You'll Miss Me When I'm Gone
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Synopsis
Andrea Boyle moved to Seattle to give her seventeen-year-old nephew, Spencer, a fresh start after the death of his parents. Andrea has found her own new beginning with Luke, a successful playwright and father of a teenage son, Damon. The boys appear to have little in common, but in truth they share a private torment . . .
When a tragedy befalls Damon, it's just the beginning of a nightmare that unfolds. But the worst is yet to come once a dark secret from Spencer's past is exposed. And when Luke is brutally attacked, both of their futures are at stake.
Now it's up to Andrea to prove Spencer's innocence to the police-and to herself. Because for reasons she has revealed to no one, even Andrea can't help but question the truth, and fear that she may be next to pay the ultimate price.
Release date: July 28, 2016
Publisher: Pinnacle Books
Print pages: 544
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You'll Miss Me When I'm Gone
Kevin O'Brien
She’d already mentioned to Luke that she had something important to discuss with him over lunch. Of course, that had been this morning before he’d had his coffee, before he’d gone off to the theater to work on rehearsals and rewrites for his new play. Luke might have forgotten by now. Hell, he probably didn’t even remember they had a lunch date. So she’d texted him a quick reminder before leaving his place. She hadn’t heard back from him yet.
Andrea Boyle had her phone in the cup holder of her car—in case he called. Sitting at the wheel, she focused on the road ahead. It was a short drive from his town house apartment to the theater in the Seattle Center. As her eight-year-old, red VW Beetle took the steep descent on Queen Anne Avenue, a few drops of rain hit the windshield. It wasn’t quite enough to switch on the wipers yet. Andrea had been in Seattle only a few months, but she’d already figured out that true Seat-tleites didn’t use their wipers or umbrellas until the rain started coming down heavy and hard.
She’d moved here from Washington, DC, with her seventeen-year-old nephew, Spencer. Andrea was a copyeditor. She polished manuscripts for authors before they sent their work off to publishers. She copyedited everything from textbooks to thrillers to bodice-ripper romances. It was a job she could do anywhere, which made moving to Seattle a bit easier. In fact, she’d first met Luke at a party in the home of her one and only Seattle client, a true-crime writer.
Andrea had relocated with the hope that she and Spencer could start fresh, where no one knew them. She’d made a dozen calls and filled out a pile of documents to have Spencer’s last name legally changed. Too many people had heard of Spencer Rowe. He was Spencer Murray now. Murray was his choice, because he worshiped Bill Murray. Spencer claimed that while in the hospital, the only thing that could cheer him up was a Bill Murray comedy. He must have seen Stripes, Caddy-shack, and Rushmore at least a dozen times each.
She and Spencer had a distinct family resemblance, both of them lean, tall, dark-haired, and blue-eyed. Traveling together and renting an apartment together, they must have looked like a slightly odd pair. Andrea was thirty-six, but thanks to good genes, her Fitbit, and Clairol’s “Chestnut Shimmer” hiding the gray in her shoulder-length hair, she passed for someone in her late twenties. Most people in Seattle assumed Spencer was her younger brother—until she told them he was her nephew. The story people got was that his parents had died in an automobile accident back when he was eleven, and she’d been taking care of him ever since.
At least the part about Spencer being her nephew was true.
No one asked any probing questions after hearing about her family tragedy. As far as Andrea could discern, no one in Seattle knew the real story—including her dear, handsome Luke.
But she needed to tell him the truth today—before someone else did. Thinking about that discussion made a knot form in her stomach.
The rain came down faster now, and Andrea switched on the wipers. She tried to think of where they could go for lunch: Tup Tim Thai, or maybe the 5 Spot. Whichever restaurant they ended up in, she’d be too nervous to eat. And from today on, it would always be the place where they had “the talk.” If, by some miracle they survived this and didn’t break up, they probably wouldn’t want to set foot in that restaurant again.
Would he ever forgive her?
She’d been dating Luke for over four months—and deceiving him the whole time. He’d gotten close to her nephew, and she didn’t want anything to foul up that friendship. Sometimes Spencer seemed more like Luke’s son than Luke’s real offspring, Damon. Spencer and Damon were both juniors at Queen Anne High. They hadn’t exactly hit it off, which wasn’t Spencer’s fault. Early on, he’d tried to reach out to Damon.
