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Brother Odd

Brother Odd

Titel: Brother Odd
Autoren: Dean Koontz
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wall.
        Stillness reigned, however, and Justine tried to speak again, and Annamarie said, "Loop," in her sweet piping voice.
        Leaving the sleeping girl, I moved to the foot of Justine's bed.
        For fear that my voice would shatter the spell, I did not speak.
        Wondering if the brain-damaged girl had made room for a visitor, I wished the bottomless blue eyes would polarize into a particular pair of Egyptian-black eyes with which I was familiar.
        Some days I feel as if I have always been twenty-one, but the truth is that I was once young.
        In those days, when death was a thing that happened to other people, my girl, Bronwen Llewellyn, who preferred to be called Stormy, would sometimes say, Loop me in, odd one. She meant that she wanted me to share the events of my day with her, or my thoughts, or my fears and worries.
        During the sixteen months since Stormy had gone to ashes in this world and to service in another, no one had spoken those words to me.
        Justine moved her mouth without producing sound, and in the adjacent bed, Annamarie said in her sleep, "Loop me in."
        Room 32 seemed airless. Following those three words, I stood in a silence as profound as that in a vacuum. I could not breathe.
        Only a moment ago, I had wished these blue eyes would polarize into the black of Stormy's eyes, that the suspicion of a visitation would be confirmed. Now the prospect terrified me.
        When we hope, we usually hope for the wrong thing.
        We yearn for tomorrow and the progress that it represents. But yesterday was once tomorrow, and where was the progress in it?
        Or we yearn for yesterday, for what was or what might have been. But as we are yearning, the present is becoming the past, so the past is nothing but our yearning for second chances.
        "Loop me in," Annamarie repeated.
        As long as I remain subject to the river of time, which will be as long as I may live, there is no way back to Stormy, to anything.
        The only way back is forward, downstream. The way up is the way down, and the way back is the way forward.
        "Loop me in, odd one."
        My hope here, in Room 32, should not be to speak with Stormy now, but only at the end of my journey, when time had no more power over me, when an eternal present robbed the past of all appeal.
        Before I might see in those blue vacancies the Egyptian black for which I hoped, I looked away, stared at my hands, which clutched the footboard of the bed.
        Stormy's spirit does not linger in this world, as some do. She moved on, as she should have done.
        The intense undying love of the living can be a magnet to the dead. Enticing her back would be an unspeakable disservice to her. And although renewed contact might at first relieve my loneliness, ultimately there is only misery in hoping for the wrong thing.
        I stared at my hands.
        Annamarie fell silent in her sleep.
        The plush-toy kittens and the china rabbit remained inanimate, thus avoiding either a demonic or a Disney moment.
        In a while, my heart beat at a normal rate once more.
        Justine's eyes were closed. Her lashes glistened, and her cheeks were damp. From the line of her jaw were suspended two tears, which quivered and then fell onto the sheet.
        In search of Boo and bodachs, I left the room.

CHAPTER 3
        
        INTO THE OLD ABBEY, WHICH WAS NOW ST Bartholomew's School, had been transplanted modern mechanical systems that could be monitored from a computer station in the basement.
        The spartan computer room had a desk, two chairs, and an unused file cabinet. Actually, the bottom drawer of the cabinet was packed with over a thousand empty Kit Kat wrappers.
        Brother Timothy, who was responsible for the mechanical systems of both the abbey and the school, had a Kit Kat Jones. Evidently, he felt that his candy craving was uncomfortably close to the sin of gluttony, because he seemed to be hiding the evidence.
        Only Brother Timothy and visiting service personnel had reason to be in this room frequently. He felt his secret was safe here.
        All the monks knew about it. Many of them, with a wink and a grin, had urged me to look in the bottom drawer of the file cabinet.
        No one could have known whether Brother Timothy had confessed gluttony to the prior, Father Reinhart. But the existence of his
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