Seize The Night. By: Dean R. Koontz

it. If they followed it without showing themselves and waited for the

driver to park and get out … The engine roar grew steadily louder.

The vehicle was in the neighborhood, probably only a few blocks away.

Abandoning caution, trying to shake the pain out of my leg as though it

were a biting mongrel that could be kicked loose, I hobbled out of the

kitchen and hurried blindly through the monkeyless dining room. As far

as I could tell, none of the flea farms lingered in the living room,

either.

At the window from which I had watched them earlier, I put my brow to

the glass and saw eight or ten members of the troop in the street.

They were dropping, one by one, through the open manhole, into which

their comrades had apparently already vanished.

Happily, Bobby wasn’t in jeopardy of having his brain scooped out and

his skull turned into a flowerpot to beautify some monkey den. Not

immediate jeopardy, anyway.

As fast as flowing water, the monkeys poured into the manhole, gone in a

quicksilver ripple. In their wake, the tree-lined street appeared to be

no more substantial than a dreamscape, a mere illusion of twisted

shadows and secondhand light, and it was almost possible to believe that

the troop had been as imaginary as the cast of a nightmare.

Heading for the front door, I returned the spare magazine to the pocket

in my shoulder holster. I held on to the Glock.

When I reached the porch, I heard the manhole cover being slid into

place. I was surprised that the monkeys were strong enough to maneuver

that heavy object from the storm drain below, a tricky task even for a

grown man.

The engine noise reverberated through the bungalows and trees.

The vehicle was close, yet I saw no headlights.

As I reached the street, still working the last of the cramp out of my

leg, the manhole cover clanked into its niche. I arrived in time to see

the curved point of a steel grappling hook wiggle out of a slot in the

iron, extracted from below. City street-department crews carry such

implements to snare and lift these covers without having to pry them

loose from the edge. The monkeys must have found or stolen the hook,

hanging from the service ladder in the drain, a couple of them were able

to leverage the disc into place, covering their trail.

Their use of tools had ominous implications that I was loath to

consider.

Headlight beams flashed through the spaces between bungalows. The truck.

It was passing on the next street parallel to this one, behind the small

houses.

Although I hadn’t seen any details of the vehicle, I was sure Bobby had

arrived. The pitch of the engine was similar to that of his Jeep, and it

was speeding toward the commercial district of Dead Town, where we were

supposed to meet.

I headed in that direction as the roar of the truck rapidly diminished.

The pain was gone from my calf, but the nerve continued to flutter,

leaving my left leg weaker than my right. With the cramp threatening to

recur, I didn’t even try to run.

From above came the shearing sound of wings, cutting the air into

scimitar shapes. I looked up, ducking defensively, as a flock of birds

made a low pass, in tight formation, and vanished into the night ahead.

Their speed and the darkness prevented me from identifying their

species. This might have been the mysterious crew that had roosted in

the tree under which I’d placed my call to Bobby.

When I reached the end of the block, the birds were flying in a circle

over the intersection, as if marking time until I caught up with them.

I counted ten or twelve, more than had kept watch over me from the

Indian laurel.

Their behavior was peculiar, but I didn’t feel that they intended any

harm.

Even if I was wrong and they posed a danger to me, there was no way to

avoid them. If I changed my route, they could easily follow.

As they passed across the face of the descendent moon, traveling more

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