The Bad Place by Dean R. Koontz

The door opened, and Hal jumped as if he’d been stuck with a hatpin.

In the doorway stood Grace Fulgham, looking as if she had just either

guided a tugboat through stormy seas or chopped and carried a couple of

cords of firewood that Pa had been too lazy to deal with.

“Security’s putting a man at every exit to stop him if he tries to

leave, and we’re mobilizing the nursing staff on each floor to look for

him. Do you intend to join the search?”

“Uh, well, I’ve got to call the office, my boss.

“If we find him, where will we find you?”

“Here. Right here. I’ll be here, making some calls.” She nodded and

went away. The door eased shut after her.

A privacy curtain hung from a ceiling track that described an arc around

three sides of the bed. It was bunched against the wall, but Hal

Yamataka drew it to the foot of the bed, blocking the view from the

doorway, in case Pollard materialized just as someone stepped in from

the corridor.

His hands were shaking, so he jammed them in his pockets.

Then he took his left hand out to look at his wristwatch: 1:48.

Pollard had been missing for perhaps eighteen minutes, except, of

course, for the few seconds during which he had flickered into existence

and talked about fireflies in a windstorm. Hal decided to wait until

two o’clock to call Bobby and Julie.

He stood at the foot of the bed, clutching the railing with one hand,

listening to the night wind crying at the window and the rain snapping

against the glass. The minutes crawled past like snails on an incline,

but at least the wait gave him time to calm down and think about how he

would tell Bobby what had happened.

As the hands on his watch lined up at two o’clock, he went the rest of

the way around the bed and was reaching for the phone on the nightstand

when he heard the eerie ululation of a distant flute. The half-drawn

bed-curtain fluttered in a sudden draft.

He returned to the foot of the bed and looked past the end of the

curtain to the hallway door. It was closed. That was the source of the

draft.

The flute died. The air in the room grew still, leaden.

Abruptly the curtain shivered and rippled, gently rattling the bearings

in the overhead track, and a cool breeze swept around the room, ruffling

his hair. The music rose again.

With the door shut and the window closed tight, the only possible source

of the draft was the ventilation grille in the wall above the

nightstand. But when Hal stood on his toes and raised his right hand in

front of that outlet, he felt nothing coming from it. The chilly

currents of air appeared to have sprung up within the room itself.

He turned in a circle, moved this way and that, trying to get a fix on

the flute. Actually, it didn’t sound like a flute. He listened

closely; it was more like a fluctuation of wind whistling through a lot

of pipes at the same time, big ones and little ones threading together

many vague but separate sounds that loosely sounded like keening that

was simultaneously eerie and, mournful yet somehow… threatening. It

faded, returned a third time. To his surprise and bewilderment,

tuneless notes seemed to be issuing from the empty air around the bed.

Hal wondered if anyone else in the hospital could hear the flute this

time. Probably not. Though the music was louder now than when it had

begun, it remained faint; in fact, if he had been asleep, the mysterious

serenade would not have been loud enough to wake him.

Before Hal’s eyes, the air over the bed shimmered. For a moment he

could not breathe, as if the room had become a temporary vacuum chamber.

He felt his ears pop the same way they did during a too-rapid altitude

change.

The strange warbling and the draft died together, and Frank Pollard

reappeared as abruptly as he had vanished. He was lying on his side,

with his knees drawn up in the fetal position. For a few seconds he was

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