Transcript
8/2/2019 XO by Jeffery Deaver
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8/2/2019 XO by Jeffery Deaver
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Pre-order a copy of Jeffery Deavers
XOfrom one of the following e-retailers,
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On Sale from Simon & Schuster in hardcover
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XOA K A T H R Y N D A N C E N O V E LJEFFERY DEAVER
SIMON & SCHUSTER
New York London Toronto Sydney New Delhi
8/2/2019 XO by Jeffery Deaver
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Subject: Re: Youre the Best!!!
From: noreply@kayleightownemusic.com
To: EdwinSharp18474@anon.com
2 January 10:32 a.m.
Hey there,
Edwin
Thanks for your email! Im so glad you liked my latest
album! Your support means the world to me. Be sure you go
to my website and sign up to get my newsletter and learn
about new releases and upcoming concerts, and dont forget
to follow me on Facebook and Twitter.
And keep an eye out for the mail. I sent you that
autographed photo you requested!
XO,
Kayleigh
* * *
Subject: Unbelievable!!!!!
From: EdwinSharp26535@anon.com
To: ktowne7788@compserve.com
3 September 5:10 a.m.
Hi, Kayleigh:
I am totally blown away. Im rendered speechless. And,
you know me pretty good by nowfor me to be speechless,
thats something!! Anyway, heres the story: I downloaded
your new album last night and listened to Your Shadow.
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Whoahhh! Its without doubt the best song I have ever
heard. I mean of anything ever written. I even like it better
than Its Going to Be Different This Time. Ive told you
nobodys ever expressed how I feel about loneliness and
life and well everything better than you. And that song
does that totally. But more important I can see what youre
saying, your plea for help. Its all clear now. Dont worry.
Youre not alone, Kayleigh!!
Ill be yourshadow. Forever.
XO, Edwin
* * *
Subject: Fwd: Unbelievable!!!!!
From: Samuel.King@CrowellSmithWendall.com
To: EdwinSharp26535@anon.com
3 September 10:34 a.m.
Mr. Sharp:
Ms. Alicia Sessions, personal assistant to our clients
Kayleigh Towne and her father, Bishop Towne, forwarded
us your email of this morning. You have sent more than 50
emails and letters since we contacted you two months ago,
urging you not to have any contact with Ms. Towne or anyof her friends and family. We are extremely troubled that
you have found her private email address (which has been
changed, I should tell you), and are looking into possible
violations of state and federal laws regarding how you
obtained such address.
Once again, we must tell you that we feel your behavior is
completely inappropriate and possibly actionable. We urgeyou in the strongest terms possible to heed this warning.
As weve said repeatedly, Ms. Townes security staff and
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local law enforcement ofcials have been notied of your
repeated, intrusive attempts to contact her and we are fully
prepared to take whatever steps are necessary to put an
end to this alarming behavior.
Samuel King, Esq.
Crowell, Smith & Wendall, Attorneys-at-Law
* * *
Subject: See you soon!!!
From: EdwinSharp26535@anon.com
To: KST33486@westerninternet.com
5 September 11:43 p.m.
Hi, Kayleigh
Got your new email address. I know what theyre up to but
DONT worry, itll be all right.
Im lying in bed, listening to you right now. I feel like Im
literally your shadow. . . And youre mine. You are so
wonderful!
I dont know if you had a chance to think about ityoure
sooooo busy, I know!but Ill ask againif you wanted to
send me some of your hair thatd be so cool. I know youhavent cut it for ten years and four months (its one of
those things that makes you so beautiful!!!) but maybe
theres one from your brush. Or better yet your pillow. Ill
treasure it forever.
Cant WAIT for the concert next Friday. C U soon.
Yours forever,
XO, Edwin
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S u n d a y
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Chapter 1
The hearT of a concert hall is people.
And when the vast space is dim and empty, as this one was at the
moment, a venue can bristle with impatience, indierence.Even hostility.