“I figured the guy could use a friend,” Spencer had told her near the beginning of the school year. “I could see he was getting picked on and all. So in the hallway, between classes, I introduced myself, and said, ‘I know this is awkward, because my aunt is dating your dad, but we might as well at least acknowledge each other or whatever.’ And all I got from him was this snooty, blank stare. Then he rolled his eyes at me and wandered away. I mean, God, no wonder people hate him. I’m sorry, Aunt Dee. Please don’t tell Luke I said that . . .”
Aunt Dee was what he’d been calling her ever since he’d learned to talk. He’d had a hard time saying Andrea.
Spencer had a point about Damon Shuler.
She and Spencer had moved in with Luke about three weeks ago. Under ordinary circumstances, cohabitating with a guy after knowing him only three months would have been way too soon for her.
But the circumstances were far from ordinary.
She hadn’t had much time to get used to their living arrangement. And she hadn’t had much time to get used to Damon, who—so far—had spent two of his “alternate weekends” with them.
He’d declared he wasn’t comfortable sharing his room with anyone. So even though Damon’s room had twin beds, Spencer had to sleep on the couch in Luke’s study for those weekends. Technically, it wasn’t even Damon’s room. It was a guest room—with only a few of Damon’s possessions in there. During those designated weekends, Damon acted as if staying with them was a huge ordeal. He was icily polite and in total said about a hundred words to her. She was the recipient of much eye-rolling as well. He wasn’t a bad-looking kid—with his skinny build, pale complexion, and wavy brown hair. But his demeanor was so off-putting, he seemed unattractive.
Damon had a bit of OCD, which wasn’t noticeable at first. But then Andrea realized he had to touch everything he came in contact with—as if testing how hot it was. Damon touched a pencil before picking it up, touched a chair before sitting down in it, touched a door before pushing it open, and sometimes he just test-touched something and then after that, didn’t handle it at all. He also washed his hands about forty times a day.
Apparently, the kids at school had picked up on it, and they teased him mercilessly. In fact, Luke and his estranged wife, Evelyn, had had a few meetings with the school principal about it. Those were the only times Luke ever saw Evelyn—at these conferences to discuss the bullying inflicted on their son.
As the newbie in their class, Spencer had been harassed by a few bullies, too, but he said it was nothing compared to the treatment Damon endured.
It broke Andrea’s heart to know that her sweet, vulnerable nephew was being harassed at school. He’d already suffered enough. But Damon was so arrogant, she couldn’t help feeling he’d sort of set himself up for the abuse he got.
Still, Andrea did her damnedest to be nice to him. After all, he was Luke’s son—even though he could get bratty toward Luke at times. Andrea was pretty certain it was Damon’s mother’s influence that made him so strange and standoffish.
To his credit, Luke Shuler never complained about his soon-to-be-ex. He admitted he’d only stayed with his wife for Damon’s sake, and things had been pretty awful for a long time. “Let’s just say I’m in a much better place now,” he’d told Andrea. Of course, Andrea was curious about her predecessor. Obviously, the woman was still very connected to Luke—after nearly nineteen years of marriage and having a son together. They’d been separated for only seven months. Andrea couldn’t help wondering if Luke might end up going back to her.
She’d found herself admitting as much to a new friend, Barbara James-Church, manager of the Seattle Group Theater, over lunch at Café Lola. The petite, attractive, fortyish brunette had already set up Andrea with two new Seattle author-clients.
“I love Luke and hated seeing how miserable he was with Evelyn—for years,” Barbara had said. “Evelyn was very clingy and possessive. She’s always been a cold fish to me. But then I compared notes with people, and realized she was that way with everybody—at least, everybody who had anything to do with Luke. Evelyn wanted him all to herself. I’ve known her for six years, and the first time Evelyn was ever nice to me was two weeks ago. She donated five thousand dollars to the Seattle Group Theater. She comes from money, you know. Five thou is a drop in the bucket for her. We’ve never gotten a dime out of her before. But suddenly, once they split, she was so bighearted. Anyway, the very day the check arrived in the mail, she phoned me—all chummy-chummy, wanting to know if I’d gotten the donation. Then she asked about Luke and started grilling me about you. I mean, could she be any more transparent? Anyway, I said you seemed ‘nice.’ Of course, Evelyn wasn’t too happy with that reply. But to her credit, at least she didn’t stop payment on the check. Anyway, in answer to your question, I don’t think Evelyn is ready to give him up—not without a fight. But it’s a losing battle, because Luke is so much better off now—with you. He knows it, too. And I’m not just saying that because I like you and you’re buying me lunch . . .”
