Seize The Night. By: Dean R. Koontz

it toward the ground the instant she realized who I was.

“Chris.

Oh, God.”

“What’s wrong? ” I asked again as I got off my bike.

“Jimmy’s gone.”

“Run away? ”

“No.” She turned from me and hurried toward the house.

“This way, here, look.” Lilly’s property is ringed by a white picket

fence that she herself built. The entrance is flanked not by gate posts

but by matched bougainvillea that she has pruned into trees and trained

into a canopy.

Her modest Cape Cod bungalow lies at the end of an intricately patterned

brick walkway that she designed and laid after teaching herself masonry

from books.

The front door stood open. Enticing rooms of deadly brightness lay

beyond.

Instead of taking me and Orson inside, Lilly quickly led us off the

bricks and across the lawn. In the still night, as I pushed my bike

through the closely cropped grass, the tick of wheel bearings was the

loudest sound. We went to the north side of the house.

A bedroom window had been raised. Inside, a single lamp glowed, and the

walls were striped with amber light and faint honey-brown shadows from

the folded cloth of the pleated shade. To the left of the bed, Star Wars

action figures stood on a set of bookshelves. As the cool night air

sucked warmth from the house, one panel of the curtains was drawn across

the sill, pale and fluttering like a troubled spirit reluctant to leave

this world for the next.

“I thought the window was locked, but it mustn’t have been, ” Lilly said

frantically. “Someone opened it, some sonofabitch, and he took Jimmy

away.”

“Maybe it’s not that bad.”

“Some sick bastard, ” she insisted.

The flashlight jiggled, and Lilly struggled to still her trembling hand

as she directed the beam at the planting bed alongside the house.

“I don’t have any money, ” she said.

“Money? ”

“To pay ransom. I’m not rich. So no one would take Jimmy for ransom.

It’s worse than that.” False Solomon’s seal, laden with feathery sprays

of white flowers that glittered like ice, had been trampled by the

intruder. Footprints were impressed in trodden leaves and soft damp

soil. They were not the prints of a runaway child but those of an adult

in athletic shoes with bold tread, and judging by the depth of the

impressions, the kidnapper was a large person, most likely male.

I saw that Lilly was barefoot.

“I couldn’t sleep, I was watching TV, some stupid show on the TV, ” she

said with a note of self-flagellation, as if she should have anticipated

this abduction and been at Jimmy’s bedside, ever vigilant.

Orson pushed between us to sniff the imprinted earth.

“I didn’t hear anything, ” Lilly said. “Jimmy never cried out, but I got

this feeling …” Her usual beauty, as clear and deep as a reflection

of eternity, was now shattered by terror, crazed by sharp lines of an

anguish that was close to grief. She was held together only by desperate

hope.

Even in the dim backwash of the flashlight, I could hardly bear the

sight of her in such pain.

“It’ll be all right, ” I said, ashamed of this facile lie.

“I called the police, ” she said. “They should be here any second.

Where are they? ” Personal experience had taught me to distrust the

authorities in Moonlight Bay. They are corrupt. And the corruption is

not merely moral, not simply a matter of bribe-taking and a taste for

power, it has deeper and more disturbing origins.

No siren shrieked in the distance, and I didn’t expect to hear one. In

our special town, the police answer calls with utmost discretion,

without even the quiet fanfare of flashing emergency lights, because as

often as not, their purpose is to conceal a crime and silence the

complainant rather than to bring the perpetrator to justice.

“He’s only five, only five, ” Lilly said miserably. “Chris, what if this

is that guy on the news? ”

“The news? ”

“The serial killer. The one who … burns kids.”

“That’s not around here.”

“All over the country. Every few months. Groups of little kids burned

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