Seize The Night. By: Dean R. Koontz

Standing in my line of fire, unaware that it was vulnerably exposed to

an emotional basket case with a handgun, the creature burbled softly,

more like a pigeon than a rhesus. The sound had an inquisitive quality.

One of the other monkeys shrieked.

I almost fired the Glock reflexively.

Two additional voices scolded the first.

In front of me, the monkey spun away from the broom closet. It scampered

deeper into the kitchen, drawn by the commotion.

In fact, the uproar indicated that all six were now gathered at the

farther end of the room. I saw no shining eyes turned in my direction.

They had found something of interest. I could imagine only that it was

the source of the putrid odor.

As I eased up on the trigger, I realized that a glutinous mass had risen

into my throat maybe my heart, maybe my lunch and I had to swallow hard to

get it down and to be able to breathe again.

While my eyes and the monkey’s had been locked, I’d fallen into a

curious physical detachment so complete that I had ceased to feel the

spasms of pain in my cramping calf. Now the agony returned, worse than

before.

Because all the members of the search party were distracted and making

noise, I exercised the cramped muscle as best I could by shifting my

weight firmly back and forth from heel to toe of my left foot.

This maneuver relieved the pain somewhat, although not enough to ensure

that I would be able to move gracefully if one of the monkeys invited me

to waltz.

The conferring members of the search party began to jabber in louder

voices. They were excited. Although I don’t believe they have a language

in remotely the sense that we do, their bleats and hisses and growls and

warbles were obviously argumentative. They appeared to have forgotten

what they had come looking for in the first place. Easily distracted,

quick to fall into disorganization, prone to put aside mutual interests

in favor of quarreling among themselves for the first time, these guys

seemed an awful lot like human beings.

The longer I listened to them, the more I dared to believe that I would

get out of this bungalow alive.

I was still rocking my foot, flexing and contracting my calf, when one

of the quarrelers broke away from the rest of the search party and

crossed the kitchen to the dining-room doorway. The instant I saw its

eye shine, I stopped moving and pretended to be a broom.

The monkey halted at the dining-room threshold and shrieked. It seemed

to be calling to other members of the troop, who were, presumably,

waiting outside on the front porch or searching the bedrooms.

Answering voices rose at once. They grew nearer.

The prospect of sharing this small kitchen with even more monkeys

possibly with the entire trooppunctured my half-inflated hope of

survival. As my shaky confidence rapidly gave way to confident

desperation, I examined my options and found no new ones.

The depth of my desperation was so abyssal that I actually asked myself

what the immortal Jackie Chan would do in a situation like this.

The answer was simple, Jackie would erupt out of the broom closet with

an athletic leap that landed him in the very midst of the search party,

drop kick one of them between the legs, karate-chop two of them in their

necks as he somersaulted to his feet, get off a cool one-liner, break

the arms and legs of multiple adversaries during an astonishing

pirouette of flashing fists and feet, execute a series of charming and

hilarious rubber-faced expressions the likes of which no one has seen

since the days of Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin, tap-dance across

the heads of the remaining members of the troop, crash through the

window above the sink, and flee to safety. Jackie Chan never gets calf

cramps.

Meanwhile, my calf cramp had become so painful that my eyes were

watering.

More monkeys entered the kitchen. They were chattering as they came, as

if the discovery of any decomposing critter was the ideal occasion to

call in all the relatives, open a keg of beer, and have a hootenanny .

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