The Bad Place by Dean R. Koontz

“So you can’t kill him, though he deserves it,” Roselle pered as she

rocked her favorite child. She stared down intently into his eyes as he

looked up from her exposed breast.

“Instead what you have to do is take something from him as revenge for

the money he took from me, something precious to them. There’s a new

baby in the Salfont house. I read about it in the paper a few months

ago, a little girl baby they called Reb Elizabeth. What kind of name is

that for a girl, I ask you. Sounds highfalutin’ to me, the kind of name

a fancy lawyer and his wife would give a baby ’cause they think them and

theirs are better than other people. Elizabeth is a queen’s name, and

you just look up what Rebekah is in the Bible, see if you don’t think

they think way too much of themselves and their little Rebekah… she’s

almost six months now, they’ve had her long enough to miss her when

she’s gone, miss her bad. I’ll drive you past their house tomorrow, my

precious little Candy let you see where it is, and tomorrow night you’ll

go there visit the Lord’s vengeance on them, my vengeance. They’ll think

a rat got into the room, or something of the sort, and they’ll blame

themselves until the day they’re dead too.”

The throat of Rebekah Salfont had been tender, her blood salty. Candy

enjoyed the adventure of it, the thrill of being in the house of

strangers without their permission or knowledge Killing the girl while

grownups slept in the adjoining room unaware, filled him with a sense of

power. He was just a kid, yet he slipped past their defenses and struck

a blow for mother, which in a way made him the man of the Pollard house.

That heady feeling added an element of glory to the excitement of the

kill.

His mother’s requests for vengeance were thereafter irrevocable.

For the first few years of his mission, infants and very young children

were his only prey. Sometimes, in order not to create a pattern to the

police, he did not bite them but disposed of them in other ways, and

occasionally he took hold of them teleported out of the house with them,

so no body was found.

An so, if Roselle’s enemies had all been from in and around Santa

Barbara, the pattern could not have been hidden. But often she required

vengeance against people in far places, about whom she read in

newspapers and magazines.

He remembered, in particular, a family in New York State, who won

millions of dollars in the lottery. His mother had felt that their good

fortune had been at the expense of the Pollard family, and that they

were too greedy to be permitted to live. Candy had been fourteen at the

time, and he had not understood his mother’s reasoning-but he had not

questioned it, either. She was the only source of truth to him, and the

thought of disobedience had never crossed his mind. He had killed all

five members of that family in New York, then burned their house to the

ground with their bodies in it.

His mother’s thirst for vengeance followed a predictable cycle.

Immediately after Candy killed someone for her, she was happy, filled

with plans for the future; she would bake special treats for him and

sing melodically while she worked in the kitchen, and she would begin a

new quilt or an elaborate needlepoint project. But over the next four

weeks her happiness would dim like a light bulb on a rheostat, and

almost one month to the day after the killing, having lost interest in

baking and crafts, she would begin to talk about other people who had

wronged her and, by extension, the Pollard family. Within two to four

more weeks, she would have settled on a target, and Candy would be

dispatched to fulfill his mission. Consequently, he killed on only six

or seven occasions each year.

That frequency satisfied Roselle, but the older Candy got, the less it

satisfied him. He had not merely acquired a thirst for blood but a

craving that occasionally overwhelmed him. The thrill of the hunt also

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