You are exactly who they mean when they say “she has everything.” You do-and I'll bet that you know it, even if you forget from time to time.
There's only one thing I have that you don't. I know something. I know that by noon two days from now, you'll be dead. You'll have a bullet in your brain and a face that no one could recognize, not even your own beautiful children, not even the adoring public that flocks to your films.
But I didn't tell you any of that when we met.
I just smiled, almost curtsied, and thanked you for being you. I walked away knowing that the next time you look at me, it will be in a different way.
Next time, I won't be invisible, I promise you that much.
And I keep my promises-just ask Arnold Griner.
Chapter_82 “WHAT DO WE THINK about this?” Van Allsburg asked the room, and then he stared directly at me. “You have more cases like this one than anyone else here. What's going on? What is she up to now?”
I just went ahead and said it. “She wants to be caught.”
I felt I needed to stand to address the group. "Most likely, this is a person who feels completely isolated. The reaction to eliminate the people she fixates on is paradoxical.
She, he, or it destroys what she can't have. Over time, it's making her feel worse. Some part of Mary may know that, and doesn't want to do this anymore, but she lacks the self- control to stop on her own."
“And the latest e-mail?” Fred asked.
“Another sign that the killer is conflicted. Maybe the conscious mind believes it's taunting the authorities while the subconscious is drawing a map for us to follow. That's the only thing I can come up with that makes sense of what's happened, and I'm not even sure if it makes sense.”
“What about the counterpossibility?” asked David Fujishiro. “That she's trying to deliberately mislead us, throw us off with fiction.”
“You're right. That is a real possibility” I said. “And what it leaves us with is every conceivable outcome except what's in the e-mail. I think we have an obligation to take the message at face value first, and consider the alternatives second. But David has just stated the other logical possibility. Of course, we don't know if she's logical.”
Several agents, including my buddy Page, scribbled notes while I spoke. I was aware of my stature here, if not exactly comfortable with it.
“Do we know what LAPD's doing with this? I'm talking about the latest threat,” asked an agent in the back, one of several faces I had never seen before. I looked over to Van Allsburg for a response.
"They've got a very large internal task force up and running. That much we know for sure. They're working on a database of potential targets. But you take every name-above- the-title actress in this town, even just sticking to the ones with families, and you've got a long list on your hands.
"Plus, LAPD's going to be a little trigger shy about the panic factor. Outside of increased patrols and some awareness- raising, there's not a hell of a lot they can do for all of these women and their families - except keep after Mary Smith. Someone has to catch her.
And you know what? I want it to be us, not LAPD."
Mary, Mary
Chapter 83
DISNEYLAND WAS CHOCK-FULL of ironies for any good mother. “The Happiest Place on Earth,” the brochures called it, and maybe it could be, but with the large, electric crowds, it also had to be one of the easiest places to lose a child.
Mary tried not to give in to her worry. Worrying just makes bad things happen.
Worrywarts are the saddest people in the world. I should know.
Besides, this day was supposed to be about fun and family Brendan and Ashley had been looking forward to it - for like forever and a day Even little Adam was bucking up and down in his stroller, squealing with a wordless excitement.
Mary kept close watch on her older two as they led the way along Main Street USA, with its candy-colored shops and other attractions. Each of them held one side of a park map.
This was adorable, since neither of them knew what they were looking at. Ever since Adam was born, they liked to play at being older.
“What do you want to do first, my three little pumpkins?” she asked them. "We're here.
We're finally at Disney, just like I promised."
“Everything,” Ashley said breathlessly. She watched slack- jawed as Goofy, the real Goofy, went ambling past on Main Street.
Breridan pointed to a little boy about his own age wearing Mickey Mouse ears with Matthew embroidered across the brim.
“Can we get those?” he asked hopefully “Can we please, please, please?”
“No, I'm sorry sweetie. Mommy doesn't have enough money for that. Not this trip. Next time for sure.”
She wondered suddenly why she hadn't thought to pack sandwiches. The trip to Disney was going to cost far more than she could afford. If something went wrong at home between now and her next paycheck, she'd be in deep doo-doo.
But that was just more to worry about. Stop. Stop. Not today. Don't ruin everything, Marsey-doats.
“1 know just what we should do,” she said gently, taking the map from their hands.
Shortly, they were floating through the It's a Small World boat ride, something Mary hadn't done since she was Brendan's age.
But it was still the same, and that was comforting. The cool and the dark were as soothing as she remembered, and she still loved all the smiling animatronic faces that never changed. There was something reassuring about the ride, about Disneyland. She loved being here with the kids, and she'd kept her promise.
“Look at that!” Brendan squealed, pointing to a jolly- looking Eskimo family, waving from their snow-covered home.
Brendan and Ashley probably didn't even remember snow, she realized, and Adam had never seen it at all. The gray and the endless cold from back home were like another world now, like the black-and-white part of The Wizard of Oz. Except Dorothy went back, and Mary never would. Never again. No more snow-covered mountains. It was all a million miles away, right where it belonged. From now on it was going to be nothing but California sunshine - and smiling Eskimos, and Goofy - “Excuse me, ma'am, please step out,” said an attendant, breaking her reverie.
“Mommy!”
Mary winced in frustration. She had missed out on half the ride, thinking about other things. What was the last part she remembered? The Eskimo family. Snow. Oh, yes, snow.
“Ma'am? Please. Others are waiting.”
Mary looked up at the uniformed worker, who gave her a look of utter politeness.
“Can we go around again?” she asked.
He smiled obligingly. “Sorry but we're not allowed to let people do that. You'll have to get back in line.”
“Let's go!” Brendan cried. “C'mon, Mommy No scenes. Please?” “All right, all right,”
Mary said. Her voice was tense, and she was a little embarrassed.
She winked to the attendant. “Kids,” she said conspiratorially, then jogged across the platform to catch up with her crew, her lovies.
Mary, Mary
Chapter 84
LUNCHTIME CAME QUICKLY, and Mary was terribly disappointed to find she had only twelve dollars and change in her purse. A small pizza and a drink to share were going to have to be it for herself and the kids.
“There's green stuff on it,” Ashley said as Mary set the food on the table.
“It doesn't taste like anything,” she said. She wiped away the flecks of oregano with her napkin. “There. All the green's gone, all gone now.”