The Bad Place by Dean R. Koontz

for a hatrack?”

Hesitantly, Thomas let go of his sister. He and Bobby embraced. After

all these years, Thomas was still not entirely comfortable with Bobby,

not because they had bad chemistry between them or any bad feelings, but

because Thomas didn’t like change very much and adapted to it slowly.

Even after more than seven years, his sister being married was a change,

something that still felt new to him.

But he likes me, Bobby thought, maybe even as much as I like him.

Liking DS victims was not difficult, once you got past the pity that

initially distanced you from them, because most of them had an innocence

and guilelessness that was charming and refreshing. Except when

inhibited by shyness or embarrassment about their differences, they were

usually forthright, more truthful than other people, and incapable of

the petty social games and scheming that marred so many relationships

among “ordinary” people.

The previous summer, at Cielo Vista’s Fourth of July picnic, a mother of

one of the other patients had said to Bobby,

“Sometimes, watching them, I think there’s something in them-a

gentleness, a special kindness that’s closer to God than anything in

us.”

Bobby felt the truth of that observation now, as he hugged Thomas and

looked down into his sweet, lumpish face.

“Did we interrupt a poem?” Julie asked.

Thomas let go of Bobby and hurried to the work table, where Julie was

looking at the magazine from which he had been clipping a picture when

they’d arrived. He opened his current scrapbook-fourteen others were

filled with his creations and shelved in a corner bookcase near his

bed-and pointed at a two-page spread of pasted-in clippings that were

arranged lines and quatrains, like poetry.

“This was yesterday. Finished yesterday,” Thomas said.

“Took me a looooong time, and it was hard, but now it… is… right.”

Four or five years ago, Thomas had decided that he wanted to be a poet

like someone he had seen and admired on television. The degree of

mental retardation among victims of Down’s syndrome varied widely, from

mild to severe; Thomas was somewhere just above the middle of the

spectrum, but did not possess the intellectual capacity to learn to

write more than his name. That didn’t stop him. He had asked for paper

glue, a scrapbook, and piles of old magazines. Since he rarely asked

for anything, and since Julie would have moved a mountain on her back to

get him whatever he wanted, the items, his list, were soon in his

possession.

“All kinds of magazine he’d said, “with different pretty pictures… but

ugly too. all kinds.” From Time, Newsweek, Life, Hot Rod, Omni,

Seventeen, and dozens of other publications, he snipped whole pictures

and parts of pictures, arranging them as if they were words, in a series

of images that made a statement that was important to him. Some of his

“poems” were only five lines long, and some involved hundreds of

clippings arranged in dearly stanzas or, more often, in loosely

structured lines that resembled free verse.

Julie took the scrapbook from him and went to the armchair by the

window, where she could concentrate on his newest composition. Thomas

remained at the worktable, watching her anxiously.

His picture poems did not tell stories or have recognizable thematic

narratives, but neither were they merely random jumbles of images. A

church spire, a mouse, a beautiful worn in an emerald-green ball gown, a

field of daisies, a can of Do pineapple rings, a crescent moon, pancakes

in a stack with syrup drizzling down, rubies gleaming on a black-velvet

drape play cloth, a fish with mouth agape, a child laughing, a nun

praying, a woman crying over the blasted body of a loved one in some

Godforsaken war zone, a pack of Lifesavers, a puppy with floppy ears,

black-clad nuns with starched white wimples-from those and thousands of

other pictures in his treasured boxes of clippings, Thomas selected the

elements of his compositions.

From the beginning Bobby recognized an uncanny rightness to many of the

poems, a symmetry too fundamental to be defined, juxtapositions that

were both naive and profound, rhythms as real as they were elusive, a

personal vision plain to see but too mysterious to comprehend to any

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