DARKFALL By Dean R. Koontz

Hampton paused. He was hyperventilating. There was a faint sheen of

perspiration on his forehead. He wiped his big hands over his face and

took several slow deep breaths. He went on, then, trying to keep his

voice calm and reasonable, but only half succeeding.

“Lavelle is a dangerous man, Lieutenant, infinitely more dangerous than

you can ever comprehend. I also think he is very probably mad, insane;

there was definitely a quality of insanity about him. That is a most

formidable combination: evil beyond measure, madness, and the power of a

masterfully skilled Bocor.”

“But you say you’re a Houngon, a priest of white magic. Can’t you use

your power against him?”

“I’m a capable Houngon, better than many. But I’m not in this man’s

league. For instance, with great effort, I might be able to put a curse

on his own supply of herbs and powders. I might be able to reach out

and cause a few bottles to fall off the shelves in his study or wherever

he keeps them-if I had seen the place first, of course. However, I

wouldn’t be able to cause so much destruction as he did. And I wouldn’t

be able to conjure up a serpent, as he did. I haven’t that much power,

that much finesse.”

“You could try.”

“No. Absolutely not. In any contest of powers, he would crush me. Like

a bug.”

Hampton went to the door, opened it. The bell above it rang. Hampton

stepped aside, holding the door wide open.

Jack pretended not to get the hint. “Listen, if you’ll just keep asking

around-”

“No. I can’t help you any more, Lieutenant. Can’t you get that through

your head?”

A frigid, blustery wind huffed and moaned and hissed and puffed at the

open door, spraying snowflakes like flecks of spittle.

“Listen,” Jack said. “Lavelle never has to know that you’re asking

about him. He-”

“He would find out!” Hampton said angrily, his eyes wide open as the

door he was holding. “He knows everything-or can find it out.

Everything.”

“But-”

“Please go,” Hampton said.

“Hear me out. I-”

“Go.”

“But-”

“Go, get out, leave, now, damnit, now!” Hampton said in a tone of voice

composed of one part anger, one part terror, and one part panic.

The big man’s almost hysterical fear of Lavelle had begun to affect

Jack. A chill rippled through him, and he found that his hands were

suddenly clammy.

He sighed, nodded. “All right, all right, Mr. Hampton. But I sure

wish-”

“Now, damnit, now!” Hampton shouted.

Jack got out of there.

s The door to Rada slammed behind him.

In the snow-quieted street, the sound was like a rifle blast.

Jack turned and looked back, saw Carver Hampton drawing down the shade

that covered the glass panel in the center of the door. In bold white

letters on the dark canvas, one word was printed: CLOSED.

A moment later the lights went out in the shop.

The snow on the sidewalk was now half an inch deep, twice what it had

been when he had gone into Hampton’s store. It was still coming down

fast, too, out of a sky that was even more somber and more

claustrophobically close than it had been twenty minutes ago.

Cautiously negotiating the slippery pavement, Jack started toward the

patrol car that was waiting for him at the curb, white exhaust trail

pluming up from it. He had taken only three steps when he was stopped

by a sound that struck him as being out of place here on the wintry

street: a ringing telephone. He looked right, left, and saw a pay phone

near the corner, twenty feet behind the waiting black-and-white. In the

uncitylike stillness that the muffling snow brought to the street, the

ringing was so loud that it seemed to be issuing from the air

immediately in front of him.

He stared at the phone. It wasn’t in a booth. There weren’t many real

booths around these days, the kind with the folding door, like a small

closet, that offered privacy; too expensive, Ma Bell said. This was a

phone on a pole, with a scoop-shaped sound battle bending around three

sides of it. Over the years, he had passed a few other public

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