Fear Nothing By Dean R. Koontz

tarnishing my image as an emotionless, efficient homicide machine.

Cool with the spider now, I also realized that I could at last hear the

priest’s voice clearly enough to understand his every word:

hurts, yes, of course, it hurts very much. But now I’ve cut the

transponder out of You, cut it out and crushed it, and they can’t

follow You anymore.”

I flashed back to the memory ofJesse Pinn stalking through the cemetery

earlier in the night, holding the peculiar instrument in his hand,

listening to faint electronic tones and reading data on a small,

glowing green screen. He’d evidently been tracking the signal from a

surgically implanted transponder in this creature. A monkey, was it?

Yet not a monkey?

“The incision wasn’t very deep,” the priest continued. “The

transponder was just under the subcutaneous fat. I’ve sterilized the

wound and sewn it up.” He sighed. “I wish I knew how much You

understand me, if at all.”

In Father Tom’s journal, he had referred to the members of a new troop

that was less hostile and less violent than the first, and he had

written that he was committed to their liberation. Why there should be

a new troop, as opposed to an old one, or why they should be set loose

in the world with transponders under their skin-even how these smarter

monkeys of either troop could have come into existence in the first

place-I couldn’t fathom. But it was clear that the priest styled

himself as a modern-day abolitionist fighting for the rights of the

oppressed and that this rectory was a key stop on an underground

railroad to freedom.

When he had confronted Father Tom in the church basement, Pinn must

have believed that this current fugitive had already received

superficial surgery and moved on, and that his hand-held tracker was

picking up the signal from the transponder no longer embedded in the

creature it was meant to identify. Instead, the fugitive was

recuperating here in the attic.

The priest’s mysterious visitor mewled softly, as if in pain, and the

cleric replied with a sympathetic patter perilously close to baby

talk.

Taking courage from the memory of how meekly the priest had responded

to the undertaker, I crossed the remaining couple of feet to the final

wall of boxes. I stood with my back to the end of the row, knees bent

only slightly to accommodate the slope of the roof.

From here, to see the priest and the creature with him, I needed only

to lean to my right, turn my head, and look into the perimeter aisle

along the south flank of the attic where the light and the voices

originated.

I hesitated to reveal my presence only because I recalled some of the

odder entries in the priest’s diary: the ranting and paranoid passages

that bordered on incoherence, the two hundred repetitions of I believe

in the mercy of Christ. Perhaps he wasn’t always as meek as he had

been with Jesse Pinn.

Overlaying the odors of mildew and dust and old cardboard was a new

medicinal scent composed of rubbing alcohol, iodine, and an astringent

antiseptic cleanser.

Somewhere in the next aisle, the fat spider reeled itself up its

filament, away from the lamplight, and the magnified arachnid shadow

rapidly dwindled across the slanted ceiling, shrinking into a black dot

and finally vanishing.

Father Tom spoke reassuringly to his patient: “I have antibiotic

powder, capsules of various penicillin derivatives, but no effective

painkiller.

I wish I did. But this world is about suffering, isn’t it?

This vale of tears. You’ll be all right. You’ll be just fine. I

promise.

God will look after You through me.”

Whether the rector of St. Bernadette’s was a saint or villain, one of

the few rational people left in Moonlight Bay or way insane, I couldn’t

judge. I didn’t have enough facts, didn’t understand the context of

his actions.

I was certain of only one thing: Even if Father Tom might be rational

and doing the right thing, his head nevertheless contained enough loose

wiring to make it unwise to let him hold the baby during a baptism.

“I’ve had some very basic medical training,” the priest told his

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