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dean koontz - the mask-第6章

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they were rapidly growing nearer; louder。
 〃I think maybe one of those last two bolts of lightning caused some real damage when it touched down;〃 Paul said。
 O'Brian swung his chair around toward the center window; which was directly behind his desk。 〃It did sound as if it struck nearby。〃
 Carol looked at each of the three windows; but she couldn't see any smoke rising from behind the nearest rooftops。 Then again; the view was blurred and visibility was reduced by the water…spotted panes of glass and by the curtains of mist and gray rain that wavered and whipped and billowed beyond the glass。
 The sirens swelled。
 〃More than one truck;〃 O'Brian said。
 The fire engines were right outside the office for a moment…at least two trucks; perhaps three…and then they passed; heading into the next block。
 O'Brian pushed up from his chair and stepped to the window。
 As the first sirens dwindled just a little; new ones shrieked in the street behind them。
 〃Must be serious;〃 Paul said。 〃Sounds as if at least two engine panies are responding。〃
 〃I see smoke;〃 O'Brian said。
 Paul rose from his chair and moved toward the windows to get a better look。
 Something's wrong here。
 That thought snapped into Carol's mind; startling her as if a whip had cracked in front of her face。 A powerful; inexplicable current of panic surged through her; electrified her。 She gripped the arms of her chair so tightly that one of her fingernails broke。
 Something。 。 。 is。。 。 wrong。。 。 very wrong。。。
 Suddenly the air was oppressively heavy…hot; thick; as if it were not air at all but a bitter and poisonous gas of some kind。 She tried to breathe; couldn't。 There was an invisible; crushing weight on her chest。
 Get away from the windows!
 She tried to shout that warning; but panic had short…circuited her voice。 Paul and O'Brian were at different windows; but they both had their backs to her; so that neither of them could see she had been gripped by sudden; immobilizing fear。
 Fear of what? she demanded of herself。 What in the name of God am l so scared of?
 She struggled against the unreasonable terror that had locked her muscles and joints。 She started to get up from the chair; and that was when it happened。
 A murderous barrage of lightning crashed like a volley of mortar fire; seven or eight tremendous bolts; perhaps more than that…she didn't count them; couldn't count them…one right after the other; with…
 out a significant pause between them; each fierce boom overlapping the ones before and after it; yet each clearly louder than its predecessors; so loud that they made her teeth and bones vibrate; each bolt smashing down discernibly closer to the building than had the bolt before it; closer to the seven…foot…high windows…the gleaming; flashing; rattling; now…black; now…milky; now…shining; now…blank; now…silvery; now…coppery windows。
 The sharp bursts of purple…white light produced a series of jerky; stroboscopic images that were burned forever into Carol's memory: Paul and O'Brian standing there; silhouetted against the natural fireworks; looking small and vulnerable; outside; the rain descending in an illusion of hesitation; wind…lashed trees heaving in a strobe…choppy rage; lightning blasting into one of those trees; a big maple; and then an ominous dark shape rising from the midst of the explosion; a torpedo like thing; spinning straight toward the center window (all of this transpiring in only a second or two; but given a queer; slow…motion quality by the flickering lightning and; after a moment; by the overhead electric light as well; which began to flicker; too); O'Brian throwing one arm up in front of his face in what appeared to be half a dozen disconnected movements; Paul turning toward O'Brian and reaching for him; both men like figures on a motion picture screen when the film slips and stutters in the projector; O'Brian lurching sideways; Paul seizing him by a coat sleeve; pulling him back and down toward safety (only a fraction of a second after the lightning splintered the maple); a huge tree limb bursting through the center window even as Paul was pulling O'Brian out of the way; one leafy branch sweeping
 across O'Brian's head; ripping his glasses loose; tossing them into the air…his face; Carol thought; his eyes!…and then Paul and O'Brian falling to the floor; out of sight; the enormous limb of the shattered maple slamming down on top of O'Brian's desk in a spray of water; glass; broken mullions; and smoking chips of bark; the legs of the desk cracking and collapsing under the brutal impact of the ruined tree。
 Carol found herself on the floor; beside her overturned chair。 She couldn't remember falling。
 The fluorescent tubes blinked off; stayed off。
 She was lying on her stomach; one cheek pressed to the floor; staring in shock at the shards of glass and the torn maple leaves that littered the carpet。 As lightning continued to stab down from the turbulent sky; wind roared through the missing window and stirred some of the loose leaves into a frantic; dervishlike dance; acpanied by the cacophonous music of the storm; they whirled and capered across the office; toward a row of green filing cabinets。 A calendar flapped off the wall and swooped around on wings of January and December; darting and soaring and kiting as if it were a bat。 Two paintings rattled on their wire hangers; trying to tear themselves free。 Papers were everywhere…stationery; forms; small sheets from a note pad; bulletins; a newspaper…all rustling and skipping this way and that; floating up; diving down; bunching together and slithering along the floor with a snakelike hiss。
 Carol had the eerie feeling that all of the movement in the room was not solely the result of the wind; that some of it was caused by a 。 。 。 presence。 Something threatening。 A bad poltergeist。 Demonic spirits seemed
 to be at work in the office; flexing their occult muscles; knocking things off the walls; briefly taking up residence in a body posed only of leaves and rumpled sheets of newsprint。
 That was a crazy idea; not at all the sort of thing she would ordinarily think of。 She was surprised and disconcerted by a thrill of superstitious fear that coursed through her。
 Lightning flared again。 And again。
 Wincing at the painfully sharp sound; wondering if lightning could get into a room through an open window; she put her arms over her head; for what little protection they provided。
 Her heart was pounding; and her mouth was dry。
 She thought about Paul; and her heartbeat grew even more frantic。 He was over by the windows; on the far side of the desk; out of sight; under some of the maple tree's branches。 She didn't think he was dead。 He hadn't been directly in the path of the tree。 O'Brian might be dead; yes; depending on how that small branch had struck his head; depending on whether he had been lucky or not; because maybe a pointed twig had been driven deep into his eye and his brain when his glasses had been knocked off; but Paul was surely alive。 Surely。 Nevertheless; he could be seriously injured; bleeding。
 Carol started to push herself up onto her hands and knees; anxious to find Paul and give him any first aid he might need。 But anoth
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