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Odd Hours Dean Koontz 44460K 2023-09-01

ONE

IT’S ONLY LIFE WE ALL GET THROUGH IT

Not all of us co the way, sos or eyes in accidents or altercations, while others skate through the years with nothing worse to worry about than an occasional bad-hair day

I still possessed both legs and both eyes, and evenin late January If I returned to bed sixteen hours later, having lost all ofelse, I would consider the day a triumph Even minus a few teeth, I’d call it a triumph

When I raised theshades in ray and swollen, windless and still, but pregnant with a pro to the radio, an airliner had crashed in Ohio Hundreds perished The sole survivor, a ten-ht and unscathed in a battered seat that stood in a field of scorched and twisted debris

Throughout the ish waves exhausted theray and aith inky shadows, as if sinuous sea beasts of fantastical forht, I had twice awakened from a dream in which the tide flowed red and the sea throbbed with a terrible light

As nighto, I’m sure you’ve had worse The problem is that a few of my dreams have come true, and people have died

While I prepared breakfast for ht news that the jihadists who had the previous day seized an ocean liner in the Mediterranean were now beheading passengers

Years ago I stopped watching news prograe they ies undo me

Because he was an insomniac ent to bed at dawn, Hutch ate breakfast at noon He paid me well, and he was kind, so I cooked to his schedule without co rooht sliver of any pane remained exposed

He often enjoyed a fil over coffee until the credits rolled That day, rather than cable news, he watched Carole Lombard and John Barryht years old, born in the era of silent films, when Lillian Gish and Rudolph Valentino were stars, and having later been a successful actor, Hutch thought less in words than in ies, and he dwelt in fantasy

Beside his plate stood a bottle of Purell sanitizing gel He lavished it on his hands not only before and after eating, but also at least twice during a meal

Like most Americans in the first decade of the new century, Hutch feared everything except what he ought to fear

When TV-news progra-addled, murderous, and otherwise crazed celebrities--which happened perhaps twice a year--they soap with a sensationalistic piece on that rare flesh-eating bacteria

Consequently, Hutch feared contracting the ravenous germ From time to time, like a dour character in a tale by Poe, he huddled in his laility of his flesh, about the insatiable appetite of his microscopic foe

He especially dreaded that his nose o, his face had been fauised him, he still took pride in his appearance

I had seen a few of Lawrence Hutchison’s movies fro presence on screen

Because he had not appeared on ca than for his children’s books about a swashbuckling rabbit named Nibbles Unlike his creator, Nibbles was fearless

Fil investment opportunities with paranoid suspicion had left Hutch financially secure in his old age Nevertheless, he worried that an explosive rise in the price of oil or a total collapse in the price of oil would lead to a ide financial crisis that would leave him penniless

His house faced the boardwalk, the beach, the ocean Surf broke less than a minute’s stroll from his front door

Over the years, he had come to fear the sea He could not bear to sleep on the west side of the house, where hethe shore

Therefore, I was quartered in the ocean-facing uest rooic Beach, more than a month previous to the red-tide drea as his chauffeur on those infrequent occasions when he wanted to go out

My experience at the Pico Mundo Grill serveda flood frolands, fry bacon to the crispness of a cracker without parching it, andyet so fluffy they see off the plate, you will always find work

At four-thirty that afternoon in late January, when I stepped into the parlor with Boo,at the television, which he had muted

Bad news, sir?

His deep and rounded voice rolled an o

We don’t live on Mars

It’s war at the sa to ?

He indicated the silenced anchorman on the TV Thiscan be done about it Nothing

Well, sir, there’s always Jupiter or whatever planet lies beyond Mars

He fixed ray-eyed stare that conveyed i district attorneys and courageousman, I think you may be from beyond Mars

Nowhere more exotic than Pico Mundo, California If you won’t need o out for a walk

Hutch rose to his feet He was tall and lean He kept his chin lifted but craned his head forward as does a ht have been a habit that he developed in the years before he had his cataracts removed

Go out? He frowned as he approached Dressed like that?

I earing sneakers, jeans, and a sweatshirt

He was not troubled by arthritis and ree Yet heto fracture so

Not for the first ti tide pools

You should put on a jacket You’ll get pneumonia

It’s not that chilly today, I assured hi people think you’re invulnerable

Not this young person, sir I’ve got every reason to be astonished that I’ the words MYSTERY TRAIN on my sweatshirt, he asked, What’s that supposed to mean?

I don’t know I found it in a thrift shop

I have never been in a thrift shop

You haven’t missed much

Do only very poor people shop there or is the criteria merely thriftiness?

They welcoo one day soon Make an adventure of it

You won’t find a genie in a bottle, I said, referring to his film The Antique Shop

No doubt you’re too h life when you’ve nothing to believe in?