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OLLIE’S HANDS By Dean R. Koontz THE JULY NIGHT WAS HOT. THE AIR AGAINST
OLLIE’S PALMS MADE HIM aware of the discomfort of the city’s sweltering
residents: millions of people wishing for winter. Even in the cruelest
weather, however, even on a bitterly cold night filled with dry January wind,
Ollie’s hands would have been soft, moist, warm – and sensitive. His thin
fingers were tapered in an extraordinary manner. When he gripped anything, his
fingers seemed to fuse with the surface of the object. When he let it go, the
release was like a sigh. Every night, regardless of the season, Ollie
visited the unlighted alleyway behind Staznik’s Restaurant, where he searched
for the accidentally discarded silverware in the three large overflowing
garbage bins. Because Staznik himself believed in quality, and because his
prices were high, the tableware was expensive enough to make Ollie’s
undignified rooting worthwhile. Every two weeks, he managed to sense out
enough pieces to constitute a matched set, which he sold to one of several
used-furniture stores in exchange for wine money. Recovered tableware was
only one source of his funds. In his own way, Ollie was a clever man. On
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