DARKFALL By Dean R. Koontz

of otherworldly forces into this world, their mere existence was an

intolerable abrasion of the nerves, the soul. He assumed they were

Lavelle’s hellish emissaries, bent on the brutal destruction of the

Carramazza family, for to the best of his knowledge there was no other

Bocor in New York who could have summoned such creatures from the

Underworld.

He sipped his Scotch. He wanted to get roaring drunk. But he wasn’t

much of a drinking man. Besides, this night of all nights, he must

remain alert, totally in control of himself. Therefore, he allowed

himself only small sips of whiskey.

The Gates had been opened. The very Gates of Hell.

Just a crack. The latch had barely been slipped. And through the

applicator of his formidable powers as a Bocor, Lavelle was holding the

Gates against the crush of demonic entities that sought to push forth

from the other side. Carver could sense all of those things in the

currents of the ether, in the invisible and soundless tides of benign

and malevolent energies that ebbed and flowed over the great metropolis.

Opening the Gates was a wildly dangerous step to have taken. Few Bocors

were even capable of doing it.

And of those few, fewer still would have dared such a thing. Because

Lavelle evidently was one of the most powerful Bocors who had ever drawn

a sieve, there was good reason to believe that he would be able to

maintain control of the Gates and that, in time, when the Carramazzas

were disposed of, he would be able to cast back the creatures that he

had permitted out of Hell.

But if he lost control for even a moment .

Then God help us, Carver thought.

If He will help us.

If He can help us.

A hurricane-force gust of wind slammed into the building and whined

through the eaves.

The window rattled in front of Carver, as if something more than the

wind was out there and wanted to get in at him.

A whirling mass of snow pressed to the glass. Incredibly, those

hundreds upon hundreds of quivering, suspended flakes seemed to form a

leering face that glared at Hampton. Although the wind huffed and

hammered and whirled and shifted directions and then shifted back again,

that impossible face did not dissolve and drift away on the changing air

currents; it hung there, just beyond the pane, unmoving, as if it were

painted on canvas.

Carver lowered his eyes.

In time the wind subsided a bit.

When the howling of it had quieted to a moan, he looked up once more.

The snow-formed face was gone.

He sipped his Scotch. The whiskey didn’t warm him.

Nothing could warm him this night.

Guilt was one reason he wished he could get drunk.

He was eaten by guilt because he had refused to give Lieutenant Dawson

any more help. That had been wrong. The situation was too dire for him

to think only about himself. The Gates were open, after all. The world

stood at the brink of Armageddon-all because one Bocor, driven by ego

and pride and an unslakeable thirst for blood, was willing to take any

risk, no matter how foolish, to settle a personal grudge. At a time

like this, a Houngon had certain responsibilities. Now was an hour for

courage. Guilt gnawed at him because he kept remembering the

midnight-black serpent that Lavelle had sent, and with that memory

tormenting him, he couldn’t find the courage he required for the task

that called.

Even if he dared get drunk, he would still have to carry that burden of

guilt. It was far too heavy-immense-to be lifted by booze alone.

Therefore, he was now drinking in hope of finding courage. It was a

peculiarity of whiskey that, in moderation, it could sometimes make

heroes of the very same men of whom it had made buffoons on other

occasions.

He must find the courage to call Detective Dawson and say, I wont to

help.

More likely than not, Lavelle would destroy him for becoming involved.

And whatever death Lavelle chose to administer, it would not be an easy

one.

He sipped his Scotch.

He looked across the room at the wall phone.

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