Okay, rein in that imagination, Kayleigh Towne told hersel. Stop act-
ing like a kid. Standing on the wide, scued stage o the Fresno Coner-
ence Centers main hall, she surveyed the place once more, bringing her
typically hypercritical eye to the task o preparing or Fridays concert,
considering and reconsidering lighting and stage movements and where
the members o the band should stand and sit. Where best to walk out
near, though not into, the crowd and touch hands and blow kisses. Wherebest acoustically to place the oldback speakersthe monitors that were
pointed toward the band so they could hear themselves without echoes
or distortion. Many perormers now used earbuds or this; Kayleigh liked
the immediacy o traditional oldbacks.
There were a hundred other details to think about. She believed that
every perormance should be perect,more than perect. Every audience
deserved the best. One hundred ten percent.She had, ater all, grown up in Bishop Townes shadow.
An unortunate choice o word, Kayleigh now refected.
Ill be yourshadow. Forever. . . .
Back to the planning. This show had to be dierent rom the previ-
ous one here, about eight months ago. A retooled program was espe-
cially important since many o the ans would have regularly attended
her hometown concerts and she wanted to make sure they got some-
thing unexpected. That was one thing about Kayleigh Townes music; heraudiences werent as big as some but were loyal as golden retrievers.
They knew her lyrics cold, knew her guitar licks, knew her moves onstage
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and laughed at her shtick beore she nished the lines. They lived and
breathed her perormances, hung on her words, knew her bio and likes
and dislikes.
And some wanted to know much more . . .
With that thought, her heart and gut clenched as i shed stepped into
Hensley Lake in January.
Thinking about him, o course.
Then she roze, gasping. Yes, someone was watching her rom the ar
end o the hall! Where none o the crew would be.
Shadows were moving.
Or was it her imagination? Or maybe her eyesight? Kayleigh had been
given perect pitch and an angelic voice but God had decided enough wasenough and skimped big-time on the vision. She squinted, adjusted her
glasses. She was sure that someone was hiding, rocking back and orth in
the doorway that led to the storage area or the concession stands.
Then the movement stopped.
She decided it wasnt movement at all and never had been. Just a hint
o light, a suggestion o shading.
Though still, she heard a series o troubling clicks and snaps and
groansrom where, she couldnt telland elt a chill o panic bubbleup her spine.
Him . . .
The man who had written her hundreds o emails and letters, inti-
mate, delusional, speaking o the lie they could share together, asking or
a strand o hair, a ngernail clipping. The man who had somehow gotten
near enough at a dozen shows to take close-up pictures o Kayleigh, with-
out anyone ever seeing him. The man who had possiblythough it hadnever been provenslipped into the band buses or motor homes on the
road and stolen articles o her clothing, underwear included.
The man who had sent her dozen o pictures o himsel: shaggy hair,
at, in clothing that looked unwashed. Never obscene but, curiously, the
images were all the more disturbing or their amiliarity. They were the
shots a boyriend would text her rom a trip.
Him . . .
Her ather had recently hired a personal bodyguard, a huge man witha round, bullet-shaped head and an occasional curly wire sprouting rom
his ear to make clear what his job was. But Darthur Morgan was outside
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at the moment, making the rounds and checking cars. His security plan
also included a nice touch: simply being visible so that potential stalk-
ers would turn around and leave rather than risk a conrontation with a
250-pound man who looked like a rapper with an attitude (which, sure
enough, hed been in his teen years).
She scanned the recesses o the hall againthe best place he might
stand and watch her. Then gritting her teeth in anger at her ear and
mostly at her ailure to tame the uneasiness and distraction, she thought,
Get. Back. To. Work.
And whatre you worried about? Youre not alone. The band wasnt
in town yetthey were nishing some studio work in Nashvillebut
Bobby was at the huge Midas XL8 mixing console dominating the controldeck in the back o the hall, two hundred eet away. Alicia was getting the
rehearsal rooms in order. A couple o the beey guys in Bobbys road crew
were unpacking the truck in the back, assembling and organizing the
hundreds o cases and tools and props and plywood sheets and stands and
wires and amps and instruments and computers and tunersthe tons o
gear that even modest touring bands like Kayleighs needed.
