The Bad Place by Dean R. Koontz

straight into the sky to rendezvous with some great glowing craft out of

a Spielberg movie.

Clint drove two blocks, turned at the corner, and pulled the curb as

soon as they were out of sight.

“Bobby, where the hell did Frank get that thing?” Bobby could only

answer him with another question:

“H many different places does he go when he teleports?

money, the red diamonds and the bug, the black sand-a how far away are

some of those places? Really far away?’

“And who is he?”

Clint asked.

“Frank Pollard from El Encanto Heights.”

“But I mean, who is that?” Clint thumped one fist again the steering

wheel.

“Who the hell is Frank Pollard from El canto?”

“I think what you really want to know is not who he is. More important

… what is he?” By SURPRISE Bobby came to visit.

Lunch was eaten before Bobby came. Dessert was still in Thomas’s mind.

Not the taste of it. The memory. Vanilla ice cream, fresh

strawberries. The way dessert made you feel.

He was alone in his room, sitting in his armchair, thinking about making

a picture poem that would have the feeling of eating ice cream and

strawberries, not the taste but the good feeling, so some day when you

didn’t have any ice cream or strawberries, you could just look at the

poem and get that same good feeling even without eating anything. Of

course, you couldn’t use pictures of ice cream or strawberries in the

poem, because that wouldn’t be a poem, that would be only saying how

good ice cream and strawberries made you feel. A poem didn’t just say,

it showed you and made you feel.

Then Bobby came through the door, and Thomas was so happy he forgot the

poem, and they hugged. Somebody was with Bobby, but it wasn’t Julie, so

Thomas was disappointed. He was embarrassed, too, because it turned out

he’d met the person with Bobby a couple times before, over the years,

but he didn’t remember him right away, which made him feel dumb. It was

Clint. Thomas said the name to himself, over and over, so maybe he’d

remember next time: Clint, Clint, Clint, Clint, Clint.

“Julie couldn’t come,” Bobby said,

“she’s babysitting a client.” Thomas wondered why a baby would ever

need a private eye, but he didn’t ask. In TV only grownups needed

private eyes, which were called private eyes because they looked out for

you, though he wasn’t sure why they were called private. He also

wondered how a baby could pay for a private eye, because he knew eyes

like Bobby and Julie worked for money like everyone else, but babies

didn’t work, they were too little to do anything. So where’d this one

get the money to Bobby and Julie? He hoped they didn’t get cheated out

of their money, they worked hard for it.

Bobby said,

“She told me to tell you she loves you even more than she did yesterday,

and she’ll love you even more torn row.” They hugged again because this

time Thomas was giving hug to Bobby for Julie.

Clint asked if he could see the latest scrapbook of poe He took it

across the room and sat in Derek’s armchair, who was okay because Derek

wasn’t in it, he was in the wreck room Bobby moved the chair from the

worktable, putting it close to the armchair that belonged to Thomas. He

sat, and talked about what a big blue day it was and how nice the

flowers looked where they were all bright outside Thomas’s room.

For a while they talked about lots of things, and Bobby funny-except

when they talked about Julie, he changed.

was worried for Julie, you could tell. When he talked about her, he was

like a good picture poem-he didn’t say his words but he showed it and

made you feel it.

Thomas was already worried for Julie, so Bobby’s worry made him feel

even worse, made him scared for her.

“We’ve got our hands full with the current case,” Bob said,

“so neither one of us might be able to visit again this weekend or the

first of the week.”

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