Seize The Night. By: Dean R. Koontz

“Stay with me, baby, ” she said, putting me on hold.

While I waited for her to come back, I could hear her program over the

phone line. She did a live public-service spot followed by a doughnut

spot recorded material at the front and back, with a live plug in the

center for a local car dealership.

Her voice is husky yet silky, soft and smooth and inviting. She could

sell me a time-share condominium in Hell, as long as it came with

air-conditioning.

I tried not to be entirely distracted by that voice as I listened with

one ear for a creaking floorboard. Outside, the street remained

deserted.

To give herself a full five minutes with me, she set up back-to-back

tracks. Sinatra’s “It Was a Very Good Year, ” followed by Patsy Cline’s

“I Fall to Pieces.” When she returned to me, I said, “Never heard such

an eclectic program format before. Sinatra, Elvis, and Patsy? ”

“It’s a theme show tonight, ” she said.

“Theme? ”

“Haven’t you been listening? ”

“Busy. What theme? ”

” Night of the Living Dead, ” she said.

“Stylin’.”

“Thanks. What’s happening? ”

“Who’s your engineer this shift? ”

“Doogie.” Doogie Sassman is a panoramically tattooed Harley-Davidson

fanatic who weighs more than three hundred pounds, twenty-five of which

are accounted for by his untamed blond hair and lush silky beard. In

spite of having a neck as wide as a pier caisson and a belly on which an

entire family of sea gulls could gather to groom themselves, Doogie is a

babe magnet who has dated some of the most beautiful women ever to walk

the beaches between San Francisco and San Diego. Although he’s a good

guy, with enough bearish charm to star in a Disney cartoon, Doogie’s

solid success with stunningly gorgeous wahineswho are not normally won

over by personality alone is, Bobby says, one of the greatest mysteries

of all time, right up there with what wiped out the dinosaurs and why

tornadoes always zero in on trailer parks.

I said, “Can you go canned for a couple of hours and let Doogie run the

show from his control panel? ”

“You want a quickie? ”

“With you, I want a forever.”

“Mr. Romance, ” she said sarcastically but with secret delight.

“We’ve got a friend needs hand-holding big time.” Sasha’s tone grew

somber. “What now? ” I couldn’t lay out the situation in plain words,

because of the possibility that the call was being monitored. In

Moonlight Bay we live in a police state so artfully imposed that it is

virtually invisible. If they were listening, I didn’t want to tip them

to the fact that Sasha would be going to Lilly Wing’s house, because

they might decide to stop her before she got there. Lilly desperately

needed support. If Sasha dropped in by surprise, maybe by the back door,

the cops would discover that she could stick like a five-barbed

fishhook.

“Do you know …” I thought I saw movement in the street, but when I

squinted through the bungalow window, I decided I’d seen only a moon

shadow, perhaps caused by the tail of a cloud brushing across one cheek

of the lunar face. “Do you know thirteen ways? ”

“Thirteen ways? ”

“The blackbird thing, ” I said, wiping at the glass again with the

Kleenex. My breath had left a faint condensation.

“Blackbird. Sure.” We were talking about Wallace Stevens’s poem

“Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird.” My father worried about how

I, limited by XP, would make it in the world without family, so he

bequeathe to me a house without a mortgage and the proceeds of a huge

life insurance policy. But he had given me another comforting legacy,

too, a love of modern poetry. Because Sasha had acquired this passion

from me, we could confound eavesdroppers as Bobby and I had done by

using surfer lingo.

“There’s a word you expect him to use, ” I said, referring to Stevens,

“but it never appears.”

“Ah, ” she said, and I knew she was following me.

A lesser poet writing thirteen stanzas relating to a blackbird would

surely use the word wing, but Stevens never resorts to it.

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