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The Taking

Dean Koontz


  “Maybe that many. Maybe even more.”

  “How many of them have parents who are dealing with this the way Derek and his crowd are dealing with it—getting drunk and worse, leaving their kids afraid and undefended?”

  “But we don’t know most of the people in town,” Neil said. “There are—what?—maybe four hundred or even five hundred houses, and we don’t know which families have kids. It’ll take hours and hours, maybe a full day, for just the two of us to go door-to-door. We don’t have that much time left.”

  “All right. So maybe we can get a few of these people to help us,” Molly said.

  Neil looked doubtful. “They’ve got their own agendas.”

  Weaving among the tables and the milling residents of Black Lake, the German shepherd returned. In its mouth, the dog held a red rose, which it brought to Molly.

  She couldn’t imagine where it had found a rose in the tavern. She hadn’t noticed any floral arrangements.

  The dog seemed to want her to take the flower.

  “You’ve got a suitor,” Neil said.

  Inevitably, she thought of her father murdering the boy in the rose garden. His voice snaked through her memory in sinuous coils of words: I buried his little disposable camera at the foot of a rosebush. It was the Cardinal Mindszenty rose, so named because of its glorious robe-red color.

  At first inclined to suspect a connection between Render and the dog, Molly hesitated to accept the rose.

  Then she looked into the shepherd’s eyes and saw what is to be seen in every dog’s eyes if it has not been broken by a cruel master: trust, strength without arrogance, a desire to give and receive affection—and an honesty so pure that deception, if contemplated, cannot be perpetrated.

  The shepherd wagged its tail.

  Molly pinched the stem of the rose, and the animal unlocked its teeth to surrender the fragrant bloom.

  As she took the flower, Molly saw evidence of a thorn prick, a spot of blood on the dog’s tongue.

  She thought at once of Render—although not as he had appeared this night, rather as he had raged maniacally in that third-grade classroom twenty years previously—and not of Michael Render only or even primarily, but also of one of his victims, a girl named Rebecca Rose, with shaggy blond hair and blue eyes, who died that afternoon in Molly’s arms.

  Rebecca Rose. A shy girl with a faint lisp. Her last words, whispered in delirium, apparently a meaningless delusion: Molly…there’s a dog. So pretty…how he shines.

  Now the shepherd watched Molly. In his eyes were mysteries to rival any others in this momentous night of enigmas, puzzles, and perplexities.

  On a rose thorn, his blood.

  Rose of forgetfulness, brought to her by the dog, became the Rose of memory, cut down so young.

  By the cock of his head, the shepherd seemed to question whether Molly Sloan—sensible Molly, she with the strong mainspring wound tight, she who always lived less in the moment than in the future, she who strived toward meticulously planned goals and was prudent in all things except her writing, she who avoided drama in her life but poured it out upon the page—could understand the intentions of a flower-bearing Sphinx, this rebus on four paws, which wanted so urgently to be properly read and understood.

  The rose trembled in her hand, and a loose petal fell, like a sanguinary drop, to the tabletop.

  And the dog waited. And the dog watched. And the dog smiled.

  In a night of dark wonder and extraordinary events, this was a moment no less important but of a different character from all that had come before it.

  Her heart raced. Her thoughts quickened, too, perhaps eventually toward a breathtaking revelation, but first through blind alleys of dead-end speculation.

  She put down the rose. She reached to the dog. He licked her hand.

  “What?” Neil said, for he knew her almost well enough to read her thoughts.

  In her mind, she walked the waters of a lucid pool and stepped ashore with an insight nearly clairvoyant in character: “The dog is going to lead us to any children who need help.”

  Neil regarded the dog, which turned its limpid eyes upon him as though its purpose could be read by anyone as easily as Molly had read it.

  “Don’t ask me how he knows what we need to do,” Molly said. “But he knows, all right. I don’t understand how he’ll find them, but he will. By scent, by instinct, by some greater gift.”

  Neil stared at the dog. He stared at Molly.

  “I know it sounds crazy,” she said.

  He looked at the long empty frame from which the bar mirror, peopled by the living dead, had shattered and fallen.

  “Then it’s the dog,” he said. “After all, what do we have to lose?”

  30

  NAMED VIRGIL, ACCORDING TO THE LICENSE tag on his collar, the shepherd was young and trim, bright-eyed, affectionate, and eager to begin the work.

