Midnight

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by Dean Koontz


  new descent into the savage mind was almost welcome.

  Repeatedly, both when in the grip of a primitive consciousness and when the clouds lifted from his mind, he thought of the boy, Eddie Valdoski, the boy, the tender boy, and he thrilled to the memory of blood, sweet blood, fresh blood steaming in the cold night air.

  42

  Physically and mentally exhausted, Chrissie nevertheless was not able to sleep. In the burlap tarps in the back of Mr. Eulane’s truck, she hung from the thin line of wakefulness, wanting nothing more than to let go and fall into unconsciousness.

  She felt incomplete, as though something had been left undone—and suddenly she was crying. Burying her face in the fragrant and slightly scratchy burlap, she bawled as she’d not done in years, with the abandon of a baby. She wept for her mother and father, perhaps lost forever, not taken cleanly by death but by something foul, dirty, inhuman, satanic. She wept for the adolescence that would have been hers—horses and seaside pastures and books read on the beach—but that had been shattered beyond repair. She wept, as well, over some loss she felt but could not quite identify, though she suspected it was innocence or maybe faith in the triumph of good over evil.

  None of the fictional heroines she admired would have indulged in uncontrolled weeping, and Chrissie was embarrassed by her torrent of tears. But to weep was as human as to err, and perhaps she needed to cry, in part, to prove to herself that no monstrous seed had been planted in her of the sort that had germinated and spread tendrils through her parents. Crying, she was still Chrissie. Crying was proof that no one had stolen her soul.

  She slept.

  43

  Sam had seen another pay phone at a Union 76 service station one block north of Ocean. The station was out of business. The windows were filmed with gray dust, and a hastily lettered FOR SALE sign hung in one of them, as if the owner actually didn’t care whether the place was sold or not and had made the sign only because it was expected of him. Crisp, dead leaves and dry pine needles from surrounding trees had blown against the gasoline pumps and lay in snow-like drifts.

  The phone booth was against the south wall of the building and visible from the street. Sam stepped through the open door but did not pull it shut, for fear of completing a circuit that would turn on the overhead bulb and draw him to the attention of any cops who happened by.

  The line was dead. He deposited a coin, hoping that would activate the dial tone. The line was still dead.

  He jiggled the hook from which the handset hung. His coin was returned.

  He tried again but to no avail.

  He believed that pay phones in or adjacent to a service station or privately owned store were sometimes joint operations, the income shared between the telephone company and the businessman who allowed the phone to be installed. Perhaps they had turned off the phone when the Union 76 had closed up.

  However, he suspected the police had used their access to the telephone-company’s computer to disable all coin-operated phones in Moonlight Cove. The moment they had learned an undercover federal agent was in town, they could have taken extreme measures to prevent him from contacting the world outside.

  Of course he might be overestimating their capabilities. He had to try another phone before giving up hope of contacting the Bureau.

  On his walk after dinner, he had passed a coin laundry half a block north of Ocean Avenue and two blocks west of this Union 76. He was pretty sure that when glancing through the plate glass window, he had seen a telephone on the rear wall, at the end of a row of industrial-size dryers with stainless-steel fronts.

  He left the Union 76. As much as possible staying away from the streetlamps—which illuminated side streets only in the first block north and south of Ocean—using alleyways where he could, he slipped through the silent town, toward where he remembered having seen the laundry. He wished the wind would die and leave some of the rapidly dissipating fog.

  At an intersection one block north of Ocean and half a block from the laundry, he almost walked into plain sight of a cop driving south toward the center of town. The patrolman was half a block from the intersection, coming slowly, surveying both sides of the street. Fortunately he was looking the other way when Sam hurried into the unavoidable fall of lamplight at the corner.

  Sam scrambled backward and pressed into a deep entrance way on the side of a three-story brick building that housed some of the town’s professionals A plaque in the recess, to the left of the door, listed a dentist, two lawyers, a doctor, and a chiropractor. If the patrol turned left at the corner and came past him, he’d probably be spotted. But if it either went straight on toward Ocean or turned right and headed west, he would not be seen.

  Leaning against the locked door and as far back in the shadows as he could go, waiting for the infuriatingly slow car to reach the intersection, Sam had a moment for reflection and realized that even for one-thirty in the morning, Moonlight Cove was peculiarly quiet and the streets unusually deserted. Small towns had night owls as surely as did cities; there should have been a pedestrian or two, a car now and then, some signs of life other than police patrols.

  The black-and-white turned right at the corner, heading west and away from him.

