Dean Koontz

The Eyes of Darkness by Dean Koontz

Few Vegas houses had basements. “Yes. The garage.” “If you want, I could just go in through the garage door.” “No. That’s all right. Come in.”

He stepped across the threshold. She closed and locked the door. “Nice place you’ve got here.” “Thank you.”

“Cozy. Good sense of color. All these earth tones. I like that. It’s a little bit like our house. My wife has a real good sense of color.”

“It’s relaxing,” Tina said. “Isn’t it? So nice and natural.”

“The garage is this way,” she said.

He followed her past the kitchen, into the short hall, into the laundry room, and from there into the garage.

Tina switched on the light. The darkness was dispelled, but shadows remained along the walls and in the corners.

The garage was slightly musty, but Tina wasn’t able to detect the odor of gas. “Doesn’t smell like there’s trouble here,” she said.

“You’re probably right. But you never can tell. It could be an underground break on your property. Gas might be leaking under the concrete slab and building up down there, in which case it’s possible you wouldn’t detect it right away, but you’d still be sitting on top of a bomb.”

“What a lovely thought.” “Makes life interesting.”

“It’s a good thing you’re not working in the gas company’s public relations department.” He laughed. “Don’t worry. If I really believed there was even the tiniest chance of anything like that, would I be standing here so cheerful?”

“I guess not.”

“You can bet on it. Really. Don’t worry. This is just going to be a routine check.”

He went to the furnace, put his heavy tool kit on the floor, and hunkered down. He opened a hinged plate, exposing the furnace’s workings. A ring of brilliant, pulsing flame was visible in there, and it bathed his face in an eerie blue light.

“Well?” she said.

He looked up at her. “This will take me maybe fifteen or twenty minutes.” “Oh. I thought it was just a simple thing.”

“It’s best to be thorough in a situation like this.” “By all means, be thorough.”

“Hey, if you’ve got something to do, feel free to go ahead with it. I won’t be needing anything.”

Tina thought of the graphic novel with the man in black on its cover. She was curious about the story out of which that creature had stepped, for she had the peculiar feeling that, in some way, it would be similar to the story of Danny’s death. This was a bizarre notion, and she didn’t know where it had come from, but she couldn’t dispel it.

“Well,” she said, “I was cleaning the back room. If you’re sure—”

“Oh, certainly,” he said. “Go ahead. Don’t let me interrupt your housework.”

She left him there in the shadowy garage, his face painted by shimmering blue light, his eyes gleaming with twin reflections of fire.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

17

WHEN ELLIOT REFUSED TO MOVE AWAY FROM THE sink to the breakfast table in the far corner of the big kitchen, Bob, the smaller of the two men, hesitated, then reluctantly took a step toward him.

“Wait,” Vince said.

Bob stopped, obviously relieved that his hulking accomplice was going to deal with Elliot.

“Don’t get in my way,” Vince advised. He tucked the sheaf of typewritten questions into his coat pocket. “Let me handle this bastard.”

Bob retreated to the table, and Elliot turned his attention to the larger intruder.

Vince held the pistol in his right hand and made a fist with his left. “You really think you want to tangle with me, little man? Hell, my fist is just about as big as your head. You know what this fist is going to feel like when it hits, little man?”

Elliot had a pretty good idea of what it would feel like, and he was sweating under his arms and in the small of his back, but he didn’t move, and he didn’t respond to the stranger’s taunting.

“It’s going to feel like a freight train ramming straight through you,” Vince said. “So stop being so damn stubborn.”

They were going to great lengths to avoid using violence, which confirmed Elliot’s suspicion that they wanted to leave him unmarked, so that later his body would bear no cuts or bruises incompatible with suicide.

The bear-who-would-be-a-man shambled toward him. “You want to change your mind, be cooperative?”

Elliot held his ground.

“One good punch in the belly,” Vince said, “and you’ll be puking your guts out on your shoes.”

Another step.

“And when you’re done puking your guts out,” Vince said, “I’m going to grab you by your balls and drag you over to the table.”

One more step.

Then the big man stopped.

They were only an arm’s length apart.

Elliot glanced at Bob, who was still standing at the breakfast table, the packet of syringes in his hand.

“Last chance to do it the easy way,” Vince said.

In one smooth lightning-fast movement, Elliot seized the measuring cup into which he had poured four ounces of vinegar a few minutes ago, and he threw the contents in Vince’s face. The big man cried out in surprise and pain, temporarily blinded. Elliot dropped the measuring cup and seized the gun, but Vince reflexively squeezed off a shot that breezed past Elliot’s face and smashed the window behind the sink. Elliot ducked a wild roundhouse punch, stepped in close, still holding on to the pistol that the other man wouldn’t surrender. He swung one arm around, slamming his bent elbow into Vince’s throat. The big man’s head snapped back, and Elliot chopped the exposed Adam’s apple with the flat blade of his hand. He rammed his knee into his adversary’s crotch and tore the gun out of the bear-paw hand as those clutching fingers went slack. Vince bent

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