The Bad Place by Dean R. Koontz

departing turbulence had taken with it every wisp of breathable air.

Then Frank’s ears popped as if from a sudden altitude change; as he

rushed across the deserted street toward the cars parked along the far

curb, air poured in around him again.

He tried four cars before finding one unlocked, a Ford. Slipping behind

the wheel, he left the door open to provide some light.

He looked back the way he had come.

The apartment complex was dead-of-the-night and Wrapped in darkness. An

ordinary building yet inexplicably sinister.

No one was in sight.

Nevertheless, Frank knew someone was closing in on him. He reached

under the dashboard, pulled out a tangle of wires, and hastily

jump-started the engine before realizing such a larcenous skill

suggested a life outside of the law.

he didn’t feel like a thief. He had no sense of guilt and no apathy

for-or fear of-the police. In fact, at the moment, would have welcomed

a cop to help him deal with whoever or whatever was on his tail. He

felt not like a criminal, like a man who had been on the run for an

exhaustingly long time, from an implacable and relentless enemy.

As he reached for the handle of the open door, a brief pale blue light

washed over him, and the driver’s-side window of the Ford exploded.

Tempered glass showered into the rear seat, gummy and minutely

fragmented. Since the front door was not closed, that window didn’t

spray over him; instead, most of it fell out of the frame, onto the

pavement Yanking the door shut, he glanced through the gap where the

glass had been, toward the gloom-enfolded apartment and saw no one.

Frank threw the Ford in gear, popped the brake, tramped hard on the

accelerator. Swinging away from the curb, he clipped the rear bumper of

the car parked in front of him. A brief peal of tortured metal rang

sharply across the night.

But he was still under attack: A scintillant blue light, at one second

in duration, lit up the car; over its entire interior. The windshield

cracked with thousands of jagged lines, though it had been struck by

nothing he could see. Frank averted his face and squeezed his eyes shut

just in time to avoid being blinded by flying fragments. For a moment

he could not remember where he was going, but he didn’t let up on the

accelerator preferring the danger of collision to the greater risk of

breaking and giving his unseen enemy time to reach him. Glass rained

over him, spattered across the top of his bent head; luckily, it was

safety glass, and none of the fragments cut him.

He opened his eyes, squinting into the gale that rushed through the now

empty windshield frame. He saw that he’d gone half a block and had

reached the intersection. He whipped the wheel to the right, tapping

the brake pedal only lightly, and turned onto a more brightly lighted

thoroughfare.

Like Saint Elm’s fire, sapphire-blue light glimmered on the chrome, and

when the Ford was halfway around the corner, one of the rear tires blew.

He had heard no gunfire. A fraction of a second later, the other rear

tire blew.

The car rocked, slewed to the left, began to fishtail.

Frank fought the steering wheel.

Both front tires ruptured simultaneously.

The car rocked again, even as it glided sideways, and the sudden

collapse of the front tires compensated for the leftward slide of the

rear end, giving Frank a chance to grapple the spinning steering wheel

into submission.

Again, he had heard no gunfire. He didn’t know why all of,this was

happening-yet he did.

That was the truly frightening part: On some deep subconscious level he

did know what was happening, what strange force was swiftly destroying

the car around him, and he also knew that his chances of escaping were

poor.

A flicker of twilight blue…

The rear window imploded. Gummy yet prickly wads of safety glass flew

past him. Some smacked the back of his head, stuck in his hair.

Frank made the corner and kept going on four flats. The sound of

flapping rubber, already shredded, and the grinding of metal wheel rims

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