  Engraved under the license number were the name and address of his owner: James Weck, on Pine Street.

  A few inquiries among those in the tavern quickly established that Weck was not present. Apparently, Virgil had been loose in the night and had found his way here, alone.

  Russell Tewkes, swigging deeply from a large mug of beer, having chosen to tie his fate to that of his best customers, the inebriates, mocked those who were getting ready to depart on missions to stock and fortify the bank building. When he realized that Neil and Molly were preparing to leave as well, he said, “Can’t you face reality? There’s nowhere to hide from this.”

  “We’re not hiding,” Molly assured him. Constrained by a sudden rush of paranoia, she decided not to tell him what their intentions were.

  “When they get up here in the mountains, the aliens—they’ll gut you like fish and leave you flopping in the street,” Tewkes said.

  Disturbed less by the tavernkeeper’s prediction than by his demeanor, neither Molly nor Neil replied.

  Tewkes had not couched his words as a warning but had spoken in an ugly, taunting tone of voice. He almost seemed to hope that this horrendous fate would befall them, that the idea of Neil and Molly disemboweled and writhing in agony perversely pleased him.

  His merry-monk face had lost its humor, and monk could be used to describe it now only in reference to an angry ape, for it had a primitive cast, sly and stupidly calculating. His features were blotchy and red with barely throttled emotion. The Friar Tuck fringe of hair bristled in chaotic spikes, as if in a rage he had tried and failed to pull it out.

  As they began to turn away from Tewkes, he lurched one step closer, slopping beer from his mug, and said, “You go out there, you better be careful of your tender parts. The red-eyed scavengers are creeping.”

  More Eliot from this most unlikely quoter of verse: The red-eyed scavengers are creeping….

  “Again,” Neil said, for though he didn’t share Molly’s extensive knowledge of the poet, he recognized the incongruity of those words spoken by this individual.

  When Molly turned to Tewkes again, she saw in his wrenched red face and in his feverish eyes—far hotter than reflected candlelight could explain—mockery, contempt, and hatred. The arteries in his temples swelled and throbbed. His nostrils flared. His clenched jaws worked back and forth as though in his rage he were grinding his teeth into powder.

  She couldn’t understand how such bitter emotion could have been seeded and made to flourish in the previously pleasant tavern owner from one hour to the next. More to the point, why should this enmity be focused with such intensity on her, when she hardly knew Russell Tewkes and had never done a thing to anger or indeed even annoy him?

  Raising his mug, Tewkes swilled a mouthful of beer, held it briefly in his bloated cheeks, then spat it on the floor at her feet.

  Neil started to move toward Tewkes, but Molly restrained him with a touch. Virgil growled, and she silenced him merely by the whispering of his name.

  If Russell Tewkes was still to any degree the man he had once been, then beyond doubt, he was
something else as well. Parasite or spotted fungus, or some other corruption, had found its way into his mind and heart.

  The atmosphere inside the tavern had turned. She could not smell the change or taste it as she would have tasted airborne soot, could not see it, either, but she could feel it: an insistent abrasiveness. A darkness settled through the room, as well, not one related to the power failure, not one that any number of candles could relieve, but one akin to the dark matter of the universe, which physicists are unable to see but which they know exists by virtue of its ominous gravity.

  She wanted to get out of here. Quickly.

  Five of the children were with Deputy Tucker Madison’s group, the fighters who intended to make a fortress of the bank. They would be leaving in moments.

  The sixth, a girl of nine, had joined her parents among the fence-sitters. She nervously twisted her glossy blond hair between thumb and forefinger, and her lovely sapphire eyes were haunted by all the mangled ghosts that she had seen in the mirror.

  She said her name was Cassie. She tried to smile when Molly complimented her on her hair, but the smile faltered.

  Cassie’s parents, especially her mother, reacted angrily to Molly’s suggestion that the tavern was not safe and that they should accompany the others to the bank.

  “What the hell do you know?” the mother demanded. “You don’t know any more than we do. We’re staying here until we know more, until we learn more. It’s dry here, we’ve got candles. We’ve been safe here. Until the situation clarifies, there’s no reason to move, it’s crazy to move.”

  “Clarify the situation for yourself,” Molly advised. “Go to the men’s rest room. Inside the janitorial closet. Take a look at what’s growing there.”

  “What’re you talking about?” In spite of her question, the woman had no desire to listen. Clearly, Cassie’s mother was frightened by the possibility that Molly might in fact have information that would force her to make a reasoned choice. “I’m not going in the men’s room. What’s wrong with you? Get away from us!”

