Seize The Night. By: Dean R. Koontz

of future need, and no buyers exist for Wyvern. Of the numerous military

bases closed following the collapse of the Soviet Union, some were sold

off to civilian interests, transformed into tracts of houses and

shopping centers. But here along California’s central coast, vast

reaches of open land, some farmed and some not, remain in the event that

Los Angeles, like a creeping fungus, should eventually cast spoors this

far north or the suburban circuitry of Silicon Valley should encroach on

us from the opposite direction. Currently, Wyvern has more value to

mice, lizards, and coyotes than to people.

Besides, if a would-be developer had placed an offer for these 134, 456

acres, he would most likely have been rebuffed. There is reason to

believe that Wyvern was never entirely vacated, that secret facilities,

far beneath its increasingly weathered surface, continue to be manned

and to carry out clandestine projects worthy of such fictional lunatics

as Doctors Moreau and Jekyll. No press release was ever issued

expressing compassionate concern for the unemployed mad scientists of

Wyvern or announcing a retraining program, and since many of them

resided on base and had little community involvement, no locals wondered

where they had gone. Abandonment, here, is but a refinement of the

sophisticated camouflage under which this work has long been performed.

I reached an intersection, where I stopped to listen. When the restless

moon rolled out of its covers yet again, I turned in a full circle,

studying the ranks of houses, the lunar-resistant darkness between them,

and the compartmentalized gloom beyond their windows.

Sometimes, prowling Wyvern, I become convinced that I am being

watched not necessarily stalked in a predatory way, but shadowed by

someone with a keen interest in my every move. I’ve learned to trust my

intuition. This time I felt that I was alone, unobserved.

I returned the Glock to my holster. The pattern of the grip was

impressed into my damp palm.

I consulted my wristwatch. Nine minutes past one o’clock.

Moving out of the street to a leafy Indian laurel, I unclipped the phone

from my belt and switched it on. I squatted with my back against the

tree.

Bobby Halloway, my best friend for more than seventeen years, has

several phone numbers. He has given the most private of these to no more

than five friends, and he answers that line at any hour. I keyed in the

number and pressed send.

Bobby picked up on the third ring, “This better be important.” Although

I believed that I was alone in this part of Dead Town, I spoke softly,

“Were you sleeping? ”

“Eating kibby.” Kibby is Mediterranean cuisine, ground beef, onion, pine

nuts, and herbs wrapped in a moist ball of bulgur and quickly

deep-fried.

“Eating it with what? ”

“Cucumbers, tomatoes, some pickled turnip.”

“At least I didn’t call when you were having sex.”

“This is worse.”

“You’re way serious about your kibby.”

“So entirely serious.”

“I’ve just been radically clamshelled, ” I said, which is surfer lingo

for being enfolded by a large collapsing wave and wiped off your board.

Bobby said, “You at the beach? ”

“I’m speaking figuratively.”

“Don’t do that.”

“Sometimes it’s best, ” I said, meaning that someone might be tapping

his phone.

“I hate this crap.”

“Get used to it, bro.”

“Kibby spoiler.”

“I’m looking for a missing weed.” A weed is a small person, and the term

is usually but not always used as a synonym for grommet, which means a

preadolescent surfer.

Jimmy Wing was too young to be a surfer, but he was indeed a small

person.

“Weed? ” Bobby asked.

“A totally small weed.”

“You playing at being Nancy Drew again? ”

“In Nancy work up to my neck, ” I confirmed.

“Kak, ” he said, which along this stretch of coast is not a nice thing

for one surfer to call another, though I believed I detected a note of

affection in his voice that was almost equal to the disgust.

A sudden flapping caused me to leap to my feet before I realized that

the source of the sound was just a night bird settling into the branches

overhead. A nighthawk or an oilbird, a lone nightingale or chimney swift

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