The Bad Place by Dean R. Koontz

“Reno, Tahoe, Atlantic City, the Caribbean, Macao, France, England,

Monte Carlo-anywhere there’s big-time gambling.” This talk of easy

access to unlimited amounts of cash excited Bobby, though he was not

sure why. After all, it was Frank who could teleport, not him, and he

was ninety-five-percent sure they were never going to see Frank again.

Spreading a sheaf of printouts across the desktop, Lee Chen said,

“The money’s the least interesting thing. You remember you wanted me to

find out if the cops are on to Mr. Blue

“Candy,” Bobby said.

“We have a name for him now.” Lee scowled.

“I liked Mr. Blue better. It had more style.”

Entering the room, Hal Yamataka said, “I don’t think you can trust the

style judgment of a guy who wears red sneakers and yellow socks.”

Lee shook his head. “We Chinese spend thousands of years working up an

intimidating image for all Asians, so we can keep these hapless

Westerners off balance, and you people in Japan blow it all by making

those Godzilla movies. You can’t be inscrutable and make Godzilla

movies.”

“Yeah? You show me anybody who understands a Godzilla movie after the

first one.”

They made an interesting pair, these two: one slender, modish, with

delicate features, an enthusiastic child of the silicon age; the other

squat, broad, with a face as blunt as a hammer, a guy who was about as

high-tech as a rock.

But to Bobby the most interesting thing was that, until this moment, he

had never thought about the fact that a disproportionately large

percentage of Dakota & Dakota’s small staff was Asian-American. There

were two more-Nguyen Tuan Phu and Jamie Quang, both Vietnamese. Four

out of eleven people. Though he and Hal once in a while made East-West

jokes, Bobby never thought of Lee and Hal and Nguyen and Jamie as

composing any subset of employees; they were just themselves, as

different from one another as apples are different from pears and

oranges and peaches. But Bobby realized that this predilection for

Asian-American co-workers revealed something about himself, something

more than just an obvious and admirable racial blindness, but he could

not figure out what it was.

Hal said,

“And nothing gets more inscrutable than the whole concept of Mother. By

the way, Bobby, Clint’s gone home to comfort Felina. We should all be

so lucky.”

“Lee was telling us about Mr. Blue,” Julie said.

“Candy,”

Bobby said.

Indicating the data he had extracted from various police records

nationwide, Lee said,

“Most police agencies began to be computerized and interlinked only

about nine years ago-in any sophisticated way, that is. So that’s all

the further back a lot of electronically accessible files go. But

during that time, there have been seventy-eight brutal murders, in nine

states, that have enough similarities to raise the possibility of a

single perp- Just the possibility, mind you. But FBI got interested

enough last year to put a three-man team on it, one in the office and

two in the field, to coordinate local and stat& investigations.”

“Three men?” Hal said.

“Doesn’t sound like high priority.”

“The Bureau’s always been overextended,” Julie said.

“And over the last thirty years, since it’s been unfashionable for

judges to hand out long criminal sentences, the bad guys outnumber them

worse than ever. Three men, full time-that’s a serious commitment at

this stage.” Extracting a printout from the pile on the desk, Lee

summarized the essential data on it.

“All of the killings have the points in common. First-the victims were

all bitten, most the throat, but virtually no part of the body is sacred

to the guy. Second-many of them were beaten, suffered head injuries.

But loss of blood, from the bites-usually the jugular vein and carotid

artery in the throat-was a substantial contributing factor to the death

in virtually every instance, regardless of other injuries.”

“On top of everything else, the guy’s a vampire?” Hal asked Taking the

question seriously-as, indeed, they had to consider every possibility in

this bizarre case, regardless of how outlandish it seemed-Julie ‘said,

“Not a vampire in the supernatural sense. From what we’ve learned, the

Pollard family for some reason generously gifted. You know that

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