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The Taking

The Taking

Titel: The Taking Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Dean Koontz
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she tried her best to drive around rather than over them.
        Grimly, she wondered how soon she would encounter human cadavers heaped in similar numbers.
        "Some sci-fi writer," Neil said at last, "I think it was Arthur C. Clarke, suggested that an extraterrestrial species, hundreds or thousands of years more advanced than us, would possess technology that would appear to us to be not the result of applied science but entirely supernatural, pure magic."
        "In this case, black magic," she said. "Evil. What practical purpose could they have for turning a dead man into a marionette-except to terrorize?"
        Ahead in the luminous storm, a separate light arose, and grew brighter as they approached it.
        Molly slowed further, allowed the SUV to coast forward.
        Out of the torrents loomed a blue Infiniti, standing in their lane, facing the same direction that they were traveling, but dead still. The lights of the car blazed. Three of its four doors hung open wide.
        Molly rolled to a stop ten feet behind the vehicle. The engine was running: Pale exhaust vapor issued continuously from the car's tailpipe, but the skeins of rain washed the plume away before it could attain much length.
        From this angle, Molly could see no driver, no passengers.
        "Keep moving," Neil encouraged.
        She swung the Explorer into the northbound lane and slowly drove around the Infiniti.
        No one, either dead or alive, was slumped inside below the level of the windows.
        The car had not failed its occupants, yet they had abandoned it and had chosen to continue on foot. Or had fled in panic. Or had been taken.
        On the pavement in front of the Infiniti, illuminated by its headlights, lay three objects. A baseball bat. A butcher knife. A long-handled ax.
        "Maybe they didn't have guns," Neil said, expressing Molly's very thoughts, "and had to arm themselves with whatever they could find."
        During the confrontation that occurred here, the occupants of the Infiniti must have discovered that their weapons were useless and must have discarded them. Or perhaps they had been forcibly disarmed by something that was unimpressed by clubs and blades.
        "Maybe we'll meet up with them somewhere on the road ahead," Neil suggested.
        Molly didn't think that would happen. Those people were gone forever: to where, unknown; to what hideous end, unguessable.

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    14
        
        AS THE ABANDONED INFINITI'S HEADLIGHTS FADED into the rain behind them, Neil switched on the radio, perhaps to forestall further disturbing speculation about the missing occupants of that car. The fate of those travelers might be the fate of all who ventured into the storm, in which case no credible argument could be advanced for continuing to town.
        Across the FM and AM bands, quarrels of static and electronic screeching alternated with silences where voices and music had once crowded the airwaves. At a small number of frequencies, words coalesced out of the cacophony, a few sentences at a time.
        In two instances, reporters or government spokesmen seemed to be reading official advisories. These lacked concrete facts and for the most part consisted of empty assurances.
        Some guy on a station in Denver spoke directly to his wife and son, expressing his love in simple but piercing words. Obviously, he did not expect to see either of them again.
        Out of some far place, through the turbulent ether of this momentous night, came music: the classic sad song "I'll Be Seeing You."
        In ordinary times, those exquisitely melancholy lyrics, that melody so full of yearning, could pierce Molly's heart. In these extraordinary circumstances, this song about lost love became a surprisingly poignant metaphor for the greater loss of an entire society, a civilization, for the sudden end of peace and hope and promise.
        Throughout her lifetime, the world had been shrinking, made ever smaller by television, by satellite communications, by the Internet. Now, in mere hours, all those bonds had been cut, and the compressed world had expanded to the size that it had been more than a century ago.
        The man speaking to his wife and son in Denver had sounded as if he were broadcasting from another continent. And now this song, written just prior to World War II and resonant with the uncertainties of that troubled age, brought with it through the

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