Fear Nothing By Dean R. Koontz

look at myself, because the single bulb in the overhead fixture was of

low wattage and had a peach tint.

Only rarely have I seen my face in full light.

Sasha says that I remind her of James Dean, more as he was in East of

Eden than in Rebel Without a Cause.

I myself don’t perceive the resemblance. The hair is the same, yes,

and the pale blue eyes. But he looked so wounded, and I do not see

myself that way.

I am not James Dean. I am no one but me, Christopher Snow, and I can

live with that.

Finished with the lotion, I returned to the bedroom. Orson raised his

head from the armchair to savor the coconut scent.

I was already wearing athletic socks, Nikes, blue ‘cans, and a black

T-shirt. I quickly pulled on a black denim shirt with long sleeves and

buttoned it at the neck.

Orson trailed me downstairs to the foyer. Because the porch was deep

with a low ceiling, and because two massive California live oaks stood

in the yard, no direct sun could reach the sidelights flanking the

front door; consequently, they were not covered with curtains or

blinds. The leaded panes-geometric mosaics of clear, green, red, and

amber glass-glowed softly like jewels.

I took a zippered, black leather jacket from the coat closet. I would

be out after dark, and even following a mild March day, the central

coast of California can turn chilly when the sun goes down.

From the closet shelf, I snatched a navy-blue, billed cap and pulled it

on, tugging it low on my head. Across the front, above the visor, in

ruby-red embroidered letters, were the words Mystery Train.

One night during the previous autumn, I had found the cap in Fort

Wyvern, the abandoned military base inland from Moonlight Bay. It had

been the only object in a cool, dry, concrete-walled room three stories

underground.

Although I had no idea to what the embroidered words might refer, I had

kept the cap because it intrigued me.

As I turned toward the front door, Orson whined beseechingly.

I stooped and petted him. “I’m sure Dad would like to see You one last

time, fella. I know he would. But there’s no place for You in a

hospital.”

His direct, coal-black eyes glimmered. I could have sworn that his

gaze brimmed with grief and sympathy. Maybe that was because I was

looking at him through repressed tears of my own.

My friend Bobby Halloway says that I tend to anthropomorphize animals,

ascribing to them human attributes and attitudes which they do not, in

fact, possess.

Perhaps this is because animals, unlike some people, have always

accepted me for what I am. The four-legged citizens of Moonlight Bay

seem to possess a more complex understanding of life-as well as more

kindness-than at least some of my neighbors.

Bobby tells me that anthropomorphizing animals, regardless of my

experiences with them, is a sign of immaturity. I tell Bobby to go

copulate with himself.

I comforted Orson, stroking his glossy coat and scratching behind his

ears. He was curiously tense. Twice he cocked his head to listen

intently to sounds I could not hear-as if he sensed a threat looming,

something even worse than the loss of my father.

At that time, I had not yet seen anything suspicious about Dad’s

impending death. Cancer was only fate, not murder-unless You wanted to

try bringing criminal charges against God.

That I had lost both parents within two years, that my mother had died

when she was only fifty-two, that my father was only fifty-six as he

lay on his deathbed . . . well, all this just seemed to be my poor

luck-which had been with me, literally, since my conception.

Later, I would have reason to recall Orson’s tension-and good reason to

wonder if he had sensed the tidal wave of trouble washing toward us.

Bobby Halloway would surely sneer at this and say that I am doing worse

than anthropomorphizing the mutt, that now I am ascribing superhuman

attributes to him. I would have to agree-and then tell Bobby to go

copulate vigorously with himself.

Anyway, I petted and scratched and generally comforted Orson until a

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