Seize The Night. By: Dean R. Koontz

have been a ghost.

“Your shirt really pops in this weird light, ” I said.

“Yeah? ”

“Bitchin’.” The freight-train rumble rose again, louder than before. The

steel and concrete bones of the structure were grinding together.

The cat, with no need for goggles, led us out of the vestibule.

I followed Roosevelt, Doogie, and Sasha, who might have been three green

spirits haunting a catacomb.

The hardest thing I’d ever had to do in my life harder than attending my

mother’s funeral, harder than sitting by my father’s deathbed was to

leave Bobby alone.

From the vestibule, a sloping tunnel, ten feet in diameter, descended

fifty feet. After reaching the bottom, we followed an entirely

horizontal but wildly serpentine course, and with every turn, the

architecture and engineering progressed from curious to strange to

markedly alien.

The first passageway featured concrete walls, but every tunnel

thereafter, while formed of reinforced concrete, appeared to be lined

with metal. Even in the inadequately revelatory infrared light, I

detected sufficient differences in the appearances of these curved

surfaces to be confident that the type of metal changed from time to

time. If I’d lifted the goggles and switched on an ordinary UV

flashlight, I suspect that I would have seen steel, copper, brass, and

an array of alloys that I couldn’t have identified without a degree in

metallurgy.

The largest of these metal-lined tunnels were about eight feet in

diameter, but we traveled some that were half that size, through which

we had to crawl. In the walls of these cylindrical causeways were

uncounted smaller openings, some were two or three inches in diameter,

others two feet, probing them with the infrared flashlight revealed

nothing more than could have been seen by peering into a drainpipe or a

gun barrel.

We might have been inside an enormous, incomprehensibly elaborate set of

refrigeration coils, or exploring the plumbing that served all the

palaces of all the gods of ancient myths.

Unquestionably, something had once surged through this colossal maze,

liquids or gases. We passed numerous tributaries, in which were anchored

turbines with blades that must have been driven by whatever had been

pumped through this system. At many junctions, various types of gigantic

electrically controlled valves stood ready to cut off, restrict, or

redirect the flow through these Stygian channels.

All the valves were in open or half-open positions, but as we passed

each block point, I worried that if they snapped shut, we would be

imprisoned down here.

These tubes had not been stripped to the concrete, as had all the rooms

and corridors in the first three floors under the hangar.

Consequently, as there were no apparent lighting sources, I assumed that

workmen servicing the system had always carried lamps.

Intermittently, a draft stirred along these strange highways, but for

the most part the atmosphere was as still as that under a bell jar.

Twice, I caught a whiff of smoldering charcoal, but otherwise the air

carried only a faint astringent scent similar to iodine, though not

iodine, which eventually left a bitter taste and caused a mild burning

sensation in my nasal membranes.

The trainlike rumble came and went, lasting longer with each occurrence,

and the silences between these assaults of sound grew shorter.

With every eruption, I expected the ceiling to collapse, burying us as

irrevocably as coal miners are occasionally entombed in veins of

anthracite. Another and utterly chilling sound spiraled along the tunnel

walls from time to time, a shrill keening that must have had its source

in some machinery spinning itself to destruction, or else crawling these

byways was a creature that I had never heard before and that I hoped

never to encounter.

I fought off attacks of claustrophobia, then induced new bouts by

wondering if I were in the sixth circle of Hell or the seventh. But

wasn’t the seventh the Lake of Boiling Blood? Or did that come after the

Fiery Desert? Neither the blood lake nor the great burning sands would

be green, and everything here was relentlessly green. Anyway, Lower Hell

couldn’t be far away, just past the luncheonette that serves only

spiders and scorpions, around the corner from the men’s shop that offers

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