Dean Koontz - The Servants of Twilight

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A wretched hag who is head of a crack pot religious cult targets Christine's six-year-old son, Joey, as the anti-Christ. Every member of the cult then sets out to destroy the boy and the only person Christine can find to really help her is a private detective. Grace (the cult leader) seems to be able to locate them with her psychic powers no matter what they do or where they go. Lots of violence and a little explicit sex. Excellent supernatural thriller from a master storyteller.

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"What did you do to these people?" Evelyn wanted to know.

"What people?"

"The people at this church."

"I didn't do anything to them, Mother. They're trying to do it to us.

Didn't you hear what I said?"

"They wouldn't pick on you for no reason," Evelyn said.

"They're crazy, Mother."

"Can't all of them be crazy, a whole churchful of people."

"Well, they are. They're bad people, Mother, real bad people."

"Can't all of them be bad. Not religious people like that.

Can't all of them be after you just for the fun of it."

"I told you why they're after us. They've got this crazy idea that Joey-"

"That's what you told me," Evelyn said, "but that can't be it. Not really. There must be something else. Must be something you did that made them angry. But even if they're angry, I'm sure they're not trying to kill anybody."

"Mother, I told you, they came with guns, and men were killed-"

"Then the people who had guns weren't these church people, " Evelyn said

" You've got it all wrong. It's someone else."

"Mother, I haven't got it all wrong. I-"

"Church people don't use guns, Christine."

"These church people do."

"It's someone else," Evelyn insisted.

"But-"

"You have a grudge against religion," Evelyn said." Always have. A grudge against the Church."

"Mother, I don't hold any grudges-"

"That's why you're so quick to blame this on religious people when it's plainly the work of someone else, maybe political terrorists like on the news all the time, or maybe you're involved in something you shouldn't be and now it's getting out of hand, which wouldn't surprise me. Are you involved in something, Christine, like drugs, which they're always killing themselves over, like you see on TV, dealers shooting each other all the time-is it anything like that, Christine?"

She imagined she could hear the grandfather clock ticking monotonously in the background. Suddenly, she couldn't breathe well.

The conversation progressed in that fashion until Christine couldn't stand any more. She said she had to go, and she hung up before her mother could protest. Evelyn hadn't even said, "I love you," or "be careful," or "I'm worried about you," or "I'll do anything I can to help."

Her mother might as well be dead; their relationship certainly was.

At seven-thirty, Christine made breakfast for George, Vince, Joey, and herself. She was buttering toast when the rain began to fall again.

The morning was so drab, the clouds so low, the light so dim and gray that it might have been the end rather than the beginning of the day, and the rain came out of that somber sky with gutter-flooding force. Fog still churned outside, and without any sun it probably would hang on all day, barely dissipate, and get blindingly thick tonight. This was.the time of year when relentless trains of storms could assault California, moving in from the Pacific, pounding the coastal areas until creeks swelled over their banks and reservoirs topped out and hillsides began to slide, carrying houses into the bottoms of the canyons with deadly swiftness. From the look of it, they were probably in the process of being run over by one of those storm trains right now.

The prospect of a long stretch of bad weather made the threat from the Church of the Twilight even more frightening. When winter rains closed in like this, streets were flooded, and freeways jammed up beyond belief, and mobility was curtailed, and California seemed to shrink, the mountains contracting toward the coast, squeezing the land in between.

When the rainy season was at its worst, California acquired a claustrophobic aspect that you never read about in tourist brochures or see on postcards.

In weather like this, Christine always felt a little trapped, even when she wasn't being hounded by well-armed lunatics.

When she took a plate of bacon and eggs to Vince Fields, where he was stationed by the front door, she said, "You guys must be tired. How long can you keep this up?"

He thanked her for the food, glanced at his watch, and said, "We only have about an hour to go. The replacement team will be here by then."

Of course. A replacement team. A new shift. That should have been obvious to her, but it hadn't been. She had grown accustomed to Vince and George, had learned to trust them. If either of them had been a member of the Church of the Twilight, she and Joey would have been dead by now. She wanted them to stay, but they couldn't remain awake and on guard forever. Foolish of her not to have understood that.

Now she had to worry about the new men. One of them might have sold his soul to Grace Spivey.

She returned to the kitchen. Joey and George Swarthout were having breakfast at the semicircular pine table which could accommodate only three chairs. She sat down in front of her own plate, but suddenly she wasn't hungry any more. She picked at her food and said, "George, the next shift of bodyguards-"

"Be here soon," he said around a mouthful of eggs and toast.

"Do you know who Charlie. who Mr. Harrison is sending? "

"You mean their names?"

"Yes, their names."

"Nope. Could be any of several fellas. Why?"

She didn't know why she would feel better if she knew their names. She wasn't familiar with Charlie's staff. Their names would mean nothing to her. She wouldn't be able to tell that they were Grace Spivey's people just by their names. She wasn't being rational.

"If you know any of our people and would prefer to have them work a shift here, you should tell Mr. Harrison," George said.

"No. I don't know anybody. I just. well. never mind.

It wasn't important."

Joey seemed to sense the nature of her fear. He stopped teasing Chewbacca with a piece of bacon, put one small hand on Christine's arm, as if to reassure her the way he'd seen Charlie do, and said, "Don't worry, Mom. They'll be good guys. Whoever Charlie sends, they'll be real good."

"The best," George agreed.

To George, Joey said, "Hey, tell Mom the story about the talking giraffe and the princess who didn't have a horse."

"I doubt if it's exactly your mother's kind of story," George said, smiling.

" Then tell me again," Joey said." Please?"

As George told the fairytale-which seemed to be of his own creation-Christine's attention drifted to the rainy day beyond the window. Somewhere out there, two of Charlie's men were coming, and she was increasingly certain that at least one of them would be a disciple of the Spivey creature.

Paranoia. She knew that half her problem was psychological.

She was worrying unnecessarily. Charlie had warned her not to go off the deep end. She wouldn't be much good to either Joey or herself if she started seeing boogeymen in every shadow. It was just the damned lousy weather, closing in on them, the rain and the morning fog, weaving a shroud around them. She felt trapped, suffocated, and her imagination was working overtime.

She was aware of all that.

It didn't matter.

She couldn't talk herself out of her fear. She knew that something bad was going to happen when the two men showed up.

30

At eight o'clock Tuesday morning, Charlie met Henry Rankin in front of the Church of the Twilight: a Spanish-style structure with stained-glass windows, red tile roof, two bell towers, and a broad expanse of steps leading up to six massive carved oak doors. Rain slanted at the doors, streamed off the steps, making oily puddles on the cracked and canted sidewalk. The doors needed to be refinished, and the building needed new stucco; it was shabby and neglected, but that was in keeping with the neighborhood, which had been deteriorating for decades. The church had once been the home of a Presbyterian congregation, which had fled ten blocks north, to a new site, where there weren't so many abandoned stores, adult bookshops, failing businesses, and crumbling houses.

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