BY THE LIGHT OF THE MOON by Dean Koontz

‘They didn’t know we’d come back here soon or ever. They were just here waiting, hoping.’

‘Nobody was running surveillance on the house this morning when Shep and I folded onto that hilltop back there.’

‘They must’ve gotten here not long after that.’

‘Ice,’ said Shep, ‘ice, ice, ice, ice.’

The guy on one knee in the shadows, the other guy half hidden by the shrub, talking on their headsets, were probably not talking just to each other, but were chatting with a cozy knitting circle of like-minded assassins surrounding the house, exchanging tips on weapons maintenance, garroting-wire techniques, and recipes for nerve poison, while synchronizing their watches and coordinating their murderous attack.

Jilly could have tapped her veins for the ice Shep wanted. She felt defenseless. She felt naked. Naked in the hands of fate.

‘Ice, ice, ice, ice, ice.’

In her mind’s eye, she considered the slowly drifting shards of glass, the bullet crawling through the air. She said, ‘But by now this team has talked to the team in Arizona, bet your ass, talked to them sometime in the past fifteen or twenty minutes, so they know we can do the old herethere boogie.’

Dylan’s mind was spinning as fast as hers: ‘In fact, maybe one of Proctor’s previous experimental subjects pulled the same trick, so they have seen folding before.’

‘The idea of a bunch of nano-whacked ginks running around with superpowers scares the hell out of them.’

‘Who can blame ’em? Scares the hell out of me,’ Dylan said, ‘even when the ginks are us.’

‘Ice, ice, ice.’

Jilly said, ‘So when they come, they’re going to come in fast and blast the crap out of the house, hoping to kill us before we know they’re here and can do our folding routine.’

‘This is what you think or what you know?’

She knew it, felt it, saw it. ‘They’re using armor-piercing rounds that’ll punch straight through the walls, through masonry, through anydamnthing.’

‘Ice, ice, ice.’

‘And worse than armor-piercing rounds,’ she continued. ‘Lots worse. Stuff like… explosive rounds that throw off cyanide-coated shrapnel.’

She had never read about such hideous weapons, had never heard about them, but thanks to the new nanobot-engineered connections in her brain, she foresaw their use here. She heard ghost voices in her head, men’s voices talking about details of the attack at some point in the future, perhaps policemen sifting through the ruins of the house later today or tomorrow, perhaps the killers themselves engaged in a little nostalgic reminiscence about bloody destruction conducted with perfect timing and homicidal flair.

‘Cyanide shrapnel, and God knows what else,’ she continued, and shuddered. ‘When they’re finished with us, what Janet Reno did to the Branch Davidians will seem like a friendly Christian taffy pull.’

‘Ice, ice, ice.’

With a new urgency, Dylan confronted Shep. ‘Open your eyes, buddy, get out of that hole, out of the ice, Shep.’

Shepherd kept his eyes closed.

‘If you ever want cake again, Shep, open your eyes.’

‘Ice, ice, ice.’

‘He’s not close to coming around yet,’ Dylan told Jilly. ‘He’s lost in there.’

‘Upstairs,’ she said. ‘It’s not going to be a picnic up there, but the downstairs is going to get chopped to pieces.’

Out at the garage, the guy stood up from the shadows, and the other guy stood up from the masking shrub. They started toward the house. They were coming at a run.

38

Jilly said, ‘Upstairs!’ and Dylan said, ‘Go!’ and Shepherd said, ‘Ice, ice, ice,’ and a kink in Dylan’s mental wiring brought to mind that old dance-party hit ‘Hot, Hot, Hot’ by Buster Poindexter, which might have struck him as funny under more congenial circumstances and if the idea of ‘Hot, Hot, Hot’ as suitable death-throe music had not been so ghastly.

The stairs were at the front of the house, and two doors led out of the kitchen, one into the dining room, one into the lower hall. The second route would have been the safer of the two, less exposed to windows.

Jilly didn’t realize the hall option existed because that door was closed. She probably thought it was a pantry. She hurried out of the kitchen, into the dining room, before Dylan thought to direct her the other way.

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