Dean Koontz - Odd Thomas 4 Odd Hours
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Odd Thomas 4 - Odd Hours
By Koontz, Dean
I feel my fate in what I cannot fear.
I learn by going where I have to go.
Theodore Roethke, The Waking
BY AN ALLEY I ARRIVED AT THE BACK OF HUTCH Hutchisons house. A gate beside the garage opened to a walkway that led to a brick patio.
Glazed terra-cotta urns and bowls held red and purple cyclamens, but the bleach of fog and the stain of night left the blooms as colorless as barnacle shells.
On a glass-topped wrought-iron table, I put down my wallet and the one I had taken off the agitated man with the flashlight.
Toe to heel, I pried off my sand-caked sneakers. I stripped off my socks and then my blue jeans, which were crusted with enough sand to fill a large hourglass. With a garden hose, I washed my feet.
Mrs. Nicely came three days a week to clean, as well as to do the laundry and ironing. Her surname suited her even better than my first name suited me, and I did not want to cause her extra work.
The back door was locked. Among the cyclamens in the nearest bowl, in a Ziploc pill bag, Hutch kept a spare key. After retrieving the two wallets, I let myself into the house.
Fragrant with the cinnamony aroma of chocolate-pumpkin cookies that I had baked earlier in the afternoon, brightened only by the golden glow of string lights hidden in the recessed toe kick of the cabinets, the kitchen waited warm and welcoming.
I am no theologian. I would not be surprised, however, if Heaven proved to be a cozy kitchen, where delicious treats appeared in the oven and in the refrigerator whenever you wanted them, and where the cupboards were full of good books.
After blotting my wet feet on the small rug, I snatched a cookie from the plate that stood on the center island, and I headed for the door to the downstairs hall.
I intended to go upstairs with the stealth of a Ninja assassin, quickly shower, dress my head wound if it didnt need stitches, and put on fresh clothes.
When I was halfway across the kitchen, the swinging door opened. Hutch switched on the overhead lights, stork-walked into the room, and said, I just saw a tsunami many hundreds of feet high.
Really? I asked. Just now?
It was in a movie.
Thats a relief, sir.
Uncommonly beautiful.
Really?
Not the wave, the woman.
Woman, sir?
Ta Leoni. She was in the movie.
He stilted to the island and took a cookie from the plate.
Son, did you know theres an asteroid on a collision course with the earth?
Its always something, I said.
If a large asteroid strikes landhe took a bite of the cookiemillions could die.
Makes you wish the world was nothing but an ocean.
Ah, but if it lands in the ocean, you get a tsunami perhaps a thousand feet high. Millions dead that way, too.
I said, Rock and a hard place.
Smiling, nodding, he said, Absolutely wonderful.
Millions dead, sir?
What? No, of course not. The cookie. Quite wonderful.
Thank you, sir. I raised the wrong hand to my mouth and almost bit into the two wallets.
He said, Soberingly profound.
Its just a cookie, sir, I said, and took a bite of mine.
The possibility all of humanity could be exterminated in a single cataclysmic event.
That would put a lot of search-and-rescue dogs out of work.
He lifted his chin, creased his brow, and drew his noble face into the expression of a man always focused on tomorrow. I was a scientist once.
What field of science, sir?
Contagious disease.
Hutch put down his half-eaten cookie, fished a bottle of Purell from a pocket, and squeezed a large dollop of the glistening gel into the cupped palm of his left hand.
A terrible new strain of pneumonic plague would have wiped out civilization if not for me, Walter Pidgeon, and Marilyn Monroe.
I havent seen that one, sir.
She was marvelous as an unwitting pneumonic-plague carrier.
His gaze refocused from the future of science and mankind to the glob of germ-killing goop on his palm.
She certainly had the lungs for the role, he said.
Vigorously, he rubbed his long-fingered hands together, and the sanitizing gel made squishy sounds.
Well, I said, I was headed up to my room.
Did you have a nice walk?
Yes, sir. Very nice.
A constitutional we used to call them.
That was before my time.
That was before everyones time. My God, I am old.
Not that old, sir.
Compared to a redwood tree, I suppose not.
I hesitated to leave the kitchen, out of concern that when I started to move, he would notice that I was without shoes and pants.
Mr. Hutchison
Call me Hutch. Everyone calls me Hutch.
Yes, sir. If anyone comes around this evening looking for me, tell them I came back from my walk very agitated, packed my things, and split.
The gel had evaporated; his hands were germ-free. He picked up his half-eaten cookie.
With dismay, he said, Youre leaving, son?
No, sir. Thats just what you tell them.
Will they be officers of the law?
No. One might be a big guy with a chin beard.
Sounds like a role for George Kennedy.
Is he still alive, sir?
Why not? I am. He was wonderfully menacing in Mirage with Gregory Peck.
If not the chin beard, then maybe a redheaded guy who will or will not have bad teeth. Whoevertell him I quit without notice, youre angry with me.
I dont think I could be angry with you, son.
Of course you can. Youre an actor.
His eyes twinkled. He swallowed some cookie. With his teeth just shy of a clench, he said, You ungrateful little shit.
Thats the spirit, sir.
You took five hundred in cash out of my dresser drawer, you thieving little bastard.
Good. Thats good.
I treat you like a son, I love you like a son, and now I see Im lucky you didnt slit my throat while I slept, you despicable little worm.
Dont ham it up, sir. Keep it real.
Hutch looked stricken. Hammy? Was it really?
Maybe thats too strong a word.
I havent been before a camera in half a century.
You werent over the top, I assured him. It was just toofulsome. Thats the word.
Fulsome. In other words, less is more.
Yes, sir. Youre angry, see, but not furious. Youre a little bitter. But its tempered with regret.
Brooding on my direction, he nodded slowly. Maybe I had a son I lost in the war, and you reminded me of him.
All right.
His name was Jamie, he was full of charm, courage, wit. You seemed so like him at first, a young man who rose above the base temptations of this worldbut you were just a leech.
I frowned. Gee, Mr. Hutchison, a leech
A parasite, just looking for a score.
Well, okay, if that works for you.
Jamie lost in the war. My precious Corrina dead of cancer. His voice grew increasingly forlorn, gradually diminishing to a whisper. So alone for so long, and youyou saw just how to take advantage of my vulnerability. You even stole Corrinas jewelry, which Ive kept for thirty years.
Are you going to tell them all this, sir?
No, no. Its just my motivation.
He snared a plate from a cabinet and put two cookies on it.
Jamies father and Corrinas husband is not the type of old man to turn to booze in his melancholy. He turns to the cookieswhich is the only sweet thing he has left from the month that you cynically exploited him.
I winced. Im beginning to feel really bad about myself.
Do you think I should put on a cardigan? Theres something about an old man huddled in a tattered cardigan that can be just wonderfully pathetic.
Do you have a tattered cardigan?
I have a cardigan, and I could tatter it in a minute.
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