The Bad Place by Dean R. Koontz

feelings; they were as inscrutable as the cats.

He only dimly grasped the twins’ bond with the cats. It was their

blessed mother’s gift to them just as his many talents were his mother’s

generous bequest to him, so he did not question the rightness or

wholesomeness of it.

Still, he wanted to hit Violet because she hadn’t saved the body for

him. She had known Frank had touched it, that it could be of use to

Candy, but she had not saved it until he’d awakened, had not come to

wake him early. He wanted to smash her, but she was his sister, and he

couldn’t hurt his sisters; he had to provide for them, protect them. His

mother was watching.

“The parts that couldn’t be eaten?” he asked.

Violet gestured toward the kitchen door.

He switched on the outside light and stepped onto the back porch. Small

knobs of bone and vertebrae were scattered like queerly shaped dice on

the unpainted floorboards. Only two sides of the porch were open; the

house angled around the other two flanks of it, and in the niche where

the house walls met, Candy found a piece of Samantha’s tail and scraps

of fur, jammed there by the night wind. The half-crushed skull was on

the top step. He snatched it up and moved down on to unmown lawn.

The wind, which had been declining since late afternoon suddenly stopped

altogether. The cold air would have carried the faintest sound a great

distance; but the night was hushed. Usually Candy could touch an object

and see who had handled it before him. Sometimes he could even see

where some of those people had gone after putting the object down, and

when he went looking for them, they were always to be found where his

clairvoyance had led him. Frank had killed the cat, and Candy hoped

that contact with the remains would spark an inner vision that would put

him on his brother’s trail again.

Every speck of flesh had been stripped from Samantha’s broken pate, and

its contents had been emptied as well. Pick clean, licked smooth, dried

by the wind, it might have been a portion of a fossil from a distant

age. Candy’s mind was fill not with images of Frank but of the other

cats and Verbina and Violet, and finally he threw down the damaged skull

in disgust.

His frustration sharpened his anger. He felt the need rising in him. He

dared not let the need bloom… but resisting was infinitely harder

than resisting the charms of women and other sins. He hated Frank. He

hated him so much, so deep he had hated him so constantly for seven

years, that he couldn’t even bear the thought that he had slept through

an opportunity to destroy him.

Need….

He dropped to his knees on the weedy lawn. He fisted his hands and

hunched his shoulders and clenched his teeth, trying to make a rock of

himself, an unmovable mass that would not be swayed one inch by the most

urgent need, not one hair width by even the most dire necessity, the

most demanding hunger, the most passionate craving. He prayed to his

mother to give him strength. The wind began to pick up again, an he

believed it was a devil wind that would blow him toward temptation, so

he fell forward on the ground and dug his fingers into the yielding

earth, and he repeated his mother’s name-Roselle-whispered her name

furiously into the grass and dirt, again and again, desperate to quell

the mention of his dark need. Then he wept. Then he got up. And went

hunting.

FRANK WENT to a theater and sat through a movie but was unable to

concentrate on the story. He ate dinner at El Torito, though he didn’t

really taste the food; he just pushed down the enchiladas and rice as if

feeding fuel to a furnace. For a couple of hours he drove aimlessly

back and forth across the middle and southern reaches of Orange County,

staying on the move only because, for the time being, he felt safer when

in motion. Finally he returned to the motel.

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