DARKFALL By Dean R. Koontz

Really?”

“Well, it’s hard to know exactly what we ought to call them, ” Rebecca

said.

“Goblins was the only word I could think of when I saw them,” Penny

said. “It just popped into my mind.”

“And it’s a pretty darned good word,” Rebecca assured her. “You

couldn’t have thought of anything better, so far as I’m concerned. And,

you know, if you think back to all the fairytales you ever heard,

goblins were always more bark than bite. About all they ever really did

to anyone was scare them. So if we’re patient and careful, really

careful, then everything will be all right.”

Jack admired and appreciated the way Rebecca was handling the children,

alleviating their anxiety. Her voice had a soothing quality. She

touched them continually as she spoke to them, squeezed and stroked

them, gentled them down.

Jack pulled up his sleeve and looked at his watch.

Ten-fourteen.

They huddled together in the shadows under the stairs, waiting. Waiting.

CHAPTER SIX

For a while Lavelle lay on the floor of the dark bedroom, stunned,

breathing only with difficulty, numb with pain. When Rebecca Chandler

shot a few of those small assassins in the Jamisons’ apartment, Lavelle

had been in psychic contact with them, and he’d felt the impact of the

bullets on their golem bodies. He hadn’t been injured, not any more

than the demonic entities themselves had been injured. His skin wasn’t

broken.

He wasn’t bleeding. In the morning, there would be no bruises, no

tenderness of flesh. But the impact of those slugs had been agonizingly

real and had rendered him briefly unconscious.

He wasn’t unconscious now. Just disoriented. When the pain began to

subside a little, he crawled around the room on his belly, not certain

what he was searching for, not even certain where he was. Gradually he

regained his senses. He crept back to the bed, levered himself onto the

mattress, and flopped on his back, groaning.

Darkness touched him.

Darkness healed him.

Snow tapped the windows.

Darkness breathed over him.

Roof rafters creaked in the wind.

Darkness whispered to him.

Darkness.

Eventually, the pain was gone.

But the darkness remained. It embraced and caressed him. He suckled on

it. Nothing else soothed as completely and as deeply as the darkness.

In spite of his unsettling and painful experience, he was eager to

reestablish the psychic link with the creatures that were in pursuit of

the Dawsons. The ribbons were still tied to his ankles, wrists, chest,

and head. The spots of cat’s blood were still on his cheeks. His lips

were still anointed with blood. And the blood veve was still on his

chest. All he had to do was repeat the proper chants, which he did,

staring at the tenebrous ceiling.

Slowly, the bedroom faded around him, and he was once again with the

silver-eyed horde, relentlessly stalking the Dawson children.

Ten-fifteen.

Ten-sixteen.

While they huddled under the stairs, Jack looked at the bite on

Rebecca’s left hand. Three puncture marks were distributed over an area

as large as a nickel, on the meatiest part of her palm, and there was a

small tear in the skin, as well, but the lizard-thing hadn’t bitten

deeply. The flesh was only slightly puffy. The wound no longer wept;

there was only dried blood.

“How does it feel?”

“Burns a bit,” she said.

“That’s all?”

“It’ll be fine. I’ll put my glove on; that ought to help prevent it

from breaking open and bleeding again.”

“Keep a watch on it, okay? If there’s any discoloration, any more

swelling, anything at all odd about it, maybe we ought to get you to a

hospital.”

“And when I talk to the doctor, what’ll I say happened to me?”

“Tell him you were bitten by a goblin. What else?”

“Might be worth it just to see his expression.”

Ten-seventeen.

Jack examined Davey’s coat, at which the lizard had clawed in a

murderous frenzy. The garment was heavy and well-made; the fabric was

sturdy. Nevertheless, the creature’s claws had sliced all the way

through in at least three places-and through the quilted lining, too.

It was a miracle that Davey was unharmed. Although the claws had

pierced the coat as if it were so much cheesecloth, they hadn’t torn the

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