Fear Nothing By Dean R. Koontz

The darkness of closed spaces is profoundly different from the darkness

of the night; the night has no boundaries, and it offers endless

mysteries, discoveries, wonders, opportunities for joy.

Night is the flag of freedom under which I live, and I will live free

or die.

I was sickened by the prospect of getting back into the patrol car with

the dead man long enough to wipe down everything on which I might have

left a fingerprint. It would be a futile exercise, anyway, because I’d

surely overlook one critical surface.

Besides, a fingerprint wasn’t likely to be the only evidence that I’d

left behind. Hairs. A thread from my jeans. A few tiny fibers from

my Mystery Train cap. Orson’s hairs in the backseat, the marks of his

claws on the upholstery. And no doubt other things equally or more

incriminating.

‘d been damn lucky. No one had heard the shots. But by their nature,

both luck and time run out, and although my watch contained a microchip

rather than a mainspring, I swore that I could hear it ticking.

Orson was nervous, too, vigorously sniffing the air for monkeys or

another menace.

I hurried to the back of the patrol car and thumbed the button to

release the trunk lid. It was locked, as I’d feared.

Tick, tick, tick.

Steeling myself, I returned to the open front door. I inhaled deeply,

held my breath, and leaned inside.

Stevenson sat twisted in his seat, head tipped back against the

doorpost. His mouth shaped a silent gasp of ecstasy, and his teeth

were bloody, as though he had fulfilled his dreams, had been biting

young girls.

Drawn by a meager cross-draft, entering through the shattered window, a

scrim of fog floated toward me, as if it were steam rising off the

still-warm blood that stained the front of the dead man’s uniform.

I had to lean in farther than I hoped, one knee on the passenger seat,

to switch off the engine.

Stevenson’s black-olive eyes were open. No life or unnatural light

glimmered in them, yet I half expected to see them blink, swim into

focus, and fix on me.

Before the chief’s clammy gray hand could reach out to clutch at me, I

plucked the keys from the ignition, backed out of the car, and finally

exhaled explosively.

In the trunk I found the large first-aid kit that I expected. From it,

I extracted only a thick roll of gauze bandage and a pair of

scissors.

While Orson patrolled the entire perimeter of the squad car, diligently

sniffing the air, I unrolled the gauze, doubling it again and again

into a collection of five-foot loops before snipping it with the

scissors. I twisted the strands tightly together, then tied a knot at

the upper end, another in the middle, and a third at the lower end.

After repeating this exercise, I joined the two multiple-strand lengths

together with a final knot-and had a fuse approximately ten feet

long.

Tick, tick, tick.

I coiled the fuse on the sidewalk, opened the fuel port on the side of

the car, and removed the tank cap. Gasoline fumes wafted out of the

neck of the tank.

At the trunk again, I replaced the scissors and what remained of the

roll of gauze in the first-aid kit. I closed the kit and then the

trunk.

The parking lot remained deserted. The only sounds were the drops of

condensation plopping from the Indian laurel onto the squad car and the

soft ceaseless padding of my worried dog’s paws.

Although it meant another visit with Lewis Stevenson’s corpse, I

returned the keys to the ignition. I’d seen a few episodes from the

most popular crime series on television, and I knew how easily even

fiendishly clever criminals could be tripped up by an ingenious

homicide detective. Or by a best-selling female mystery novelist who

solves real murders as a hobby. Or a retired spinster schoolteacher.

All this between the opening credits and the final commercial for a

vaginal deodorant. I intended to give them-both the professionals and

the meddlesome hobbyists-damned little with which to work.

The dead man croaked at me as a bubble of gas broke deep in his

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