
‘For, behold, the darkness shall cover the earth, and gross darkness the people,’ Chet said. ‘The Book is full of dark days,’ Chet noted. ‘I have been in darkness that you could not see your hand in front of your face,’ Chet laughed. ‘Have you ever seen such thick darkness that it swallowed light?’ Chet asked. ‘I was in a cave one time that if I had not had a rope tied around my waist, I would have never found my way out of the blackness,’ Chet observed. ‘It was creepy and I still do not enjoy thinking about it,’ Chet offered.

‘Night has a different feel to it,’ Billy B said. ‘Life is one way in the morning and it is different at night,’ Billy B explained. ‘Many people function better at night,’ Billy B continued. ‘Without the prism of the sun, the world is monochrome,’ Billy B noted. ‘Life is Noir at night,’ Billy B smiled. ‘Night is for back room deals and secrets,’ Billy B whispered. ‘It is less crowded, but those whom you do encounter are enveloped in shadows,’ Billy B said.

‘I like to visit Cigar Bars at night,’ Jane said. ‘The shadows in the room remind me of people who have gone,’ Jane observed. ‘There is time to plan and consider at night,’ Jane said. ‘There is less worry and hurry at night while the lights are low and remembering is at its zenith,’ Jane observed. ‘Do you remember talking with the well-dressed man who said he knew JFK in the Cigar Bar?’ Jane asked. ‘He could have been his twin brother, and he knew things that only President Kennedy would have known,’ Jane softly said.

‘He spoke of coming calamities and global destruction,’ Chet recalled. ‘JFK noted that his greatest fear was nuclear annihilation,’ Chet said. ‘JFK noted that we came closer than anyone knew to nuclear war with the Soviet Union during the Cuban Missile Crisis,’ Chet remembered. ‘JFK said something chilling that night in the Cigar Bar,’ Chet recalled. ‘JFK said that the lust for power would destroy life as we know it when men and women loved power and money more than truth,’ Chet quietly said.
