Seize The Night. By: Dean R. Koontz

track, out there sideways in time, like we always knew, always knew but

didn’t want to believe.” I had been right when I’d suspected that truths

were hidden in his strange statements, and I wanted to hear him out and

understand, but staying there any longer would have been suicidal.

As I joined Doogie, the half-closed gate valve, which was the door of

the chamber, began to slide all the way shut.

Cursing, Doogie gripped the valve and put all his muscle against it, the

arteries in his neck bulging from the effort, slowly forcing the steel

disc back into the wall.

“Go! ” Doogie said.

Because I’m the kind of guy who knows good advice when he hears it, I

squeezed past the mambo king and sprinted along the sixteen-foot section

of tunnel between the two enormous valves.

Above a thundering and a wind like shrieking worthy of the final storm

on doomsday, I could hear John Joseph Randolph shouting, not with terror

but with joy, with passionate conviction, “I believe! I believe!

” Sasha, the kids, Mungojerrie, and Orson had already passed through to

the next section of tunnel beyond the outer gateway.

Roosevelt was wedged into the breach, to prevent the valve from sealing

Doogie and me in here. I could hear the motor grinding in the wall,

trying to drive the steel disc into the fully closed position.

I jammed the metal folding chair into the gap, above Roosevelt’s head,

bracing the valve open.

“Thanks, son, ” he said.

I followed Roosevelt through the gate.

The others were waiting beyond, with an ordinary flashlight.

Sasha looked far more beautiful when she wasn’t green.

The gap in the gateway was a tight fit for the sass man, but he popped

through, too, and then he wrenched the chair out of the gap, because we

were likely to need it again.

We passed the Mystery Train patch and the image of the crow. No draft

currently moved through this tunnel. None of the newspaper clippings

ahead of us stirred at all. And yet the large sheet of art paper, which

featured the graphite rubbing of the carved-stone bird, was fluttering

as if a gale-force wind were tearing at it. The loose ends of the paper

curled and flapped vigorously. The crow seemed to be pulling angrily at

the pieces of tape that fixed it to the curved steel surface, determined

to break out of the paper as, according to Randolph, it had once arisen

out of rock.

Maybe I was hallucinating this business with the crow, sure, and maybe I

was born to be a snake charmer, but I wasn’t going to hang around to see

if a real bird morphed out of the paper and took flight, any more than I

was going to lie down in a nest of cobras and hum show tunes to

entertain them.

On a hunch that I might want proof of what I’d seen down here, I tore a

few newspaper clippings from the wall and stuffed them in my pockets.

With the faux crow flapping furiously against the wall behind us, we

hurried on, keeping our group together, doing what any sane person would

do when the world was coming apart around him and death loomed at every

side, We followed the cat.

I tried not to think about Bobby. The first problem was just getting to

him. If we got to him, everything would be okay. He would be waiting for

us cold and sore and weak, but waiting by the elevator where we had left

him and he would remind me of my promise by saying, Carpe cerevisi, bro.

The faint iodine odor that had been with us all the way through the

labyrinth was sharper now. Threaded through it were whiffs of charcoal,

sulfur, rotting roses, and an indescribable, bitter scent unlike

anything I had smelled before.

If the time-shifting phenomena were spreading down here into the deepest

realms of the structure, we were at greater risk than at any moment

since we had entered the hangar. The worst possibility wasn’t that our

escape would be delayed or even cut off by the motor-driven valves.

Worse, if the wrong moment of the past intersected with the present, as

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