The Bad Place by Dean R. Koontz

he had been built by a mason who knew how to fit stones tight together

and hide the mortar.

In case nothing worth watching was on television and his charge proved

to be a lousy conversationalist, he had brought a John D. MacDonald

novel.

Looking at the rain-washed window, Frank said, “I guess I’m just…

scared.”

“No need to be scared,” Bobby said.

“Hal’s not as dangerous as he looks. He’s never killed anyone he

liked.”

“Only once,” Hal said.

Bobby said, “You once killed someone you liked? Over what?”

“He asked to borrow my comb.”

“There you go, Frank,” Bobby said.

“Just don’t ask to his comb, and you’re safe.”

Frank was in no mood to be kidded. “I can’t stop thinking about waking

up with blood on my hands. I’m afraid I’ve already hurt someone. I

don’t want to hurt anyone.

“Oh, you can’t hurt Hal,” Bobby said. “He’s an imputable-oriental.”

“Inscrutable,” Hal said.

“I’m an inscrutable oriental.”

“I don’t want to hear about your sex problems, Hal.

“Anyway, if you didn’t eat so much sushi and didn’t have raw breath,

you’d get screwed as often as anyone.”

Reaching over the bed railing, Julie took one of Frank’s hands.

He smiled weakly.

“Your husband always like this, Mrs. Dakota?”

“Call me Julie. Do you mean, does he always act like a wise ass or a

child? Not always, but most of the time, I’m afraid.”

“You hear that, Hal?” Bobby said.

“Women and amtracs-they have no sense of humor.”

To Frank, Julie said, “My husband believes everything in life should be

fun, even car accidents, even funerals-”

“Even dental hygiene,” Bobby said.

“-and he’d probably be making jokes about fallout in the middle of a

nuclear war. That’s just the way he is. He could be cured-”

“She’s tried,” Bobby said.

“She sent me to a happiness detox center. They promised to knock some

gloom into me, but they Couldn’t.”

“You’ll be safe here,” Julie said, squeezing Frank’s hand before letting

go of it. “Hal will look after you.”

THE ENTOMOLOGIST’s house was in the Turtle Rock development in Irvine,

within easy driving distance of the university. Low, black,

mushroom-shaped Malibu lamps threw circles of light on the rain-puddled

walkway that led to the softly gleaming oak doors.

Carrying one of Frank Pollard’s leather flight bags, Clint stepped onto

the small covered porch and rang the bell.

A man spoke to him through an intercom set just below the bell push.

“Who is it, please?”

“Dr. Dyson Manfred? I’m Clint Karaghiosis. From Dakota and Dakota.”

Half a minute later, Manfred opened the door. He was at least ten

inches taller than Clint, six feet five or six, and thin. He was

wearing black slacks, a white shirt, and a green necktie; the top button

of the shirt was undone, and the tie hung loose.

“Good God, man, you’re soaked.”

“Just damp.”

Manfred moved back, opening the door wide, and Clint stepped into the

tile-floored foyer.

As he closed the door, Manfred said, “Ought to have a raincoat or

umbrella on a night like this.”

“It’s invigorating.”

“What is?”

“Bad weather,” Clint said.

Manfred looked at him as if he was strange, but in Clint’s view it was

Manfred himself who was strange. The guy was too thin, all bones. He

could not fill his clothes; his trousers hung shapelessly on his knobby

hips, and his shoulders poked at the fabric of his shirt as if only

bare, sharp bones lay under there. Angular and graceless, he looked as

if he had been assembled from a pile of dry sticks by an apprentice god.

His face was long and narrow, with a high brow and a lantern and his

well-tanned, leathery skin seemed to be stretched tight over his

cheekbones that it might split. He had peculiar amber eyes that

regarded Clint with an expression of curiosity no doubt familiar to the

thousands of bugs he had picked to specimen boards.

Manfred’s gaze traveled down Clint to the floor,water was puddling

around his running shoes.

“Sorry,” Clint said.

“It’ll dry. I was in my study. Come along.”

Glancing into the living room, to his right, Clint noted flowerless

wallpaper, a thick Chinese rug, too many overstuffed chairs and sofas,

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