Andrea wondered what Luke had ever seen in Evelyn. He didn’t seem to need her money. But then Andrea had seen photos of Evelyn among the family snapshots that Luke had saved. Evelyn Shuler was a knockout—blond, elegant, and chic. The only possible physical flaw Andrea could find was a slight overbite—which some men found attractive.
As curious as she was about Luke’s almost-ex, Andrea had no desire to meet her.
Then just a few days after the informative chat with Barbara at Café Lola, Andrea had received an email from Evelyn with the subject line: Free for Lunch? How Luke’s wife had gotten her email address was a mystery:
At the time, Andrea had been living with Spencer in an apartment in Ballard. She’d been dating Luke for only six weeks and hadn’t yet spent the night at his place. She hadn’t witnessed Luke’s morning routine with the Bruce Lee coffee cup. However, they’d shared many extended lunch hours at his apartment or at the Westin. It was no secret they’d been seeing each other. She’d merely been reluctant about leaving Spencer alone in the apartment for a night—or having Luke in her bed while Spencer slept across the hall from them.
Maybe she had read too much into a friendly email, but it seemed a bit manipulative and meddling. Andrea might have had a little more respect for Evelyn if she’d focused more on Damon in that note. Instead, she didn’t mention him until the very end. Her son seemed like an afterthought.
Andrea didn’t tell Luke about his wife’s email, not until after she’d sent Evelyn a reply. She spent forty-five minutes carefully wording the short response:
She’d shown both emails to Luke that evening. “Well done,” he’d said, kissing her on the forehead. “Let me know if she tries to get in touch with you again.”
She never heard back from Evelyn.
That wasn’t to say Evelyn had backed off. The email had been harmless. What came later was far more disturbing. In fact, things got so bad that she and Spencer had to leave their apartment in Ballard and move in with Luke.
Though it was “Modern Cookie-Cutter” in its construction, Andrea had liked their first Seattle home. It was part of the Briarwood Court, a complex of six tall, thin, identical buildings, each with two apartment units. She and Spencer had an upper unit. Once through the outside front door, they had to climb up a stairway to the living room, kitchen, and powder room. Another flight of stairs led to the two bedrooms and another bathroom.
The manager had pointed out that the beige Berber carpeting throughout the apartment was brand new. He asked that they and their guests remove their shoes before going upstairs to the unit. After two weeks, there was a different pair of shoes—belonging to either her or Spencer—along the edge of each step nearly halfway up the stairs. In fact, Spencer had more shoes on the stairs than in his bedroom closet. Though it was a bit messy, Andrea found the display of footwear on the steps a comforting, homey image when she came through the front door—a sign that they were settled in.
She got the manager’s okay to plant some iris, chrysanthemums, and pansies near the bushes beside their front door. She loved to garden—to the point that Spencer jokingly called her “Fanny View” because she was always bent over, tilling the soil. But to her knowledge, she’d never actually mooned anyone.
Briarwood Court was walking distance from shopping, restaurants, and the bus to downtown Seattle. Another plus about the location: it was a mere ten-minute drive to Luke’s town house on Queen Anne Hill. She’d had her first date with him just a week after she and Spencer had moved into the apartment. She remembered thinking at the time that everything was finally going their way. She’d met a great guy, and she and Spencer had found a terrific place to live.
But with its own separate, outside entrance, the big windows and a designated uncovered parking spot, the apartment in Briarwood Court also made her and Spencer vulnerable to anyone who had it out for them.
They were still relatively new to the complex when somebody broke a headlight on her VW during the night. The car had been in its parking spot. As if a broken headlight weren’t enough, the culprit had also scratched the driver’s side with a key or a box cutter or something. Andrea reported it to the police and her insurance company. The police asked her if she had any idea who might have inflicted this damage on her car. She thought of Luke’s wife, but quickly dismissed the notion as silly. She told the police she didn’t have a clue who the perpetrator was.
