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Fear Nothing

Fear Nothing

Titel: Fear Nothing Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Dean Koontz
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his head for a moment before resuming worship of the forbidden biscuits.
        In the hutch, a large video monitor clicked on. The quartered screen showed murky views of the fog-shrouded marina and the bay on all four sides of the Nostromo .
        “What's this?” I wondered.
        “Security.” Roosevelt put down the remote control. “Motion detectors and infrared sensors will pick up anyone approaching the boat and alert us at once. Then a telescopic lens automatically isolates and zooms in on the intruder before he gets here, so we'll know what we're dealing with.”
        “What are we dealing with”
        The man mountain took two slow, dainty sips of his coffee before he said, “You might already know too much about that.”
        “What do you mean? Who are you?”
        “I'm nobody but who I am,” he said. “Just old Rosie Frost. If you're thinking that maybe I'm one of the people behind all this, you're wrong.”
        “What people? Behind what?”
        Looking at the four security-camera views on the quartered video monitor, he said, “With any luck, they're not even aware that I know about them.”
        “Who? People at Wyvern?”
        He turned to me again. “They're not just at Wyvern anymore.
        Townspeople are in it now. I don't know how many. Maybe a couple of hundred, maybe five hundred, but probably not more than that, at least not yet. No doubt it's gradually spreading to others… and it's already beyond Moonlight Bay.”
        Frustrated, I said, “Are you trying to be inscrutable?”
        “As much as I can, yes.”
        He got up, fetched the coffeepot, and without further comment freshened our cups. Evidently he intended to make me wait for morsels of information in much the way that poor Orson was being made to wait patiently for his snack.
        The dog licked the tabletop around the three biscuits, but his tongue never touched the treats.
        When Roosevelt returned to his chair, I said, “If you're not involved with these people, how do you know so much about them?”
        “I don't know all that much.”
        “Apparently a lot more than I do.”
        “I know only what the animals tell me.”
        “What animals?”
        “Well, not your dog, for sure.”
        Orson looked up from the biscuits.
        “He's a regular sphinx,” Roosevelt said.
        Although I hadn't been aware of doing so, sometime soon after sunset, I had evidently walked through a magic looking-glass.
        Deciding to play by the lunatic rules of this new kingdom, I said, “So… aside from my phlegmatic dog, what do these animals tell you?”
        “You shouldn't know all of it. Just enough so you realize it's best that you forget what you saw in the hospital garage and up at the morgue.”
        I sat up straighter in my chair, as though pulled erect by my tightening scalp. “You are one of them.”
        “No. Relax, son. You're safe with me. How long have we been friends? More than two years now since you first came here with your dog. And I think you know you can trust me.”
        In fact, I was at least half convinced that I could still trust Roosevelt Frost, even though I was no longer as sure of my character judgment as I had once been.
        “But if you don't forget what you saw,” he continued, “if you try to contact authorities outside town, you'll endanger lives.”
        As my chest tightened around my heart, I said, “You just told me I could trust you, and now you're threatening me.”
        He looked wounded. “I'm your friend, son. I wouldn't threaten on you. I'm only telling you…”
        “Yeah. What the animals said.”
        “It's the people from Wyvern who want to keep a lid on this at any cost, not me. Anyway, you aren't personally in any danger even if you try to go to outside authorities, at least not at first. They won't touch you. Not you. You're revered.”
        This was one of the most baffling things that he had said yet, and I blinked in confusion. “Revered?”
        “Yes. They're in awe of you.”
        I realized that Orson was staring at me intently, temporarily having forgotten the three promised biscuits.
        Roosevelt 's statement was not merely baffling: It was downright wacky.
        “Why would anyone be in awe of me?” I demanded.
        “Because of who you are.”
        My mind looped and spun and tumbled like a capering seagull.
        “Who am

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