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Frankenstein: The Complete 5-Book Collection. Dean KoontzЧитать онлайн книгу.

Frankenstein: The Complete 5-Book Collection - Dean Koontz


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Wayne to turn.

      “Release her,” Deucalion advised.

      The biker – massive, with a cruel face – was not impressed. “You walk real fast away from here, Lone Ranger, and you might leave with your cojones.”

      Deucalion seized his adversary’s right arm and bent it behind his back so suddenly, with such violence, that the shoulder broke with a loud crack. He pitched the big man away from him.

      Briefly airborne, Wayne landed face-first, his scream stifled by a mouthful of blacktop.

      A hard stomp to the nape of the biker’s neck would have snapped his spine. Remembering torch-bearing mobs with pitchforks in another century, Deucalion restrained himself.

      He turned toward the whoosh of a swung chain.

      Another motorcycle aficionado, a leering grotesque with a studded eyebrow, studded nose, studded tongue, and bristling red beard, recklessly joined the fray.

      Instead of dodging the chain-link whip, Deucalion stepped toward his assailant. The chain lashed around his left arm. He seized it and pulled Redbeard off balance.

      The biker had a ponytail. It served as a handle.

      Deucalion lifted him, punched him, threw him.

      In possession of the chain, he rounded on a third thug, whipped him across the knees.

      The struck man cried out and fell. Deucalion helped him off the ground by throat, by crotch, and slammed him into the fourth of the four enforcers.

      He rapped their heads against a wall to the bar-band beat, creating much misery and perhaps some remorse.

      Already the customers wandering from porno shop to brothel to bar had fled the alleyway. The dealers on wheels had skated with their wares.

      In rapid succession, the pimpmobiles fired up. No one drove toward Deucalion. They reversed out of the alleyway.

      A chopped-and-stretched Cadillac crashed into a yellow Mercedes.

      Neither driver stopped to provide the other with the name of his insurance agent.

      In a moment, Deucalion and the girl, Joyce, were alone with the disabled bikers, though surely watched from doorways and windows.

      In the bar, the zydeco band jammed without faltering. The thick, damp air seemed to shimmer with the music.

      Deucalion walked the girl to the corner, where the alleyway met the street. He said nothing, but Joyce needed no encouragement to stay at his side.

      Although she went with him, she was clearly afraid. She had good reason to be.

      The action in the alley had not diminished his fury. When he was fully self-possessed, his mind was a centuries-old mansion furnished with rich experience, elegant thought, and philosophical reflection. Now, however, it was a many-chambered charnel house dark with blood and cold with the urge to murder.

      As they passed under a streetlamp, treading on the fluttering shadows cast by moths above, the girl glanced at him. He was aware that she shuddered.

      She seemed as bewildered as she was frightened, as if she had awakened from a bad dream and could not yet distinguish between what might be real and what might be remnants of her nightmare.

      In the gloom between streetlamps, when Deucalion put one hand on her shoulder, when they traded shadows for shadows and fading zydeco for louder jazz, her bewilderment increased, and her fear. “What … what just happened? This is the Quarter.”

      “At this hour,” he warned, as he walked her across Jackson Square, past the statue of the general, “the Quarter is no safer for you than that alleyway. You have somewhere to go?”

      Hugging herself as if the bayou air had taken an arctic chill, she said, “Home.”

      “Here in the city?”

      “No. Up to Baton Rouge.” She was close to tears. “Home don’t seem boring anymore.”

      Envy seasoned Deucalion’s ferocious anger, for he had never had a home. He’d had places where he stayed, but none had truly been a home.

      A wild criminal desire to smash the girl raged at the bars of the mental cell in which he strove to keep imprisoned his bestial impulses, to smash her because she could go home in a way that he never could.

      He said, “You’ve got a phone?”

      She nodded, and unclipped a cell phone from her braided belt.

      “You tell your mother and father you’ll be waiting in the cathedral over there,” he said.

      He walked her to the church, paused in the street, encouraged her forward, made certain to be gone before she turned to look at him.

       CHAPTER 2

      IN HIS MANSION in the Garden District, Victor Helios, formerly Frankenstein, began this fine summer morning by making love to his new wife, Erika.

      His first wife, Elizabeth, had been murdered two hundred years ago in the Austrian mountains, on their wedding day. He rarely thought of her anymore.

      He had always been oriented toward the future. The past bored him. Besides, much of it didn’t bear contemplation.

      Counting Elizabeth, Victor had enjoyed – or in some cases merely tolerated – six wives. Numbers two through six had been named Erika.

      The Erikas had been identical in appearance because they had all been engineered in his New Orleans lab and grown in his cloning vats. This saved the expense of a new wardrobe each time one of them had to be terminated.

      Although extremely wealthy, Victor loathed wasting money. His mother, otherwise a useless woman, had impressed upon him the need for thrift.

      Upon his mother’s death, he had not stood the expense of either a service or a pine box. No doubt she would have approved of the simple hole in the ground, excavated to a depth of four rather than six feet to reduce the gravedigger’s fee.

      Although the Erikas looked identical to one another, numbers one through four had different flaws. He kept refining and improving them.

      Just the previous evening, he had killed Erika Four. He had sent her remains to an upstate landfill operated by one of his companies, where the first three Erikas and other disappointments were interred under a sea of garbage.

      Her passion for books had resulted in too much introspection and had encouraged in her an independent spirit that Victor refused to tolerate. Besides, she slurped her soup.

      Not long ago, he had summoned his new Erika from her tank, in which universities of digitized education were electronically downloaded into her absorbent brain.

      Ever the optimist, Victor believed that Erika Five would prove to be a perfect creation, worthy of serving him for a long time. Beautiful, refined, erudite, and obedient.

      She certainly was more lubricious than the previous Erikas. The more he hurt her, the more eagerly she responded to him.

      Because she was one of the New Race, she could turn off pain at will, but he did not allow her to do so in the bedroom. He lived for power. Sex was, for him, satisfying only to the extent that he could hurt and oppress his partner.

      She took his blows with magnificent erotic submission. Her many bruises and abrasions were, to Victor, proof of his virility. He was a stallion.

      As with all his creatures, she had the physiology of a demigod.

      Her wounds would heal and her physical perfection be restored in but an hour or two.

      Spent, he left her on the bed, sobbing. She wept not merely because of the pain but also with shame.

      His wife was the only member of the New Race designed with the capacity


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