The Fun House. By: Dean R. Koontz

ride was in operation. A string of work lights ran the length of the

track and disappeared around a bend fifty feet away, when the place was

open for business, those lights would be extinguished. Yet even with

that chain of softly glowing bulbs, the funhouse was gloomy.

– Janet leaned through the doorway. “Hello?”

No one answered.

. “Is anyone there?” she asked.

Silence.

She switched on her flashlight, hesitated only a second, and stepped

inside.

The funhouse smelled damp and oily.

She knelt and inspected the pins that joined two sections of track.

They were securely fastened.

She got up and moved deeper into the building.

On both sides of the track, slightly elevated from it, life-sized

mechanical figures stood in secret niches in the walls: an ugly,

leering pirate with a sword in his hand, a werewolf, claws coated with

silvery, day-glow paint that would make them look like glinting blades

in the dark, phony but realistic blood on his wolfish snout and on his

two-inch-long fangs, a grinning, blood-drenched ax-murderer standing

over the hideously wounded corpse of one of his victims, and many

others, some more gruesome than those first few. In this light Janet

could see that they were only clever, lifelike mannequins, but she felt

uneasy around them.

Although none of them was animated, as all of them would be when the

funhouse was in operation, they looked as if they were about to pounce

on her, to her chagrin, the damned things spooked her. But her dislike

of them didn’t prevent her from inspecting the anchor bolts on a few of

them to make sure they wouldn’t topple down into a passing gondola and

injure a rider.

Walking along the passageway, looking up at the monsters, Janet

wondered why people insisted on referring to a place like this as a

funhouse.

She turned the bend at the end of the first length of track, moved

farther into the funhouse, turned another corner, then another,

marveling at the richness of invention that had been employed in the

design of the place. It was huge, as large as a medium-sized

warehouse, and it was crammed full of genuinely frightening things. It

wasn’t the sort of amusement that appealed to her, but she had to

admire the work, the craftsmanship, and the creativity that had gone

into it.

She was in the center of the enormous structure, standing on the track,

looking up at a man-sized spider hanging overhead, when someone put a

hand on her shoulder. She gasped, jumped, jerked away from the

unexpected contact, turned, I and would have screamed if her throat

hadn’t frozen. i A man was standing on the tracks behind her. He was

extremely tall, at least six and a half feet, broad-shouldered,

barrel-chested, and he was wearing a Frankenstein outfit: a black suit,

a black turtleneck, monster gloves, and a rubber mask that covered his

entire head. “Scared?” he asked. His voice was exceptionally deep

and hoarse. She swallowed hard, finally breathed, and said, aYes, my

God! You scared me half to death.” , “My job,” he said. “What?”

“Scare the marks. My job.” “Oh. You work here at the funhouse?”

“My job,” he said. n She decided that he must be dull-witted. His

simple, halting declarations resembled the speech patterns of a

severely retarded child. Trying to be friendly, hoping to keep him

friendly, she said, My name’s Janet. What’s yours?” “Huh?” “What’s

your name?”

“Gunther.” “That’s a nice name.” “Don’t like.” “You don’t like your

name?” “NO “What would you like to be called?” “victor.” “That’s a

nice name, too.” “Victor his favorite.” “Whose favorite?” “His,” She

realized that she was in a bad spot–in a strange and poorly lighted

place, out of sight and perhaps out of earshot of anyone who might be

inclined to help her, alone except for a badly retarded man big enough

to break her in half the way she might break a breadstick.

He took a step toward her.

She backed up.

He stopped.

She stopped, too, shaking, aware that she couldn’t outrun him.

His legs were longer than hers, and he was probably more familiar with

the terrain than she was.

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