She supposed one o them could get to her in a hurry i the source o
the shadow had been him.
Dammit, quit making him more than he is! Him, him, him, like youre
even araid to say his name. As i to utter it would conjure up his pres-
ence.
Shed had other obsessed ans, plenty o themwhat gorgeous singer-
songwriter with a voice rom heaven wouldnt collect a ew inappropriate
admirers? Shed had twelve marriage proposals rom men shed never
met, three rom women. A dozen couples wanted to adopt her, thirtyor so teen girls wanted to be her best riend, a thousand men wanted
to buy her a drink or dinner at Bob Evans or the Mandarin Oriental . . .
and thered been plenty o invitations to enjoy a wedding night without
the inconvenience o a wedding. Hey Kayleigh think on it cause Ill show
you a good time better than you ever had and by the by heres a picture of
what you can expect yah its really me not bad huh???
(Very stupid idea to send a picture like that to a seventeen-year-old,
Kayleighs age at the time. By the by.)Usually she was cautiously amused by the attention. But not always
and denitely not now. Kayleigh ound hersel snagging her denim jacket
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rom a nearby chair and pulling it on to cover her T-shirt, providing
another barrier to any prying eyes. This, despite the characteristic Sep-
tember heat in Fresno, which lled the murky venue like thin stew.
And more o those clicks and taps rom nowhere.
Kayleigh?
She turned quickly, trying to hide her slight jump, even though she
recognized the voice.
A solidly built woman o around thirty paused halway across the stage.
She had cropped red hair and some subdued inking on arms, shoulders
and spine, partly visible thanks to her trim tank top and tight, hip-hugging
black jeans. Fancy cowboy boots. Didnt mean to scare you. You okay?
You didnt. Whats up? she asked Alicia Sessions.A nod toward the iPad she carried. These just came in. Proos or
the new posters? I we get them to the printer today well denitely have
them by the show. They look okay to you?
Kayleigh bent over the screen and examined them. Music nowadays
is only partly about music, o course. Probably always has been, she sup-
posed, but it seemed that as her popularity had grown, the business side
o her career took up a lot more time than it used to. She didnt have much
interest in these matters but she generally didnt need to. Her ather washer manager, Alicia handled the day-to-day paperwork and scheduling,
the lawyers read the contracts, the record company made arrangements
with the recording studios and the CD production companies and the
retail and download outlets; her longtime producer and riend at BHRC
Records, Barry Zeigler, handled the technical side o arranging and pro-
duction, and Bobby and the crew set up and ran the shows.
All so that Kayleigh Towne could do what she did best: write songsand sing them.
Still, one business matter o interest to her was making sure ans
many o them young or without much moneycould buy cheap but
decent memorabilia to make the night o the concert that much more
special. Posters like this one, T-shirts, key chains, bracelets, charms, gui-
tar chord books, headbands, backpacks . . . and mugs, or the moms and
dads driving the youngsters to and rom the shows and, o course, oten
buying the tickets, as well.She studied the proos. The image was o Kayleigh and her avorite
Martin guitarnot a big dreadnought-size but a smaller, 000-18, ancient,
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with a crisp yellowing spruce top and a voice o its own. The photo was
the inside picture rom her latest album, Your Shadow.
Him . . .
No, dont.
Eyes scanning the doors again.
You sure youre okay? Alicia asked, voice buzzing with a aint Texas
twang.
Yeah. Kayleigh returned to the poster proos, which all eatured the
same photo though with dierent type, messages and background. Her
picture was a straight-on shot, depicting her much as she saw hersel:
at ve-two, shorter than she would have liked, her ace a bit long, but
with stunning blue eyes, lashes that wouldnt quit and lips that had somereporters talking collagen. Asif. . . Her trademark golden hair, our eet
longand no, not cut, only trimmed, in ten years and our months
fowed in the ake gentle breeze rom the photographers electric an.