  Molly wanted to grab Cassie, take her with them by force, but that would lead to violence and delay, and would further terrify the girl.

  As Russell Tewkes blustered toward them to take up the argument, Neil said, “Molly, let’s get out of here.”

  Of the eight dogs in addition to Virgil, five were about to leave with the fighters. The other three gathered around Cassie. Two mutts and a golden retriever.

  Molly read each of those three solemn gazes, and felt an uncanny connection with the animals, experienced a communication beyond any that could have been fashioned from words. She knew that they would guard the girl, would if necessary die to protect her.

  Just as Render seemed to be Render but also someone else, just as Derek and Tewkes looked like themselves but acted like someone new, so the dogs at a glance appeared to be merely dogs but were something more. Unlike the murderer, the professor, and the tavern owner, however, the dogs were not agents of despair; quite the opposite.

  With growing wonder that rivaled fear for possession of her heart, Molly touched each of the animals, smoothing the fur on their heads, and each in turn nuzzled her hand.

  “Gentle hearts,” she told them, “and courageous.”

  “What’s going on here?” Russell Tewkes inquired, arriving in a reek of beer breath and sweat.

  “We’re leaving,” Molly said, and turned away from him.

  She and Neil had almost reached the front door when the rain stopped as abruptly as if a spigot had been shut off.

  31

  SPENT CATARACTS OF WATER DRAINED OFF streets and out of gutters. New cataracts, of the blinding type, frustrated the eye and deceived the mind.

  The town had nearly vanished in fog. Thick curdled masses of mist slid down from the higher ridges in a soft avalanche and also rose off the swollen lake below.

  For a moment, Molly held her breath for fear these clouds would prove poisonous. But then she breathed, and lived.

  Along the street, houses and other structures formed a geometry more suggested than seen. The calligraphy of trees, deciduous and evergreen, full of cursives and flourishes, was continuously erased only to be half revealed again by the lazily roiling mist.

  To Molly, the sudden silence, following the long roar of the rain, had all the drama of a roof-rattling thunderclap. Stepping out of the tavern with Virgil, closely followed by Neil, she seemed to have gone deaf, a perception abetted by the muffling effect of the dense fog.

  More than the cessation of the rain, more than the murk or the silence, the arrival of dawn surprised her. A glance at her watch—which functioned when out from under the oppressive influence of the mysterious leviathan—confirmed that daybreak should have arrived.

  The descending light was deep purple, less like a brightening sunrise than like a fading dusk. This glow imparted to the fog a purplish tint with ribbony veins of gold.

  In ordinary times, these royal colors would have been a majestic beginning to the day. In the current circumstances, however, the weird light and the cloaking mist augured chaos and violence.

  The mist had no scent. The rain had left no smell behind.

  One phase of the taking of the earth had ended.

  A new and surely more terrifying phase had begun.

  In every end is a beginning—and perhaps in this beginning, for her and Neil, would be the end of all things mortal. The last twist of the knife.

  Visibility proved inconstant. Even when she stood still, one moment she could see only five feet, the next moment ten; never more than twenty; sometimes only as far as from eye to hand.

  People poured out of the tavern, though many remained behind with their lubricants and illusions. Each took only a few steps before he became a ghostly form with the muffled voice of a mummy in its windings.

  In this slowly churning, ever shifting purple opacity, a flashlight seemed useful. When Neil probed with his, however, the beam refracted strangely through the murk, revealing nothing and further confusing the eye.

  Switching off the flash and pocketing it, he said, “Better to have both hands for the shotgun, anyway.”

  Molly had drawn her pistol as she’d come out of the tavern door. She felt no better armed than a blowgun primitive cast by some fluke of time onto a modern battlefield contested by armies with tanks and laser-guided missiles.

  A ragtag group of the resistance fighters set off for the bank, on foot and closely marshaled. Their footsteps and then their voices quickly faded.

  Another group, in a Chevy Suburban and a Ford pickup, drove away, into the lower reaches of town, toward Norman Ling’s food market. Although they proceeded at a creep, they soon vanished into the throat of the fog; and a swallow later, their headlights dimmed, damped.

  The roar of engines swiftly softened and, with distance, changed into a throaty grumble, as if beasts from the Jurassic period prowled swamps in the purple dimness far below.

