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Authors: Dean Koontz

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BOOK: Ticktock
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When the police arrived, they might not find much left of the victims on that patio. Perhaps nothing other than a little blood—and not even blood after a few more minutes of cleansing rain. The two men would seem to have vanished.

Tommy's stomach twisted with nausea.

If his arm hadn't still been tingling from the blow to his funny bone, if his muscles and joints hadn't ached from the fall and burned with fatigue, if he had not been shivering from the cold, he might have thought that he was in a nightmare. But he was suffering enough discomfort and pain that he had no need to pinch himself to determine if he was awake.

More than one siren cleaved the night, and they were rapidly drawing nearer.

Scootie ran, Del ran, Tommy ran once more, as one of the men stopped screaming, stopped being
able
to scream, and then the second man's cries choked off as well, and not a single dog was barking any more, all silenced by the scent of something otherworldly, while the harbor gradually filled with an incoming tide and the earth rotated inexorably toward dawn.

SIX

Under the roof of the silent and unmoving carousel, among the herd of colorful horses frozen in mid-gallop, Tommy and Del found a two-person chariot with carved eagles on the sides. They were glad to be out of the rain and to have a chance, however brief, to rest.

Ordinarily the perimeter of the carousel was covered when it was not in use, but this night it stood open to the elements.

Scootie quietly prowled among the horses, circling the elevated platform, apparently on sentry duty, ready to warn them if the demon approached in either its Samaritan guise or any other.

The Balboa Fun Zone, arguably the heart of the peninsula's important tourist business, extended for a few blocks along Edgewater Avenue, a pedestrian mall that did not admit vehicular traffic west of Main Street. Numerous gift shops, Pizza Pete's, ice-cream stands, restaurants, Balboa Saloon, arcades offering video games and pinball and skee-ball, boat-rental operations, bumper cars, a Ferris wheel, the carousel on which Tommy and Del sat, Lazer Tag, docks for various companies offering guided-tour cruises, and other diversions lined Edgewater, with views of the dazzling harbor and its islands to be glimpsed between the attractions on the north side.

In spring, summer, and autumn—or on any warm day in the winter—tourists and sun lovers strolled this promenade, taking a break from the Pacific surf and from the beaches on the opposite side of the narrow peninsula. Newlyweds, elderly couples, spectacular-looking young women in bikinis, lean and tanned young men in shorts, and children walked-skated-Rollerbladed among veterans in wheelchairs and babies in strollers, enjoying the glitter of sunlight on water, eating ice-cream cones, roasted corn from Kountry Corn, Popsicles, cookies. Laughter and happy chatter mingled with the music from the carousel, the putter of boat engines, and the ceaseless ring-beep-pong-bop from the game arcades.

At two-thirty on this stormy November morning, the Fun Zone was deserted. The only sounds were those made by the rain as it drummed hollowly on the carousel roof, pinged off the brass poles on the outer circle of horses, snapped against festoons of limp vinyl pennants, and drizzled through the fronds of the queen palms along the harbor side of the promenade. This was a lonely music, the forlorn and tuneless anthem of desolation.

The shops and other attractions were shuttered and dark but for an occasional security lantern. On summer evenings, when augmented by the neon and the sparkling Tivoli lights of the arcades and rides, the old bronze lampposts with frosted-glass globes—some round, most in the form of urns with finials—provided an appealing and romantic glow; then everything glimmered, including the great mirror that was the harbor, and the world was scintillant, effervescent. But now the lamplight was strangely bleak, cold, too feeble to prevent the crushing weight of the November night from pressing low over the Fun Zone.

Extracting a shotgun shell from a pocket in her ski jacket, Del spoke in a murmur that would not carry beyond the carousel: “Here. You only fired one round, I think.”

“Yeah,” Tommy said, matching her soft tone.

“Keep it fully loaded.”

“Those poor damn guys,” he lamented as he slid the shell into the magazine tube on the Mossberg. “What horrible deaths.”

“It's not your fault,” she said.

