The Bad Place by Dean R. Koontz

let’s get out of here.”

When Candy was close enough for Bobby to see blue eyes as wild and

vicious as those of a rattlesnake on Benzedrine, he let out a wordless

roar of triumph. He flung himself at them.

Darkness.

Fireflies.

Velocity.

Pale morning light filtered from a clear sky into the narrow

pass-through between two rotting, ramshackle buildings so crusted in the

filth of ages that it was impossible to determine what material had been

used to construct their walls. Bobby and Frank were standing in

knee-deep garbage that had been tossed out of the windows of the

two-story structures and left to decompose into a reeking sludge that

steamed like a compost pile. Their magical arrival had startled a

colony of roaches that scuttled away from them, and caused swarms of fat

black flies to leap up from their breakfast. Several sleek rats sat up

on their haunches to see what had arrived among them, but they were too

bold to be scared off.

The tenements on both sides had some windows completely open to the

outside, some covered with what looked like oiled paper, none with

glass. Though no people were in sight, from the rooms within the aged

walls came voices: laughter here; an angry exchange there; chanting, as

of a mantra, softly drifting down from the second floor of the building

on the right. It was all in a foreign tongue with which Bobby was not

familiar, though he suspected they might be in India, perhaps Bombay or

Calcutta.

Because of the ineluctable stench, which by comparison made the stink of

a slaughterhouse seem like a new perfume by Calvin Klein, and because of

the insistently buzzing flies that exhibited great interest in an open

mouth and nostrils, Bobby was unable to get his breath. He choked, put

his free hand over his mouth, still could not breathe, and knew he was

going to faint face first into the vile, steaming muck.

Darkness.

Fireflies.

Velocity.

In a place of stillness and silence, shafts of afternoon sunshine

pierced mimosa branches and dappled the ground with golden light. They

stood on a red oriental footbridge over a koi pond in a Japanese garden,

where sculpted bonsai and other meticulously tended plants were

positioned among carefully raked beds of pebbles.

“Oh, yes,” Frank said with a mixture of wonder and pleasure and relief.

“I lived here, too, for a while.” They were alone in the garden. Bobby

realized that Frank always materialized in sheltered places where he was

unlikely to be seen in the act, or in circumstances-such as the middle

of a cloudburst-that almost ensured even a public place like a beach

would be conveniently deserted. Evidently, in addition to the

unimaginably demanding task of deconstruction-rather than

reconstruction, his mind was also capable of scouting the way ahead and

choosing a discreet point of arrival.

Frank said,

“I was the longest-residing guest they’d ever had. It’s a traditional

Japanese inn on the outskirts of Kyoto.” Bobby became aware that they

were both totally dry. their clothes were wrinkled, in need of an

ironing, but when Frank had deconstructed them in Hawaii, he had not

teleported the molecules of water that had saturated their clothes.

“They were so kind here,” Frank said,

“respectful of my privacy, yet so attentive and kind.” He sounded

wistful and eternally weary, as if he would have liked to have stopped

traveling right there, even if stopping meant dying at the hand of his

brother.

Bobby was relieved to see that Frank also had not brought with them any

of the slime from the narrow alley in Calcutta or wherever. Their shoes

and pants were clean.

Then he noticed something on the toe of his right shoe.

He bent forward to look at it.

“I wish we could stay here,” Frank said.

“Forever.”

One of the roaches from that filth-choked alley was now part of Bobby’s

footwear.

One of the biggest advantages being self-employed was freedom from

neckties and uncomfortable shoes, so he was wearing, as usual, a pair of

soft Rock port Supersports, and the roach was not merely stuck on the

putty-colored leather but bristling from it and melded with it.

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