The Night Eternal

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Authors: Guillermo del Toro, Chuck Hogan
to turn the entire zoo over to Zack, but on one condition: that Zack had to take care of it. Had to feed the animals and clean the cages, all by himself. Zack had jumped at the chance, and the Central Park Zoo became his. Just like that. (He was offered the carousel too, but carousels were for babies; he had helped them tear it down.) The Master could grant wishes like a genie.
    Of course, Zack didn’t realize how much work it was going to be, but he kept at it as best he could. The changed atmosphere claimed some of the animals quickly, including the red panda and most of the birds, making his job easier. Still, with no one to prod him along, he allowed the intervals between feeding times to grow and grow. It fascinated him how some of the animals turned on one another, both the mammals and the reptiles. The great snow leopard was Zack’s favorite and the animal he feared most. So the leopard was fed most regularly: at first, thick slabs of fresh meat arriving by truck every other day. Then one day, a live goat. Zack led it into the cage and watched from behind a tree as the leopard stalked its prey. Then a sheep. Then a baby deer. But over time, the zoo fell deep into disrepair, the cages fouled with animal waste that Zack grew tired of cleaning. After many months he came to dread the zoo, and more and more he ignored his responsibilities. At night sometimes he heard the other animals cry out, but never the snow leopard.
    After the better part of a year, Zack went to the Master and complained that the work was too much for him.
    It will be abandoned, then. And the animals destroyed.
    “I don’t want them destroyed. I just … don’t want to take care of them anymore. You could have any of your kind do it, and they would never complain.”
    You want me to keep it open just for your enjoyment only.
    “Yes.” Zack had asked for more extravagant things and always received them. “Why not?”
    On one condition.
    “Okay.”
    I have watched you with the leopard.
    “You have?”
    Watched you feed it animals to stalk and devour. Its agility and beauty attracts you. But its power frightens you.
    “I guess.”
    I have also watched you allow other animals to starve.
    Zack began to protest. “There are too many to take care of—”
    I have watched you pit them against one another. It is natural enough, your curiosity. Watching how lesser species react under stress. Fascinating, isn’t it? Watching them fight for survival …
    Zack did not know if he should admit to this.
    The animals are yours to do with what you wish. That includes the leopard. You control its habitat and its feeding schedule. You should not fear it.
    “Well … I don’t. Not really.”
    Then … why don’t you kill it?
    “What?”
    Have you never thought about what it would be like, to kill such an animal?
    “Kill it? Kill the leopard?”
    You’ve grown bored with zoo-keeping because it is artificial, unnatural. Your instincts are correct, but your method is wrong. You want to own these primitive creatures. But they are not meant to be kept. Too much power. Too much pride. There is only one way to truly possess a wild animal. To make it your own.
    “To kill it.”
    Prove yourself equal to this task, and I will reward you by seeing to it that your zoo remains open and the animals fed and cared for, while relieving you of your duties there.
    “I … I can’t.”
    Because it is beautiful or because you fear it?
    “Just … because.”
    What is the one thing I have refused you? The one thing you asked for that I declined to allow?
    “A loaded gun.”
    I will see to it that a rifle is maintained for your use within the confines of the zoo. The decision is yours … I want you to take a side …
    So Zack went to the zoo the next day, just to hold the loaded weapon. He found it on an umbrella table inside the entrance, brand-new, small sized, with a satin walnut stock and a recoil pad, and a scope on top. It only weighed about seven pounds. He

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