  Although the danger had passed, Sam remained in the unlighted entrance way, mentally retracing his journey from Cove Lodge to the municipal building, from there to the Union 76, and finally to his current position. He could not recall passing a house where music was playing, where a television blared, or where the laughter of late revelers indicated a party in progress. He had seen no young couples sharing a last kiss in parked cars. The few restaurants and taverns were apparently closed, and the movie theater was out of business, and except for his movements and those of the police, Moonlight Cove might have been a ghost town. Its living rooms, bedrooms, and kitchens might have been peopled only by moldering corpses—or by robots that posed as people during the day and were turned off at night to save energy when it was not as essential to maintain the illusion of life.

  Increasingly worried by the word “conversion” and its mysterious meaning in the context of this thing they called the Moonhawk Project, he left the entrance way, turned the corner, and ran along the brightly lighted street to the laundry. He saw the phone as he was pushing open the glass door.

  He hurried halfway through the long room-dryers on the right, a double row of washers back-to-back in the middle, some chairs at the end of the washers, more chairs along the left wall with the candy and detergent machines and the laundry-folding counter—before he realized the place was not deserted. A petite blonde in faded jeans and a blue pullover sweater sat on one of the yellow plastic chairs. None of the washers or dryers was running, and the woman did not seem to have a basket of clothes with her.

  He was so startled by her—a live person, a live civilian, in this sepulchral night—that he stopped and blinked.

  She was perched on the edge of the chair, visibly tense. Her eyes were wide. Her hands were clenched in her lap. She seemed to be holding her breath.

  Realizing that he had frightened her, Sam said, “Sorry.”

  She stared at him as if she were a rabbit facing down a fox. Aware that he must look wild-eyed, even frantic, he added, “I’m not dangerous.”

  “They all say that.”

  “They do?”

  “But I am.”

  Confused, he said, “You are what?”

  “Dangerous.”

  “Really?”

  She stood up.

  “I’m a black belt.”

  For the first time in days, a genuine smile pulled at Sam’s face. “Can you kill with your hands?”

  She stared at him for a moment, pale and shaking. When she spoke, her defensive anger was excessive.

  “Hey, don’t laugh at me, asshole, or I’ll bust you up so bad that when you walk, you’ll clink like a bag of broken glass.”

  At last, astonished by her vehemency, Sam began to assimilate the observations he’d made on
entering. No washers or dryers in operation. No clothes basket. No box of detergent or bottle of fabric softener.

  “What’s wrong?” he asked, suddenly suspicious.

  “Nothing, if you keep your distance.”

  He wondered if she knew somehow that the local cops were eager to get hold of him. But that seemed nuts. How could she know?

  “What’re you doing here if you don’t have clothes to wash?”

  “What’s it your business? You own this dump?” she demanded.

  “No. And don’t tell me you own it, either.”

  She glared at him.

  He studied her, gradually absorbing how attractive she was.

  She had eyes as piercingly blue as a June sky and skin as clear as summer air, and she seemed radically out of place along this dark, October coast, let alone in a grungy Laundromat at one-thirty in the morning. When her beauty finally, fully registered with him, so did other things about her, including the intensity of her fear, which was revealed in her eyes and in the lines around them and in the set of her mouth. it was fear far out of proportion to any threat he could pose. If he had been a six-foot-six, three-hundred-pound, tattooed biker with a revolver in one hand and a ten-inch knife in the other, and if he had burst into the laundry chanting paeans to Satan, the utterly bloodless paleness of her face and the hard edge of terror in her eyes would have been understandable. But he was only Sam Booker, whose greatest attribute as an agent was his guy-next-door ordinariness and an aura of harmlessness.

  Unsettled by her unsettledness, he said, “The phone.”

  “What?”

  He pointed at the pay phone.

  “Yes,” she said, as if confirming it was indeed a phone.

  “Just came in to make a call.”

  “Oh.”

  Keeping one eye on her, he went to the phone, fed it his quarter, but got no dial tone. He retrieved his coin, tried again. No luck.

  “Damn!” he said.

  The blonde had edged toward the door. She halted, as though she thought he might rush at her and drag her down if she attempted to leave the Laundromat.

  The Cove engendered in Sam a powerful paranoia. Increasingly over the past few hours he had come to think of everyone in town as a potential enemy. And suddenly he perceived that this woman’s peculiar behavior resulted from a state of mind precisely like his. “Yes, of course—you’re not from here, are you, from Moonlight Cove?”

  “So?”

  “Neither am I.”

  “So?”

  “And you’ve seen something.”

  She stared at him.

  He said, “Something’s happened, you’ve seen something, and you’re scared, and I’ll bet you’ve got damned good reason to be.”

  She looked as if she’d sprint for the door.

  “Wait,” he said quickly. “I’m with the FBI.” His voice cracked slightly. “I really am.”

  44

  Because he was a night person who had always preferred to sleep during the day, Thomas Shaddack was in his teak-paneled study, dressed in a gray sweat suit, working on an aspect of Moonhawk at a computer terminal, when Evan, his night servant, rang through to tell him that Loman Watkins was at the front door.

