Chapter One The world is full of broken people. Splints, casts, miracle drugs, and  time can’t mend fractured hearts, wounded minds, torn spirits.
 Currently, sunshine  was Micky Bellsong’s medication of choice, and southern California in late August  was an apothecary with a deep supply of this prescription.
 Tuesday afternoon, wearing  a bikini and oiled for broiling, Micky reclined in a lounge chair in her aunt Geneva’ s backyard. The nylon webbing was a nausea-inducing shade of green, and it sagged,  too, and the aluminum joints creaked as though the lawn furniture were far older  than Micky, who was only twenty-eight, but who sometimes felt ancient.
 Her aunt,  from whom fate had stolen everything except a reliable sense of humor, referred to  the yard as “the garden.” That would be the rosebush.
 The property was wider than  it was deep, to allow the full length of the house trailer to face the street. Instead  of a lawn with trees, a narrow covered patio shaded the front entrance. Here in back,  a strip of grass extended from one side of the lot to the other, but it provided  a scant twelve feet of turf between the door and the rear fence. The grass flourished  because Geneva watered it regularly with a hose.
 The rosebush, however, responded  perversely to tender care. In spite of ample sunshine, water, and plant food, in  spite of the regular aeration of its roots and periodic treatment with measured doses  of insecticide, the bush remained as scraggly and as blighted as any specimen watered  with venom and fed pure sulfur in the satanic gardens of Hell.
 Face to the sun,  eyes closed, striving to empty her mind of all thought, yet troubled by insistent  memories, Micky had been cooking for half an hour when a small sweet voice asked,  “Are you suicidal?”
 She turned her head toward the speaker and saw a girl of nine  or ten standing at the low, sagging picket fence that separated this trailer space  from the one to the west. Sun glare veiled the kid’s features.
 “Skin cancer kills,”  the girl explained.
 “So does vitamin D deficiency.”
 “Not likely.”
 “Your bones  get soft.”
 “Rickets. I know. But you can get vitamin D in tuna, eggs, and dairy  products. That’s better than too much sun.”
 Closing her eyes again, turning her  face to the deadly blazing heavens, Micky said, “Well, I don’t intend to live forever.”
 “Why not?”
 “Maybe you haven’t noticed, but nobody does.”
 “I probably will,” the  girl declared.
 “How’s that work?”
 “A little extraterrestrial DNA.”
 “Yeah, right.  You’re part alien.”
 “Not yet. I have to make contact first.”
 Micky opened her eyes  again and squinted at the ET wannabe. “You’ve been watching too many reruns of 
The  X Files, kid.”
 “I’ve only got until my next birthday, and then all bets are off.”  The girl moved along the swooning fence to a point where it had entirely collapsed.  She clattered across the flattened section of pickets and approached Micky. “Do you  believe in life after death?”
 “I’m not sure I believe in life before death,” Micky  said.
 “I knew you were suicidal.”
 “I’m not suicidal. I’m just a wiseass.”
 Even  after stepping off the splintered fence staves onto the grass, the girl moved awkwardly.  “We’re renting next door. We just moved in. My name’s Leilani.”
 As Leilani drew  closer, Micky saw that she wore a complicated steel brace on her left leg, from the  ankle to above the knee.
 “Isn’t that a Hawaiian name?” Micky asked.
 “My mother’s a little nuts about all things Hawaiian.”
 Leilani wore khaki shorts. Her right  leg was fine, but in the cradle of steel and padding, her left leg appeared to be  malformed.
 “In fact,” Leilani continued, “old Sinsemilla — that’s my mother—is  a little nuts, period.”
 “Sinsemilla? That’s a . . .”
 “Type of marijuana. Maybe  she was Cindy Sue or Barbara way back in the Jurassic period, but she’s called herself  Sinsemilla as long as I’ve known her.” Leilani settled into a hideous orange-and-blue  chair as decrepit as Micky’s bile-green lounge. “This lawn furniture sucks.”
