Seize The Night. By: Dean R. Koontz

spiny skeleton effectively screened the creature crouched beyond it.

I didn’t think I was going to be able to pick out the beast at all, but

then I spotted it because, although it was a shade of brown similar to

the woody veil in front of it, the softer lines of its body contrasted

with the jagged patterns of the bare hedge. Through the interstices in

he many layers of boxwood bones, I fixed the beam on our quarry,

revealing no details but getting a glimpse of eye shine as green as that

of certain cats.

This thing was too big to be any cat other than a mountain lion.

It was no mountain lion.

Found, the creature bleated again and raced along the shielding dead

wood with such speed that I couldn’t keep the light trained on it.

A break in the hedgerow allowed a walkway to connect a bungalow with the

street, but Big Heador Big Foot, or the wolf man, or the Loch Ness

monster in drag, or whatever the hell this was crossed the gap fast, an

Before I could respond, something screamed. The cry was eerie but

instant ahead of the light. I didn’t get a look at anything but its

shaggy ass, and not even a clear view of that, though a clear view of

its ass might not have been either informative or gratifying.

All I had were vague impressions. The impression that it ran half erect

like a monkey, shoulders sloped forward and head low, the knuckles of

its hands almost dragging the ground. That it was a lot bigger than a

rhesus. That it might have been even taller than Bobby had guessed, and

that if it rose to its full height, it would be able to peer at us over

the top of the four-foot hedge and stick its tongue out at us.

I swept the spotlight back and forth but couldn’t locate the critter

along the next section of boxwood.

“Running for it, ” Bobby said, braking to a full stop, rising half out

of his seat, pointing.

When I shifted my focus beyond the hedgerow, I saw a shapeless figure

loping across the yard, away from the street, toward the corner of the

bungalow.

Even when I held the spotlight high, I couldn’t get an angle on the

fast-moving beast, whose disappearing act was abetted by the intervening

branches of a laurel and by tall grass.

Bobby dropped back into his seat, swung toward the hedgerow, threw the

Jeep into four-wheel drive, and tramped on the accelerator.

“Geek chase, ” he said.

Because Bobby lives for the moment and because he expects ultimately to

be mulched by something more immediate than melanoma, he maintains the

deepest tan this side of a skin-cancer ward. By contrast, his teeth and

his eyes glow as white as the plutonium-soaked bones of Chernobyl

wildlife, which usually make him look dashing and exotic and full of

Gypsy spirit, but which now made him look more than a little like a

grinning madman.

“Way stupid, ” I protested.

“Geek, geek, geek chase, ” he insisted, leaning into the steering wheel.

The Jeep jumped the curb, flashed under the low-hanging branches of two

flanking laurels, and crashed through the boxwood hard enough to rattle

the bottles of beer in the slush-filled cooler, spitting broken hedge

branches behind it. As we crossed the lawn, a raw, sweet, green odor

rose from the crushed grass under the tires, which was lush from the

winter rains.

The creature had disappeared around the side of the bungalow even as we

were blasting through the hedge.

Bobby went after it.

“This has nothing to do with Orson or Jimmy, ” I shouted over the engine

roar.

“How do you know? ” He was right. I didn’t know. Maybe there was a

connection.

Anyway, we didn’t have any better leads to follow.

As he swung the Jeep between two bungalows, he said, “Carpe noctem,

remember? ” I had recently told him my new motto. Already, I regretted

having revealed it. I had the feeling that it was going to be quoted to

me, at opportune moments, until it had less appeal than a mutton

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