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Odd Hours

Odd Hours

Titel: Odd Hours
Autoren: Dean Koontz
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on it, and their bodies pressed against my legs.
    Annamaria had quoted Shakespeare: Virtue is bold, and goodness never fearful.
    “I know,” I told the coyotes, “that you are not only what you appear to be, and I am not afraid of anything you are.”
    That was a lie, but it was not a fraction as outrageous as the multitudinous lies that I had told to Chief Hoss Shackett and his associates.
    One of the beasts nipped the left leg of my jeans and tugged.
    “You will leave now,” I said firmly but serenely, without a tremor in my voice, as Annamaria had said it.
    Another coyote snatched at the right leg of my jeans. A third one nipped at my left shoe.
    They were growing more aggressive.
    Out of the mist, through their thickly furred and plume-tailed ranks, came one stronger than the others, with a proud chest ruff and a larger head than any in the pack.
    Coyotes communicate—especially in the hunt—by the pricking of their flexible and expressive ears, by the positions of their tails, and with other body language.
    As this leader approached me through the swarm that parted to give him passage, his every expression of ears and tail was at once mimicked by the others, as if he were marshaling them for attack.
    I faltered to a halt.
    Although I had the words that Annamaria used, I did not have Annamaria, and it was beginning to look as if that was the difference between coyotes skulking away in defeat and coyotes ripping my throat out.
    Much earlier in the evening, in the Brick District, a still small voice deep inside me had said Hide when a harbor-department truck had turned the corner. Now through my mind rang two words: the bell.
    I did not have Annamaria with me, but I had something that had belonged to Annamaria, and I fished it from under my sweatshirt.
    Surely the silver bell, no larger than a thimble, would be too small, too alien to a coyote’s experience, too lacking in shine in this foggy dark to attract their notice.
    Yet when I let it lie upon the blue field of my sweatshirt, the eyes of the leader went to it, and as well the eyes of the others.
    “The rest of the world is yours,” I repeated, “but not this place at this moment.”
    The leader did not relent, but some of the smaller individuals began to shy away from me.
    Emboldened, I addressed the master of the others, making eye contact with him and with him alone. “You will leave now.”
    He did not look away from me, but he stopped advancing.
    “You will leave now,” I repeated, and I moved forward once more, bold and not fearful, as Shakespeare advised, though I couldn’t lay claim to goodness and virtue to the extent that I would have liked.
    “Now,” I insisted, and with one hand touched the bell upon my chest. “Go now.”
    One moment, the eyes of the leader were sharp with what seemed to be hatred, though no animal has the capacity for hate, an emotion that, like envy, humanity reserves for itself.
    The next moment, his fierce eyes clouded with confusion. He turned his head, surveying the rapidly deserting throng that he had rallied. He seemed to be surprised to find himself here, at this late hour in this strange place.
    When he stared directly at me again, I knew that he was now only what he appeared to be, a beautiful work of nature, and nothing else, and nothing darker.
    “Go,” I said gently, “back to your home.”
    As if he were more a cousin of the dog than of the wolf, he backed away, turned, and sought the path that would lead him home.
    In a quarter of a minute, the fog closed all its yellow eyes, and the scent of musk faded beyond detection.
    I walked unhindered to the Mercedes and drove away.
    At the corner of Memorial Park Avenue and Highcliff Drive, the Salvation Army collection bin featured a revolving dump-drawer like those in bank walls for night deposits.
    When I tried to lift the satchel from the trunk, it seemed to weigh more than the car itself. Suddenly I knew that the hindering weight was the same as the confrontational coyotes, and both those things the same as the curious light and the shuffling sound under the lightning-bolt drain grating, and all of them of an identical character with the phantom that had sat in the porch swing.
    “Twenty pounds,” I said. “No more than twenty pounds. No more of this. The night is done.”
    I lifted the satchel with ease. It fit in the bin’s revolving drawer, and I let it roll away into the softness of donated clothing.
    I closed the trunk, got in the
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