Around this same time, Andrea experienced a surge in hang-ups on her cell phone—always from a CALLER UNKNOWN, according to the caller ID. Even when she answered, they hung up after a moment. It was as if they just wanted to hear her voice—or make certain she was home. She got one of those anonymous hang-ups at two in the morning; after that, Andrea switched off her phone before going to bed at night.
But she couldn’t flick a switch and turn off the eerie feeling that someone was watching her whenever she set foot outside the apartment. Or maybe they were out there in the dark, studying her through the living room’s big picture window. There weren’t many streetlights on their block, so at night all she could see outside were some trees and the lights from the apartment building across the way. But she knew her every move was visible to anyone out there. In the darkened glass of the living room windows, she’d notice her own reflection in the room.
She imagined it was exactly how a stranger lurking outside saw her.
Andrea started closing the drapes once dusk settled. It made her feel closed in, and not all that much safer. But at least she knew no one could see her.
One morning, Spencer started off for school and almost stepped on a dead squirrel on their front stoop. And someone had trampled all over her newly planted flowers. Andrea talked to the manager, who seemed to think she was paranoid. She asked if the previous tenant had ever had a stalker—or any enemies. The manager said a quiet seventy-something widower had lived there for eight years before her. “And he never gave me any problems,” he added, scowling at her.
At least Spencer didn’t think she was paranoid. In fact, he couldn’t help wondering if someone in Seattle knew about him after all—and maybe this was a campaign to make him feel unwelcome.
Andrea tried to assure her nephew that it wasn’t about him. He wasn’t the one getting ten hang-ups on his cell phone every day.
Then about five weeks ago, Andrea heard from a friend and client, Sylvia Goethals in Washington, DC. Andrea had copyedited seven of Sylvia’s travel books. At the time of Sylvia’s call, Andrea had thought her friend was in India, researching her next book. But no, Sylvia was home: “Andie, I think you should know, some private detective came to my book signing at Barnes and Noble this afternoon, asking questions about you.”
“You’re kidding,” Andrea murmured, bewildered. She stood at the living room window with the phone to her ear. It was early in the evening, and she hadn’t closed the drapes yet. “What—what did he want? Did he mention who he was working for?”
“No, he wouldn’t say who hired him,” Sylvia replied. “But that didn’t stop this joker from asking a ton of questions about you. He was very clever about it. Unfortunately, I didn’t have that good a turnout at the bookstore, so he started talking to me and I was a captive audience. He didn’t say who he was at first. I thought he was looking for an editor when he asked about you. He must have Googled you and found your name in the acknowledgments section of one of my books. He knew we were friends. Anyway, when he started asking personal questions about you, that’s when I put the brakes on . . .”
“Did he know about Spencer?” Andrea started pacing around the living room. “Did he give any indication?”
“Yes, he clearly knew. He even mentioned that he’d talked to some of the witnesses at the trial. Anyway, he gave me his business card, and I realized he was a private detective. He asked me about the men you’ve dated and if you had any long-term boyfriends. I told him if he was so curious, maybe he should ask you . . .”
Andrea wondered why in the world he’d asked about her love life. Until she’d met Luke, there had been just a few short-term boyfriends. Considering her family history, she’d always felt so grateful when a guy—any guy—wanted to go out with her. Usually, it took her a few dates for the blind gratitude to wear off. Then she’d realize the guy was totally wrong for her.
“Andie, are you still there?” her friend asked on the other end of the line.
“Yeah, sorry,” she murmured, moving to the window again. “What else did he ask about?”
“That was it,” Sylvia said. “Obviously, he realized I wasn’t going to cooperate. I told him if he wasn’t going to buy one of my books, he could move on . . .”
Andrea stared at her reflection in the darkened glass. She looked frightened and haggard. Her chestnut-colored hair was in a ponytail, and she wore a long-sleeve white T-shirt and jeans. Spencer was up in his room, tinkering with his portable keyboard. She’d been putting together one of her favorite “quick dinners” when Sylvia had called—Trader Joe’s Mandarin Orange Chicken, to which she added fresh, steamed vegetables and rice.
Now she didn’t have any appetite at all.
“Do you think he knew that we live in Seattle?” she asked.
“He seemed to, yeah,” Sylvia replied.
Andrea was about to turn away from the big window, but then she saw something on the other side of the glass—a small, white object hurtling right toward her. She wasn’t sure what it was, but automatically stepped back. The thing—it must have been a rock—hit the glass with a loud snap.
