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Brother Odd

Brother Odd

Titel: Brother Odd
Autoren: Dean Koontz
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prefer to live in the '30s than in the age of the Internet and shock jocks broadcasting via satellite.
        I have some sympathy for her position. In those days, there were no nuclear weapons, either, no organized terrorists eager to blow up women and children, and you could buy Black Jack chewing gum anywhere, and for no more than a nickel a pack.
        This bit of gum trivia comes from a novel. I have learned a great deal from novels. Some of it is even true.
        Settling into the second chair, Sister Angela said, "Another restless night, Odd Thomas?"
        From previous conversations, she knew that I don't sleep as well these days as I once did. Sleep is a kind of peace, and I have not yet earned peace.
        "I couldn't go to bed until the snow began to fall," I told her. "I wanted to see the world turn white."
        "The blizzard still hasn't broken. But a basement room is a most peculiar place to stand watch for it." Yes, ma'am.
        She has a certain lovely smile that she can sustain for a long time in patient expectancy. If she held a sword over your head, it would not be as effective an instrument of interrogation as that forbearing smile.
        After a silence that was a test of wills, I said, "Ma'am, you look as though you think I'm hiding something."
        "Are you hiding something, Oddie?"
        "No, ma'am." I indicated the computer. "I was just checking on the school's mechanical systems."
        "I see. Then you're covering for Brother Timothy? Has he been committed to a clinic for Kit Kat addiction?"
        "I just like to learn new things around here… to make myself useful," I said.
        "Your breakfast pancakes every weekend are a greater grace than any guest of the abbey has ever brought to us."
        "Nobody's cakes are fluffier than mine."
        Her eyes are the same merry blue as the periwinkles on the Royal Doulton china that my mother owned, pieces of which Mom, from time to time, threw at the walls or at me. "You must have had quite a loyal following at the diner where you worked."
        "I was a star with a spatula."
        She smiled at me. Smiled and waited.
        "I'll make hash browns this Sunday. You've never tasted my hash browns."
        Smiling, she fingered the beaded chain on her pectoral cross.
        I said, "The thing is, I had a bad dream about an exploding boiler."
        "An exploding-boiler dream?"
        "That's right."
        "A real nightmare, was it?"
        "It left me very anxious."
        "Was it one of our boilers exploding?"
        "It might have been. In the dream, the place wasn't clear. You know how dreams are."
        A twinkle brightened her periwinkle eyes. "In this dream, did you see nuns on fire, screaming through a snowy night?"
        "No, ma'am. Good heavens, no. Just the boiler exploding."
        "Did you see disabled children flinging themselves from windows full of flame?"
        I tried silence and a smile of my own.
        She said, "Are your nightmares always so thinly plotted, Oddie?"
        "Not always, ma'am."
        She said, "Now and then I dream of Frankenstein because of a movie I saw when I was a little girl. In my dream, there's an ancient windmill hung with ragged rotting sails creaking 'round in a storm. A ferocity of rain, sky-splitting bolts of lightning, leaping shadows, stairwells of cold stone, hidden doors in bookcases, candlelit secret passageways, bizarre machines with gold-plated gyroscopes, crackling arcs of electricity, a demented hunchback with lantern eyes, always the lumbering monster close behind me, and a scientist in a white lab coat carrying his own severed head."
        Finished, she smiled at me.
        "Just an exploding boiler," I said.
        "God has many reasons to love you, Oddie, but for certain He loves you because you're such an inexperienced and incompetent liar."
        "I've told some whoppers in my time," I assured her.
        "The claim that you have told whoppers is the biggest whopper you have told."
        "At nun school, you must've been president of the debating team."
        "Fess up, young man. You didn't dream about an exploding boiler. Something else has you worried."
        I shrugged.
        "You were checking on the children in their rooms."
        She knew that I saw the lingering dead. But I had not told her or Abbot Bernard about bodachs.
        Because these bloodthirsty spirits are
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