Fear Nothing By Dean R. Koontz

advanced another step, the cat spun away from me and dashed along the

moon-silvered path, vanishing into the darkness.

Elsewhere in the night, the Hummer was on the move again.

Its shriek and snarl rapidly grew louder.

I picked up my pace.

By the time I had gone a hundred yards, the Hummer was no longer

roaring but idling somewhere nearby, its engine noise like a slow deep

panting.

Overhead, the predatory gaze of the lights swept the night for prey.

Upon reaching the next branching of the hollow, I discovered the cat

waiting for me. It sat at the point of division, committed to neither

trail.

When I moved toward the left-hand path, the cat scurried to the

right.

It halted after several steps-and turned its lantern eyes on me.

The cat must have been acutely aware of the searchers all around us,

not just of the noisy Hummer but of the men on foot.

With its sharp senses, it might even perceive pheromones of aggression

streaming from them, violence pending. It would want to avoid these

people as much as I did. Given the chance, I would be better off

choosing an escape route according to the animal’s instincts rather

than according to my own.

The idling engine of the Hummer suddenly thundered. The hard peals

echoed back and forth through the hollows, so that the vehicle seemed

to be simultaneously approaching and racing away.

With this storm of sound, indecision flooded me, and for a moment I

floundered in it.

Then I decided to go the way of the cat.

As I turned from the left-hand trail, the Hummer roared over the

hilltop on the eastern flank of the hollow into which I had almost

proceeded.

For an instant it hung, suspended, as though weightless in a

clock-stopped gap in time, headlights like twin wires leading a circus

tightrope walker into midair, one searchlight stabbing straight up at

the black tent of the sky. Time snapped across that empty synapse and

flowed again: The Hummer tipped forward, and the front wheels crashed

onto the hillside, and the rear wheels crossed the crest, and gouts of

earth and grass spewed out from under its tires as it charged

downhill.

A man whooped with delight, and another laughed. They were reveling in

the hunt.

As the big wagon descended only fifty yards ahead of me, the hand-held

searchlight swept the hollow.

I threw myself to the ground and rolled for cover. The rocky swale was

hell on bones, and I felt my sunglasses crack apart in my shirt

pocket.

As I scrambled to my feet, a beam as bright as an oak-cleaving

thunderbolt sizzled across the ground on which I had been standing.

Wincing at the glare, squinting, I saw the searchlight quiver and then

sweep away to the south. The Hummer was not coming up the hollow

toward me.

I might have stayed where I was, at the intersection of the trails,

with the narrower point of the hill at my back, until the Hummer moved

out of the vicinity, rather than risk encountering it in the next

hollow. When four flashlights winked far back on the trail that I had

followed to this point, however, I ceased to have the luxury of

hesitation. I was beyond the reach of these men’s lights, but they

were approaching at a trot, and I was in imminent danger of

discovery.

When I rounded the point of the hill and ente red the hollow to the

west of it, the cat was still there, as though waiting for me.

Presenting its tail to me, it scampered away, though not so fast that I

lost sight of it.

I was grateful for the stone under me, in which I could not leave

betraying footprints-and then I realized that only fragments of my

broken sunglasses remained in my shirt pocket. As I ran, I fingered my

pocket and felt one bent stem and a jagged piece of one lens. The rest

must have scattered on the ground where I had fallen, at the fork in

the trail.

The four searchers were sure to spot the broken frames. They would

divide their forces, two men to each hollow, and they would come after

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