Designer jeans and high-collared dark-red blouse. A small diamond cru-
cix.
You gotta give the ans the package, Bishop Towne always said.
Thatsvisual too, Im talking. And the standardsre dierent tween men
and women. You get into trouble, you deny it. He meant that in thecountry music world a man could get away with a look like Bishops own:
jutting belly, cigarette, a lined, craggy ace riddled with stubble, wrin-
kled shirt, scued boots and aded jeans. A woman singer, he lectured
though he really intended to say girlhad to be put together or date
night. And in Kayleighs case that meant a church social, o course: the
good girl next door was the image on which shed built her career. Sure,
the jeans could be a little tight, the blouses and sweaters could closelyhug her round chest, but the necklines were high. The makeup was sub-
tle and leaned toward pinks.
Go with them.
Great. Alicia shut o the device. A slight pause. I havent gotten
your athers okay yet.
Theyre good, the singer reassured her, nodding at the iPad.
Sure. Ill just run it by him. You know.
Now Kayleigh paused. Then: Okay.Acoustics good here? asked Alicia, who had been a perormer her-
sel; she had quite a voice and a love o music, which was undoubtedly
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why shed taken a job or someone like Kayleigh Towne, when the e-
cient, no-nonsense woman could have earned twice as much as a personal
assistant or a corporate executive. Shed signed on last spring and had
never heard the band perorm here.
Oh, the sound is great, Kayleigh said enthusiastically, glancing at
the ugly concrete walls. You wouldnt think it. She explained how the
designers o the venue, back in the 1960s, had done their homework;
too many concert hallseven sophisticated ones intended or classi-
cal musichad been built by people without condence in the natural
ability o musical instruments and voices to reach the arthest seats with
direct volume, that is, the sound emanating rom the stage. Architects
would add angular suraces and ree-standing shapes to boost the volumeo the music, which did that but also sent the vibrations in a hundred di-
erent directions. This resulted in every perormers acoustic nightmare,
reverberation: in eect, echoes upon echoes that yielded muddy, some-
times even o-key, sounds.
Here, in modest Fresno, Kayleigh explained to Alicia, as her ather
had to her, the designers had trusted in the power and purity o the voice
and drum skin and sounding board and reed and string. She was about to
ask the assistant to join her in a chorus o one o her songs to prove herpointAlicia did great harmonieswhen she noticed her looking toward
the back o the hall. She assumed the woman was bored with the scien-
tic discussion. But the rowning gaze suggested something else was on
her mind.
What? Kayleigh asked.
Isnt it just us and Bobby?
What do you mean?I thought I saw somebody. She lited a nger tipped in a black-
painted nail. That doorway. There.
Just where Kayleigh hersel had thought shed seen the shadow ten
minutes beore.
Palms sweating, absently touching her phone, Kayleigh stared at the
changing shapes in the back o the hall.
Yes . . . no. She just couldnt tell.
Then shrugging her broad shoulders, one o them sporting a tattoo oa snake in red and green, Alicia said, Hm. Guess not. Whatever it was its
gone now. . . . Okay, see you later. The restaurant at one?
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Yeah, sure.
Kayleigh listened absently to the thumping o boots as she let and
continued to stare at the black doorways.
Angrily, she suddenly whispered, Edwin Sharp.
There Ive said his name.
Edwin, Edwin, Edwin.
Now that Ive conjured you up, listen here: Get the hell out o my
concert hall! Ive got work to do.
And she turned away rom the shadowy, gaping doorway rom which,
o course, no one was leering at her at all. She stepped to center stage,
looking over the masking tape on the dusty wood, blocking out where she
would stand at dierent points during the concert.It was then that she heard a mans voice crying rom the back o the
hall, Kayleigh! It was Bobby, now rising rom behind the mixing con-
sole, knocking his chair over and ripping o his hard-shell earphones.
