Seize The Night. By: Dean R. Koontz

“But how does that work? ” Sasha asked.

“Like a toaster oven, ” I said, meaning who knows?

Doogie pressed his thumb against G and kept it there. We didn’t want the

door to open on B-1. B for bedlam. B for bad news. B for be prepared to

die squishily.

Aaron Stuart said, “Mr. Snow? ” I took a deep breath, “Yes? ”

“If Mr. Halloway didn’t die, then whose blood is on your hands?

” I looked at my hands. They were sticky-damp with Bobby’s blood, which

had gotten on them when I’d dragged his body into the elevator.

“Weird, ” I admitted.

Wendy Dulcinea said, “If the body went poof, why didn’t the blood on

your hands go poof? ” My mouth was too dry, my tongue too thick, and my

throat too tight to allow me to answer her.

The shuddering elevator briefly caught on something in the shaft, tore

loose with a ripping-metal sound, and then we groaned to B-1.

Where we stopped.

Doogie leaned on close door and on the button for the ground floor.

We didn’t ascend any farther.

The doors slid inexorably open. Heat, humidity, and that fetid stench

rolled over us, and I expected the vigorous alien vegetation to grow

into the cab and overwhelm us with explosive force.

In our slice of time, we’d risen one level, but William Hodgson was

still out there in never land, where we had left him. Pointing at us.

The man beyond Hodgsonlumley, according to his helmet also turned to look

at us.

Shrieking, something flew out of that baleful sky, among the black

trees, a creature with glossy black wings and whiplike tail, with the

muscular, scaly limbs of a lizard, as if a gargoyle had torn itself

loose of the stone high on an ancient Gothic cathedral and had taken

flight. As it swooped down on Lumley, it appeared to spit out a stream

of objects, which looked like large peach pits but were something

deadlier, something no doubt full of frenzied life. Lumley twitched and

jerked as though he had been hit by machine-gun fire, and several

perfectly round holes appeared in his spacesuit, like those we had seen

in poor damn Hodgson’s suit in the egg room the previous night.

Lumley screamed as though he were being eaten alive, and Hodgson

stumbled backward in terror, away from us.

The elevator doors began to close, but the flying thing abruptly changed

directions, streaking straight toward us.

As the doors bumped shut, hard objects rattled against them, and a

series of dimples appeared in the steel, as if it had been hit by

bullets with almost enough punch to penetrate to the interior of the

cab.

Sasha’s face was talcum white.

Mine must have been whiter still, to match my name.

Even Orson seemed to have gone a paler shade of black.

We ascended toward the ground floor through crashes of thunder, the

grinding rumble of steel wheels on steel track, harsh whistles, shrieks,

and the throbbing electronic hum, but in spite of all those sounds of

worlds colliding, we also heard another noise, which was more intimate,

more terrifying. Something was on the roof of the elevator cab.

Crawling, slithering.

It could have been nothing but a loose cable, which might have explained

our quaking, jerky progress toward the ground floor. But it wasn’t a

loose cable. That was wishful thinking. This thing was alive.

Alive and purposeful.

I couldn’t imagine how anything could have gotten into the shaft with us

after the doors had shut, unless the intermingling of these two

realities was nearly complete. In which case, at any moment, might not

the thing on the roof pass through the ceiling and be among us, like a

ghost passing through a wall?

Doogie remained focused on the indicator board above the doors, but the

rest of us animals, kids, and adults turned our faces up toward the

menacing sounds.

In the center of the ceiling was an escape hatch. A way out. A way in.

Borrowing the Uzi from Doogie once more, I aimed at the ceiling.

Sasha also covered the trapdoor with her shotgun.

I wasn’t optimistic about the effectiveness of gunfire. Unless I was

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