“They wouldn't have been there, the
thing
wouldn't have been there, if
I
hadn't been there.”

“It's upsetting,” she agreed. “But you were only trying to stay alive, running for your life, and they stepped in.”

“Still.”

“Obviously, they were marked for an unnatural extraction.”

“Extraction?”

“From this world. If the thing in the fat man hadn't gotten them, then they would have been taken in some other unusual way. Like spontaneous combustion. Or an encounter with a lycanthrope.”

“Lycanthrope? Werewolf?” He wasn't able to deal with her weirdness just now, so he changed the subject. “Where the hell did you learn to shoot like that? Your mother again?”

“Daddy. He taught Mom and me, wanted us to be prepared for anything. Pistols, revolvers, rifles, shotguns. I can handle an Uzi as if I were born with it, and—”

“Uzi?”

“Yeah. And when it comes to—”

“Submachine guns?”

“—when it comes to knife throwing—”


Knife
throwing?” Tommy said, and realized that he had raised his voice.

“—I'm good enough to put together a stage act and make a living with it in Vegas or even the circus, if I ever had to,” Del continued in a murmur as she unzipped another pocket and took from it a handful of cartridges for the Desert Eagle. “Unfortunately, I'm not half as good at fencing as I'd like to be, though I'll admit to being first-rate with a crossbow.”

“He died when you were ten,” Tommy said. “So he taught you all this when you were just a little kid?”

“Yeah. We'd go out in the desert near Vegas and blow the crap out of empty soda bottles, tin cans, posters of old movie monsters like Dracula and the creature from the Black Lagoon. It was a lot of fun.”

“What in the name of God was he preparing you for?”

“Dating.”

“Dating?”

“That was his joke. Actually he was preparing me for the unusual life he knew I was going to have.”

“How could he know?”

Rather than answer the question, Del said, “But the truth is, because of the training Daddy gave me, I've never been on a date with any guy who intimidated me, never had a problem.”

“I guess not. I think you'd have to be dating Hannibal Lecter before you'd feel uneasy.”

Pressing the last two rounds into the .44 magazine, she said, “I still miss Daddy. He truly understood me—and not many people ever do.”

“I'm trying,” Tommy assured her.

Passing by on his sentry duties, Scootie came to Del, put his head in her lap, and whimpered as though he had heard the regret and the sense of loss in her voice.

Tommy said, “How could a little girl hold and fire a gun like that? The recoil—”

“Oh, of course, we started with an air rifle, an air pistol, and then a .22,” she said, slamming the loaded magazine into the Israeli pistol. “When we practiced with rifles or shotguns, Daddy padded my shoulders, crouched behind to brace me, and held the gun with me. He was only familiarizing me with the more powerful weapons, so I'd feel comfortable with them from an early age, wouldn't be afraid of them when the time came to actually handle them. He died before I
really
got good with the bigger stuff, and then Mom continued the lessons.”

“Too bad he never got around to teaching you how to make bombs,” Tommy said with mock dismay.

“I'm comfortable with dynamite and most plastic explosives, but they really aren't particularly useful for self-defense.”

“Was your father a terrorist?”

“Furthest thing from it. He thought all politics were stupid. He was a gentle man.”

“But he just usually had some dynamite laying around to practice making bombs.”

“Not usually.”

“Just at Christmas, huh?”

“Basically, I learned explosives not to make bombs but to disarm them if I had to.”

“A task we're all faced with every month or so.”

“No,” she said, “I've only had to do it twice.”

Tommy wanted to believe that she was kidding, but he decided not to ask. His brain was overloaded with new discoveries about her, and in his current weariness, he did not have the energy or the mental capacity to contemplate more of her disconcerting revelations. “And I thought
my
family was strange.”

“Everyone thinks his family is strange,” Del said, scratching Scootie behind the ears, “but it's just that…because we're closer to the people we love, we tend to see them through a magnifying glass, through a thicker lens of emotion, and we exaggerate their eccentricities.”

“Not in the case of
your
family,” he said. “Magnifying glass or no magnifying glass, it's a strange clan.”

