The Bad Place by Dean R. Koontz

lost, adrift, I feel sorry for him. Okay?”

He stared at her, chewing on his pale lower lip for a moment then

finally said, “We work good together because we complement each other.

You’re strong where I’m weak, and I’m strong where you’re weak. In many

ways we’re not at all alike but we belong together because we fit like

pieces of a puzzle.

“What’s your point?”

“One way we’re different but complementary is our motivation. This line

of work suits me because I get a kick out of helping people whore in

trouble through no fault of their own. I like to see good triumph.

Sounds like a comic-book hero, but it’s the way I feel. You, on the

other hand, are primarily motivated by a desire to stomp the bad guys.

Yeah, sure, I like to see the bad guys all crumpled and whimpering, too,

but it is not as important to me as it is to you. And, of course,

you’re happy to help innocent people, but with you that’s second to the

stomping and crushing. Probably because you’re still working out your

rage over the murder of your mother.”

“Bobby, if I want psychoanalysis, I’ll get it in a room when the primary

piece of furniture is a couch-not a toilet.”

Her mother had been taken hostage in a bank holdup when Julie was

twelve. The two perpetrators had been high on amphetamines and low on

common sense and compassion. Before it was all over, five of the six

hostages were dead, and Julie’s mother was not the lucky one.

Turning to the mirror, Bobby looked at her reflection, as if he was

uncomfortable meeting her eyes directly.

“My point is-suddenly you’re acting like me, and that’s no good, that

destroys our balance, disrupts the harmony of this relationship, and

it’s the harmony that has always kept us alive, successful and alive.

You want to take this case because you’re fascinated, it excites your

imagination, and because you’d like to help Frank, he’s so pitiful.

Where’s your usual outrage? I’ll tell you where it is. You don’t have

any because, at this moment anyway, there’s no one to elicit it, no bad

guy. Okay, there’s the guy he says chased him that night, but we don’t

even know if he’s real or just a figment of Frank’s fantasy. Without an

obvious bad guy to focus your anger, I should have to drag you into this

every step of the way, and that’s what I was doing, but now you’re doing

the dragging, and that worries me. It doesn’t feel right.”

She let him ramble on, with their gazes locked in the mirror, and when

at last he finished, she said, “No, that’s not your point.”

“What do you mean?”

“I mean, everything you just said is smoke. What’s really bothering

you, Robert?”

His reflection tried to stare down her reflection.

She smiled.

“Come on. Tell me. We never keep secrets.”

Bobby-in-the-mirror looked like some bad imitation of the real Bobby

Dakota. The real Bobby, her Bobby, was full of fun and life and energy.

Bobby-in-the-mirror was gray-faced, almost grim; his vitality had been

sapped by worry.

“Robert?” she prodded.

“You remember last Thursday when we woke?” he said. “The Santa Anas

were blowing. We made love.”

“I remember.”

“And right after we’d made love… I had the strange, terrible feeling

that I was going to lose you, that something out there in the wind

was… coming to get you.”

“You told me about it later that night, at Ozzie’s, when we were talking

about jukeboxes. But the windstorm ended, and nothing got me. Here I

am.”

“That same night, Thursday night, I had a nightmare, the most vivid damn

dream you can imagine.” He told her about the little house on the

beach, the jukebox standing in the san the thunderous inner voice-THE

BAD THING IS COMING, THE BAD THING, BAD THING!-and about the corrosive

sea that had swallowed both of them, dissolving the flesh and dragging

their bones into lightless depths.

“It rock me. You can’t conceive of how real it seemed. Sounds crazy

but… that dream was almost more real than real life. I woke up,

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