BY THE LIGHT OF THE MOON by Dean Koontz

‘Ice.’

‘Hail.’

‘Ice.’

‘Floe,’ Jilly said.

Another crash downstairs: This one reverberated all the way up through the house, trembling the floor under Jilly’s knees.

Below, Dylan closed the closet door, and their situation seemed markedly more claustrophobic.

‘Ice.’

‘Glacier.’

Just when she suspected that Shepherd was about to respond to her, Jilly exhausted her supply of synonyms for ice and words for types of ice. She decided to change the nature of the game, adding a word to Shepherd’s ice as if to complete a thought.

Shep said, ‘Ice.’

‘Berg,’ said Jilly.

‘Ice.’

‘Cube.’

All this talk of ice made the attic hotter, hotter. Dust on the rafters, dust on the floor, dust drifting in the air seemed about to combust.

‘Ice.’

‘Rink.’

‘Ice.’

‘Skater.’

‘Ice.’

‘Hockey. You ought to be embarrassed, sweetie, taking the easy half of the game, always the same word.’

Shepherd had raised his bowed head. He stared at the section of the ladder rung exposed between his clenched hands.

Downstairs: more crashing, more breaking, a quick nervous burst of gunfire.

‘Ice.’

‘Cream. Shep, how much fun would it be to work a puzzle that only had one piece?’

‘Ice.’

‘Pick.’

‘Ice.’

‘Tongs.’

As she slipped new words into his head, ice no longer ricocheted around in there all by itself. A subtle change occurred in his face, a softening, suggesting a relaxation of this obsession. She felt sure she wasn’t imagining it. Pretty sure.

‘Ice.’

‘Bucket.’

‘Ice.’

‘Age. You know what, sweetie? Even if I’ve got the harder half of this game, it’s a bunch more fun than listening to synonyms for feces.’

A faint smile found his lips, but almost at once he breathed it away with a trembling exhalation.

‘Ice.’

‘Cold.’

Shepherd shifted his right hand to a higher rung, then his left. Then to a still higher rung. ‘Ice.’

‘Bag.’

Shepherd moved his feet without assistance from his brother.

Downstairs the doorbell rang. Even in a squad of professional killers, there had to be a bonehead joker.

‘Ice.’

‘Box.’

Shepherd climbed, climbed. ‘Ice.’

‘Show.’

‘Ice.’

‘Storm.’

‘Ice.’

‘Tea, ax, breaker, man, chest, water,’ Jilly said, talking him up the last rungs and into the attic.

She helped him off the ladder, to his feet, away from the trapdoor. She hugged him and told him he was terrific, and Shep didn’t resist, though he did say, ‘Where’s all the ice?’

Down in the closet, Dylan switched off the light. He climbed quickly in the darkness. ‘Good work, Jackson.’

‘De nada, O’Conner.’

On his knees in the gloom, Dylan folded the accordion ladder upward, as quietly as possible reloading it onto the back of the trapdoor, which he would then pull shut. ‘If they aren’t upstairs yet, they’re coming,’ he whispered. ‘Take Shep over there, the southwest corner, behind those boxes.’

‘Where’s all the ice?’ Shepherd asked too loudly.

Jilly hushed him as she guided him across the shadow-choked attic. He wasn’t tall enough to rap the lowest rafters with his forehead, but his big brother would have to duck.

In lower realms the wrecking crew crashed into another room.

A man shouted something unintelligible. Another man returned his shout with a curse, and someone barked with laughter.

A hardness, a roughness, a swagger of presumption in these voices made them sound less like men to Jilly, more like the never quite defined shapes in a nightmare chase, which pursued sometimes on two feet, sometimes on four, alternately howling like men and crying like beasts.

She wondered when the cops would come. If they would come. Dylan had said the nearest town was miles away. The closest neighbor lived half a mile south of here. But surely somebody had heard the gunfire.

Of course the assault had started just five minutes ago, maybe six, and no rural police force would be able to answer such a remote call sooner than another five minutes, more likely ten.

‘Where’s all the ice?’ Shepherd asked as loudly as before.

Instead of hushing him again, Jilly answered in a soft voice with which she hoped to set an example: ‘In the refrigerator, honey. That’s where all the ice is.’

Behind stacked boxes in the southwest corner, Jilly encouraged Shep to sit beside her on the dusty floor.

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