The Bad Place by Dean R. Koontz

checked into the hospital, Hal helped Bobby slip their client out of the

room. With Julie scouting the way, they went quickly and quietly along

the hall and through the fire door at the head of the emergency stairs.

Frank’s skin remained cold to the touch, and he was still clammy with

perspiration; but the effort brought a flush to his cheeks, which made

him look less like a walking corpse.

Julie hurried to the bottom of the stairwell to see what lay beyond the

lower door. With the thump and scrape of their footsteps echoing

hollowly off the bare concrete walls, the three men went down four

flights without much difficulty. At the fourth-floor landing, however,

they had to pause to let Frank catch his breath.

“Are you always this weak when you wake up and don’t remember where

you’ve been?” Bobby asked.

Frank shook his head. His words issued in a thing wheeze: “No. -Always

frightened… tired, but not as bad… as this. I feel like…

whatever I’m doing… wherever I’m going… it’s taking a bigger and

bigger toll. I’m not… not going to survive… a lot more of this.”

As Frank was talking, Bobby noticed something peculiar about the man’s

blue cotton sweater. The pattern of the cable knit was wildly irregular

in places, as if the knitting machine had briefly gone berserk. And on

the back, near his right shoulder blade, a patch of fibers was missing;

the hole was the size of a block of four postage stamps, though with

irregular rather than straight edges. But it wasn’t just a hole. A

piece of what appeared to be khaki filled the gap, not merely sewn on

but woven tightly into the surrounding cotton yarn, as if at the garment

factory itself. Khaki of the same shade and hard finish as the pants

that Frank was wearing.

A shiver of dread pierced Bobby, although he was not sure why. His

subconscious mind seemed to understand how the patch had come to be and

what it meant, and grasped some hideous consequence not yet fulfilled,

while his conscious mind was baffled.

He saw that Hal, on the other side of Frank, had noticed the patch, too,

and was frowning.

Julie ascended the stairs while Bobby was staring in puzzlement at the

khaki swatch.

“We’re in luck,” she said.

“There’re two doors at the bottom. One leads into a hallway off the

lobby, where we’d probably run into a security man, even though they

aren’t looking for Frank any more. But the other door leads into the

parking garage, the same level our car’s on. How you doing, Frank? You

going to be okay?”

“Getting my… second wind,” he said less wheezingly than before.

“Look at this,” Bobby said, calling Julie’s attention to the khaki woven

into the blue cotton sweater.

While Julie studied the peculiar patch, Bobby let go of Frank and, on a

hunch, stooped down to examine the legs of his client’s pants. He found

a corresponding irregularity: blue cotton yarn from the sweater was

woven into the slacks. It was now one spot of the same size and shape

as that in the sweater, near a series of three smaller holes near the

cuff on the right leg however, he was sure that more accurate

measurements would confirm what he knew from a quick look-that the tot

amount of blue yarn in those three holes would just about fill the hole

in the shoulder of the sweater.

“What’s wrong?” Frank asked.

Bobby didn’t respond but took hold of the somewhat baggy leg of the

pants and pulled it taut, so he could get a better look at the three

patches. Actually,

“patches” was an inaccurate word because these abnormalities in the

fabric did not look like repairs; they were too well blended with the

material around them to be handwork.

Julie squatted beside him and said, “First, we’ve got to get Frank out

of here, back to the office.”

“Yeah, but this is real strange,” Bobby said, indicating the

irregularities in the pants.

“Strange and… important some how.”

“What’s wrong?” Frank repeated.

“Where’d you get these clothes?” Bobby asked him.

“Well… I don’t know.”

Julie pointed to the white athletic sock on Frank’s right foot and Bobby

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