Fear Nothing By Dean R. Koontz

and for my own good, I resented the invasion, and I could imagine how

deeply I would resent it if it were compulsory rather than voluntary.

She said, “Maybe I shouldn’t tell You. Even though You need to know to

. . . to defend yourself. Telling You all of it is like lighting a

fuse. Sooner or later, your whole world blows up.”

“Was the monkey carrying a disease?”

“I wish it were a disease. Wouldn’t that be nice? Maybe I’d be cured

by now. Or dead. Dead would be better than what’s coming.

She snatched up her empty cordial glass, made a fist around it, and for

a moment I thought she would hurl it across the room.

“The monkey never bit me,” she insisted, “never clawed me, never even

touched me, for God’s sake. But they won’t believe me.

I’m not sure even Rod believed me. They won’t take any chances.

They made me . . . Rod made me submit to sterilization.”

Tears stood in her eyes, unshed but shimmering like the votive light in

the red glass candleholders.

“I was forty-five years old then,” she said, “and I’d never had a

child, because I was already sterile. We’d tried so hard to have a

baby fertility doctors, hormone therapy, everything, everything and

nothing worked.”

Oppressed by the suffering in Angela’s voice, I was barely able to

remain in my chair, looking passively up at her. I had the urge to

stand, to put my arms around her. To be the nurse this time.

With a tremor of rage in her voice, she said, “And still the bastards

made me have the surgery, permanent surgery, didn’t just tie my tubes

but removed my ovaries, cut me, cut out all hope.”

Her voice almost broke, but she was strong. “I was forty-five, and I’d

given up hope anyway, or pretended to give it up. But to have it cut

out of me . . . The humiliation of it, the hopelessness. They

wouldn’t even tell me why. Rod took me out to the base the day after

Christmas, supposedly for an interview about the monkey, about its

behavior. He wouldn’t elaborate. Very mysterious. He took me into

this place . . . this place out there that even most people on the

base didn’t know existed. They sedated me against my will, performed

the surgery without my permission. And when it was all over, the sons

of bitches wouldn’t even tell me why!”

I pushed my chair away from the table and got to my feet. My shoulders

ached, and my legs felt weak. I hadn’t been expecting to hear a story

of this weight.

Although I wanted to comfort her, I didn’t attempt to approach

Angela.

The cordial glass was still sealed in the hard shell of her fist.

Grinding anger had sharpened her once-pretty face into a collection of

knives. I didn’t think she would want me to touch her just then.

Instead, after standing awkwardly at the table for seconds that were

interminable, not sure what to do, I went at last to the back door and

double-checked the dead bolt to confirm that it was engaged.

“I know Rod loved me,” she said, although the anger in her voice didn’t

soften. “It broke his heart, just broke him entirely, to do what he

had to do. Broke his heart to cooperate with them, tricking me into

surgery. He was never the same after that.”

I turned and saw that her fist was cocked. The blades of her face were

polished by candlelight.

“And if his superiors had understood how close Rod and I had always

been, they would have known he couldn’t go on keeping secrets from me,

not when I’d suffered so much for them.”

“Eventually he told You all of it,” I guessed.

“Yes. And I forgave him, truly forgave him for what had been done to

me, but he was still in despair. There was nothing I could do to nurse

him out of it. So deep in despair . . . and so scared.”

Now her anger was veined with pity and with sorrow. “So scared he had

no joy in anything anymore. Finally he killed himself . . .

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