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Winter Moon

Winter Moon

Titel: Winter Moon Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Dean Koontz
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backyard, Toby pictured himself in a green boat on a cold black sea. Green because it was his favorite color. No land anywhere in sight.
        Just his little green boat and him in it. The sea was old, ancient, older than ancient, so old that it had come alive in a way, could.think, could want things and need to have its way. The sea wanted to rise on all sides of the little green boat, swamp it, drag it down a thousand fathoms into the inky water, and Toby with it, ten thousand fathoms, twenty thousand, down and down to a place with no light but strange music. In his boat, Toby had bags of Calming Dust, which he'd gotten from someone important, maybe from Indiana Jones, maybe from E.T maybe from Aladdin-probably from Aladdin, who got it from the Genie. He kept scattering the Calming Dust on the sea as his little green boat puttered along, and though the dust seemed light and silvery in his hands, lighter than feathers, it became hugely heavy when it hit the water, but heavy in a funny way, in a way that didn't make it sink, magical Calming Dust that crushed the water flat, made the sea as smooth and ripple-free as a mirror. The ancient sea wanted to rise up, swamp the boat, but the Calming Dust weighed it down, more than iron, more than lead, weighed it down and kept it calm, defeated it. Deep in the darkest and coldest canyons below its surface, the sea raged, furious with Toby, wanting more than ever to kill him, drown him, bash his body to pieces against shoreline rocks, wear him away with its waters until he would be just sand. But it couldn't rise, couldn't rise, all was calm on the surface, peaceful and calm, calm.
        Perhaps because Toby was concentrating so intensely on keeping the Giver under him, he lacked the strength to climb the entire hill, though the snow was not piled dauntingly high on that windswept ground.
        Jack put down the fuel cans two-thirds of the way to the higher woods, carried Toby to the stone house, gave Heather the keys, and returned for the ten gallons of gasoline.
        By the time Jack reached the fieldstone house again Heather had opened the door. The rooms inside were dark. He hadn't had time to discover the reason for the malfunctioning lights.
        Nevertheless, now he knew why Paul Youngblood couldn't get power to the house on Monday. The dweller within hadn't wanted them to enter.
        The rooms were still dark because the windows were boarded over, and there was no time to pry off the plywood that shielded the glass.
        Fortunately, Heather had remembered the lack of power and come prepared. From two pockets of her ski suit, she produced, instead of bullets, a pair of flashlights.
        It always seems to come down to this, Jack thought: going into a dark place.
        Basements, alleyways, abandoned houses, boiler rooms, crumbling warehouses.
        Even when a cop was chasing a perp on a bright day and the chase led only outdoors, in the final confrontation, when you came face-to-face with evil, it was always a dark place, as if the sun could not find that one small patch of ground where you and your potential murderer tested fate.
        Toby walked into the house ahead of them, either unafraid of the gloom or eager to do the deed.
        Heather and Jack each took a flashlight and a can of gasoline, leaving two cans just outside the front door.
        Harlan Moffit brought up the rear with two cans. "What're these buggers like?
        They all hairless and bigeyed like those geeks who kidnapped Whitley Strieber?"
        In the unfurnished and unlighted living room, Toby was standing in front of a dark figure, and when their flashlight beams found what the boy had found before them, Harlan Moffit had his answer. Not hairless and big-eyed. Not the cute little guys from a Spielberg movie. A decomposing body stood with legs spread, swaying but in no danger of crumpling to the floor.
        A singularly repulsive creature was draped across the cadaver's back, bound to it by several greasy tentacles, intruded into its rotting body, as though it had been trying to become one with the dead flesh.
        It was quiescent but obviously alive: queer pulses were visible beneath its wet-silk skin, and the tips of some appendages quivered.
        The dead man with which the alien had combined was Jack's old friend.and partner Tommy Fernandez.
        Heather realized, too late, that Jack had never actually seen one of the

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