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Midnight by Dean R. Koontz

Satisfied, he returned to the trapdoor and went backward down wooden rungs, into the closet of Harry’s third-floor bedroom. They had removed many of the hanging clothes to be able to open the trap and draw down the collapsible ladder.

Tessa, Chrissie, Harry, and Moose were waiting for him just outside the closet door, in the steadily darkening bedroom.

Sam said, “Yeah, it’ll do.”

“I haven’t been up there since before the war,” Harry said.

“A little dirty, a few spiders, but you’ll be safe. If you’re not at the end of their list, if they do come for you early, they’ll find the house empty, and they’ll never think of the attic. Because how could a man with two bad legs and one bad arm drag himself up there?”

Sam was not sure that he believed what he was saying. But for his own peace of mind as well as Harry’s, he wanted to believe.

“Can I take Moose up there with me?”

“Take that handgun you mentioned,” Tessa said, “but not Moose. Well-behaved as he is, he might bark at just the wrong moment.”

“Will Moose be safe down here … when they come?” Chrissie wondered.

“I’m sure he will be,” Sam said. “They don’t want dogs. Only people.”

“We better get you up there, Harry,” Tessa said. “It’s twenty Past five. We’ve got to be out of here soon.”

The bedroom was filling with shadows almost as rapidly as a glass filling with blood-dark wine.

Part Three

THE NIGHT BELONGS TO THEM

Montgomery told me about the Law … became oddly weakened about nightfall; that then the animal was at its strongest; a spirit of adventure sprang up in them at the dusk; they would dare things they never seemed to dream about by day.

—H. G. WELLS,

The Island of Dr. Moreau

1

In the scrub-covered hills that surrounded the abandoned Icarus Colony, gophers and field mice and rabbits and a few foxes scrambled out of their burrows and shivered in the rain, listening. In the two nearest stands of pine, sweet gum, and autumn-stripped birch, one just to the south and one immediately east of the old colony, squirrels and raccoons stood to attention.

The birds were the first to respond. In spite of the rain, they flew from their sheltered nests in the trees, in the dilapidated old barn, and in the crumbling eaves of the main building itself. Cawing and screeching, they spiraled into the sky, darted and swooped, then streaked directly to the house. Starlings, wrens, crows, owls, and hawks all came in shrill and flapping profusion. Some flew against the walls, as if struck blind, battering insistently until they broke their necks, or until they snapped their wings and fell to the ground where they fluttered and squeaked until they were exhausted or had perished. Others, equally frenzied, found open doorways and windows through which they entered without damaging themselves.

Though wildlife within a two-hundred-yard radius had heard the call, only the nearer animals responded obediently. Rabbits leaped, squirrels scurried, coyotes loped, foxes dashed, and raccoons waddled in that curious way of theirs, through wet grass and rain-bent weeds and mud, toward the source of the siren song. Some were predators and some, by nature, were timid prey, but they moved side by side without conflict. It might have been a scene from an animated Disney film—the neighborly and harmonious folk of field and forest responding to the sweet guitar or harmonica music of some elderly black man who, when they gathered around him, would tell them stories of magic and great adventure. But there was no kindly, tale-spinning Negro where they were going, and the music that drew them was dark, cold, and without melody.

2

While Sam struggled to lift Harry up the ladder and into the attic, Tessa and Chrissie took the wheelchair to the basement garage. It was a heavy-duty motorized model, not a light collapsible chair, and would not fit through the trap. Tessa and Chrissie parked it just inside the big garage door, so it looked as if Harry had gotten this far in his chair and had left the house, perhaps in a friend’s car.

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