Fear Nothing By Dean R. Koontz

concrete, reluctant to touch them even with one of my shoes.

Standing in the next length of sloping tunnel, I turned to examine this

peculiar find.

When I cranked up the flame on the lighter, I discovered that before me

lay not mushrooms but a collection of skulls. The fragile skulls of

birds. The elongated skulls of lizards. The larger skulls of what

might have been cats, dogs, raccoons, porcupines, rabbits, squirrels.

.

Not a scrap of flesh adhered to any of these death’s-heads, as if they

had been boiled clean: white and yellow-white in the butane light,

scores of them, perhaps a hundred. No leg bones, no rib cages, just

skulls. They were arranged neatly side by side in three rows-two on

the bottom step and one on the second from the bottom-facing out, as

though, even with their empty eye sockets, they were here to bear

witness to something.

I had no idea what to make of this. I saw no satanic markings on the

culvert walls, no indications of macabre ceremonies of any kind, yet

the display had an undeniably symbolic purpose. The extent of the

collection indicated obsession, and the cruelty implicit in so much

killing and decapitation was chilling.

Recalling the fascination with death that had gripped me and Bobby

Halloway when we were thirteen, I wondered if some kid, far weirder

than we ever were, had done this grisly work. Criminologists claim

that by the age of three or four, most serial killers begin torturing

and killing insects, progressing to small animals during childhood and

adolescence, and finally graduating to people. Maybe in these

catacombs, a particularly vicious young murderer was practicing for his

life’s work.

In the middle of the third and highest row of these bony visages rested

a gleaming skull that was markedly different from all the others. It

appeared to be human. Small but human. Like the skull of an infant.

“Dear God.”

My voice whispered back to me along the concrete walls.

More than ever, I felt as though I were in a dreaniscape, where even

such things as concrete and bone were no more solid than smoke.

Nevertheless, I did not reach out to touch the small human skull-or any

of the others, for that matter. However unreal they might seem, I knew

that they would be cold, slick, and too solid to the touch.

Anxious to avoid encountering whoever had acquired this grim

collection, I continued downward through the drain.

I expected the cat with the enigmatic eyes to reappear, pale paws

meeting concrete with feather-on-feather silence, but either it

remained out of sight ahead of me or it had detoured into one of the

tributary lines.

Sections of sloped concrete pipe alternated with more spillways, and

just as I was beginning to worry that the lighter didn’t contain enough

fuel to see me to safety, a circle of dim gray light appeared and

gradually brightened ahead. I hurried toward it and found that no

grate barred the lower end of the tunnel, which led into an open

drainage channel of mortar-set river rock.

I was in familiar territory at last, the northern flats of town. A

couple of blocks from the sea. Half a block from the high school.

After the dank culvert, the night air smelled not merely fresh but

sweet. The high points of the polished sky glittered diamondwhite.

According to the digital light board on the Wells Fargo Bank building,

the time was 7:56 P.m., which meant that my father had been dead less

than three hours, though days seemed to have passed since I’d lost

him.

The same sign set the temperature at sixty degrees, but the night

seemed colder to me.

Around the corner from the bank and down the block, the Tidy Time

Laundromat was flooded with fluorescent light. Currently no customers

were doing their laundry.

With the dollar bill ready in my hand, with my eyes squinted to slits,

I went inside, into the flowery fragrance of soap powders and the

chemical keenness of bleach, my head lowered to maximize the protection

provided by the bill of my cap. I ran straight to the change machine,

fed it, snatched up the four quarters that it spat into the tray, and

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