The Bad Place by Dean R. Koontz

“After they’ve mined diamonds for hundreds of years, over the world, and

only found seven red ones… where in the hell did Frank come up with a

jarful?”

Bobby shook his head and said nothing.

Clint reached into his pants pocket and withdrew one of the diamonds,

smaller than the specimen that Bobby had brought for Archer van

Corvaire’s appraisal.

“I took this home to show it to Felina. I was going to return it to the

jar when I got to the office, but you hustled me out before I had a

chance. Now that I know what it is, I don’t want it in my possession a

minute longer.”

Bobby took the stone and put it in his pocket with the larger diamond.

“Thank you, Clint.”

DR. DYSON MANFRED’S study, in his house in Turtle Rock, was the most

uncomfortable place Bobby had ever been. He had been happier last week,

flattened on the floor of his van, trying to avoid being chopped to bits

by automatic weapons fire than he was among Manfred’s collection of

many-legged, carapaced, antenna-bristled, mandibled, and thoroughly

repulsive exotic bugs.

Repeatedly, in his peripheral vision, Bobby saw something move in one of

the many glass-covered boxes on the wall, but every time he turned to

ascertain which hideous creature was about to slip out from under the

frame, his fear proved unfounded. All of the nightmarish specimens were

pinned and motionless, lined up neatly beside one another, none missing.

He also would have sworn that he heard things skittering and slithering

inside the shallow drawers of the many cases that he knew contained more

insects, but he supposed that those sounds were every bit was imaginary

as the phantom movement glimpsed from the corners of his eyes.

Though he knew Clint to be a born stoic, Bobby was impressed by the

apparent ease with which the guy endured the creepy-crawly decor. This

was an employee he must never lose. He decided on the spot to give

Clint a significant raise in salary before the day was out.

Bobby found Dr. Manfred nearly as disquieting as his collection. The

tall, thing, long-limbed entomologist seemed to be the offspring of a

professional basketball player and one of those African stick insects

that you saw in nature films and hoped never to encounter in real life.

Manfred stood behind his desk, his chair pushed out of the way, and they

stood in front of it. Their attention was direct upon a two-foot-long,

one-foot-wide, white-enamel, inch-lab tray which occupied the center of

the desktop and over which was draped a small white towel.

“I have had no sleep since Mr. Karaghiosis brought this me last night,”

Manfred said,

“and I won’t sleep much tonight either, just turning over all the

remaining questions in mind. This dissection was the most fascinating

of my care and I doubt that I’ll ever again experience anything in my I

to equal it.” The intensity with which Manfred spoke-and the

implication that

neither good food nor good sex, neither a beautiful sunset nor a fine

wine, could be a fraction as satisfying as ins dismemberment-gave Bobby

a queasy stomach.

He glanced at the fourth man in the room, if only to divide his

attention briefly from their bugophile host. The guy in his late

forties, as round as Manfred was angular, as pi as Manfred was pale,

with red-gold hair, blue eyes, and freckles. He sat on a chair in the

corner, straining the seams of gray jogging suit, with his hands fisted

on his heavy thigh looking like a good Boston Irish fellow who had been

trying to eat his way into a career as a Sumo wrestler. The

entomologist hadn’t introduced or even referred to the well-padded

server. Bobby figured that introductions would be made who Manfred was

ready. He decided not to force the issue-if on because the round man

silently regarded them with a mixture of wonder, suspicion, fear, and

intense curiosity that encouraged Bobby to believe they would not be

pleased to hear who he had to tell them when, at last, he spoke.

With long-fingered, spidery hands-which Bobby might have sprayed with

Raid if he’d had any-Dyson Manfred moved the towel from the white-enamel

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