The Bad Place by Dean R. Koontz

neighborhoods in fog bound Laguna, he parked on a dark side street and

exchanged the Chevy’s plates for those on an Oldsmobile. With luck, the

owner of the Olds wouldn’t notice the new plates for a couple of days,

maybe even a day or longer; until he reported the switch, the Chevy

wouldn’t match anything on a police hot sheet and he would, therefore be

relatively safe to drive. In any case, Frank intended to get rid of the

car by tomorrow night and either boost a new one or use some of the cash

in the flight bag to buy legal wheels. Though he was exhausted, he

didn’t think it wise to check into a motel. Four-thirty in the morning

was a damned hour for anyone to be wanting a room. Furthermore, he was

unshaven, and his thick hair was matted and oily, and his jeans and

checkered blue flannel shirt were dirty and filthy from his recent

adventures. The last thing he wanted to do was call attention to

himself, so he decided to catch a couple hours of sleep in the car.

He drove farther south, into Laguna Niguel, where he parked on a quiet

residential street, under the immense bow of a date palm. He stretched

out on the back seat, as foully as possible without benefit of

sufficient legroom or pillow and closed his eyes.

For the moment he was not afraid of his unknown pursuers because he felt

that the man was no longer nearby. Temporarily, at least, he had given

his enemy the shake, and had no desire to lie awake in fear of a hostile

face suddenly appearing at the window. He was also able to put out of

his mind all questions about his identity and the money in the flight

bag; he was so tired-and his thought processes were so fuzzy-that any

attempt to puzzle out solutions to those mysteries would be fruitless.

He was kept awake, however, by the memory of how strange the events in

Anaheim had been, a few hours ago. The foreboding gusts of wind. The

eerie flowerlike music. Imploding windows, exploding tires, failed

brakes, failed steering…

Who had come into that apartment behind the blue light?

Was “who” the right word… or would it be more accurate to ask what

had been searching for him?

During his urgent flight from Anaheim to Laguna, he’d not had the

leisure to reflect upon those bizarre incidents, but now he could not

turn his mind from them. He sensed that he had survived an encounter

with something unnatural. Worse, he sensed that he knew what it was-and

that his amnesia was self-induced by a deep desire to forget.

After a while, even the memory of those preternatural events wasn’t

enough to keep him awake. The last thing that crossed his waking mind,

as he slipped off on a tide of sleep, was that four-word phrase that had

come to him when he had first awakened in the deserted alleyway:

Fireflies in a windstorm….

BY THE time they had cooperated with the police at the scene, made

arrangements for their disabled vehicle and talked with the three

corporate officers who showed at Decodyne, Bobby and Julie did not get

home until shortly before dawn. They were dropped at their door by a

police cruiser, and Bobby was glad to see the place.

They lived on the east side of Orange, in a three-bedroom

sort-of-ersatz-Spanish tract house, which they had bought new two years

ago, largely for its investment potential. Even though the relative

youth of the neighborhood was apparent the landscaping: and None of the

shrubbery had reached full size the trees were still too immature to

loom higher than the gutters on the houses.

Bobby unlocked the door. Julie went in, and he followed The sound of

their footsteps on the parquet floor of the foyer echoing hollowly off

the bare walls of the adjacent and utter empty living room, was proof

that they were not committed to the house for the long term. To save

money toward the fulfillment of The Dream, they had left the living

room, dining room, and two bedrooms unfurnished. They installed carpet

and cheaper draperies. Not a penny had been spent on other

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