 “Someone  gave it to Aunt Geneva for nothing.”
 “She ought to’ve been paid to take it. Anyway,  they put old Sinsemilla in an institution once and shot like fifty or a hundred thousand  volts of electricity through her brain, but it didn’t help.”
 “You shouldn’t make  up stuff like that about your own mother.”
 Leilani shrugged. “It’s the truth. I  couldn’t make up anything as weird as what is. In fact, they blasted her brain several  times. Probably, if they’d done it just once more, old Sinsemilla would’ve developed  a taste for electricity. Now she’d be sticking her finger in a socket about ten times  a day. She’s an addictive personality, but she means well.”
 Although the sky was  a furnace grate, although Micky was slick with coconut-scented lotion and sweat,  she’d grown all but oblivious of the sun. “How old are you, kid?”
 “Nine. But I’m  precocious. What’s your name?”
 “Micky.”
 “That’s a name for a boy or a mouse. So  it’s probably Michelle. Most women your age are named Michelle or Heather or Courtney.”
 “My age?”
 “No offense intended.”
 “It’s Michelina.”
 Leilani wrinkled her nose.  “Too precious.”
 “Michelina Bellsong.”
 “No wonder you’re suicidal.”
 “Therefore—Micky.”
 “I’m Klonk.”
 “You’re what?”
 “Leilani Klonk.”
 Micky cocked her head  and frowned skeptically. “I’m not sure I should believe anything you tell me.”
 “Sometimes  names are destiny. Look at you. Two pretty names, and you’re as gorgeous as a model—except for all the sweat and your face puffy with a hangover.”
 “Thanks. I guess.”
 “Me, on the other hand — I’ve got one pretty name followed by a clinker like Klonk.  Half of me is sort of pretty—”
 “You’re very pretty,” Micky assured her.
 This  was true. Golden hair. Eyes as blue as gentian petals. The clarity of Leilani’s features  promised that hers was not the transient beauty of childhood, but an enduring quality.
 “Half of me,” Leilani conceded, “might turn heads one day, but that’s balanced by  the fact that I’m a mutant.”
 “You’re not a mutant.”
 The girl stamped her left foot  on the ground, causing the leg brace to rattle softly. She raised her left hand,  which proved to be deformed: The little finger and the ring finger were fused into  a single misshapen digit that was connected by a thick web of tissue to a gnarled  and stubby middle finger.
 Until now, Micky hadn’t noticed this deformity. “Everyone’ s got imperfections,” she said.
 “This isn’t like having a big schnoz. I’m either  a mutant or a cripple, and I refuse to be a cripple. People pity cripples, but they’ re afraid of mutants.”
 “You want people to be afraid of you?”
 “Fear implies respect,”  Leilani said.
 “So far, you’re not registering high on my terror meter.”
 “Give me  time. You’ve got a great body.”
 Disconcerted to hear such a thing from a child,  Micky covered her discomfort with self-deprecation: “Yeah, well, by nature I’m a  huge pudding. I’ve got to work hard to stay like this.”
 “No you don’t. You were  born perfect, and you’ve got one of those metabolisms tuned like a space-shuttle  gyroscope. You could eat half a cow and drink a keg of beer every day, and your butt  would actually tighten up a notch.”
 Micky couldn’t remember the last time that she’ d been rendered speechless by anyone, but with this girl, she was nearly befuddled  into silence. “How would you know?”
 “I can tell,” Leilani assured her. “You don’ t run, you don’t power walk—”
 “I work out.”
 “Oh? When was your last workout?”
 “Yesterday,” Micky lied.
 “Yeah,” said Leilani, “and I was out waltzing all night.”  She stamped her left foot again, rattling her leg brace. “Having a great metabolism  is nothing to be ashamed about. It’s not like laziness or anything.”
 “Thanks for  your approval.”
 “Your boobs are real, aren’t they?”
 “Girl, you are an amazing piece  of work.”								
									 Copyright © 2001 by Dean Koontz. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.