Seize The Night. By: Dean R. Koontz

though this was much smaller, about thirty feet long and fifteen feet in

diameter at its widest point. The curving surfaces were sheathe not in

that glassy, gold-flecked substance but in what appeared to be ordinary

copper.

My heart soared when I saw the four missing children sitting with their

backs to the wall in the shadows at one end of the room. They were

exhausted and frightened. Their small wrists and ankles were bound, and

their mouths were covered with strips of cloth tape. They were not

visibly injured, however, and their eyes widened with amazement at the

sight of Doogie and me.

Then I spotted Orson, lying on his side, near the kids, muzzled and

restrained. His eyes were open, and he was breathing. Alive.

Before my vision could blur, I looked away from him.

In the center of the room, frozen by Doogie’s gun, two men sat in padded

folding chairs, facing each other across the card table that held the

storm lamp. In this stark tableau, they reminded me of characters in a

stripped-down stage set from one of those stultifying minimalist plays

about boredom, isolation, emotional disconnection, the futility of

modern relationships, and the sobering philosophical implications of the

cheeseburger.

The guy on the right was the abb who had tried to brain me with a two

by-four under the warehouse. He was wearing the same clothes he’d been

wearing then, and he still had those tiny white teeth, although his

smile was considerably more strained than it had been previously, as

though he had just discovered a corn worm among that mouthful of white

kernels.

I wanted to pump one shot into his mug, because I sensed not just

smugness in the geek, but also vanity. After he took a magnum round at

such close range, the only word adequate to describe his face would also

spur on a dog sled team.

The man on the left was tall, blond, with pale green eyes and a puckered

scar, in his mid-fifties. He was the one who had snatched the Stuart

twin sand his smile was as winning as it had been when he was a boy of

twelve with the blood of his parents on his hands.

John Joseph Randolph was unnervingly self-possessed, as if our arrival

neither startled nor concerned him. “How’re you doing, Chris? ” I was

surprised he knew my name. I’d never seen him before.

Whispery echoes of his voice were conducted like a current along the

copper walls, one word overlaying the next, “Your mother, Wisteriashe

was a great woman.” I couldn’t understand how he knew my mother.

Instinct told me that I didn’t want to know. A shotgun blast would

silence him, and scour that smile off his face the smile with which he

charmed the innocent and the unwaryturning it into a lipless

death’s-head grin.

“She was deadlier than Mother Nature, ” he said.

Renaissance men ponder, brood, and analyze the complex moral

consequences of their actions, preferring persuasion and negotiation to

violence. Evidently, I’d forgotten to renew my membership in the

Renaissance Man Club, and they had repossessed my principles, because

all I wanted to do was blow away this butchering creep and with extreme ,

prejudice.

Or maybe I’m just becoming.

It’s the rage these days.

With my heart made brittle by bitterness, I might have pulled the

trigger if the kids hadn’t been there to witness the carnage. I was also

inhibited because the copper skin on the curved walls was guaranteed to

spin deadly ricochets in all directions. My soul was saved not by the

purity of my morals but by circumstances, which is a humbling

confession.

With the barrel of the Uzi, Doogie gestured at the playing cards in the

two men’s hands. “What’s the game? ” His voice echoed tinnily around the

curved copper walls.

I didn’t like these two men’s watchful calm. I wanted to see fear in

their eyes.

Now Randolph turned his hand of cards face up on the table and replied

to Doogie’s question with too much dry amusement. “Poker.” Before Doogie

decided how best to restrain the card players, he needed to determine,

if he could, whether they had guns. They were wearing jackets that could

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