Authors: James Patterson
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Romance, #Suspense, #Thriller, #Anthologies (multiple authors), #Fiction - Espionage, #Short Story, #Anthologies, #Thrillers, #Suspense fiction; English, #Suspense fiction; American
“No, no, I found that scrap of paper with the rune on it!”
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“The Arabic letter, Dad. That was yours. You’re fluent in Arabic.”
“Am I?” He presses his fingertips into his temple. If only his
head would stop pounding he might be able to think clearly. But
now he is unsure of the last time he’s thought clearly. Could
Christopher be right?
But then something odd and chilling occurs to him. “Why are
you talking like this? You know nothing of your mother and
me—of our secret life. You’re a designer of computer software.”
Christopher’s eyes are soft, his smile all the sadder. “
You’re
the
software designer. That’s why you were recruited to the Agency,
that’s how you were doubled—on one of your trips to Shanghai
or Bangalore, they don’t really know where, and right now it’s
not important. What is important is that you give me the gun so
that we can walk out of here together.”
A spasm of irrational rage causes him to lift his weapon. “I’m
not going anywhere, with you or anyone else.”
“Dad, please be reasonable.”
“There is no reason in the world!” he shouts. “Reason is an
illusion, just like love!”
And as he levels the gun at Christopher, his son whips a snubnosed Walther PPK from behind his back and shoots him neatly
and precisely through the forehead.
Christopher looked down at his father’s corpse. At this moment,
he was interested in what emotions he would feel. There were
none. It was as if his heart had been muffled under so many layers of identity no event, no matter how traumatic, could reach it.
Agency protocol dictated that all evidence of terminations be
immediately destroyed. This would be done, of course, his spycraft was precise, something in which he prided himself.
Looking around, he saw all his father’s children, re-created in
intricate and loving miniaturized detail from the pages of magazines he’d bought and scrounged from the hotel lobby.
Here was the set for
The Merchant of Venice,
here the one for
A Streetcar Named Desire,
there the set for the revival of
Carousel,
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acclaimed for his father’s innovative design. All the many shows
were represented in miniature, so cleverly fashioned that for a
moment Christopher was astonished all over again by his father’s
genius.
It was in the shower that he came across the set for
Death of
a Salesman
. He stared at it for a moment, lines from Arthur
Miller’s pen running like an electronic news ribbon through his
mind. After an unknown time he reached down. Retreating, he
threw it on his father’s body. Producing a bottle of lighter fluid
bought for just this purpose, he poured it over the mass, soaking the corpse. Then, his back to the door, he threw open the
lock and lit a match, watching it arc toward the end of all things.
Everything changes. But it won’t get better
.
He went out the side door of the hotel into the stinking dawn,
the stench of lighter fluid and burning hair masking the reek of
human excrement and decay. As he craned his neck, looking for
the first gray tendrils of smoke, he decided to create a new legend for himself. When he passed through customs on his way
home he would be Biff Loman.
The idea brought a smile to his face, and for that moment he
looked just like his dad.
Christopher Rice’s first novel, the Gothic thriller
A Density
of Souls
, was published when he was just twenty-two years old.
Being the son of vampire novelist Anne Rice, his novel was
met with a great deal of media attention and more than a fair
amount of skepticism. But it was
The Snow Garden
, Rice’s second
New York Times
bestseller, that cemented his reputation
as a writer capable of bringing stories with fully realized gay
characters to a wider commercial audience.
While his latest novel,
Light Before Day,
explores the seamy
underbelly of Los Angeles’s gay ghetto, Rice’s consistent focus
over the course of three books has been on the complex relationships that develop between straight and gay characters
drawn together by a shared trauma.
The Snow Garden
focused on the murderous deceits that threaten a close friendship between a straight woman and a gay man.
Light Before
Day
centered on the parental relationship that developed between a bestselling mystery novelist and his gay assistant.
This same theme can be found here in
Man Catch
, where a
young woman’s sudden discovery of a loved one’s closeted homosexuality brings a rain of violence down onto a tightly knit
family unit.
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Man Catch
was a challenge for Rice. Unaccustomed to
writing short fiction and often praised by his readers for detailed setting and atmosphere, he studied the efforts of Richard Matheson and David Morrell in an effort to tell the most
fully realized story in the fewest words. At first, letting go of
some of the texture and color Rice loves to include in his
work was a frightening challenge. But ultimately, he says, it
proved a deeply gratifying exercise.
From her table by the window inside the bustling Starbucks,
Kate could see clear across the crowded parking lot and the traffic-snarled interstate to where the setting sun turned the San
Bernardino Mountains into looming ghosts on the near horizon.
After giving her his laptop computer, Rick had disappeared into
the shopping mall next door; she assumed he was ensconced in
the racks at Border’s, perusing books on fishing or hunting, or
one of the other strangely adult hobbies he had picked up from
his father following high-school graduation.
This was going to be their first trip alone together, three days
at a cabin near Lake Arrowhead, three days without parents
checking to make sure they were sleeping in separate beds. In
less than a month they would be at different colleges; every hour
they spent together was too precious to be wasted in traffic.
Even though her boyfriend had insisted otherwise, Kate was
confident they could find an alternate route to the cabin. As soon
as she typed in the first two letters of Mapquest, the browser on
Rick’s computer automatically completed the address with the
closest match from its list of recently visited sites.
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www.ManCatch.com
.
