WATCHERS by Dean R. Koontz

react to this picture because it reminds you of the family you used to live

with?”

One bark. No.

Travis said, “Did you ever live with any family?”

One bark.

“But you’re not a wild dog,” Nora said. “You must’ve lived somewhere before

Travis found you.”

Studying the Blue Cross advertisement, Travis suddenly thought he knew all the

right questions. “Did you react to this picture because of the baby?”

One bark. No.

“Because of the woman?”

No.

“Because of the man in the white lab coat?”

Much wagging: Yes, yes, yes.

“So he lived with a doctor,” Nora said. “Maybe a vet.”

“Or maybe a scientist,” Travis said as he followed the intuitive line of thought

that had stricken him.

Einstein wagged a “yes” at the mention of scientist.

“Research scientist,” Travis said. Yes.

“In a lab,” Travis said. Yes, yes, yes. “You’re a lab dog?” Nora asked. Yes.

“A research animal,” Travis said. Yes.

“And that’s why you’re so bright.” Yes.

“Because of something they’ve done to you.” Yes.

Travis’s heart raced. They actually were communicating, by God, not just in

broad strokes, and not just in the comparatively crude way he and Einstein had

communicated the night that the dog had formed a question mark out of

Milk-Bones. This was communication with extreme specificity. Here they were,

talking as if they were three people—well, almost talking—and suddenly nothing

would ever be the same again. Nothing could possibly be the same in a world

where men and animals possessed equal (if different) intellects, where they

faced life on equal terms, with equal rights, with similar hopes and dreams. All

right, okay, so maybe he was blowing this out of proportion. Not all animals had

suddenly been given human-level consciousness and intelligence; this was only

one dog, an experimental animal, perhaps the only one of his kind. But Jesus.

Jesus. Travis stared in awe at the retriever, and a chill swept through him, not

a chill of fear but of wonder.

Nora spoke to the dog, and in her voice was a trace of the same awe that had

briefly rendered Travis speechless: “They didn’t just let you go, did they?”

One bark. No.

“You escaped?”

Yes.

“That Tuesday morning I found you in the woods?” Travis asked. “Had you just

escaped then?”

Einstein neither barked nor wagged his tail.

“Days before that?” Travis asked.

The dog whined.

“He probably has a sense of time,” Nora said, “because virtually all animals

follow natural day-night rhythms, don’t they? They have instinctive clocks,

biological clocks. But he probably doesn’t have any concept of calendar days.

He doesn’t really understand how we divide time up into days and weeks and

months, so he has no way of answering your question.”

“Then that’s something we’ll have to teach him,” Travis said.

Einstein vigorously wagged his tail.

Thoughtfully, Nora said, “Escaped . .

Travis knew what she must be thinking. To Einstein, he said, “They’ll be looking

for you, won’t they?”

The dog whined and wagged his tail—which Travis interpreted as a “yes” with a

special edge of anxiety.

4

An hour after sunset, Lemuel Johnson and Cliff Soames, trailed by two additional

unmarked cars carrying eight NSA agents, arrived at Bordeaux Ridge. The unpaved

street through the center of the unfinished housing tract was lined with

vehicles, mostly black-and-whites bearing the Sheriffs Department shield, plus

cars and a van from the coroner’s office.

Lem was dismayed to see that the press had already arrived. Both print

journalists and television crews with minicams were being kept behind a police

line, half a block from the apparent scene of the murder. By quietly suppressing

details of the death of Wesley Dalberg in Holy Jim Canyon and of the associated

murders of the scientists working at Banodyne, and by instituting an aggressive

campaign of disinformation, the NSA had managed to keep the press ignorant of

the connections among all these events. Lem hoped that the deputies manning

these barriers were among Walt Gaines’s most trusted men and that they would

meet reporters’ questions with stony silence until a convincing cover story

could be developed.

Sawhorses were lifted out of the way to let the unmarked NSA cars through the

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