The Bad Place by Dean R. Koontz

round-backed, as if he were an old man unable to stand up to the force

of the rain, or as if his spine had been warped by all the moisture.

“Frank, dammit, where are we?”

Frank stopped, unbent his back slightly, lifted his head, and blinked

stupidly.

“What?”

Raising his voice even further, Bobby shouted above the tumult: “Where

are we!”

Pointing to Bobby’s left, Frank indicated an enigmatic, rain shrouded

structure that stood like the ancient shrine of a long dead religion,

perhaps a hundred feet farther down the black beach.

“Lifeguard station!” He pointed the other direction, up the beach,

indicating a large wooden building considerably farther from them but

less mysterious because its size made it easier to see.

“Restaurant. One of the most popular on the island.”

“What island?”

“The big island.”

“What big island?”

“Hawaii. We’re standing on Punaluu Beach.”

“This was where Clint was supposed to take me,” Bobby said. He laughed,

but it was a strange, wild laugh that spooked him, so he stopped.

Frank said, “The house I bought and abandoned is over there.” He

indicated the direction from which they had come.

“Overlooking a golf course. I loved the place. I was happy there for

eight months. Then he found me. Bobby, we have to get out of here.”

Frank took a few steps toward Bobby, out of the mushy mire and onto that

section of the beach where the sand was compacted.

“That’s far enough,” Bobby ordered when Frank was six or eight feet from

him.

“Don’t come any closer.”

“Bobby, we have to go now, right away. I can’t teleport correctly when

I want. That’ll happen when it happens, but at least we have to get

away from this part of the island. He knows I lived here. He’s

familiar with this area. And he may be following us.”

The fiery anger in Bobby was not quenched by the rain; grew hotter than

ever.

“You lying bastard.”

“It’s true, really,” Frank said, obviously surprised by Bobby’s

vehemence.

They were close enough to converse wit out shouting now, but Frank still

spoke louder than usual to be heard over the crackle-hiss-patter-rumble

of the deluge

“Candy came here after me, and he was worse than I’d ever seen him, more

horrible, more evil. He came into my house with a baby, an infant he’d

picked up somewhere, only a month old, he’d probably killed its parents.

He bit into that poor baby’s throat, Bobby, then laughed and offered me

its blood, taunted me with it. He drinks blood, you know, she taught

him to drink blood, and he relishes it now, thrives on it. And when I

wouldn’t join him at the baby’s throat, he threw it waside the way you’d

discard an empty beer can, and he came for me but I… traveled.

“I didn’t mean you were lying about him.”

A wave broke closer to shore than the others, washing around Bobby’s

feet and leaving short-lived, lacelike traceries of foam on the black

sand.

“I mean you lied to us about your amnesia. You remember everything. You

know exactly who you are.”

“No, no.” Frank shook his head and made negating gestures with his

hands.

“I didn’t know. It was a blank. And maybe it’ll be a blank again when

I stop traveling and stay put someplace.”

“Lying shit!” Bobby said.

He stooped, scooped up handsful of wet black sand and threw it at Frank

in a blind fury, two more sopping handsful, then two more. He began to

realize that he was behaving like a child throwing a tantrum.

Frank flinched from the wet sand but waited patiently for Bobby to stop.

“This isn’t like you,” he said, when at last Bobby relented.

“To hell with you.”

“Your rage is all out of proportion to anything you imagine I’ve done to

you.” Bobby knew that was true. As he wiped his wet sand covered hands

on his shirt and tried to catch his breath, he began to understand that

he was not angry at Frank but at what Frank represented to him. Chaos.

Teleportation was a fun house ride in which the monsters and dangers

were not illusory, in which the constant threat of death was to be taken

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