WATCHERS by Dean R. Koontz

tracks throughout California, but he had been injured and could no longer race

safely. However, he could still be put to stud, and Tracy had no doubt that he’d

sire winners. Within a week they hoped to add two good mares to the stable, and

then they’d take the horses immediately to a breeding farm, where Goodheart

would impregnate the mares. All three would be brought back here, where Tracy

would care for them. Next year two healthy colts would be born, and then the

young ones would be boarded with a trainer near enough so Tracy could visit

constantly, and she’d help out with their training, learn all there was to learn

about rearing a champion, and then—and then—she and the offspring of Goodheart

would make racing history, oh yes, she was quite confident of making racing

history— Her fantasizing was interrupted when, about forty yards from the

stables,

she stepped in something mushy and slippery, and nearly fell. She didn’t smell

manure, but she figured it must be a pile left by Goodheart when they’d had

him out in the yard last evening. Feeling stupid and clumsy, she switched on the

flashlight and directed it at the ground, and instead of manure she found the

remains of a brutally mutilated cat.

Tracy made a hissing sound of disgust and instantly switched off the flashlight.

The neighborhood was crawling with cats, partly because they were useful for

controlling the mouse population around everyone’s stables. Coyotes regularly

ventured in from the hills and canyons to the east, in search of prey. Although

cats were quick, coyotes were sometimes quicker, and at first Tracy thought a

coyote had dug under the fence or leaped over it and had gotten hold of this

unfortunate feline, which had probably been prowling for rodents.

But a coyote would have eaten the cat right on the spot, leaving little more

than a bit of tail and a scrap or two of fur, for a coyote was a gourmand rather

than gourmet and had a ravenous appetite. Or it would have carried the cat away

for leisurely consumption elsewhere. Yet this cat had not looked even

half-eaten, merely torn to pieces, as if something or someone had killed it

merely for the sick pleasure of rending it apart .

Tracy shuddered.

And remembered the rumors about the zoo.

In Irvine Park, which was only a couple of miles away, someone apparently had

killed several caged animals in the small petting zoo two nights ago.

Drug-crazed vandals. Thrill killers. The story was just a hot rumor, and no one

was able to confirm it, but there were indications that it was true. Some kids

had bicycled out to the park yesterday after school, and they’d not seen any

mangled carcasses, but they’d reported that there seemed to be fewer animals in

the pens than usual. And the Shetland pony was definitely missing. Park

employees had been uncommunicative when approached.

Tracy wondered if the same psychos were prowling Orange Park Acres, killing cats

and other family pets, a possibility that was spooky and sickening. Suddenly,

she realized that people deranged enough to slaughter cats for the sheer fun of

it would also be sufficiently twisted to get a kick out of killing horses.

An almost crippling pang of fear flashed through her as she thought of Goodheart

out there in the stable all by himself. For a moment, she could not move.

Around her, the night seemed even quieter than it had been.

It was quieter. The crickets were no longer chirruping. The frogs had stopped

croaking, too.

The galleon clouds seemed to have dropped anchor in the sky, and the night

appeared to have frozen in the ice-pale glow of the moon.

Something moved in the shrubbery.

Most of the enormous lot was devoted to open expanses of lawn, but a score of

trees stood in artfully placed groups—mostly Indian laurels and jacarandas, plus

a couple of corals—and there were beds of azaleas, California lilac bushes, Cape

honeysuckles.

Tracy distinctly heard shrubbery rustling as something pushed roughly and

hurriedly through it. But when she switched on the flashlight and swept the beam

around the nearest plantings, she could not see anything moving.

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