Fear Nothing By Dean R. Koontz

in a black suit, as if one of Noah’s neighbors had climbed out of his

casket to go visiting.

The man stopped in the very row of graves in which Orson and I stood,

and he consulted a curious object in his left hand. It appeared to be

the size of a cellular telephone, with an illuminated display screen.

He tapped on the instrument’s keypad. The eerie music of electronic

notes carried briefly through the cemetery, but these were different

from telephone tones.

just as a scarf of cloud blew off the moon, the stranger brought the

sour-apple-green screen closer to his face for a better look at

whatever data it provided, and those two soft lights revealed enough

for me to make an identification. I couldn’t see the red of his hair

or his russet eyes, but even in profile the whippet-lean face and thin

lips were chillingly familiar: Jesse Pinn, assistant mortician.

He was not aware of Orson and me, though we stood only thirty or forty

feet to his left.

We played at being granite. Orson wasn’t growling anymore, even though

the soughing of the breeze through the oaks would easily have masked

his grumble.

Pinn raised his face from the hand-held device, glanced to his right,

at St. Bernadette’s, and then consulted the screen again. Finally he

headed toward the church.

He remained unaware of us, although we were little more than thirty

feet from him.

I looked at Orson.

He looked at me.

Squirrels forgotten, we followed Pinn.

The mortician hurried to the back of the church, never glancing over

his shoulder. He descended a broad set of stone stairs that led to a

basement door.

I followed closely to keep him in sight. Halting only ten feet from

the head of the stairs and at an angle to them, I peered down at him.

If he turned and looked up, he would see me before I could move out of

sight, but I was not overly concerned. He seemed so involved in the

task at hand that the summons of celestial trumpets and the racket of

the dead rising from their graves might not have drawn his attention.

He studied the mysterious device in his hand, switched it off, and

tucked it into an inside coat pocket. From another pocket he extracted

a second instrument, but the light was too poor to allow me to see what

he held; unlike the first item, this one incorporated no luminous

parts.

Even above the susurration of wind and oak leaves, I heard a series of

clicks and rasping noises. These were followed by a hard snap, another

snap, and then a third.

On the fourth snap, I thought I recognized the distinctive sound. A

Lockaid lock-release gun. The device had a thin pick that You slipped

into the key channel, under the pin tumblers. When You pulled the

trigger, a flat steel spring jumped upward and lodged some of the pins

at the sheer line.

A few years ago, Manuel Ramirez gave me a Lockaid demonstration.

Lock-release guns were sold only to law-enforcement agencies, and the

possession of one by a civilian was illegal.

Although Jesse Pinn could hang a consoling expression on his mug as

convincingly as could Sandy Kirk, he incinerated murder victims in a

crematorium furnace to assist in the cover-up of capital crimes, so he

was not likely to be fazed by laws restricting Lockaid ownership.

Maybe he had limits. Maybe, for instance, he wouldn’t push a nun off a

cliff for no reason whatsoever. Nevertheless, recalling Pinn’s sharp

face and the stiletto flicker of his red-brown eyes as he had

approached the crematorium window earlier this evening, I wouldn’t have

put money on the nun at any odds.

The undertaker needed to fire the lock-release gun five times to clear

all the pins and disengage the dead bolt. After cautiously trying the

door, he returned the Lockaid to his pocket.

When he pushed the door inward, the windowless basement proved to be

lighted. Silhouetted, he stood listening on the threshold for perhaps

half a minute, his bony shoulders canted to the left and his half-hung

head cocked to the right, wind-spiked hair bristling like straw;

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