DARKFALL By Dean R. Koontz

It was in the form of a small man, perhaps ten inches high, crouching up

there in the mouth of the duct. Although it possessed the crude form of

a man, it was in no other way humanlike. Its hands and feet resembled

those of the first beast, with dangerous claws and barbed spurs. The

flesh was funguslike, slippery looking, though less green, more yellow

and gray. There were black circles around the eyes and patches of

corrupted-looking black flesh fanning out from the nostrils. Its head

was misshapen, with a toothy mouth that went from ear to ear. And it

had those same hellish eyes, although they were smaller than the eyes in

the ratlike thing.

Jack saw that the man-form beast was holding a weapon. It looked like a

miniature spear. The point was well-honed; it caught the light and

glinted along its cutting edge.

Jack remembered the first two victims of Lavelle’s crusade against the

Carramazza family. They had both been stabbed hundreds of times with a

weapon no bigger than a penknife-yet not a penknife. The medical

examiner had been perplexed; the lab technicians had been baffled. But,

of course, it wouldn’t have occurred to them to explore the possibility

that those homicides were the work of ten-inch voodoo devils and that

the murder weapons were miniature spears.

Voodoo devils? Goblins? Gremlins? What exactly were these things?

Did Lavelle mold them from clay and then somehow invest them with life

and malevolent purpose?

Or were they conjured up with the help of pentagrams and sacrifices and

arcane chants, the way demons were supposedly called forth by Satanists?

Were they demons?

Where did they come from?

The man-form thing didn’t creep down the wall behind the first beast.

Instead, it leaped out of the duct, dropping to the top of the dresser,

landing on its feet, agile and quick.

It looked past Jack and Keith, and it said, “Penny?

Davey?”

Jack pushed Keith across the threshold, into the hall, then followed him

and pulled the door shut behind them.

An instant later, one of the creatures-probably the manlike

beast-crashed against the other side of the door and began to claw

frantically at it.

The kids were already out of the hall, in the living room.

Jack and Keith hurried after them.

Faye shouted, “Jack! Quick! They’re coming through the vent out here!”

“Trying to cut us off,” Jack said.

Jesus, we’re not going to make it, they’re everywhere, the damned

building’s infested with them, they’re all around us In his mind, Jack

quickly slammed the door on those bleak thoughts, closed it tight and

locked it and told himself that their worst enemies were their own

pessimism and fear, which could enervate and immobilize them.

Just this side of the foyer, in the living room, Faye and Rebecca were

helping the kids put on coats and boots.

Snarling, hissing, and eager wordless jabbering issued from the vent

plate in the wall above the long sofa.

Beyond the slots in that grille, silver eyes blazed in the darkness. One

of the screws was being worked loose from inside.

Davey had only one boot on, but time had run out.

Jack picked up the boy and said, “Faye, bring his other boot, and let’s

get moving.”

Keith was already in the foyer. He’d been to the closet and had gotten

coats for himself and Faye. Without pausing to put them on, he grabbed

Faye by the arm and hurried her out of the apartment.

Penny screamed.

Jack turned toward the living room, instinctively crouching slightly and

holding Davey even tighter.

The vent plate was off the duct above the sofa.

Something was starting to come out of the darkness there.

But that wasn’t why Penny had screamed. Another hideous intruder had

come out of the kitchen, and that was what had seized her attention. It

was two-thirds of the way through the dining room, scurrying toward the

living room archway, coming straight at them. Its coloration was

different from that of the other beasts, although no less disgusting; it

was a sickly yellow-white with cancerous-looking green-black pockmarks

all over it, and like the other beasts Lavelle had sent, this one

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