  “Send him to the tower,” Shaddack said.

  “I’ll join him shortly. ” He seldom wore anything but sweat suits these days. He had more than twenty in the closet—ten black, ten gray, and a couple navy blue. They were more comfortable than other clothes, and by limiting his choices, he saved time that otherwise would be wasted coordinating each day’s wardrobe, a task at which he was not skilled. Fashion was of no interest to him. Besides, he was gawky—big feet, lanky legs, knobby knees, long arms, bony shoulders—and too thin to look good even in finely tailored suits. Clothes either hung strangely on him or emphasized his thinness to such a degree that he appeared to be Death personified, an unfortunate image reinforced by his flour-white skin, nearly black hair, sharp features, and yellowish eyes.

  He even wore sweat suits to New Wave board meetings. If you were a genius in your field, people expected you to be eccentric. And if your personal fortune was in the hundreds of millions, they accepted all eccentricities without comment.

  His ultramodern, reinforced-concrete house at cliff’s edge near the north point of the cove was another expression of his calculated nonconformity. The three stories were like three layers of a cake, though each layer was of a different size than the others—the largest on top, the smallest in the middle—and they were not concentric but misaligned, creating a profile that in daylight lent the house the appearance of an enormous piece of avant-garde sculpture. At night, its myriad windows aglow, it looked less like sculpture than like the star-traveling mothership of an invading alien force.

  The tower was eccentricity piled on eccentricity, rising offcenter from the third level, soaring an additional forty feet into the air. It was not round but oval, not anything like a tower in which a princess might pine for a crusade-bound prince or in which a king might have his enemies imprisoned and tortured, but reminiscent of the conning tower of a submarine. The large, glass-walled room at the top could be reached by elevator or by stairs that spiraled around the inside of the tower wall, circling the metal core in which the elevator was housed.

  Shaddack kept Watkins waiting for ten minutes, just for the hell of it, then chose to take the lift to meet him. The interior of the cab was paneled with burnished brass, so although the mechanism was slow, he seemed to be ascending inside a rifle cartridge.

  He had added the tower to the architect’s designs almost as an afterthought, but it had become his favorite part of the huge house. That high place offered endless vistas of calm (or wind-chopped), sun-spangled (or night-shrouded) sea to the west. To the east and south, he looked out and down on the whole town of Moonlight Cove; his sense of superiority was comfortably reinforced by that lofty perspective on the only other visible works of man. From that room, only four months ago, he had seen the moonhawk for the third time in his life, a sight that few men were privileged to see even once—which he took to be a sign that he was destined to become the most influential man ever to walk the earth.

  The elevator stopped. The doors opened.

  When Shaddack entered the dimly lighted room that encircled the elevator, Loman Watkins rose quickly from an armchair and respectfully said, “Good evening, sir.”

  “Please be seated, chief,” he said graciously, even affably, but with a subtle note in his voice that reinforced their mutual understanding that it was Shaddack, not Watkins, who decided how formal or casual the meeting would be.

  Shaddack was the only child of James Randolph Shaddack, a former circuit-court judge in Phoenix, now deceased. The family had not been wealthy, though solidly upper middle-class, and that position on the economic ladder, combined with the prestige of a judgeship, gave James considerable stature in his community. And power. Throughout his childhood and adolescence, Tom had been fascinated by how his father, a political activist as well as a judge, had used that power not only to acquire material benefits but to control others. The control—the exercise of power for power’s sake—was what had most appealed to James, and that was what had deeply excited his son, too, from an early age.

  Now Tom Shaddack held power over Loman Watkins and Moonlight Cove by reason of his wealth, because he was the primary employer in town, because he gripped the reins of the political system, and because of the Moonhawk Project, named after the thrice-received vision. But his ability to manipulate them was more extensive than anything old James had enjoyed as a judge and canny politico. He possessed the power of life and death over them—literally. If an hour from now he decided they all must die, they would be dead before midnight. Furthermore he could condemn them to the grave with no more chance of being punished than a god risked when raining fire on his creations.

  The only lights in the tower room were concealed in a recess under the immense windows, which extended from the ceiling to within ten inc
hes of the floor. The hidden lamps ringed the chamber, subtly illuminating the plush carpet but casting no glare on the huge panes. Nevertheless, if the night had been clear, Shaddack would have flicked the switch next to the elevator button, plunging the room into near darkness, so his ghostly reflection and those of the starkly modern furnishings would not fall on the glass between him and his view of the world over which he held dominion. He left the lights on, however, because some milky fog still churned past glass walls, and little could be seen now that the horned moon had found the horizon.