He waved to her with one hand and pointed to a spot over her head with
another. Look out! . . . No, Kayleigh!
She glanced up ast and saw one o the strip lightsa seven-oot Col-
ortran unitalling ree o its mounting and swinging toward the stage
by its thick electric cable.Stepping back instinctively, she tripped over a guitar stand she hadnt
remembered was behind her.
Tumbling, arms failing, gasping . . .
The young woman hit the stage hard, on her tailbone. The massive
light plummeted toward her, a deadly pendulum, growing bigger and
bigger. She tried desperately to rise but ell back, blinded as the searing
beams rom the thousand-watt bulbs turned her way.Then everything went black.
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Chapter 2
KaThryn Dance haD several lives.
Widowed mother o two children approaching their teen years.
Agent with the Caliornia Bureau o Investigation, her specialty inter-rogation and kinesicsbody language analysis.
Dutiul, i sometimes irreverent and exasperated, daughter to parents
who lived nearby.
That was the order in which she placed these aspects o her lie.
Then there was number our, which was nearly as vital to her psychic
well-being as the rst three: music. Like Alan Lomax in the middle o the
last century, Dance was a olklorist, a song catcher. Occasionally shed
take time o, climb into her SUV, sometimes with kids and dogs, some-times, like now, solo, and go in search o music, the way hunters take to
the elds or deer or turkey.
Dance was now piloting her Pathnder along Highway 152 rom the
Monterey Peninsula through a largely barren stretch o Caliornia to
Fresno in the San Joaquin Valley, three hours away. This was the agricul-
tural heart o the country and open double-trailer trucks, piled high with
garlic, tomatoes, and other ruits and vegetables, rolled endlessly towardthe massive ood-processing plants in the hazy distance. The working
elds were verdant or, i harvested already, rich black, but everything
else was dry and dun as orgotten toast.
Dust swirled in the Nissans wake and insects died splatty deaths on
the windshield.
Dances mission over the next ew days was to record the homemade
tunes o a local group o Mexican musicians, all o whom lived in or near
Fresno. Most o them picked in the elds so theyd adopted the nameLos Trabajadores, the Workers. Dance would record them on her digital
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TASCAM HD-P2, a bit more expensive than she could aord but superb,
then edit and post the songs on her website, American Tunes.
People could download them or a small ee, o which she would send
most to the musicians, and would keep enough to cover the cost o the
site and to take hersel and the kids out to dinner occasionally. No one got
rich rom the downloads but some o the groups that she and her business
partner in the venture, Martine Christensen, had discovered had come to
regional and even national attention.
Shed just come o a tough case in Monterey, the CBI oce she was
assigned to, and decided to take some time o. The children were at
their music and sports camps, spending the nights with their grandpar-
ents. Dance was ree to roam Fresno, Yosemite, and environs, recordLos Trabajadores and look or other talent in this musically rich area. Not
only Latino but a unique strain o country could be ound here (theres a
reason, o course, the genre is oten called country-western). In act the
Bakerseld sound, originating in that city a ew hours south o Fresno,
had been a major country music movement; it had arisen in reaction to
what some people thought was the overly slick productions o Nashville
in the ties. Perormers like Buck Owens and Merle Haggard began the
movement and it had enjoyed a recent resurgence, in the music o suchartists as Dwight Yoakam and Gary Allan.
Dance sipped a Sprite and juggled radio stations. Shed considered
making this trip a romantic getaway and inviting Jon Boling to come with
her. But hed just gotten a consulting assignment or a computer start-up
and would be tied up or several days. And or some reason, Dance had
decided she preerred to make the trip solo. The kidnapping case shed
just closed had been tough; two days ago shed attended the uneral othe one victim they couldnt save, in the company o the two they had.
