarmed, Carson said, “ Tibet? Hey, no. It might as well be the moon! ”
    “Vicky Chou is in the kitchen, unconscious. Better move that dresser and get out of here,” Deucalion advised. “Police will be coming, and you won’t know who they really are.”
    The giant turned as if to carry Arnie through the open window, but in the turn itself, he was gone.
     
     
     

Chapter 66
     
    Maybe four minutes had passed since Carson had first fired the shotgun at Randal in Arnie’s room. Figure none of the neighbors had called 911 for a minute, taking that long to wonder if it had been a backfiring truck or the dog farting. So maybe a call had gone out three minutes ago.
    In this city, the average police response time to a gunfire-heard call, when no gunman had actually been seen and no location verified, was about six minutes.
    With three minutes to leave, Carson didn’t have time to worry about Arnie in

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