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of what drives us to do better.
"Alex, we owe you one on this." Van Allsburg finally came over to me. "Your
work on the case was invaluable. I have to say that. I see why Ron Burns likes
you close to home."
A few uneasy laughs went through the room. Agent Page reached from behind and
patted my shoulder. He would go far in the Bureau, if he could keep his
passion for solving crimes.
"I'd still like to take a peek at that final evidence LAPD found. And maybe
get a real interview with Mary Wagner," I said, diverting back to whatI
thought was most important.
Van Allsburg shook his head. "Not necessary."
"There's no reason for me not to stick around another day  " I started to
say.
"Don't worry about it. Page and Fujishiro are good for the details; I can
back them up. And if we really need you again, there's always frequent-flier
miles, right?" His tone was artificially bright.
"Fred, Mary Wagner wouldn't talk to anyone before I came. She trusts me."
"At least, she did," he said. "Probably not anymore." It was a blunt
statement, but not aggressive.
"I'm still the only person she's opened up to. I hear LAPD is getting nowhere
with her."
"Like I said, you're just a plane ride away if we need you back. I spoke
about it with Director Burns and he agrees. Go home to your family. You have
kids, right?"
"Yes, I have kids."
Hours later, packing my bag at the hotel, I was struck hard with another kind
of realization: Actually, I couldn't wait to get home. It was a huge relief
that I'd be back in D.C. again, with no immediate travel plans.
But  and thebut was important  why had that fact been so far from my mind
in Van Allsburg's office? What were these blinders I wore, and how did I keep
forgetting I had them on? What kind of dramatic wake-up call did I need before
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I got the message?
On the way to the airport I figured out another piece. It just hit me. TheA
's andB  s on the children's stickers at the crime scenes. I knew what the
letters meant. Mary's imaginary children's names  Ashley, Adam, Brendan. TwoA
's and aB .
I phoned it in on my way out of L.A.
Part Five
END OF STORY
Chapter 99
THE STORYTELLER WAS DONE KILLING.Fini. It was over, and no one would ever
know the whole truth about what had happened.End of story .
So he threw himself a party with some of his best buddies from Beverly Hills.
He told them he'd just gotten a gig writing a screenplay for an A-list
director, a big, dopey thriller based on a dopey bestseller. He'd been given
license to change anything he didn't like, but that was all he could say about
it right now. The director was paranoid  so what's new? But a big party was
definitely in order.
His friends thought they understood what was going down, which gave him some
idea how little they knew him. His best friends in the world  and hell, none
of them knew him at all. None of them suspected he could be a killer. How
fricking unbelievably crazy was that? No one knew him.
The party was at the Snake Pit Ale House, a bar on Melrose where they'd held
a fantasy football league during his early days in L.A., soon after he'd
arrived from Brown University to act, and maybe dabble at writing scripts 
serious, worthy stuff, not box-office crap.
"The order of the night is free beer," he said as each of his buds arrived at
the bar, "and wine for the wussies among you. So I guess it's vino all
around?"
Nobody drank wine, not one of the fourteen pals who came to the bash. They
were all glad to see him out and about, and also about his new gig  though
some of the more honest ones admitted they were jealous. Everybody started
calling him "A-list."
He and David andJohn boy and Frankie were still at the bar when it closed at
a little past two. They were overanalyzing a movie calledWe Don't Live Here
Anymore. They finally more or less stumbled outside and exchanged Hollywood
hugs on the street next toJohn ny's fucking Bentley  talk about A-list  the
spoils of the last movie he'd produced, a 400-million-dollar grosser
worldwide, which made all the rest of them sick because all he'd done was buy
a dipshit graphic novel for fifty thousand then sign up the Rock for ten mil.
Genius, right? Yep   cause it worked.
"Love ya, man. You're the best, you sick, obnoxious, ostentatious bastard.
You too, Davey!" he yelled as the silver Bentley pulled away from the curb and
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sped west.
"I know  I'm just abastard right now," David yelled back. "But I have dreams
of being sick, obnoxious, and ostentatious, too. Andtalented  which is what's
holding me back in this town."
"Hey, man  I hear you, I feel ya," he yelled.
"Seeya, A-list! Ya hack!"
"I'm just a storyteller!" he yelled back.
Then he was kind of floating down a side street to his own car, a
seven-year-old Beamer. Not a Suburban. He was definitely three sheets to the
wind. Happy as a pig out of a blanket  humming Jimi Hendrix's "The Wind Cries
Mary." An in-joke that only he would get.
Until suddenly he began to sob, and he couldn't make himself stop, not even
when he was sitting on the lawn of some grungy apartment building with his [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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