  She worried that the dog would race ahead of them, vanish in the earthbound clouds, but she hoped that he would obey her when she called him back. The fog might complicate their search, but no more than the pounding rain would have done.

  “All right, Virgil,” she said, “let’s do the work.”

  The dog seemed to know what she meant, and he started forward at a pace they could match.

  They walked the center of the street, their hoods thrown back, but still wearing their raincoats in case the storm returned.

  They had not gone far when a forlorn voice called out of the mist: “Help me. Someone help me.”

  The dog stopped, ears pricked forward.

  Molly scanned the gloom, seeking the source of the cry.

  “Where?” Neil asked.

  “I don’t know.”

  Then the pleading came again, this time with a thin note of anguish: “Please. Someone please. Oh, God, please help me.”

  She recognized the voice. Ken Halleck: the postal clerk with the muttonchops and the wide
smile.

  With rifle and pitchfork, Ken and his seventeen-year-old son, Bobby, had been guarding the front door of the tavern.

  On leaving that establishment, Molly had not realized that Ken and Bobby were missing. The end of the rain, the arrival of dawn, and the purple mist had fully commanded her attention.

  “I hear someone,” Halleck said, his voice shuddering with pain, with fear. “Please, don’t leave me here alone, suffering like this. I’m so afraid.”

  Virgil deduced Halleck’s location and advanced a few steps in that direction before halting. His head lowered and his hackles rose. He growled softly, more to warn his companions than to challenge whatever menace he detected in the dismalness ahead.

  Molly hesitated, but when Halleck cried out again, this time in a racked voice even more pitiable than before, she could not turn away from him, even if he might be—as the dog’s reaction seemed to suggest—bait in a trap.

  “Careful,” Neil whispered, moving with her, at her side, into the livid mist, leaving the wary dog behind them.

  Foreboding, forbidding, the odorless miasma closed around them, cloyed, so thick it seemed to muffle even the beat of her heart in her own ears. But in a few steps it began to draw away, like layer upon layer of opening curtains.

  Through lifting veils, Molly saw an object in the street, dark against the darker blacktop. In another step she realized that it was the severed head of Ken Halleck.

  In the bodiless head, the eyes opened, filled with impossible life, and with unspeakable misery.

  The lips moved, the mouth cracked, and words came forth: “Do you know where Bobby is, my Bobby, my son?”

  32

  THE HUMAN IMAGINATION MAY BE THE MOST elastic thing in the universe, stretching to encompass the millions of hopes and dreams that in centuries of relentless struggle built modern civilization, to entertain the endless doubts that hamper every human enterprise, and to conceive the vast menagerie of boogeymen that trouble every human heart.

  Yet there had been discoveries and sights in these momentous hours that Molly could not have imagined and with which her reason wrestled and lost. Not the least was this severed and yet apparently living head, although it had been foreshadowed by the brainless walking corpse of Harry Corrigan and by the self-mutilating doll.

  For a moment, Ken Halleck’s eyes transfixed her. Pathetic. Pathoformic. Demonic.

  The aliens had introduced on Earth some malevolent energy that did not differentiate between vegetable and animal, between organic and inorganic, between the animate and the inanimate. It thrived equally in the living and in the dead, and in what had never lived at all.

  In Ken’s voice now, a tremor of anguish, of grief: “Where is my Bobby? What have they done to him? I want to see my boy.”

  The mind not only reeled but rebelled, and not only rebelled but retreated to denial, desperate to refute this abomination no matter how vividly the senses confirmed it.

  You might imagine surviving in an environment transformed to match that of a world on the far end of the galaxy, dressed with strange malignant plants, populated by a Sabbat broth of repulsive and vicious animals. You might hope for a hospitable corner in some extreme latitude, where you could live out your days in mousehole secrecy, with simple food and the pleasures of the timid.

  But Molly couldn’t imagine wanting to survive in a madhouse world where the dead walked, severed heads conversed, dolls made threats, and every horror of the elastic human imagination might be encountered—and worse. Such a place could offer no moment of peace, no chance of happiness.

  Here, now, she might have given up the hope of survival, except that she would be left with two options: wait until some nightmare creature found her and tore her to pieces—or kill herself. Either course counted as self-destruction, however, and suicide was not permissible in her philosophy or her faith.

  Besides, the children had to be found. What might happen after she had gathered them together under her inadequate protection was something she chose not to dwell upon.