Seize The Night. By: Dean R. Koontz

as real as steel striking steel.

“Mirage? ” I suggested, tossing his deficient explanation back at him as

I shoved one flashlight under my belt and jammed the other into a jacket

pocket.

“It’s bogus.” In reply, I slapped my hand against the door.

“Bogus, ” he insisted. “Check your watch.” I was less interested in the

time than in whether anything might be coming out of Hodgson’s pressure

suit.

With a shudder, I realized that I was brushing at the sleeves of my

jacket, wiping at the back of my neck, scrubbing the side of my face,

trying to rid myself of crawling things that weren’t really there.

Motivated by a vivid memory of the squirming horde inside the helmet, I

hooked my fingers in a groove along the edge of the door and pulled.

I grunted, cursed, and pulled harder, as though I might actually be able

to move a few tons of steel by tapping the store of energy I’d laid up

from a breakfast of crumb cake and hot chocolate.

“Check your watch, ” Bobby repeated.

He had shucked back the sleeve of his cotton pullover to look at his own

watch. This surprised me. He had never before worn a timepiece, and now

he had one just like mine.

When I consulted the luminous digital readout on the oversize face of my

wristwatch, I saw 4,08 P. M. The correct time, of course, was short of

four o’clock in the morning.

“Mine, too, ” he said, showing me that our watches agreed.

“Both wrong? ”

“No. That’s what time it is. Here. Now. In this place.”

“Witchy.”

“Pure Salem.” Then I registered the date in a separate window below the

digital time display. This was the twelfth of April. My watch claimed it

was Mon Feb 19. So did Bobby’s.

I wondered what year the watch would reveal if its date window had been

four digits wider. Somewhere in the past. A memorably catastrophic

afternoon for the big-brow scientists on the Mystery Train team, an

afternoon when the feces hit the flabellum.

The speed and brightness of the spiraling-bursting-streaming lights in

the walls were slowly but noticeably diminishing.

I looked toward the bio-secure suit, which had proved no more secure

against hostile organisms than a porkpie hat and a fig leaf, and I saw

that whatever inhabited it was moving, churning restlessly. The arms

flopped limply against the floor, and one leg twitched, and the entire

body quivered as though a powerful electric current was passing through

it.

“Not good, ” I decided.

“It’ll fade.”

“Oh, yeah? ”

“The screams did, the voices, the wind.

” I rapped my knuckles against the vault door.

“It’ll fade, ” Bobby insisted.

Though the light show was diminishing, Hodgsonrather, the Hodgson

suit was becoming more active. It drummed the heels of its boots against

the floor. It bucked and thrashed its arms.

“Trying to get up, ” I said.

“Can’t hurt us.”

“You serious? ” My logic seemed unassailable, “If the vault door is real

enough to keep us in here, then that thing’s real enough to cause us

major grief.”

“It’ll fade.” Apparently not having been informed that all its efforts

were pointless, due to its impending fade, the Hodgson suit thrashed and

bucked and rocked until it rolled off its air tank and onto its side. I

was looking at the dark faceplate again, and I could feel something

staring back at me from the other side of that tinted Plexiglas, not

simply a mass of worms or beetles, stupidly churning, but a cohesive and

formidable entity, a malevolent consciousness, as curious about me as I

was terrified of it.

This was not my feverish imagination at work.

This was a perception as unambiguous and valid as the chill I would have

felt if I’d held an ice cube to the nape of my neck.

“It’ll fade, ” Bobby repeated, and the thin note of dread in his voice

revealed that he, too, was aware of being observed.

I was not comforted by the fact that the Hodgson thing was forty feet

away from us. I wouldn’t have felt safe if the distance had been forty

miles and if I’d been studying this spastic apparition through a

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