  Barefoot, Shaddack crossed the charcoal-gray carpet. He settled into a second armchair, facing Loman Watkins across a low, white-marble cocktail table.

  The policeman was forty-four, less than three years older than Shaddack, but he was Shaddack’s complete physical opposite: five-ten, a hundred and eighty pounds, large-boned, broad in the shoulders and chest, thick-necked. His face was broad, too, as open and guileless as Shaddack’s was closed and cunning. His blue eyes met Shaddack’s yellow-brown gaze, held it only for a moment, then lowered to stare at his strong hands, which were clasped so rigidly in his lap that the sharp knuckles seemed in danger of piercing the taut skin. His darkly tanned scalp showed through brush-cut brown hair.

  Watkins’s obvious subservience pleased Shaddack, but he was even more gratified by the chief’s fear, which was evident in the tremors that the man was struggling—with some success—to repress and in the haunted expression that deepened the color of his eyes. Because of the Moonhawk Project, because of what had been done to him, Loman Watkins was in many ways superior to most men, but he was also now and forever in Shaddack’s thrall as surely as a laboratory mouse, clamped down and attached to electrodes, was at the mercy of the scientist who conducted experiments on him. In a manner of speaking, Shaddack was Watkins’s maker, and he possessed, in Watkins’s eyes, the position and power of a god.

  Leaning back in his chair, folding his pale, long-fingered hands on his chest, Shaddack felt his manhood swelling, hardening. He was not aroused by Loman Watkins, because he had no tendency whatsoever toward homosexuality; he was aroused not by anything in Watkins’s physical appearance but by the awareness of the tremendous authority he wielded over the man. Power aroused Shaddack more fully and easily than sexual stimuli. Even as an adolescent, when he saw pictures of naked women in erotic magazines, he was turned on not by the sight of bared breasts, not by the curve of a female bottom or the elegant line of long legs, but by the thought of dominating such women, totally controlling them, holding their very lives in his hands. If a woman looked at him with undisguised fear, he found her infinitely more appealing than if she regarded him with desire. And since he reacted more strongly to terror than to lust, his arousal was not dependent upon the sex or age or physical attractiveness of the person who trembled in his presence.

  Enjoying the policeman’s submissiveness, Shaddack said, “You’ve got Booker?”

  “No, sir.”

  “Why not?”

  “He wasn’t at Cove Lodge when Sholnick got there.”

  “He’s got to be found.”

  “We’ll find him.”

  “And converted. Not just to prevent him from telling anyone what he’s seen … but to give us one of our own inside the Bureau. That’d be a coup. His being here could turn out to be an incredible plus for the project.”

  “Well, whether Booker’s a plus or not, there’s worse than him. Regressives attacked some of the guests at the lodge. Quinn himself was either carried off, killed, and left where we haven’t found him yet … or he was one of the regressives himself and is off now … doing whatever they do after a kill, maybe baying at the goddamn moon.”

  With growing dismay and agitation, Shaddack listened to the report.

  Perched on the edge of his chair, Watkins finished, blinked, and said, “These regressives scare the hell out of me.”

  “They’re disturbing,” Shaddack agreed.

  On the night of September fourth, they had cornered a regressive, Jordan Coombs, in the movie theater on main street. Coombs had been a maintenance man at New Wave. That night, however, he had been more ape than man, although actually neither, but something so strange and savage that no single word could describe him. The term “regressive” was only adequate, Shaddack had discovered, if you never came face to face with one of the beasts. Because once you’d seen one close up, “regressive” insufficiently conveyed the horror of the thing, and in fact all words failed. Their attempt to take Coombs alive had failed, too, for he had proved too aggressive and powerful to be subdued; to save themselves, they’d had to blow his head off.

  Now Watkins said, “They’re more than disturbing. Much more than just that. They’re …. psychotic.”

  “I know they’re psychotic,” Shaddack said impatiently. “I’ve named their condition myself metamorphic-related psychosis.”

  “They enjoy killing.”

  Thomas Shaddack frowned. He had not foreseen the problem of the regressives, and he refused to believe that they constituted more than a minor anomaly in the otherwise beneficial conversion of the people of Moonlight Cove. “Yes, all right, they enjoy killing, and in their regressed state they’re designed for it, but we’ve only a few of them to identify and eliminate. Statistically, they’re an insignificant percentage of those we’ve put through the Change.”

  “Maybe not so insignificant,” Watkins said hesitantly, unable to meet Shaddack’s eyes, a reluctant bearer of bad tidings. “Judging by all the bloody wreckage lately, I’d guess that among those nineteen hundred converted as of this morning, there were fifty or sixty of these regressives out there.”

  “Ridiculous!”

  To admit regressives existed in large numbers, Shaddack would have to consider the possibility that his research was flawed, that he had rushed his

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