The Bad Place by Dean R. Koontz

exchanged her trademark blond curls for a more mode cut that would

require a new source of income just to pay for all the makeup she was

going to use, but she looked great.

Come in. Want a drink?

“I’d love a drink, kid, and right now I could use six of ”em but I

gotta say no. My in-laws came over, and we’re about thinking about

either playing cards with ”em or shooting ”em. It depends on their

attitude.” Of all the people Felina knew in her day-to-day life, Alice

was the only one, other than Clint, who understood sign language. Given

the fact that most people harbored a prejudice against the deaf, to

which they could not admit but on what they acted, Alice was her only

girlfriend. But Felina was happy and would have given up their

friendship if Mark Kasper-Alicson, for whom she had learned sign

language-had not been born deaf

“Why I came over, we got a call from Clint, asking me to tell ya he’s

not on his way home yet, but he expects to get here soon.”

“So late?”

“maybe by eight. “Since when does he work so late?”

“They’ve got a big case. That always means some overtime.

“ya it’s

“He’s going to take ya out to dinner, and says it’s been an incredible

day. I guess that’s about the case, huh? Must be fascinating, married

to a detective. And he’s sweet, too. You’re lucky, kid.”

“Yes. But so is he.

Alice laughed.

“Right on! And if he comes home this late another night, don’t settle

for dinner. Make him buy ya diamonds.”

Felina thought of the red gem he had brought home yesterday, and she

wished she could tell Alice about it. But Dakota & Dakota business,

especially concerning an ongoing case in which the client was in

jeopardy, was as sacred in their house as the privacies of the marriage

bed.

“Saturday, our place, six-thirty? Jack’ll cook up a mess of his chili,

and we’ll play pinochle and eat chili and drink beer and fart till we

pass out. Okay?”

“Yes.”

“And tell Clint, it’s okay-we won’t expect him to talk.”

Felina laughed, then signed: He’s getting better.

“That’s ’cause you’re civilizing him, kid.”

They hugged again, and Alice left.

Felina closed the door, looked at her wristwatch, and saw that it was

seven o’clock. She had only an hour to get ready for dinner, and she

wanted to look especially good for Clint, not because this was a special

occasion, but because she always wanted to look good for him. She

headed for the bedroom, then realized that only the automatic lock was

engaged on the front door. She returned to the foyer, twisted the thumb

screw that slid the dead bolt home, and slipped the security chain in

place.

Clint worried about her too much. If he came home and found that she

hadn’t remembered the dead bolt, he’d age a year in a minute, right

before her eyes.

so AFTER BEING off duty all day, Hal Yamataka responded to a call from

Clint and came to the offices at 6: Tuesday night, to stand a watch in

case Frank returned after the rest of them had left. Clint met him in

the reception lounge and briefed him there over a cup of coffee. He had

to be brought up to date on what had happened during his absence and

after he heard what had gone down, he again wistfully considered a

career in gardening.

Nearly everyone in his family either had a gardening business or owned a

little nursery, and all of them did well, most of them better than what

Hal made working for Dakota & Dakota, some of them a great deal better.

His folks, his three brothers, and various well-meaning uncles tried

repeatedly to persuade him that he should work for them or come into

business with them, but he resisted. It was not that he had anything

against running a nursery, selling gardening supplies, land scape

planning, tree pruning, or even gardening itself But southern California

was not the place.

the term “Japanese gardener” was a cliche not a career, and he couldn’t

abide the thought of being a kind of stereotype.

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