WATCHERS by Dean R. Koontz

Yes.

For a minute, the dog pressed against him, enjoying being petted. Then he turned

away from Travis, coughed a couple of times, and went downstairs.

Travis followed. In the kitchen, he found Einstein slurping water from the dish.

Having emptied the dish, the retriever went to the pantry, turned on the light,

and began to paw lettered tiles out of the Lucite tubes.

THIRSTY.

“Are you sure you feel well?”

FINE. JUST THIRSTY. NIGHTMARE WOKE ME.

Surprised, Travis said, “You dream?”

DON’T YOU?

“Yeah. Too much.”

He refilled the retriever’s water dish, and Einstein emptied it again, and

Travis filled it a second time. By then the dog had had enough. Travis expected

him to want to go outside to pee, but the dog went upstairs instead and settled

in the hall by the door of the bedroom in which Nora still slept.

In a whisper, Travis said, “Listen, if you want to come in and sleep beside the

bed, it’s all right.”

That was what Einstein wanted. He curled up on the floor on Travis’s side of the

bed.

In the dark, Travis could reach out and easily touch both the shotgun and

Einstein. He took greater reassurance from the presence of the dog than from the

gun.

6

Saturday afternoon, just two days after Thanksgiving, Garrison Dilworth got in

his Mercedes and drove slowly away from his house. Within two blocks he

confirmed that the NSA still had a tail on him. It was a green Ford, Probably

the same one that had followed him last evening. They stayed well back of him,

and they were discreet, but he was not blind.

He still had not called Nora and Travis. Because he was being followed, he

suspected his phones were being tapped as well. He could have gone to a pay

phone, but he was afraid that the NSA could eavesdrop on the conversation with a

directional microphone or some other high-tech gadget. And if they managed to

record the push-button tones that he produced by punching in the Cornells’

number, they could easily translate those tones into digits and trace the number

back to Big Sur. He would have to resort to deception to contact Travis and Nora

safely.

He knew he had better act soon, before Travis or Nora phoned him. These days,

with the technology available to them, the NSA could trace the call back to its

origins as fast as Garrison would be able to warn Travis that the line was

tapped.

So at two o’clock Saturday afternoon, chaperoned by the green Ford, he drove to

Della Colby’s house in Montecito to take her to his boat, the Amazing Grace, for

a lazy afternoon in the sun. At least that was what he had told her on the

phone.

Della was Judge Jack Colby’s widow. She and Jack were Garrison’s and Francine’s

best friends for twenty-five years before death broke up the foursome. Jack had

died one year after Francine. Della and Garrison remained very close; they

frequently went to dinner together, went dancing and walking and sailing.

Initially, their relationship had been strictly platonic; they were simply old

friends who had the fortune—or misfortune—to outlast everyone they most cared

about, and they needed each other because they shared so many good times and

memories that would be diminished when there was no longer anyone left with whom

to reminisce. A year ago, when they suddenly found themselves in bed together,

they had been surprised and overwhelmed with guilt. They felt as if they were

cheating on their spouses, though Jack and Francine had died years ago. The

guilt passed, of course, and now they were grateful for the companionship and

gently burning passion that had unexpectedly brightened their late-autumn years.

When he pulled into Della’s driveway, she came out of the house, locked the

front door, and hurried to his car. She was dressed in boat shoes, white slacks,

a blue- and white-striped sweater, and a blue windbreaker. Although she was

sixty-nine, and though her short hair was snow-white, she looked fifteen years

younger.

He got out of the Mercedes, gave her a hug and a kiss, and said, “Can we go in

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