Scootie returned to his patrol, padding quietly away through the motionless stampede of wooden horses.

As Del zipped shut the pocket from which she had taken the ammunition, she said, “The way I see it, your family might have a prejudice against blondes, but when they see how much I've got to offer, they'll learn to like me.”

Grateful that she couldn't see him blush in this gloom, Tommy said, “Never mind expertise with guns. Can you cook? That's a big deal in my family.”

“Ah, yes, the family of fighting bakers. Well, I've picked up a lot from my folks. Daddy won several prizes in chili-cooking contests all across Texas and the Southwest, and Mom graduated from Cordon Bleu.”

“Was that
while
she was a ballerina?”

“Right after.”

He checked his watch—2:37. “Maybe we better get moving again.”

Another siren rose in the distance.

Del listened long enough to be sure that the siren was drawing nearer rather than receding. “Let's wait a while. We're going to have to find new wheels and hit the road again, but I don't want to be hot-wiring a car when the streets around here are crawling with cops.”

“If we stay too long in one place—”

“We're okay for a while. You sleepy?”

“Couldn't sleep if I tried.”

“Eyes itchy and burning?”

“Yeah,” he said. “But I'll be okay.”

“Your neck aches so bad you can hardly hold up your head,” she said, as if she could feel his discomfort.

“I'm alert enough. Don't worry about me,” he said, and with one hand he squeezed the nape of his neck as if he could pull the pain out of his flesh.

She said, “You're weary to the bone, poor baby. Turn away from me a little. Let me work on you.”

“Work on me?”

“Move your butt a little, tofu boy, come on,” she said, nudging him with her hip.

The chariot was narrow, but he was able to turn enough to allow her to massage his shoulders and the back of his neck. Her slender hands were surprisingly strong, but though she pressed hard at times, she relieved rather than caused pain.

Sighing, he said, “Who taught you this?”

“It's just a thing I know. Like my painting.”

They were both quiet for a minute, except for Tommy's occasional groan as Del's fingers found another coil of tension and slowly unwound it.

The diligent Scootie passed, out at the edge of the platform, as black as the night itself and as silent as a spirit.

As she worked her thumbs up and down the nape of Tommy's neck, Del said, “Have you ever been abducted by aliens?”

“Oh, boy.”

“What?”

“Here we go again.”

“You mean you
have
?”

“Been abducted? Of course not. I mean, here
you
go again, getting weird.”

“You don't believe in extraterrestrial intelligences?”

“I believe the universe is so big that there's got to be lots of other intelligent species in it.”

“So what's weird?”

“But I
don't
believe they come all the way across the galaxy to kidnap people and take them up in flying saucers and examine their genitals.”

“They don't just examine the genitals.”

“I know, I know. Sometimes they take the abductee to Chicago for beer and pizza.”

She lightly, chastisingly slapped the back of his head. “You're being sarcastic.”

“A little.”

“It's not becoming to you.”

“Listen, an alien species, vastly more intelligent than we are, creatures millions of years more evolved than we are, probably wouldn't have any interest in us at all—and certainly wouldn't be interested enough to spend so much manpower harassing a bunch of ordinary citizens.”

Massaging his scalp now, Del said, “Personally, I believe in alien abductions.”

“I am not surprised.”

“I believe they're worried about us.”

“The aliens?”

“That's right.”

“Why would they be worried about us?”

“We're such a troubled species, so confused, self-destructive. I think the aliens want to help us achieve enlightenment.”

“By examining our genitals? Then those guys sitting ringside at nude-dancing clubs only want to help the girls on the stage to achieve enlightenment.”

From behind him, she reached around to his forehead, drawing light circles on his brow with her fingers. “You're such a wise guy.”

“I write detective novels.”

“Maybe you've even been abducted,” she said.

“Not me.”

“You wouldn't remember.”

“I'd remember,” he assured her.

“Not if the aliens didn't want you to.”

“Just a wild shot in the dark here—but I bet you think
you've
been abducted.”

BOOK: Ticktock
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