Seize The Night. By: Dean R. Koontz

Spanish, Italian, and English, while I’m limited strictly to English and

a few comforting mottoes in Latin, he’s full of political opinions,

while I find politics boring and sleazy, he’s a great cook, but the only

thing I can do well with food is eat it. In spite of all these

differences and many others, we once shared a love of people and a love

of life that made us friends.

For years he had worked the graveyard shift, the top cop of the night,

but since Chief Lewis Stevenson died one month ago, Manuel had been head

of the department. In the night world where I had met him and become his

friend, he was once a bright presence, a good cop and a good man.

Things change, especially here in the new Moonlight Bay, and although he

now works the day, he has given his heart to darkness and is not the

person I once knew.

“Any one else here? ” Manuel asked.

“No.” I heard Feeney and the other deputy talking in the foyer and then

footsteps on the stairs.

“Got your message, ” Manuel told me. “The license number.” I nodded.

“Sasha Good all was at Lilly Wing’s house last night.”

“Maybe it was a Tupperware party, ” I said.

Breaking the magazine out of the Glock, Manuel said, “You two showed up

just before dawn. You parked behind the garage and came in the back

way.”

“We needed some Tupperware, ” Bobby said.

“Where were you all night? ”

“Studying Tupperware catalogs, ” I said.

“You disappoint me, Chris.”

“You think I’m more the Rubbermaid type?

” Manuel said, “I never knew you to be a smartass.”

“I’m a man of countless facets.” A subdued response to his questioning

would be interpreted as fear, and any show of fear would invite harsher

treatment. We both knew that the perverse martial law in force during

this emergency had never been legally declared, and though it was

unlikely that any authority would ever hold Manuel or his men

accountable for high crimes or misdemeanors, he couldn’t be certain

there would be no consequences for his illegal acts. Besides, he’d once

been a by-the-book lawman, and beneath all his self justification, he

still had a conscience. Wise ass remarks were my way and Bobby’s way of

reminding Manuel that we knew as well as he did that his authority was

now mostly illegitimate and that pushed too hard, we would resist it.

“Don’t I disappoint you, too? ” Bobby asked.

“I’ve always known what you are, ” Manuel said, dropping the pistol

magazine into one of his pockets.

“Likewise. You should change brands of face makeup. Shouldn’t he change

brands of makeup, Chris? ”

“Something that covers better, ” I said.

“Yeah, ” Bobby said to Manuel, “I can still see the three sixes on your

forehead.” Without responding, Manuel tucked my Glock under his belt.

“Did you check out the license number? ” I asked him.

“Useless. The Suburban was stolen earlier in the evening. We found it

abandoned this afternoon, near the marina.”

“Any leads? ”

“None of this is your business. I’ve got two things to say to you,

Chris. Two reasons I’m here. Stay out of this.”

“Is that number one? ”

“What?”

“Is that number one of the two? Or is that bonus advice? ”

“Two things we can remember, ” Bobby said. “But if there’s a lot of

bonus advice, we’ll have to take notes.”

“Stay out of this, ” Manuel repeated, speaking to me and ignoring Bobby.

There was no unnatural luminosity in his eyes, but the hard edge in his

voice was as chilling as animal eye shine. “You’ve used up all the

get-out-of jail-free cards you had any right to expect from me. I mean

it, Chris.” A crash came from upstairs. A heavy piece of furniture had

been tipped over.

I started toward the hall door.

Manuel stopped me by drawing his billy club and slamming it hard against

the table. The rap was as loud as a gunshot. He said, “You heard me tell

Frank not to trash the place too much. Just relax.”

“There aren’t any more guns, ” I said angrily.

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