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Seize the Night

Seize the Night

Titel: Seize the Night Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Dean Koontz
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voices were lower and softer than Curious George's caterwauling, but they didn't sound like a hospitality committee welcoming a visitor.
    I drew the Glock from my shoulder holster.
    Eight rounds remained in the gun.
    I had the spare ten-round magazine in the holster.
    Eighteen bullets. Thirty monkeys.
    I had done the calculations before. I did them again. Poetry, after all, is of more interest to me than math, so there was reason to double-check my figures. They still sucked.
    Curious George raced toward the house again. This time he kept coming.
    Behind him, the entire troop erupted out of the street, across the lawn, straight at the bungalow. Simultaneously, as they came, they all fell into a silence that implied organization, discipline, and deadly purpose.

7
    I still didn't believe the troop could have seen me, heard me, or smelled me, but they must have detected me somehow, because obviously they were not merely expressing their distaste for the undistinguished architecture of the bungalow. They were in a rage of a kind that I had seen before, a fury they reserved for humanity.
    Furthermore, by their schedule, dinnertime had probably arrived.
    In lieu of a mouse or juicy spider, I was the meat dish, a refreshing change from their usual fare of fruits, nuts, seeds, leaves, flowers, and birds' eggs.
    I turned a hundred eighty degrees from the window and headed across the living room, hands out in front of me. I was moving fast, blindly trusting in my familiarity with these houses. My shoulder clipped the casing on a doorway, and I pushed through a half-open door into the dining room.
    Although the monkeys continued to restrain themselves, operating in attack-status silence, I heard the hollow thumping of their paws on the wooden floor of the porch. I hoped they would hesitate at the front entrance, tempering their rancor with caution long enough for me to put a little ground between us.
    A tattered blind, though askew, covered most of the single window in the small dining room. Too little light penetrated to bring meaningful relief from the gloom.
    I kept moving, because I knew that the door to the kitchen was directly in line with the living-room door through which I had just entered.
    This time, passing from room to room, I didn't even knock my shoulder against the jamb.
    No blinds or curtains covered the pair of windows over the sink in the kitchen. Painted with a thin wash of moonlight, they had that ghostly phosphorous glow of television screens just after you switch them off.
    Under my feet, the aging linoleum popped and cracked. If any members of the troop had entered the house behind me, I couldn't hear them above the noise that I was making.
    The air was thick with a foul miasma that made me want to retch.
    A rat or some wild animal must have died in a corner of the kitchen or in one of the cabinets, where it was now decomposing.
    Holding my breath, I hurried to the back door, which featured a large pane of glass in the upper half. It was locked.
    When this was a military base, personal security had been assured, and no one who lived inside the fence had reason to fear crime.
    Consequently, the locks were simple, keyed only from the outside.
    I felt for the doorknob, which would have a lock-release button in the center. Found it. I would have turned it and torn open the door except that the shadow of a leaping monkey flew up across the glass and fell away just as my hand closed on the cold brass.
    I quietly released the knob and retreated two steps, considering my options. I could open the door and, pistol blazing, stride boldly through the murderous monkey multitudes as though I were Indiana Jones minus bullwhip and fedora, relying on sheer panache to survive.
    The only alternative was to remain in the kitchen and wait to see what happened next.
    A monkey leaped onto the sill of one of the windows above the sink.
    Gripping the casing to keep its balance, it pressed against the glass, peering into the kitchen.
    Because this mangy gremlin was silhouetted against moonlight, I could see no details of its face. Just its hot-ember eyes. The faint white crescent of its humorless grin.
    Turning its head left and right and left again, it rolled its eyes, squinted, then went wide-eyed once more. By following its questing gaze, which roamed the kitchen, I deduced that it couldn't see me in the darkness.
    Options. Stay here and be trapped. Plunge into the night only to be dragged down and savaged under the mad

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