Seize The Night. By: Dean R. Koontz

an astronaut returned from a mission to Planet Hell, the Hodgson thing

had crossed half the original distance between us. It was twenty feet

away, relentlessly dragging itself forward, obviously not offended by my

language, driven by a hunger almost as palpable as the stench of hot tar

and rotting vegetation that earlier had been borne on the wind from

nowhere.

In frustration, Bobby struck the door with the shotgun barrel.

That steel plug tolled like a bell.

He didn’t even bother to point the weapon at the Hodgson thing.

Evidently, he, too, had reached the conclusion that the impact of stray

buckshot against the walls of the chamber might energize the place and

leave us trapped here longer.

The light show ended, and over us fell absolute darkness.

If I could have stilled my storming heart and held my breath, I might

have been able to hear the whispery slippage of rubber boot soles over

the glassy floor, but I was a one-man percussion section. I probably

couldn’t have detected the sound of the Hodgson thing’s approach if it

had been beating a bass drum.

When the luminous phenomenon in the walls had been extinguished, surely

the phantasmagoric engine had shut down altogether, surely we had come

all the way back to reality, surely the Hodgson thing had ceased to

exist as abruptly as it had appeared, surely Again, Bobby struck the

vault door with the shotgun. It didn’t toll this time. The tone was

flat, less reverberant than before, as if he had slammed a hammer into a

block of wood.

Maybe the door was changing, in the process of dematerializing, but it

was still blocking the exit. We couldn’t risk trying to leave until we

were certain we wouldn’t be passing through it while it was in a state

of flux and possibly capable of taking some molecules from our bodies

with it when it vanished for good.

I wondered what would happen if the Hodgson thing had a firm grip on me

when its very substance began to transform. If, for even a moment, my

hand had become one with the steel of the vault door, perhaps part of me

would become one with the pressure suit and with the squirming entity

inside the suit, a close, too-personal encounter that might destroy my

sanity even if, miraculously, I survived with no physical damage.

Blackness pressed liquidly against my open eyes, as if I were deep

underwater. Although I strained to catch the slightest sign of the

approaching figure, I was as sightless here as I’d been in the corridor

outside the room where I’d found the ve ve rats.

Inevitably, I recalled the kidnapper with the white-corn teeth, whose

face I’d touched in the blinding dark.

As then, I now sensed a presence looming before me, and with more reason

than I’d had previously.

After all that had happened in this Mystery Train terminal, this

antechamber to Hell, I was no longer inclined to discount my fears as

the product of a hyperactive imagination. This time I didn’t reach out

to prove to myself that my darkest suspicions were groundless, because I

knew that my fingertips would slide down the smooth curve of the

Plexiglas faceplate.

“Chris! ” I jerked in surprise before I comprehended that the voice was

Bobby’s.

“Your watch, ” he said.

The radiant readouts were visible even in this soot-thick murk.

The green numbers in those displays were changing, counting forward so

rapidly that many hours were falling behind us in a fraction of a

second.

The letters in the day and month windows were passing in a blur of

continuously changing abbreviations.

Time past was giving way to time present.

Hell, in truth I didn’t know exactly what was happening here.

Maybe I didn’t understand this situation at all, and maybe a bend in the

fabric of time had nothing to do with what we’d witnessed. Maybe we were

entirely delusional because someone had spiked our beer with LSD.

Maybe I was at home, snug in bed, asleep and dreaming. Maybe up was

down, in was out, black was white. I knew only that whatever was

happening now felt right, felt a lot better than would a sudden embrace

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