She turned up the AC. This time o year the Monterey Peninsula was
comortable, even chilly occasionally, and shed dressed according to her
port o embarkation. In a long-sleeved gray cotton shirt and blue jeans,
she was hot. She slipped o her pink-rimmed glasses and wiped them
on a napkin, steering with her knees. Somehow sweat had managed to
crawl down one lens. The Pathnders thermometer reported 96 degrees
outside.September. Right.
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Dance was looking orward to the trip or another reasonto see her
only celebrity riend, Kayleigh Towne, the now amous singer-songwriter.
Kayleigh had been a longtime supporter o Dances website and the
indigenous musicians she and Martine championed. The singer had
invited Dance to her big concert Friday night in Fresno. Though a dozen
years younger than Dance, Kayleigh had been a perormer since she was
nine or ten years old and a pro since her late teens. Funny, sophisticated
and one hell o a writer and entertainer, with no ego whatsoever, the
woman was mature beyond her years, and Dance enjoyed her company
very much.
She was also the daughter o country music legend Bishop Towne.
On the two or three occasions when Dance had come to Kayleighsperormances, or visited her in Fresno, bearlike Bishop had lumbered into
the room with his thousand-pound ego and the intensity o somebody as
addicted to recovery as he had been to cocaine and liquor. Hed rambled
on about people in the Industryspoken with an infected capital I: musi-
cians he knew intimately (hundreds), musicians hed learned rom (only
the greats), musicians hed mentored (most o the present-day superstars)
and musicians hed gotten into stghts with (plenty o those too).
He was brash, crude and overtly theatrical; Dance had been enthralled.On the other hand, his latest album had tanked. His voice had deserted
him, his energy too, and those were two things that even the most sophis-
ticated digital massaging in the studio cant do much about. And nothing
could rescue the trite songwriting, so dierent rom the brilliant words
and tunes that had made him a hit years ago.
Still, he had his aithul entourage and he was in bold control o Kay-
leighs career; woe to any producer or record company or music venuethat didnt treat her right.
Dance now entered Fresno proper. Salinas Valley, one hundred miles
to the west, was known as the nations Lettuce Bowl. But the San Joaquin
was bigger and produced more and Fresno was its heart. The place was a
nondescript working town o about a hal million. It had some gang activ-
ity and the same domestic, robbery, homicide and even terrorist threats
that you saw in every small urban area nowadays, with the rate a bit higher
than the national average or all crimes. That infation, she surmised, wasa refection o unemploymenthovering here around 18 percent. She
noticed a number o young men, living evidence o this statistic, hanging
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out on hazy street corners. Dressed in sleeveless T-shirts and baggy shorts
or jeans, they watched her and other cars pass by or talked and laughed
and drank rom bottles swathed in paper bags.
Dust and heat waves rose rom baking suraces. Dogs sat on porches
and gazed through her car at distant nothingness and she caught glimpses
o children in backyards jumping happily over trickling sprinklers, a ques-
tionable i not illegal activity in perpetually drought-plagued Caliornia.
The satellite got her easily to the Mountain View Motel o Highway
41. It had no such vista, though that might be due to the haze. At best, she
deduced, squinting east and north, were some timid oothills that would
eventually lead to majestic Yosemite.
Stepping into the brittle heat, Dance actually elt light-headed. Break-ast with the kids and dogs had been a long time ago.
The hotel room wasnt ready yet but that didnt matter, since she was
meeting Kayleigh and some riends in a hal hour, at one. She checked
her bags with the ront desk and jumped back into the Pathnder, which
was already the temperature o a hotplate.
She punched another address into the GPS and dutiully headed
where directed, wondering why most o the programmed voices in sat-
nav were womens.At a stoplight she picked up her phone and glanced at the incoming
call and text list.
Empty.
Good that no one at the oce or the childrens camps had contacted
her.
But odd that there was nothing rom Kayleigh, who was going to call
that morning to conrm their get-together. And one thing about the per-ormer that had always impressed Dance: despite her ame, she never
neglected the little things. In act, in lie, and perormances, she seemed
to be utterly responsible.
