The Bad Place by Dean R. Koontz

lintels; white-painted French windows and doors were recessed in

graceful arches, with deep sills. The sidewalks were shaded by lattice

arbors draped with a mix of purple- and yellow-blooming bougainvillea,

from which the wind drew a chorus of urgent whispers. Inside, the

floors were gray vinyl tile, speckled with peach and turquoise, and the

walls were peach with white base and crown molding, which lent the place

a warm and airy ambience.

They paused in the foyer, just inside the front door, while Julie

withdrew a comb from her purse and pulled the wind tangles from her

hair. After stopping at the front desk in the cozy visitors’ lobby,

they followed the north hall to Thomas’s first floor room.

His was the second of the two beds, nearest the windows, but he was

neither there nor in his armchair. When they stopped in his open

doorway, he was sitting at the worktable that belonged to both him and

his roommate, Derek. Bent over the table, using a pair of scissors to

clip a photograph from a magazine, Thomas appeared curiously both

hulking and fragile, thickset yet delicate; physically, he was solid but

mentally and emotionally he was frail, and that inner weakness shone

through to belie the outer image of strength. With thick neck, heavy

rounded shoulders, broad back, proportionally short arms, and stocky

legs, Thomas had a gnomish look but when he became aware of them and

turned his head to see who was there, his face was not graced by the

cute and beguiling features of a fairy-tale creature; it was instead a

face of cruel genetic destiny and biological tragedy.

“Jules!” he said, dropping the scissors and magazine, nearly knocking

over his chair in his haste to get up. He was wearing baggy jeans and a

green-plaid flannel shirt. He seemed years younger than his true age.

“Jules, Jules!”

Julie let go of Bobby’s hand and stepped into the room opening her arms

to her brother.

“Hi, honey.” Thomas hurried to her in that shuffling walk of his, as if

his shoes were heeled and soled with enough iron to preclude lifting

them. Although he was twenty years old, ten years younger than Julie,

he was four inches shorter than she, just barely five feet. He had been

born with Down’s syndrome, a diagnosis that even a layman could read in

his face: his brow was sloppy and heavy; inner epicanthic folds gave his

eyes an oriental cant the bridge of his nose was flat; his ears were

low-set on a head that was slightly too small to be in proportion to his

body; the rest of his features had those soft, heavy contours often

associated with mental retardation. Though it was a common shaped more

for expressions of sadness and loneliness, it no less defied its

naturally downcast lines and formed itself into a wondrous smile, a warm

grin of pure delight.

Julie always had that effect on Thomas.

Hell, she has that effect on me, Bobby thought.

Stooping only slightly, Julie threw her arms around her brother when he

came to her, and for a while they hugged each other.

“How’re you doing?” she asked.

“Good,” Thomas said.

“I’m good.” His speech was thick but not at all difficult to

understand, for his tongue was as deformed as those of some victims of

DS; it was a little larger than it should have been but not fissured or

protruding.

“I’ real good.”

“Where’s Derek?”

“Visiting. Down the hall. He’ll be back. I’m real good. Are you

good?”

“I’m fine, honey. Just great.”

“I’m just great too. I love you, Jules,” Thomas said happily, for with

Julie he was always free of the shyness that colored his relations with

everyone else.

“I love you so much.”

“I love you, too, Thomas.”

“I was afraid… maybe you wouldn’t come.”

“Don’t I always come?”

“Always,” he said. At last he relaxed his grip on his sister and peeked

around her. “Hi, Bobby.”

“Hi, Thomas. You’re looking’ good.”

“Am I?”

“If I’m lyin’, I’m dyin’.”

Thomas laughed. To Julie, he said, “He’s funny.”

“Do I get a hug too?” Bobby asked.

“Or do I have to stand here with my arms out until someone mistakes me

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