Andrea let out a startled little scream, and almost dropped the phone.
The stone ricocheted off the window. Lightning-bolt splintered cracks shot out from the point of contact.
Spencer called down from upstairs, asking what had just happened. On the other end of the phone line, Sylvia wanted to know if she was all right.
Her heart racing, Andrea retreated all the way to the kitchen counter. She kept expecting another object— maybe a brick this time—to come crashing through the window. She heard a rumbling upstairs.
“Spencer, don’t come down here!” she yelled. “And stay away from the windows!”
Her friend was still on the line. “For God’s sake, what’s going on? Are you okay?”
“Listen, I have to hang up and call the police,” she said, catching her breath. “Someone’s been harassing us lately, and they—at least, I think it was them—they just threw a rock at our window. I’ll call you back in a little while, Syl.”
“A little while” was an hour later, almost 10:30 for Sylvia on the East Coast. By then, Spencer had ventured down to the living room to join Andrea. The police had arrived—and left already. Andrea had told them about the other incidents: the vandalism to her car, the dead squirrel left on their front stoop, the trampled garden, and the countless hang-ups on her cell phone. The two cops responding to the 911 call had taken notes and given her a card with her “incident number” on it.
On the phone, she assured Sylvia that she and Spencer were okay. By that time she was so frayed she couldn’t think straight. She kept wondering why this was happening. Who had she made so angry? No one in Seattle really knew her well enough to hate her. Was there a connection between the private detective asking questions about her and the harassment they’d endured—including tonight’s episode?
She remembered her lunch conversation with Barbara James-Church at Café Lola: “I don’t think Evelyn is ready to give him up—not without a fight.”
Andrea couldn’t quite picture Luke’s chic wife vandalizing cars and tossing rocks at windows. If she was behind any of this, she would have had to hire some lowlife to do her dirty work for her. Suspecting Evelyn seemed like a knee-jerk reaction. She wondered if Luke’s son was behind everything that had occurred. But it didn’t make sense. His parents had split up long before she’d come into the picture. Besides, what about the private detective? She couldn’t see a high school kid having the means to hire a private investigator.
When Luke phoned a little later that night, she told him what had happened. She didn’t share with him any of her shaky theories as to who might be responsible. Luke wanted them to spend the night at his place, but Andrea refused to be bullied out of her apartment. So Luke came over. She put the Mandarin Orange Chicken back in the freezer, and they ordered a pizza from Zeek’s. The three of them ate in front of High Fidelity on cable, and at one point, Andrea realized they were all laughing. And it was nice to sleep with him in her bed.
Things calmed down after that—for nearly two weeks. Andrea welcomed the peaceful lull. Even the anonymous calls had stopped. The living room window and the Volkswagen were repaired. She even planted some new perennials in the little garden. But that didn’t mean she wasn’t constantly looking over her shoulder, ready for the next “incident.”
She phoned Sylvia to find out more about this pushy private detective. But her friend didn’t reply until two days later—by email—saying she was back in India. She didn’t remember the investigator’s name, but she was pretty sure she’d stuck his card in a drawer at home. She would be coming back to the states in three weeks, and could search for it then. “If it’s an emergency, I can ask the building manager to let himself in and look around the apartment for the card,” Sylvia wrote. “But it might be a lost cause. Anyway, let me know what you’d like me to do. Meanwhile, here’s hoping you haven’t had any more broken windows or things of that sort . . .”
Andrea emailed her friend that it could wait until she was home again and settled in. “Everything’s fine here for now” she wrote. “We’re okay.” At the time, she felt as if she were jinxing things by putting that in writing.
Perhaps she had.
A few days later, while Spencer was at school, Andrea went out to run some errands. She was gone for just over an hour. Returning home with a bag of groceries from Safeway, she stepped through the front door and started to kick off her shoes. Then she noticed the footwear on the steps. The pairs were all mismatched, lined up alongside the wrong corresponding shoe. It was as if someone were playing a joke on her.
Or maybe they just wanted her to know they could get inside her place now.
Andrea set down the grocery bag and backed out the front door. She kept thinking the culprit might still be inside the apartment. She hurried toward the sidewalk in front of Briarwood Court. With a shaky hand, she grabbed her phone from her purse and called Spencer at school. They usually texted each other, but she couldn’t really explain in a text what she needed to know. Fortunately, Spencer was between classes, and he picked up. He told her no, he hadn’t messed around with their shoes before catching the bus that morning. He didn’t know what she was talking about.
