The Bad Place by Dean R. Koontz

“A place like this, with a view like this. Not a big place.”

“Doesn’t have to be. A living room, one bedroom for us and one for

Thomas, maybe a cozy little den lined with books.”

“We don’t even need a dining room, but I’d like a big kitchen.”

“Yeah. A kitchen you can really live in.” She sighed.

“Music, books, real home-cooked meals instead of junk food grabbed on

the fly, lots of time to sit on the porch and enjoy the view-and the

three of us together.”

That was the rest of The Dream: a place by the sea and by otherwise

living simply-enough financial security to retire twenty years early.

One of the things that had drawn Bobby to Julie-and Julie to him-was

their shared awareness of the shortness of life. Everyone knew that

life was too short, of course, but most people pushed that thought out

of mind, living as if there were endless tomorrows. If most people

weren’t able to deceive themselves about death, they could not have

cared so passionately about the outcome of a ball game, the plot of a

soap opera, the blatherings of politicians, or a thousand other things

that actually meant nothing when considered against the inevitable fall

of the endless night that finally came to everyone. They could not have

endured to waste a minute standing in a supermarket line and would not

have suffered hours in the company of bores or fools. Maybe a world lay

beyond this on maybe even Heaven, but you couldn’t count on it; you

could count only on darkness. Self-deception in this case was a

blessing. Neither Bobby nor Julie was a gloom-monger. She knew how to

enjoy life as well as anyone, and so did he, even if neither of them

could buy the fragile illusion of immortality than served most people as

a defense against the unthinkable. This awareness expressed itself not

in anxiety or depression, but in a strong resolve not to spend their

lives in a hurly-burly meaningless activity, to find a way to finance

long stretches time together in their own serene little tide pool.

As her chestnut hair streamed in the wind, Julie squinted at the far

horizon, which was filling up with honey-gold light as the sinking sun

drizzled toward it.

“What frightens Thomas about being out in the world is people, too many

people. But he’d be happy in a little house by the sea, a quiet stretch

of coast, few people.

“I’m sure he would.”

“It’ll happen,” Bobby assured her.

“By the time we build the agency big enough to sell, the southern coast

will be too expensive. But north of Santa Barbara is pretty.”

“It’s a long coast,” Bobby said, putting an arm around her.

“We’ll still be able to find a place in the south. And we’ll have time

to enjoy it. We’re not going to live forever, but we’re young. Our

numbers aren’t going to come up for years an years yet.” But he

remembered the premonition that had shivered through him in bed that

morning, after they had made love, the feeling that something malevolent

was out there in the windswept world, coming to take Julie away from

him.

The sun had touched the horizon and begun to melt into it. The golden

light deepened swiftly to orange and then to bloody red. The grass and

tall weeds behind them rustled in the wind, and Bobby looked over his

shoulder at the spirals of airborne sand that swirled across the slope

between the beach and the parking lot, like pale spirits that had fled a

graveyard with the coming of twilight. From the east a wall of night

was toppling over the world. The air had grown downright cold.

CANDY SLEPT all day in the front bedroom that had once been his

mother’s, breathing her special scent. Two or three times a week, he

carefully shook a few drops of her favorite perfume-Channel Number

Five-onto a white, lace-trimmed handkerchief, which he kept on the

dresser beside her silver comb-and-brush set, so each breath he took in

the room reminded him of her. Occasionally he half woke from slumber to

readjust the pillows or pull the covers more tightly around him, and the

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