DARKFALL By Dean R. Koontz

with turquoise accents.

Burt Wicke, the occupant, was in his late forties. He was about six

feet tall, and at one time he’d been solid and strong, but now all the

hard meat of him was sheathed with fat. His shoulders were big but

round, and his chest was big, and his gut overhung his belt, and as he

sat on the edge of the bed, his slacks were stretched tight around his

hammy thighs. Jack found it hard to tell if Wicke had ever been

good-looking. Too much rich food, too much booze, too many cigarettes,

too much of everything had left him with a face that looked partly

melted. His eyes protruded just a bit and were bloodshot. In that

coral and turquoise room, Wicke looked like a toad on a birthday cake.

His voice was a surprise, higher pitched than Jack expected. He had

figured Burt Wicke to be slow-moving, slow-talking, a weary and

sedentary man, but Wicke spoke with considerable nervous energy He

couldn’t sit still, either. He got up from the bed, paced the room sat

down in a chair, bolted up almost at once, paced, all; the while

talking, answering questions-and complaining.

He was a non-stop complainer.

“This won’t take long, will it? I’ve already had to cancel one business

meeting. If this takes long, I’ll have to cancel another.”

“It shouldn’t take long,” Jack said.

“I had breakfast here in the room. Not a very good breakfast. The

orange juice was too warm, and the coffee wasn’t warm enough. I asked

for my eggs over well, and they came sunny-side up. You’d think a hotel

like this, a hotel with this reputation, a hotel this expensive, would

be able to give you a decent room service breakfast. Anyway, I shaved

and got dressed. I was standing in the bathroom, combing my hair, when

I heard somebody shouting. Then screaming. I stepped out of the

bathroom and listened, and I was pretty sure it was all coming from next

door there. More than one voice.”

“What were they shouting?” Rebecca asked.

“Sounded surprised, startled. Scared. Real scared.”

“No, what I mean is-do you remember any words they shouted?”

“No words.”

“Or maybe names.”

“They weren’t shouting words or names; nothing like that.”

“What were they shouting?”

“Well, maybe it was words and names or both, but it didn’t come through

the wall all that distinctly. It was just noise. And I thought to

myself: Christ, not something else gone wrong; this has been a rotten

trip all the way.”

Wicke wasn’t only a complainer; he was a whiner. His voice had the

power to set Jack’s teeth on edge.

“Then what?” Rebecca asked.

“Well, the shouting part didn’t last long. Almost right away, the

shooting started.”

“Those two slugs came through the wall?” Jack asked, pointing to the

holes.

“Not right then. Maybe a minute later. And what the hell is this joint

made of, anyway, if the walls can’t stop a bullet?”

“It was a .357 Magnum,” Jack said. “Nothing’ll stop that.”

“Walls like tissue paper,” Wicke said, not wanting to hear anything that

might contribute to the hotel’s exoneration. He went to the telephone

that stood on a nightstand by the bed, and he put his hand on the

receiver.

“As soon as the shooting started, I scrambled over here, dialed the

hotel operator, told her to get the cops. They were a very long time

coming. Are you always such a long time coming in this city when

someone needs help?”

“We do our best,” Jack said.

“So I put the phone down and hesitated, not sure what to do, just stood

listening to them screaming and shooting over there, and then I realized

I might be in the line of fire, so I started toward the bathroom,

figuring to hole up in there until it all blew over, and then all of a

sudden, Jesus, I was in the line of fire. The first shot came through

the wall and missed my face by maybe six inches. The second one was

even closer. I dropped to the floor and hugged the carpet, but those

were the last two shots-and just a few seconds later, there wasn’t any

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