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just a friend.  Around the time Harry asked Sally if she wanted to

partake of a piece of pecan pie, I made the mistake of pointing out

that the film's only flaw was how implausible it was that they didn't

figure out earlier that they belonged together.

"Yeah?"  Chuck said.  "Well, take a look at us.  Some people might say

that we should've figured out a few things ourselves by now."

It was the first time either of us had ever acknowledged out loud the

potential to be more than friends again.  I might like directness in

every other aspect of my life, but I didn't think I liked it in this

context.

"No mistakes here.  We were made to have a beautiful friendship," I

said with my best Bogart impersonation.

"Nope, not this time, Sam.  Whenever I move a little closer to you, you

pull out something goofy to help you scoot away.  Cut it out with the

Casablanca.  I'm serious about this."

"Well, maybe you missed your chance to be serious.  If you were

serious, and you thought we were meant to be together, you wouldn't

have dumped me."

He laughed out of exasperation.  "Sam, we were kids back then.  And I

didn't want to dump you, as you put it.  But I also didn't want to move

down to California to learn how to be some corporate drone."

"Then you could've come with me and done something else," I said.  I

stood up and started heading toward the kitchen, but he took my arm and

pulled me back down.

"You wouldn't have been happy, Sam.  You had this idea in your head

about what your life should look like, and back then I just didn't fit

into it."

"Well, what makes you think you'd fit into it now?  Maybe you'd start

to feel like I was trying to change you again, and we wouldn't want

that, now, would we?"

"I'd fit in, Sam, because you don't want to change me.  We like each

other just the way we are.  The problem has been that you won't admit

it.  You won't accept that you like everything about me."

"Including your modesty?"  I said, trying to laugh.

"Be serious for just a moment, OK, Sam?  You know I match every part of

that conflicted personality of yours.  You like that I have this crazy

job.  You like that part of me is still a big kid.  And you'll never

admit it, but you love that I do what I want, even when it meant

letting you down."

This time, when I stood, he let me.  I went into the kitchen, poured a

glass of water, and sat down at the table.

He came in after a few minutes.  "When you found out your mother had

breast cancer, you came to me, not Roger.  And, today, when I heard

about the letter to the paper, you were the one I wanted to talk to. We

don't have to work out everything in our history and our future right

now.  But don't pretend you haven't thought about this, Sam. I'll go if

that's what you want, but I really do need you tonight."

It wasn't until the door closed that I realized I didn't want him to

leave yet.  And that it was important enough that I was willing to

figure out the rest of it later.

He was still on my front steps when I opened the door.  He came back

in, and we didn't talk again for the rest of the night.

Given my long-standing commitment to keeping things with Chuck

platonic, I would have expected larger repercussions from the night's

activities.  But the sky didn't fall, lightning didn't strike, and I

didn't even regret it in the morning.

The truth was, I hadn't felt that good for months.  Whether it was just

the aftereflects of the great sex remained to be seen.

And it had apparently taken Chuck's mind off the Taylor investigation.

He hadn't even watched the local news before we went to sleep.

Unfortunately, reality set back in quickly.  While I scurried around

the house picking up the various items of clothing strewn on the path

between the front door and my bed, Chuck grabbed the Oregonian from the

porch.

The story about the anonymous letter was a long one and had made the

front page of the Metro section.  Putting aside my outrage that the

press had gone forward on the basis on a single anonymous unconfirmed

letter, I could acknowledge that the story was actually fair.  It

raised the possibility that

Taylor and Landry were innocent, but it also quoted experienced

criminal investigators who were familiar with the common phenomenon of

false confessions in high-profile cases.  Some even suggested it might

be a publicity stunt by a death-penalty opponent.

Although the paper did not reprint the letter itself, I was surprised

by the amount of detail revealed about the letter's contents.  The

typewritten letter was mailed from Roseburg, a logging town a couple of

hours south of Portland.  According to the report, the letter described

with dispassion the grizzly details of the final hours of Jamie

Zimmerman's life and her horrible death.  Its anonymous author claimed

to have been playing pool at Tommy Z's when he saw Jamie Zimmerman

running her tongue across her parted lips, watching him while she did a

nasty dance in front of the jukebox.  She made it clear what she wanted

when she graphically simulated fellatio on the last of many bottles of

Rolling Rock he bought her.

I looked up from the paper.  "Tommy Z's?  Did that come up in the

investigation?"

Chuck nodded.  "Truck stop slash biker bar in southeast Portland.  It

was reported during the trial, though, so anyone could know about it.

Margaret Landry said Taylor picked up Jamie there.  We found witnesses

who placed Taylor at the bar around the time Jamie disappeared, and

Jamie was known to hang out there sometimes."

I went back to the article.  The author claimed that Jamie danced for a

couple of songs and then walked over to him and said she noticed him

because he looked dangerous.  After some token small talk, he drove her

back to his apartment.  In the privacy of the apartment, the dance she

began at

Tommy Z's evolved into a strip tease and a lap dance.  After the two

began to engage in what the article paraphrased as "consensual

intercourse," what might have been merely a desperate exchange of

bodily fluids between two pathetic lives took a violent turn. According

to the author, a drunk Jamie started laughing during the act itself,

mocking her anonymous lover about the size of his manhood.  The man hit

her repeatedly, telling her to shut up.  The author wrote that he

initially wrapped his hands around Jamie Zimmerman's throat to silence

her taunts.  But when her eyes started to bulge and she began tensing

her entire body in an effort to free her throat from his grasp, he

realized he wouldn't stop; that he had never felt such power and

gratification as through her suffering.

When I'd finished reading, I looked up at Chuck.  He read my thoughts.