Part 16 (2/2)
”You'll know.”
As I turned from chapter to chapter, a growing sense of horror came over me.
”I don't believe this!” I cried.
Coffeepot in hand, Christina looked over at me.
”Are you saying you didn't write it?” Sue asked.
I stared at the words on the scratch pad. My words.
”Of course I wrote it,” I said. ”But I didn't mean it. I mean, not like this. I'm going to have to check my ma.n.u.script.”
”It's hard to believe the wording is mere coincidence,” Sue said.
”You took the words right out of the prosecuting attorney's mouth,” I replied.
Christina set the coffeepot down, her fear having been resuscitated.
”What do you want me to tell the professor?” Sue asked.
”What do you mean?”
”He's the one who instructed me to review the book. He's going to want to know your response.”
”My response? Tell him I didn't write it! That I wrote it, but didn't know I'd written it, because I never would have written this. Tell him I'm going to check my original ma.n.u.script.”
My emotions were getting the best of me. I fought for control. I told myself not to panic, to attack the problem. ”How did you find this?” I asked her.
”I'm good at recognizing patterns,” she said.
I sighed. ”I wonder how many other people who are good at recognizing patterns will recognize this one?”
”I have to go,” Sue said. ”Someone else is calling me. It's Jana. Is her phone call going to make me angry?”
”You mean you haven't talked with her today?”
”Did you make her cry?”
”No! Everything's fine. We talked earlier, it's fine. But you haven't talked with Jana already today?”
She hung up. I closed my phone.
”Who's Jana?” Christina asked. ”And Sue? My, you were a busy little boy while you were in California, weren't you?”
”Not now, Christina.”
”Not now? Not now? You stalk me for two days, then force your way into my house-”
”I didn't force my way into your house!” I protested.
”That's exactly what the police report is going to say unless you start talking. And here's a news flash for you, buster: I know we agreed to cool things off for a while, but taking calls from your girlfriends while you're with me in my apartment is beyond rude, it's mean.”
I handed her the piece of paper. It was the only way I could think to shut her up.
Her eyes grew wide. ”Grant, this isn't funny.”
”Tell me about it.”
”You shouldn't write things like this, not even on a notepad . . . my notepad!”
”How would you feel if I told you I not only wrote it, I published it?”
”Grant!”
I patted the open book. ”A sequential pattern. One word per chapter.”
”Why would you-”
”I didn't! Someone is messing with me!”
She stared in disbelief at the note. ”Well, whoever they are, they're doing an outstanding job.”
CHAPTER 13.
On most nights it takes me ten minutes to drive home from Christina's apartment. Tonight it took longer because I had to walk the first two blocks to get to my car.
My apartment is a cozy one bedroom on Thirty-fourth Street within walking distance of Georgetown University. Call me nerdy, but I like the atmosphere of a university neighborhood, and it's only ten minutes to the White House and fifteen minutes to the Library of Congress.
Christina was waiting for me when I arrived at my apartment. She insisted on taking separate cars. She said that if an army of Feds jumped out of the trees and bushes she wanted to be able to put her Toyota into gear and drive away as though she didn't know me.
When no army appeared, she sprang out of her car and shoved me into the apartment faster than I could unlock the door, which resulted in collision.
While my laptop booted up, I searched for the printed copies of the ma.n.u.script. There were two: an early first draft and the final draft. They were somewhere in the back of my bedroom closet buried beneath empty printer boxes, worn-out pairs of shoes, and stacks of clothes that no longer fit.
While I was rummaging, my computer played the Hallelujah Chorus, signaling it had booted up. I used to have Robin Williams shout, ”Good morning, Vietnam!” but after a while, that got annoying.
”It's ready,” Christina said, in case I hadn't heard Mr. Handel. She hovered in front of the computer, nervously working the page from the scratch pad between her thumb and forefinger. The hearts floating between the cartoon mice were taking a beating.
I fell into the chair in front of my corner desk. Most of the biography had been written on the road or at a desk at the White House. But a good number of late-night hours were spent here in this corner polis.h.i.+ng the ma.n.u.script.
I put the cursor through its paces, opening folders to get to the master ma.n.u.script file.
<script>