The Bad Place by Dean R. Koontz

He looked for somewhere to hide. There was nothing in the crater to

afford concealment, and nowhere to run on the plain beyond.

The vibrations stopped.

Even in the deep shadows thrown by the ship, Bobby noticed a horde of

identical insects begin to scuttle out of the bore holes in the crater

walls, one after the other. They had been called forth.

Though no apparent openings appeared in the belly of the ship, a score

or more of low-energy lasers-some yellow, some white, some blue, some

red-began to play over the floor of the crater. Each beam was the

diameter of a silver dollar, and each moved independently of the others.

Like spotlights, they repeatedly swept the crater and everything in it,

sometimes moving parallel to one another, sometimes crisscrossing one

another, in a display that further disoriented Bobby and gave him the

feeling that he was caught in the middle of a silent fireworks show.

He remembered what Manfred and Gavenall had told him about the crimson

decorations along the rim of the bug’s shell, and he saw that the white

lasers were focusing only on the insects, busily scanning the markings

around each carapace. Their owners were taking roll call. He saw a

white beam fidget over the broken corpus of one of the bugs he had

kicked, and after a moment a red beam joined it to study the carcass.

Then the red beam jumped to Bobby, and a couple of other beams of

different hue also found him, as if he was a can of peas being

identified and added to someone’s grocery bill at a supermarket

checkout.

The floor of the crater was teeming with insects now, so many that Bobby

could see neither the gray soil nor the litter of excreted diamonds over

which they clambered. He told himself that they were not really bugs;

they were just biological machines, engineered by the same race that had

built the ship hanging over him. But that didn’t help much because they

still looked more like bugs than like machines. They had been designed

to mine diamonds; they were not attracted to him whatsoever; but their

disinterest did not make him feel better, because his phobia guaranteed

that he was interested in them. His shadow-chilled skin prickled with

gooseflesh. Short circuiting nerve endings sputtered with false reports

of things crawling on him, so he felt as if bugs swarmed over him from

head to foot. They were actually creeping over his shoes, but none of

them tried to scurry up his legs; he was grateful, because he was sure

he would go mad if they began to climb him.

He used his hand as a visor over his eyes, to avoid being dazzled by the

lasers that were playing on him. He saw something gleaming in the

scanner beams only a few feet away: a curved section of what appeared to

be hollow steel tubing. It was sticking out of the powdery soil, partly

buried, further concealed by the bugs that scurried and jittered around

it. Nevertheless, at first sight Bobby knew what it was, and he was

overcome with a horrible sinking feeling. He shuffled forward, trying

to crush any of the insects because, for all he knew, the penalty for

the additional destruction of property might be instant incineration.

When he could reach the glinting curve metal, he seized it and pulled it

loose of the soft earth. It was the missing railing from the hospital

bed.

“HOW LONG?” Julie demanded.

“Twenty-one minutes,” Clint said.

They still stood near the chair where Frank had been sitting and beside

which Bobby had been stooping.

Lee Chen had gotten off the sofa, so Jackie Jaxx could sit down. The

magician-hypnotist had draped a damp washcloth over his forehead. Every

couple of minutes he protested. He could not really make people

disappear, though no one had accused him of being responsible for what

had happened to Frank and Bobby.

Having retrieved a bottle of Scotch, glasses, and ice from the office

wet bar, Lee Chen was pouring six stiff drinks,for each person in the

room, as well as for Frank and Bobby

“If you don’t need a drink to steady your nerves now,” he said, “you’ll

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