Andrea felt silly, calling the police because someone had rearranged their footwear on the stairs; nevertheless, she phoned them. She said she thought that someone had broken into the apartment and that they might still be in there. She gave them her incident number and waited outside until a patrol car showed up. The two cops went inside the apartment with her. No one was there. Nothing else had been disturbed. Nothing was damaged or missing. She sensed her credibility with them slipping after each room inspection. She pulled the quilt and the sheets off her bed, just to make sure the intruder hadn’t slipped anything in there—like another dead squirrel. She was afraid they might have done something to her soap or shampoo, her eyedrops or her perfume. Anything that was open in the medicine chest, the kitchen cupboards or the refrigerator might be tainted.
The two cops recommended that she change her locks and have her home security system upgraded. When they asked if she had any idea who might be harassing her, she thought about Evelyn Shuler again. But she told them she didn’t have a clue.
Once the police left, Andrea phoned Luke and admitted her suspicions that Evelyn may have been responsible for these strange, unsettling incidents. “I’m sorry,” she said. “It’s an awful thing to say about someone who is still a very important person in your life. And I’m not accusing her. I’m just wondering. I can’t think of anyone else who would do this—”
“Honey?” he interrupted.
“Luke, I’m sorry. I have absolutely no proof—”
“Andrea,” he interrupted again. “To tell you the truth, I wouldn’t put it past her. I’m so sorry if she’s the one who put you through this. I should have seen it earlier. But I have a history of blinding myself to some of the things Evelyn is capable of. I’ll have a talk with her. She’ll deny it until she’s blue in the face and be furious with me. But I’ll have a talk with her.”
This time, he insisted she and Spencer come stay with him—at least until all of this was resolved. Spencer could sleep in the guest room, where Damon stayed on alternate weekends. Luke pointed out that, at last, he’d actually have her sleeping in his bed. His room was far enough away from the guest room so she needn’t feel self-conscious. Spencer was practically an adult. He knew the score. He knew they were involved. Luke told her, “After what he’s been through, I don’t think he’ll be traumatized because we’re sleeping together.”
But Luke had no idea how fragile Spencer was—and neither did she, for that matter.
“Just so you know,” she told her nephew as they were driving to Luke’s town house that first night, “I’ll be sleeping with Luke in his room tonight. Do you have any problems with that?”
“God, it’s about time,” Spencer sighed. He had one arm dangling out the window on the passenger side. The wind whipped at his unruly, dark brown hair. Their suitcases were piled in the tiny backseat. “You guys have been going out for—like, three months now. I can’t believe you’ve waited this long . . .”
And so, though it seemed to be rushing things, Andrea and Spencer “temporarily” moved in with Luke.
In her effort to scare off Andrea, Evelyn had only thrown her and Luke closer together. But Evelyn still had an advantage—if she’d been the one who had hired that private detective. Luke’s soon-to-be-ex knew Spencer’s and her history. And it was just a matter of time before she told Luke.
Last week, when Luke had asked her and Spencer to consider living with him on a more permanent basis, Andrea had come very close to telling him the truth. It had seemed like the best time, and she’d wanted him to hear it from her. But she’d lost her nerve.
Except for this awful thing hanging over her head, she was the happiest she’d been in years. She was in love. After a sporadic series of “wrong guys,” she’d finally hit the jackpot with Luke. She cherished what they had together and didn’t want to see it ruined.
Evelyn Shuler could do that with one phone call.
Andrea knew she had to tell him the truth today.
She found a parking spot a block from the theater, grabbed her umbrella from the floor of the passenger side, and stepped out of the VW. She made a mad dash in the rain. For this lunch she dreaded, Andrea wore—under her trench coat—a floral print sweater and khaki slacks. The pants were damp from the knees down by the time she reached the theater. The Seattle Group Theater was in a complex of buildings under the shadow of the Space Needle. Andrea knew which door they kept unlocked during the day. As she collapsed her umbrella and ducked inside, her phone rang. It played the refrain from the Beatles’ “Hello, Goodbye.”
Checking her cell, she paused in the lobby by a life-size, black-and-white cardboard cut-out of Jack Kerouac, advertising the theater’s c
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