DARKFALL By Dean R. Koontz

left at the corner, moving out of sight.

Jack pounded through the snow, which was almost over the tops of his

boots in some places, and his heart triphammered, and his breath spurted

from him in white clouds, and he slipped, almost fell, regained his

balance, ran, ran, and it seemed to him that he wasn’t running along a

real street, that this was only a street in a dream, a nightmare place

from which there was no escape.

In the elevator, on the way up to the fourteenth floor, where Anson and

Francine Dorset had an apartment, Faye said, “Not a word about voodoo or

any of that nonsense. You hear me? They’ll think you’re crazy.”

Keith said, “Well, I don’t know about voodoo. But I sure as hell saw

something strange.”

“Don’t you dare go raving about it to Anson and Francine. He’s your

business partner, for heaven’s sake.

You’ve got to go on working with the man. That’s going to be hard to do

if he thinks you’re some sort of superstitious nut. A broker’s got to

have an image of stability. A banker’s image. Bankers and brokers.

People want to see stable, conservative men at a brokerage firm before

they trust it with their investments. You can’t afford the damage to

your reputation. Besides, they were only rats.”

“They weren’t rats,” he said. “I saw-”

“Nothing but rats.”

“I know what I saw.”

“Rats,” she insisted. “But we’re not going to tell Anson and Francine

we have rats. What would they think of us? I won’t have them knowing

we live in a building with rats. Why, Francine already looks down on

me, she looks down on everyone; she thinks she’s such a blueblood, that

family she comes from. I won’t give her the slightest advantage. I

swear I won’t. Not a word about rats. What we’ll tell them is that

there’s a gas leak. They can’t see our building from their apartment

and they won’t be going out on a night like this, so we’ll tell them

we’ve been evacuated because of a gas leak.”

“Faye-”

“And tomorrow morning,” she said determinedly, “I’ll start looking for a

new place for us.”

“But-”

“I won’t live in a building with rats. I simply won’t do it, and you

can’t expect me to. You should want out of there yourself, just as fast

as it can be arranged.”

“But they weren’t-”

“We’ll sell the apartment. And maybe it’s even time we got out of this

damned dirty city altogether. I’ve been half wanting to get out for

years. You know that.

Maybe it’s time we start looking for a place in Connecticut. I know you

won’t be happy about commuting, but the train isn’t so bad, and think of

all the advantages.

Fresh air. A bigger place for the same money. Our own pool. Wouldn’t

that be nice? Maybe Penny and Davey could come and stay with us for the

entire summer.

They shouldn’t spend their entire childhood in the city.

It isn’t healthy. Yes, definitely, I’ll start looking into it

tomorrow.”

“Faye, for one thing, everything’ll be shut up tight on account of the

blizzard-”

“That won’t stop me. You’ll see. First thing tomorrow.”

The elevator doors opened.

In the fourteenth-floor corridor, Keith said, “Aren’t you worried about

Penny and Davey? I mean, we left them-”

“They’ll be fine,” she said, and she even seemed to believe it. “It was

only rats. You don’t think rats are going to follow them out of the

building? They’re in no danger from a few rats. What I’m most worried

about is that father of theirs, telling them it’s voodoo, scaring them

like that, stuffing their heads full of such nonsense. What’s gotten

into that man? Maybe he does have a psychotic killer to track down, but

voodoo has nothing to do with it. He doesn’t sound rational. Honestly,

I just can’t understand him; no matter how hard I try, I just can’t.”

They had reached the door to the Dorset apartment.

Keith rang the bell.

Faye said, “Remember, not a word!”

Anson Dorset must have been waiting with his hand on the doorknob ever

since they phoned up from downstairs, for he opened up at once, just as

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