WATCHERS by Dean R. Koontz

scrub growth—including desert plants like mesquite—

marked the upper reaches of the canyon walls that dropped away to the right and

left of them, and down on the lower slopes and canyon floors were trees and

greener undergrowth.

They were less than four air miles north of the town of Sunland, fourteen air

miles north of Hollywood, and twenty miles north of the populous heart of the

great city of Los Angeles, yet it seemed they were in a desolation measuring a

thousand miles across, disquietingly far from civilization. The sheriffs

deputies had parked their four-wheel-drive wagons on a crude dirt track

three-quarters of a mile away—coming in, Lem’s chopper had flown over those

vehicles—and they had hiked with ranger guides to the site where the bodies had

been found. Now, gathered around the corpses were four deputies, two men from

the county crime lab, and three rangers, and they looked as if they, too, felt

isolated in a primeval place.

When Lem and Cliff arrived, the sheriff’s men had just finished tucking the

remains in body bags. The zippers hadn’t yet been closed, so Lem saw that one

victim was male, the other female, both young and dressed for hiking. Their

wounds were grievous; their eyes were gone.

The dead now numbered five innocents, and that toll conjured a specter of guilt

that haunted Lem. At times like this, he wished that his father had raised him

with no sense of responsibility whatsoever.

Deputy Hal Bockner, tall and tan but with a surprisingly reedy voice, apprised

Lem of the identity and condition of the victims: “Based on the ID he was

carrying, the male’s name was Sidney Tranken, twenty-eight, of Glendale. Body

has more than a score of nasty bite marks, even more claw marks, slashes.

Throat, as you saw, torn open. Eyes—”

“Yes,” Lem said, seeing no need to dwell on these grisly details.

The men from the crime lab pulled the zippers shut on the body bags. It was a

cold sound that hung for a moment like a chain of icicles in the hot July air.

Deputy Bockner said, “At first we thought Tranken was probably knifed by some

psycho. Once in a while you get a homicidal nut who prowls these forests instead

of the streets, preying on hikers. So we figured . . . knifed first, then all

this other damage must’ve been done by animals, scavengers, after the guy was

dead. But now . . . we’re not so sure.”

“I don’t see blood on the ground here,” Cliff Soames said with a note of

puzzlement. “There’d have been a lot of it.”

“They weren’t killed here,” Deputy Bockner said, then went on with his Summary

at his own pace. “Female, twenty-seven, Ruth Kasavaris, also of Glendale. Also

vicious bite marks, slashes. Her throat—”

Cutting him off again, Lem said, “When were they killed?”

“Best guess before lab tests is that they died late yesterday. We believe the

bodies were carried up here because they’d be found quicker on the ridge top. A

popular hiking trail runs along here. But it wasn’t other hikers found them. It

was a routine fire-patrol plane. Pilot looked down, saw them sprawled here on

the bare ridge.”

This high ground above Boulder Canyon was more than thirty air miles

north-northwest of Johnstone Peak, where the young campers had taken refuge from

The Outsider in their van and had later fired at it with a .32 pistol on June

18, twenty-eight days ago. The Outsider would have been reckoning

north-northwest by sheer instinct and no doubt would have frequently been

required to backtrack out of box canyons; therefore, in this mountainous terrain

it had very likely traveled between sixty and ninety miles on the ground to

cover those thirty air miles. Still, that was only a pace of three miles a day,

at most, and Lem wondered what the creature had been doing during the time it

was not traveling or sleeping or chasing down food.

“You’ll want to see where these two were killed,” Bockner said. “We’ve found the

place. And you’ll want to see the den, too.”

“Den?”

“The lair,” one of the forest rangers said. “The damn lair.”

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