Seize The Night. By: Dean R. Koontz

and grisly souvenir collections for the admiration of family and

neighbors, they are forced to preen privately.

Then I had thought the gallery was nothing more than pornography to

titillate a radically twisted mind. To this freak, the newspaper

headlines might be the equivalent of obscene dialogue. The victim and

crime-scene photographs might get him off more readily than any triple-X

adult film ever made.

But now I saw that the display was an offering. His whole life was an

offering. The murder of his parents, the single killing every twelve

months, his three hundred sixty-four days of stern self-denial each

year, and recently the storm of child murders. Burnt offerings.

As I studied the vile gallery, I didn’t know to whom these terrible

gifts were made, or for what purpose, although even at that point, I

would have been willing to hazard a guess.

The tunnel ended at a fully deployed, eight-foot-diameter gate valve,

which had once been operated by an electric motor.

When Doogie set aside his machine pistol and hooked his fingers into a

groove on the face of the valve, without the aid of a motor he was able

to roll the barrier aside almost as easily as he would have retracted a

sliding door. Although unused for more than two years, it traveled in

its recessed tracks with only a little noise, which was, in any case,

lost in the increasingly ominous sounds that rumbled and squealed

through these drained guts of the “temporal relocator.” Oddly enough, I

thought of the awe stricken, shipwrecked seamen who had been rescued by

Captain Nemo in 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea and then given a tour of

the labyrinthine mechanical bowels of the megalomaniac’s Nautilus.

Eventually they might have felt enough at home aboard that leviathan of

a submarine to break out the hornpipe, play a tune, and dance a

sprightly jig, but even the most gregarious and adaptable of folks, left

to prowl the seemingly endless metal intestines here below the egg room,

would forever feel that they were in alien and hostile territory.

Although Doogie opened the door like valve only three feet, lamplight

poured through from a space beyond, flaring with blinding power in my

infrared lenses.

I raised the goggles to my brow, switched off the infrared flashlight

and jammed it under my belt. The lamplight wasn’t as bright as I had

expected, the lenses had exaggerated it, because they weren’t meant to

function in the ultraviolet spectrum. The others pulled up their

goggles, too.

Beyond the gate valve was a fourteen- or sixteen-foot length of tunnel,

clad in seamlessly butted sleeves of brushed stainless steel,

terminating in a second valve, identical to the first. This one was

already open approximately as far as Doogie had opened the first, the

goggle-defeating UV light issued from the room beyond.

Sasha and Roosevelt remained at the first valve. Armed with the . 38,

Sasha would make sure that no one came along behind us to block what

might be our only exit. Roosevelt, whose left eye was swelling again,

stayed with her because he wasn’t armed and because he was our essential

link to the cat.

The mouser hung with Sasha and Roosevelt, keeping safely out of the

forward action. We hadn’t dropped a trail of bread crumbs on the way in,

and we weren’t a hundred percent certain that we could find the route

back to Bobby and the elevator without feline guidance.

I followed Doogie to the inner gate valve.

After peering into the space beyond the gate, he raised two fingers to

suggest that there were only two people in there about whom we needed to

worry. He indicated that he would go first, moving immediately to the

right after entering, and that I should follow, going to the left.

As soon as he cleared the doorway, I slipped into the room, with the

shotgun thrust in front of me.

The Twilight-of-the-Gods rumble, rattle, bang, and skreek that shook

down through the entire facility, from roof to bedrock, was muffled

here, and the only light came from an eight-battery storm lamp sitting

on a card table.

This chamber was similar in shape to the egg room three floors overhead,

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