WATCHERS by Dean R. Koontz

“No, we’re really not. I paint, and you do things in which poor Einstein doesn’t

get included. And if you do go back to real estate eventually, there’ll be a lot

of time when Einstein’s without anyone.”

“He has his books. He loves books.”

“Maybe books aren’t enough,” she said.

They were silent for so long that she thought Travis had fallen asleep. Then he

said, “If Einstein mated and produced puppies, what would they be like?”

“You mean—would they be as smart as he is?”

“I wonder . . . Seems to me there’s three possibilities. First, his intelligence

isn’t inheritable, so his puppies would just be ordinary puppies. Second, it is

inheritable, but the genes of his mate would dilute the intelligence, so the

puppies would be smart but not as smart as their father; and each succeeding

generation would get dimmer, duller, until eventually his

great-great-greatgrandpups would just be ordinary dogs.”

“What’s the third possibility?”

“Intelligence, being a survival trait, might be genetically dominant, very

dominant.”

“In which case his puppies would be as smart as he is.”

“And their puppies after them, on and on, until in time you’d have a colony of

intelligent golden retrievers, thousands of them all over the world.”

They were silent again.

Finally she said, “Wow.”

Travis said, “He’s right.”

“What?”

“It is something worth thinking about.”

4

Vince Nasco had never anticipated, back in November, that he would need a full

month to get a whack at Ramon Velazquez, the guy in Oakland who was a thorn in

the side of Don Mario Tetragna. Until he wasted Velazquez, Vince would not be

given the names of people in San Francisco who dealt in false ID and who might

help him track down Travis Cornell, the woman, and the dog. So he had an urgent

need to reduce Velazquez to a hunk of putrefying meat.

But Velazquez was a goddamn shadow. The man did not make a step without two

bodyguards at his side, which should have made him more rather than less

conspicuous. However, he conducted his gambling and drug enterprises—infringing

on the Tetragna franchise in Oakland—with all the stealth of Howard Hughes. He

slipped and slithered on his errands, using a fleet of different cars, never

taking the same route two days in a row, never meeting in the same place, using

the street as an office, never staying anywhere long enough to be made, marked,

and wiped out. He was a hopeless paranoid who believed everyone was out to get

him. Vince couldn’t keep the man in sight long enough to match him with the

photograph that the Tetragnas had supplied. Ramon Velazquez was smoke.

Vince didn’t get him until Christmas Day, and it was a hell of a mess when it

went down. Ramon was at home with a lot of relatives. Vince came at the

Velazquez property from the house behind it, over the high brick wall between

one big lot and the other. Coming down on the other side, he saw Velazquez and

some people at a barbecue on the patio near the pool, where they were roasting

an enormous turkey—did people barbecue turkeys anywhere but in

California?—and they all spotted him immediately though he was half an acre

away. He saw the bodyguards reaching for weapons in their shoulder holsters, so

he had no choice but to fire indiscriminately with his Uzi, spraying the entire

patio area, taking out Velazquez, both bodyguards, a middle-aged woman who must

have been somebody’s wife, and an old dame who had to be somebody’s grandmother.

Ssssnap.

Ssssnap.

Ssssnap.

Ssssnap.

Ssssnap.

Everyone else, inside and outside of the house, was screaming and diving for

cover. Vince had to climb the wall back into the yard of the house next

door—where nobody was home, thank God—and as he was hauling his ass over the

top, a bunch of Latino types at the Velazquez place opened fire on him. He

barely got away with his hide intact.

The day after Christmas, when he showed up at a San Francisco restaurant owned

by Don Tetragna, to meet with Frank Dicenziano, a trusted Family capo who

answered only to the don himself, Vince was worried. The fratellanza had a code

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