Seize The Night. By: Dean R. Koontz

out of its element, nothing as large as an owl.

“This is stone-dead serious, Bobby. I need your help.”

“You see what you get for ever going inland? ” Bobby lives far out on

the southern horn of the bay, and surfing is his vocation and avocation,

his life’s purpose, the foundation of his philosophy, not merely his

favorite sport but a true spiritual enterprise. The ocean is his

cathedral, and he hears the voice of God only in the rumble of the

waves. As far as Bobby is concerned, little of real consequence ever

occurs farther than half a mile from the beach.

Peering into the branches overhead, I was unable to spot the now quiet

bird, even though the moonlight was bright and though the struggling

laurel was not richly clothe in leaves. To Bobby, I said again, “I need

your help.”

“You can do it yourself. Just stand on a chair, tie a noose around your

neck, and jump.”

“Don’t have a chair.”

“Pull the shotgun trigger with your toe.” In any circumstance, he can

make me laugh, and laughter keeps me sane.

An awareness that life is a cosmic joke is close to the core of the

philosophy by which Bobby, Sasha, and I live. Our guiding principles are

simple, Do as little harm to others as you can, make any sacrifice for

your true friends, be responsible for yourself and ask nothing of

others, and grab all the fun you can. Don’t give much thought to

yesterday, don’t worry about tomorrow, live in the moment, and trust

that your existence has meaning even when the world seems to be all

blind chance and chaos. When life lands a hammer blow in your face, do

your best to respond to the hammer as if it had been a cream pie.

Sometimes black humor is the only kind we can summon, but even dark

laughter can sustain.

I said, “Bobby, if you knew the name of the weed, you’d already be

here.” He sighed. “Bro, how am I ever going to be a fully realized,

super maximum, jerk-off slacker if you keep insisting I have a

conscience? ”

“You’re doomed to be responsible.”

“That’s what I’m afraid of.”

“The furry dude is missing, too, ” I said, meaning Orson.

“Citizen Kane? ” Orson was named after Orson Welles, the director of

Citizen Kane, for whose films he has a strange fascination.

I made an admission that I found difficult to voice, “I’m scared for

him.”

“I’ll be there, ” Bobby said at once.

“Cool.”

“Where’s there? ” Wings thrummed, and another bird or possibly two

joined the one already roosting in the laurel.

“Dead Town, ” I told him.

“Oh, man. You never listen.”

“I’m a bad boy. Come in by the river.”

“The river? ”

“There’s a Suburban parked there. Belongs to a mondo psycho, so be

careful. The fence is cut.”

“Do I have to creep or can I strut? ”

“Sneaky doesn’t matter anymore.

Just watch your ass.”

“Dead Town, ” he said disgustedly. “What am I going to do with you,

young man? ”

“No TV for a month? ”

“Kak, ” he called me again.

“Where in D Town?”

“Meet me at the movies.” He didn’t know Wyvern a fraction as well as I

did, but he would be able to find the movie theater in the commercial

area adjacent to the abandoned houses. As a teenager, not yet so

religiously devoted to the seashore that it had become his monastery, he

had for a while dated a military brat who lived on-base with her

parents.

Bobby said, “We’ll find them, bro.” I was on a perilous emotional ledge.

The threat of my own death troubles me far less than you might expect,

because from the earliest days of childhood, I’ve lived with an

awareness of my mortality that is both more acute and more chronic than

what most people experience, but I’m crushed flat by the loss of someone

I love. Grief is sharper than the tools of any torturer, and even the

prospect of such a loss now seemed to have severed my vocal cords.

“Hang loose, ” Bobby said.

“I’m just about untied, ” I said thinly.

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