DARKFALL By Dean R. Koontz

“There are other shops like yours?”

“One shop somewhat like this, although not as large.

And then there are two practicing Houngons-not strong magicians, these

two, little more than amateurs, neither of them powerful enough or

knowledgeable enough to do well for themselves-who sell the stuff of

magic out of their apartments. They have considerable lines of

merchandise to offer to other practitioners. But none of those three

have scruples. They will sell to either the Bocor or the Houngon. They

even sell the instruments required for a blood sacrifice, the ceremonial

hatchets, the razor-edged spoons used to scoop the living eye from the

skull. Terrible people, peddling their wares to anyone, anyone at all,

even to the most wicked and debased.”

“So Lavelle came here when he couldn’t get everything he wanted from

them.”

“Yes. He told me that he’d found most of what he needed, but he said my

shop was the only one with a complete selection of even the most

seldom-used ingredients for spells and incantations. Which is, of

course true. I pride myself on my selection and on the purity of my

goods. But unlike the others, I won’t sell to a Bocor-if I know what he

is. Usually I can spot them. I also won’t sell to those amateurs with

bad intentions, the ones who want to put a curse of death on a

motherin-law or cause sickness in some man who’s a rival for a girl or a

job. I’ll have none of that. Anyway, this man, this one in the

photograph-”

“Lavelle,” Jack said.

“But I didn’t know his name then. As I was packaging the few things

he’d selected, I discovered he was a Bocor, and I refused to conclude

the sale. He thought I was like all the other merchants, that I’d sell

to just anyone, and he was furious when I wouldn’t let him have what he

wanted. I made him leave the shop, and I thought that was the end of

it.”

“But it wasn’t?” Jack asked.

“No.”

“He came back?”

“No.”

“Then what happened?”

Hampton came out from behind the sales counter. He went to the shelves

where the hundreds upon hundreds of bottles were stored, and Jack

followed him.

Hampton’s voice was hushed, a note of fear in it: “Two days after

Lavelle was here, while I was alone in the shop, sitting at the counter

back there, just reading-suddenly, every bottle on those shelves was

flung off, to the floor. All in an instant. Such a crash! Half of

them broke, and the contents mingled together, all ruined. I rushed

over to see what had happened, what had caused it, and as I approached,

some of the spilled herbs and powders and ground roots began to . . .

well, to move . . . to form together . . . and take on life. Out

of the debris, composed of several substances, there arose . . . a

black serpent, about eighteen inches in length. Yellow eyes. Fangs. A

flickering tongue. As real as any serpent hatched from its mother’s

egg.”

Jack stared at the big man, not sure what to think of him or his story.

Until this moment, he had thought that Carver Hampton was sincere in his

religious beliefs and a perfectly level-headed man, no less rational

because his religion was voodoo rather than Catholicism or Judaism.

However, it was one thing to believe in a religious doctrine and in the

possibility of magic and miracles -and quite another thing altogether to

claim to have seen a miracle. Those who swore they had seen miracles

were hysterics, fanatics, or liars. Weren’t they? On the other hand,

if you were at all religious-and Jack was not a man without faith-then

how could you believe in the possibility of miracles and the existence

of the occult without also embracing the claims of at least some of

those who said they had been witness to manifestations of the

supernatural? Your faith could have no substance if you did not also

accept the reality of its effects in this world. It was a thought that

hadn’t occurred to him before, and now he stared at Carver Hampton with

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