Seize The Night. By: Dean R. Koontz

Roosevelt insisted on helping us clear up the remaining mess.

Although it seemed peculiar to be doing housework side by side with a

national monument and heir of Saint Francis, we gave him the vacuum

cleaner.

Mungojerrie woke when the vacuum wailed, raised his head long enough to

express displeasure with a quick baring of his fangs, and then appeared

to go to sleep again.

My kitchen is large, but it seems small when Roosevelt Frost is in-it,

regardless of whether he’s vacuuming. He stands six feet four, and the

formidable dimensions of his neck, shoulders, chest, back, and arms make

it difficult to believe that he was formed in anything as fragile as a

womb, he seems to have been carved out of a granite quarry or poured in

a foundry, or perhaps built in a truck factory. He looks considerably

younger than he is, with only a few gray hairs at his temples. He

succeeded big time in football not merely because of his size but

because of his brains, at sixty-three he is nearly as strong as he ever

was and i’m guessing even smarter, because he’s a man who’s always

learning.

He also vacuums like a sonofabitch. Together, the three of us soon

finished setting the kitchen right.

It would never again be entirely right, I’m afraid, not with only one

shelf of Royal Worcester, Evesham pattern, remaining in the display

cabinet. The empty shelves were a sad sight. My mother had loved those

fine dishes, the soft colors of the hand-painted apples and plums on the

coffee cups, the blackberries and pears on the salad plates.

.

.

. My mother’s favorite things were not my mother they were merely her

things yet, though we like to believe that memories are as permanent as

engravings in steel, even memories of love and great kindness are in

fact frighteningly ephemeral in their details, and we remember best

those that are linked to places and things, memory embeds in the form

and weight and texture of real objects, and there it endures to be

brought forth vividly with a touch.

There was a second set of dishes, the everyday stuff, and while

Roosevelt set the kitchen table with cups and saucers, I brewed a pot of

coffee.

In the refrigerator, Bobby discovered a large bakery box crammed full of

the pecan-cinnamon buns that are among my all-time-favorite things.

“Carpe crustulorum! ” he cried.

Roosevelt said, “What was that? ” I said, “Don’t ask.”

“Seize the pastry, ” Bobby translated.

I brought a couple of pillows from the living room and put them on one

of the chairs, which allowed Mungojerrienow awaketo sit high enough to

be part of the gathering.

As Roosevelt was breaking off bits of a cinnamon bun and soaking them in

the saucer of milk that he had poured for the cat, Sasha came home from

whatever business she had been about. Roosevelt calls her daughter, the

way he sometimes calls me and Bobby son, which is just his way, though

he thinks so highly of Sasha that I suspect he would be pleased to adopt

her. I was standing behind him when he lifted her and hugged her, as

though she were a little girl, she entirely disappeared in his bearish

embrace, except for one sneaker-clad foot, which dangled an inch off the

floor.

Sasha brought the chair from her composition table in the dining room,

positioning it between my chair and Bobby’s. She fingered Bobby’s sleeve

and said, “Bitchin’ shirt.”

“Thanks.”

“I’ve seen Doogie, ” Sasha said. “He’s putting together a package of

equipment, ordnance.

It’s now … just past three o’clock.

We’ll be ready to go as soon as it’s dark.”

“Ordnance? ” Bobby asked.

“Doogie’s got some really fine tech support.”

“Tech support? ”

“We’re going to be prepared for contingencies.”

“Contingencies? ” Bobby turned to me. “Bro, are you sleeping with G. I.

Jane? ”

“Emma Peel, ” I corrected. To Sasha-Emma, I said, “We may need some

ordnance. Manuel and two deputies were here, confiscated our weapons.”

“Broke some china, ” Bobby said.

“Smashed some furniture, ” I added.

“Kicked the toaster around, ” Bobby said.

“We can count on Doogie, ” Sasha said. “Why the toaster? ” Bobby

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