The Bad Place by Dean R. Koontz

assimilate. Julie had liked an respected Hal, Clint, and Felina

enormously, and her admiration for the deaf woman’s courage and

self-sufficiency washounded. It was unfair that she could not mourn

each of the individually; they deserved that much. She also felt that

she was somehow betraying them because her sorrow at their deaths was

only a pale reflection of the grief she felt at the lose of Thomas,

though that was, of course, the only way it could be.

Her breath caught in her throat, and when it flew free, i was not just

an exhalation but a sob. That was no good. Sh could not allow herself

to break down. At no point in her life had she needed to be as strong

as she needed to be now; the murders committed in Orange County tonight

were the fir in a domino-fall of death that would take down her and

Bobby too, if misery dulled their edge.

While Bobby continued to kneel before her and reveal moor details-Derek

was dead, too, and perhaps others at Ciel Vista-she gripped his hands

tightly, inexpressibly gratefulhave him for an anchor in this

turbulence. Her vision was blurry, but she held back the tears with a

sheer effort of will though she dared not make eye contact with Bobby

just seeing that would be the end of her self-control.

When he finished, she said,

“It was Frank’s brother,course,”

and was dismayed by the way her voice quavered.

“Almost certainly,” Bobby said.

“But how did he find out Frank was our client?”

“I don’t know. He saw me on the beach at Punaluu-”

“Yeah, but didn’t follow you. He has no way of knowin who you were. And

for God’s sake, how did he find out about Thomas?”

“There’s some crucial bit of information missing, so we can’t understand

the pattern.”

“What’s the bastard after?” she said. Now her voice was marked by

nearly as much anger as grief, and that was good.

“He’s hunting Frank,” Bobby said.

“For seven years Frank was a loner, and that made him harder to find.

Now Frank has friends, and that gives Candy more ways to search for

him.”

“I as good as killed Thomas when I took the case,” she said.

“You didn’t want to take it. I had to talk you into it.”

“I talked you into it, you wanted to back out.”

“If there’s guilt, we share it, but there isn’t any. We took on a new

client, that’s all, and everything… just happened.” Julie nodded and

finally met his eyes. Although his voice had remained steady, tears

slid down his cheeks. Preoccupied with her own grief, she had forgotten

that the friends lost were his as well as hers, and that he had come to

love Thomas nearly as much as she did. She had to look away from him

again.

“Are you okay?” he asked.

“For now, I have to be. Later, I want to talk about Thomas, how brave

he was about being different, how he never complained, how sweet he was.

I want to talk about all of it, you and me, and I don’t want us to

forget. Nobody’s ever going to build a monument to Thomas, he wasn’t

famous, he was, just a little guy who never did anything great except be

the best person he knew how, and the only monument he’s ever going to

have is our memories. So we’ll keep him alive,-won’t we?”

“Yes.”

“We’ll keep him alive… until we’re gone. But that’s for later, when

there’s time. Now we have to keep ourselves alive, because that son of

a bitch will be coming for us, won’t he?”

“I think he will,” Bobby said.

He rose from his knees and pulled her up from the chair.

He was wearing his dark brown Ultraseude jacket with the shoulder

holster under it. She’d taken off her corduroy blazer and her holster;

she put both of them on again. The weight of the revolver, against her

left side, felt good. She hoped she’d have a chance to use it.

Her vision had cleared; her eyes were dry. She said,

“One’ thing for sure-no more dreams for me. What good is it, haing

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