DARKFALL By Dean R. Koontz

o’clock. By three-ten, a tide of laughing, jabbering children spilled

through the front doors, down the steps, onto the sidewalk, into the

driving snow that transformed the gray urban landscape of New York into

a dazzling fantasyland. Warmly dressed in knitted caps, earmuffs,

scarves, sweaters, heavy coats, gloves, jeans, and high boots, they

walked with a slight toddle, arms out at their sides because of all the

layers of insulation they were wearing; they looked furry and cuddly and

well-padded and stumpy-legged, not unlike a bunch of magically animated

teddy bears.

Some of them lived near enough and were old enough to be allowed to walk

home, and ten of them piled into a minibus that their parents had

bought. But most were met by a mother or father or grandparent in the

family car or, because of the inclement weather, by one of those same

relatives in a taxi.

Mrs. Shepherd, one of the teachers, had the Dismissal Watch duty this

week. She moved back and forth along the sidewalk, keeping an eye on

everyone, making sure none of the younger kids tried to walk home,

seeing that none of them got into a car with a stranger. Today, she had

the added chore of stopping snowball battles before they could get

started Penny and Davey had been told that their Aunt Faye would pick

them up, instead of their father, but they couldn’t see her anywhere

when they came down the steps, so they moved off to one side, out of the

way.

They stood in front of the emerald-green wooden gate that closed off the

service passageway between Wellton School and the townhouse next door.

The gate wasn’t flush with the front walls of the two buildings, but

recessed eight or ten inches. Trying to stay out of the sharp cold wind

that cruelly pinched their cheeks and even penetrated their heavy coats,

they pressed their backs to the gate, huddling in the shallow depression

in front of it.

Davey said, “Why isn’t Dad coming?”

“I guess he had to work.”

“Why?”

“I guess he’s on an important case.”

“What case?”

“I don’t know.”

“It isn’t dangerous, is it?”

“Probably not.”

“He won’t get shot, will he?”

“Of course not.”

“How can you be sure?”

“I’m sure,” she said, although she wasn’t sure at all.

“Cops get shot all the time.”

“Not that often.”

“What’ll we do if Dad gets shot?”

Immediately after their mother’s death, Davey had handled the loss quite

well. Better than anyone had expected. Better than Penny had handled

it, in fact.

He hadn’t needed to see a psychiatrist. He had cried, sure; he had

cried a lot, for a few days, but then he had bounced back. Lately,

however, a year and a half after the funeral, he had begun to develop an

unnatural fear of losing his father, too. As far as Penny knew, she was

the only one who noticed how terribly obsessed Davey was with the

dangers-both real and imagined -of his father’s occupation. She hadn’t

mentioned her brother’s state of mind to her father, or to anyone else,

for that matter, because she thought she could straighten him out by

herself. After all, she was his big sister; he was her responsibility;

she had certain obligations to him. In the months right after their

mother’s death, Penny had failed Davey; at least that was how she felt.

She had gone to pieces then. She hadn’t been there when he’d needed her

the most. Now, she intended to make it up to him.

“What’ll we do if Dad gets shot?” he asked again.

“He isn’t going to get shot.”

“But if he does get shot. What’ll we do?”

“We’ll be all right.”

“Will we have to go to an orphanage?”

“No, silly.”

“Where would we go then? Huh? Penny, where would we go? ”

“We’d probably go to live with Aunt Faye and Uncle Keith.”

“Yuch.”

“They’re all right.”

“I’d rather go live in the sewers.”

“That’s ridiculous.”

“It’d be neat living in the sewers.”

“Neat is the last thing it’d be.”

“We could come out at night and steal our food.”

“From who-the wings asleep in the gutters?”

“We could have an alligator for a pet!”

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