The Bad Place by Dean R. Koontz

when he tried to breathe he could not. He went down, flailing at the

waves with arms and hands that were only bone, caught in an undertow,

sucked into everlasting darkness, dissolution, oblivion.

BAD THING!

Bobby sat straight up in bed.

He was screaming, but no cry issued from him. When he realized he had

been dreaming, he stopped trying to scream and finally a low and

miserable sound escaped him.

He had thrown off the sheets. He sat on the edge of the bed feet on the

floor, both hands on the mattress, steadying himself as if he was still

on that heaving beach or struggling to swim in those roiling tides.

The green numbers of the projection clock glowed fain on the ceiling:

2:43.

For a while the drum-loud thud of his own heart filled him with sound

from within, and he was deaf to the outer warmth But after a few seconds

he heard Julie breathing rhythmically, and he was surprised that he had

not awaken her. Evidently he had not been thrashing in his sleep.

The panic that infused the dream had not entirely left him His anxiety

began to swell again, partly because the room was lightless as that

devouring sea. Afraid of waking Julie did not switch on the bedside

lamp.

As soon as he was able to stand, he got up and circled the bed in the

perfect blackness. The bathroom was on her side but a clear path was

provided, and he found his way as he had on countless other nights,

without difficulty, guided by both experience and instinct.

He eased the door shut behind him and switched on the lights. For a

moment the fluorescent brilliance prevented him from looking into the

glary surface of the mirror above the double sinks. When at last he

regarded his reflection, and that his flesh had not been eaten away. The

dream had been frighteningly vivid, unlike anything he’d known before;

and in some strange way it had been even more real than waking like with

intense colors and sounds that pulsed through his slumbering mind with

the full glare dazzle of light along the filament of an incandescent

bulb. Though aware that it had been a dream, he had half feared that

the nightmare ocean had I its corrosive mark on him even after he woke.

Shuddering, he leaned against the counter. He turned on the cold water,

bent forward, and splashed his face. Dripping, he looked at his

reflection again and met his eyes. He whispered to himself.

“What the hell was that?” CANDY PROWLED.

The eastern end of the Pollard family’s two-acre property dropped into a

canyon. The walls were steep, composed mostly of dry crumbling soil

veined in places by pink and gray shale Only the expansive root systems

of the hardy, desert vegetation-chapparal, thick clumps of bunchgrass,

pampas grass scattered mesquite-kept the slopes from eroding extensively

in every heavy rain. A few eucalyptuses, laurels, and melaleucas grew

on the walls of the canyon, and where the floor was broad enough,

melaleucas and California live oaks sank roots deep into the earth along

the runoff channel. That channel only a dry stream bed now, but during

a heavy rain it over flowed.

Fleet and silent in spite of his size, Candy followed the canyon

eastward, moving upslope, until he came to a junction wit another

declivity that was too narrow to be called a canyon There, he turned

north. The land continued to climb, though not as steeply as before.

Sheer walls soared on both sides of him, and in places the passage was

nearly pinched off, narrowing to only a couple of feet. Brittle

tumbleweeds, blown into the ravine by the wind, had collected in mounds

at some those choke points, and they scratched Candy as he pushed

through them.

Without even a fragment moon, the night was unusually dark at the bottom

of that fissure in the land, but he seldom stumbled and never hesitated.

His gifts did not include super human vision; he was as blinded by

lightlessness as anyone However, even in the blackest night, he knew

when an obstacle lay before him, sensed the contours of the land so well

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