The Bad Place by Dean R. Koontz

“How could I?”

She sounded irritable now, but her voice was no less seductive than it

had been.

“The cats went after him, though.”

“Did they hurt him?”

“A little. Not bad. But he killed Samantha.”

“Who?”

“Our poor little pussy. Samantha.”

Candy did not know the cats’ names. They had always seemed to be not

just a pack of cats but a single creature, most often moving as one,

apparently thinking as one.

“He killed Samantha. Smashed her head against one of the stone

pilasters at the end of the walk.” At last Violet looked up from her

sister’s hand. Her eyes seemed to be a paler blue than before, icy.

“I want you to hurt him, Candy. I want you to hurt him real bad, the

way he hurt our cat. I don’t care if he is our brother-”

“He isn’t our brother any more, not after what he did Candy said

furiously.

“I want you to do to him what he did to our poor Samantha I want you to

smash him, Candy, I want you to crush his head crack his skull open

until his brains ooze out.” She continued to speak softly, but he was

riveted by her words. Sometimes, like now, when her voice was even more

sensuous than us it seemed not merely to play upon his ears but to

slither inside his head, where it lay gently on his brain, like a mist,

a

“I want you to pound him, hit him and tear him until he’s just

splintered bones and ruptured guts, and I want you to rip his eyes. I

want him to be sorry he hurt Samantha.” Candy shook himself.

“If I get my hands on him, I’ll kill him, all right, but not because of

what he did to your cat.

cause of what he did to our mother. Don’t you remember what he did to

her? How can you worry about getting revenge on a cat when we still

haven’t made him pay for our mother, after seven long years?” She

looked stricken, turned her face from him, and fell silent.

The cats flowed off Verbina’s recumbent form.

Violet stretched out half atop her sister, half beside her.

and put her head on Verbina’s breasts. Their bare legs were twined.

Rising part of the way out of her trance like state, Verbina stroked her

sister’s silken hair.

The cats returned and cuddled against both twins where there was a warm

hollow to welcome them.

“Frank was here,” Candy said aloud but largely to himself and his hands

curled into tight fists.

A fury grew in him, like a small turning wheel of wind out on the sea

but soon to whirl itself into a hurricane. However, rage was an emotion

he dared not indulge; he must control himself. A storm of rage would

water the seeds of his need. His mother would approve of killing Frank,

for Frank had betrayed the family; his death would benefit the family.

But if Candy let his anger at his brother swell into a rage, then was

unable to find Frank, he would have to kill someone else because the

need would be too great to deny. His mother, in Heaven, would be

ashamed of him, and for a while she would turn her face from him and

deny that she had ever given birth to him. Looking up at the ceiling,

toward the unseen sky and the place at God’s court where his mother

dwelled, Candy said,

“I’ll be okay. I won’t lose control. I won’t.” He turned from his

sisters and the cats, and he went outside to see if any trace of Frank

remained near the Eugenia hedge or at the pilaster where he’d killed

Samantha.

BOBBY AND Julie ate dinner at Ozzie’s, in Orange then shifted to the

adjoining bar. The music was provided Eddie Day, who had a smooth,

supple voice; he played contemporary stuff but also tunes from the

fifties and early sixties.

It wasn’t Big Band, but some early rock-and-roll had a swing beat. They

could swing to numbers like “Dream Love, rumba to “La Bamba,” and

cha-cha to any disco that was put into Eddie’s repertoire, so they had a

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