WATCHERS by Dean R. Koontz

in her bedazzlement.

Barstow, California, was a sprawling pit stop in that enormous wasteland, and

they arrived at the big RV campgrounds by three that afternoon. Frank and Mae

Jordan, the middle-aged couple in the next camper space, were from Salt Lake

City and were traveling with their pet, a black Labrador named Jack.

To Travis’s and Nora’s surprise, Einstein had a terrific time playing with Jack.

They chased each other around the trailers, took playful nips at each other,

tangled and tumbled and sprang up and went chasing again. Frank Jordan tossed a

red rubber ball for them, and they sprinted after it, vying to

be the champion retriever. The dogs also made a game of trying to get the ball

away from each other and then holding on to it as long as possible. Travis was

exhausted just watching them.

Einstein was undoubtedly the smartest dog in the world, the smartest dog of all

time, a phenomenon, a miracle, as perceptive as any man—but he was also a dog.

Sometimes, Travis forgot this fact, but he was charmed every time Einstein did

something to remind him.

Later, after sharing charcoal-grilled hamburgers and corn on the cob with the

Jordans, and after downing a couple of beers in the clear desert night, they

said goodbye to the Salt Lakers, and Einstein seemed to say goodbye to Jack.

Inside the Airstream, Travis patted Einstein on the head and told him, “That was

very nice of you.”

The dog cocked his head, staring at Travis as if to ask what the devil he meant.

Travis said, “You know what I’m talking about, fur face.”

“I know, too,” Nora said. She hugged the dog. “When you were playing games with

Jack, you could have made a fool of him if you’d wanted to, but you let him win

his share, didn’t you?”

Einstein panted and grinned happily.

After one last nightcap, Nora took the bedroom, and Travis slept on the fold-out

sofa bed in the living room. Travis had thought about sleeping with her, and

perhaps she had considered allowing him into her bed. After all, the wedding was

less than four days away. God knew, Travis wanted her. And although she surely

suffered slightly with a virgin’s fear, she wanted him, too; he had no doubt of

that. Each day, they were touching each other and kissing more often—and more

intimately—and the air between them crackled with erotic energy. But why not do

things right and proper since they were so close to the day? Why not go to their

marriage bed as virgins—she as a virgin to everyone, he to her?

That night, Travis dreamed that Nora and Einstein were lost in the desolate

reaches of the Mojave. In the dream, he was for some reason legless, forced to

search for them at an agonizingly slow crawl, which was bad because he knew

that, wherever they were, they were under attack by . . . something.

Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday in Las Vegas, they prepared for the wedding, watched

Einstein playing enthusiastically with other campers’ dogs, and took side trips

to Charleston Peak and Lake Mead. In the evenings, Nora and Travis left Einstein

with his books while they went to stage shows. Travis felt guilty about leaving

the retriever alone, but by various means Einstein indicated that he did not

want them to stay at the trailer merely because the Strip hotels were so

prejudiced and shortsighted as to refuse to allow well-behaved genius dogs into

the casinos and showrooms.

Wednesday morning, Travis dressed in a tuxedo, and Nora wore a simple

calf-length white dress with spare lace trim at the cuffs and neckline. With

Einstein between them, they drove to their wedding in the pickup, leaving the

unhitched Airstream at the campgrounds.

The nondenominational, commercial chapel was the funniest place Travis had ever

seen, for the design was earnestly romantic, solemn, and tacky all at the same

time. Nora thought it was hilarious, too, and upon entering they had trouble

suppressing their laughter. The chapel was tucked in among neondripping, glitzy,

high-rise hotels on Las Vegas Boulevard South. It was only the size of a

one-story house, pale-pink stucco with white doors. Engraved in brass above the

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