Convinced it was a Web site that taught lazy jocks like Rick
how to manage their finances, Kate clicked on the entry. The
screen filled with an image of a muscular half-naked Latino man
reclining on a white bedspread, one hand draped over the bulge
in his white briefs. According to the flashing pink banner above
the man’s head, ManCatch was the #1 site for man-on-man action in the country. She almost laughed out loud. Surely, Rick had
visited the site by mistake.
Then she saw that the computer had been set to remember
user names and passwords, not a surprise considering Rick had
made it through four years of high school without memorizing
a single locker combination. The user name in the entry blank
was
SoaksGuy
. S Oaks had to mean Sherman Oaks, the San Fernando Valley suburb where they had both grown up. The
browser’s history list told her that Rick had visited ManCatch the
night before, at 1:30 a.m., when she had believed him to be
asleep beside her.
At her house. In her bed.
Her breaths short and ragged, Kate clicked the LogIn button
before she could convince herself not to. Suddenly, she was
scrolling through profiles for ManCatch members in which each
man spelled out his sexual tastes in a coded language that combined hip-hop affectations with the shorthand her girlfriends
used to pass notes in class. (
Lookin for hung dudes! U Can Play?
Step 2 da front! HIV—here, U B2.)
Most profiles were accompanied by a photo. The first few were harmless enough, mostly
shots of bare muscular chests, the heads cropped out, making
the subject look like a Greek statue in lousy lighting. Then came
several preposterously large erections.
A chair scraped the floor behind her. A silently furious mother
was dragging her toddler-age son toward the exit. When the woman
looked back and saw that it was a seemingly normal teenage girl
who had just exposed her child to such filth, she looked both
wounded and baffled, as if her tiny son had just flipped her the bird.
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Humiliated, Kate scrolled up until the most offensive photographs were out of frame. She tried to make some kind of sense
of what she was seeing. According to the history list, Rick had
only made one visit to this site in the past three weeks. But the
username and password suggested he planned on becoming a
regular. Why then had he let her borrow his computer without
a second’s pause? Maybe he was a regular and had deleted all evidence of his other visits—except for one.
Nothing fires the imagination like betrayal, she realized. In
digital clarity, she saw Rick, in only his paisley boxers, backing
silently out of the half-open door to her room, holding his laptop in both hands as if it were the Holy Grail.
Her eyes locked on something she had missed. On the lefthand side of the screen, there was a long menu bar. It was clear
Rick might be a regular; now she could find out if he had made
any friends. When she clicked on the Buddy List button, only
one name came up:
FunForRtNow
. Next to the name was a photograph of a short muscular brown-haired guy lying facedown
on his bed. She thought he was naked at first, then she saw the
red waistband of a jockstrap tucked beneath the exposed cheeks
of his ass.
HOT JOCK LOOKIN 2 PLAY! YOU GAME?
5’11”, 156, 27, 9’’ cut, in Studio City here. Into young and
old, u just gotta be fit, got it? (Fit = work out 4 X a week
or more!)A u gotta be hot! No fats, flems or flakes. No
time-wasters. No hard partiers. Into porn, role play, lots a
oral. Be Clean! Be Cool.
The photo didn’t shock her. But the nakedness of the man’s
requests turned her stomach. Then it occurred to her that she
was reading the wrong profile.
She was about to type
SoaksGuy
into the search blank when
something slammed into the window just above her head. Rick
was plastered to the glass as if he had just been hurled against it
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by a nightclub bouncer. When he stumbled back a few steps, he
was too busy laughing at himself to notice the expression on
Kate’s face.
“So I was talking to my aunt on the phone,” he boomed as he
approached her table. “She says there’s this awesome pond, like,
a half mile from the cabin. Totally easy hike, too.” He slammed
down into the chair opposite hers and flattened his mess of black
curls with his palm. “She says it’s so cool at sunrise ’cause the
sun comes up, like, right over— Jesus. Are you all right?”
Kate turned the laptop so Rick could see it. He jerked back
from the screen as if he had been stung. Then his sleepy eyes
turned to slits and his upper lip tensed. He sucked in a deep,
pained breath.
“Last night,” she said. “One-thirty. I was asleep. I thought you
were, too.”
“I
was!
”
“Your computer says you were
right here,
” she said, tapping
the top of the monitor for emphasis. “Is it lying, Rick?”
He kept shaking his head and studying the screen in front of
him as if his best defense could be found in FunForRtNow’s profile. For the two years they had been together, she had consistently studied the way he acted around other girls, searched for
smiles that might look like invitations, friendly pats on intimate
body parts. She had been doing the wrong homework all along.
His wide eyes met hers. “It wasn’t me, Kate,” he whispered.
“Then who was it?”
His mouth opened slightly but nothing came out. He chewed
his lower lip and brought one hand to the bridge of his nose. If
he wasn’t about to choke on his guilt, she certainly was. She
pulled the laptop’s power cord from the socket and scooped both
items up off the table.
She was several paces from her 4Runner when he caught up
with her. The second his hand met her shoulder, she whirled,
lifting the computer like a baseball bat, swinging it around her
in a wide arc. For a split second, she wasn’t sure how hard she
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had hit him. Then he hit the pavement ass-first, blood from his
nostrils painted all over his lips. Before she pulled out of the parking lot, she checked to see if she had run over him. When she
saw him struggling to his feet, she felt a dull sense of relief.
The interior rearview mirror offered a view of Rick’s bulging
duffel bag lying across the back seat. After the fourth call from
him, she killed the ringer on her cell phone. She called her father. Her father would fix it. Her father would beat Rick within
an inch of his life and find a way to blame his injuries on a strong
wind. That morning, as she was packing, he had told her he