Fear Nothing By Dean R. Koontz

fled.

Two blocks away, outside the post office, stood a pay phone with

winglike sound shields. Above the phone, mounted on the wall of the

building, was a security light behind a wire cage.

When I hung my hat on the cage, shadows fell.

I figured that Manuel Ramirez would still be at home. When I phoned

him, his mother, Rosalina, said that he had been gone for hours. He

was working a double shift because another officer had called in

sick.

This evening he was on desk duty; later, after midnight, he would be on

patrol.

I punched in the main number of the Moonlight Bay Police and asked the

operator if I could speak to Officer Ramirez.

Manuel, in my judgment the best cop in town, is three inches shorter

than I am, thirty pounds heavier, twelve years older, and a Mexican

American. He loves baseball; I never follow sports because I have an

acute sense of time slipping away and a reluctance to use my precious

hours in too many passive activities. Manuel prefers country music; I

like rock. He is a staunch Republican; I have no interest in

politics.

In movies, his guilty pleasure is Abbott and Costello; mine is the

immortal Jackie Chan. We are friends.

“Chris, I heard about your dad,” Manuel said when he came on the

line.

“I don’t know what to say.”

“Neither do I, really.”

“No, there never is anything to say, is there?”

“Not that matters.”

“You going to be okay?”

To my surprise, I couldn’t speak. My terrible loss seemed suddenly to

be a surgeon’s needle that stitched shut my throat and sewed my tongue

to the roof of my mouth.

Curiously, immediately after Dad’s death, I’d been able to answer this

same question from Dr. Cleveland without hesitation.

I felt closer to Manuel than to the physician. Friendship thaws the

nerves, making it possible for pain to be felt.

“You come over some evening when I’m off duty,” Manuel said. “We’ll

drink some beer, eat some tamales, watch a couple of Jackie Chan

movies.”

In spite of baseball and country music, we have much in common, Manuel

Ramirez and I. He works the graveyard shift, from midnight until eight

in the morning, sometimes doubling on the swing shift when, as on this

March evening, there is a personnel shortage. He likes the night as I

do, but he also works it by necessity. Because the graveyard shift is

less desirable than daytime duty, the pay is higher. More important,

he is able to spend afternoons and evenings with his son, Toby, whom he

cherishes. Sixteen years ago, Manuel’s wife, Carmelita, died minutes

after bringing Toby into the world. The boy is gentle, charming-and a

victim of Down’s syndrome. Manuel’s mother moved into his house

immediately after Carmelita’s death and still helps to look after

Toby.

Manuel Ramirez knows about limitations. He feels the hand of fate

every day of his life, in an age when most people no longer believe in

purpose or destiny. We have much in common, Manuel Ramirez and I.

“Beer and Jackie Chan sound great,” I agreed. “But who makes the

tamales-You or your mother?”

“Oh, not mi madre, I promise.”

Manuel is an exceptional cook, and his mother thinks that she is an

exceptional cook. A comparison of their cooking provides a fearsomely

illuminating example of the difference between a good deed and a good

intention.

A car passed in the street behind me, and when I looked down, I saw my

shadow pull at my unmoving feet, stretching from my left side around to

my right, growing not merely longer but blacker on the concrete

sidewalk, straining to tear loose of me and flee-but then snapping back

to the left when the car passed.

“Manuel, there’s something You can do for me, something more than

tamales.”

“You name it, Chris.”

After a long hesitation, I said, “It involves my dad . . . his

body.”

Manuel matched my hesitation. His thoughtful silence was the

equivalent of a cat’s ears pricking with interest.

He heard more in my words than they appeared to convey. His tone was

different when he spoke this time, still the voice of a friend but also

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