Another call to Kayleigh.
Straight to voicemail.
KaThryn Dance haD to laugh.The owners o the Cowboy Saloon had a sense o humor. The dark,
woody place, giddily cool, had not a single cowboy artiact. But lie in the
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saddle was well representedby thewomen who rode the range, roped,
branded and punched cattle . . . and did some ancy six-gun work, i you
could believe the poster showing an Old West version o Rosie the Riv-
eter shooting bottles o a ence rail.
According to the movie art, blown-up book jackets, lunch boxes,
toys, paintings and photos, the era must have been saturated with fip-
haired, excessively busty gals in ve-gallon hats, cute neckerchies,
suede skirts and embroidered blouses, as well as some o the nest boots
ever made. Kathryn Dance loved ootwear and owned two pairs o elab-
orately tooled Noconas. But neither came close to the ones worn by
Dale Evans, Roy Rogerss partner, rom the 1950s TV show, on impres-
sive display in a aded poster.At the bar she ordered an iced tea, drank it down ast and got another,
then sat at one o the round tables, overvarnished and nicked, looking at
the clientele. Two elderly couples; a trio o tired, jumpsuited utility work-
ers, whod probably been on the job at dawn; a slim young man in jeans
and plaid shirt, studying the old-ashioned jukebox; several businessmen
in white shirts and dark ties, minus jackets.
She was looking orward to seeing Kayleigh, to recording the songs o
the Workers; looking orward to lunch too. She was starving.And concerned.
It was now one-twenty. Where was her riend?
Music rom the jukebox lled the place. Dance gave a aint laugh. It
was a Kayleigh Towne songa particularly good choice too, considering
this venue: Me, Im Not a Cowgirl.
The song was about a suburban soccer mom, who seems to live a lie
very dierent rom that o a cowgirl but in the end realizes that maybeshes one in spirit. Typical o Kayleighs songs, it was lighthearted and yet
spoke meaningully to people.
It was then that the ront door opened and a slab o powerul sunlight
ell onto the scued linoleum foor, on which danced geometric shapes,
the shadows o the people entering.
Dance rose. Kayleigh!
Surrounded by our others, the young singer stepped into the restau-
rant, smiling but also looking around quickly. She was troubled, Dancenoted immediately. No, more than that, Kayleigh Towne was scared.
But whatever shed been concerned about nding here was absent
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and she relaxed, then stepped orward, hugging Dance rmly. Kathryn,
hey. This is so great!
I couldnt wait to get here.
The singer was in jeans and, oddly, a thick denim jacket, despite the
heat. Her lovely hair fowed ree, nearly as long as she was tall.
Dance added, I called a couple o times.
There was . . . well, there was a little problem at the concert hall. Its
all right. Hey, everybody, thiss my bud, Kathryn Dance.
Dance greeted Bobby Prescott, whom shed met a ew years ago: thir-
tyish, an actors looks belied by a shy smile, curly brown hair. There was
also pudgy and terminally shy Tye Slocum, with long reddish hair in need
o a trim. He was the bands guitar technician and repairman. Unsmil-ing, athletic Alicia Sessions, who looked to Dance like she belonged in a
downtown Manhattan punk-rock club, was Kayleighs personal assistant.
And someone else was in the entourage. An Arican-American man,
over six eet tall, well into the 250-pound range.
Security.
The act that Kayleigh had a bodyguard wasnt surprising, though
Dance was troubled to note that he was intently on the job, even here. He
careully examined everyone in the barthe young man at the jukebox,the workers, the businessmen and even the elderly couples and the bar-
tender, clearly running their aces through a mental database o potential
threats.
What had prompted this?
Whatever threat he was here to guard against wasnt present and he
turned his attention back to Kayleigh. He didnt relax, though. People like
him never didthats what made them so good. He went into a waitingstate. Looks okay to me.
His name was Darthur Morgan and when he shook Dances hand he
examined her closely and his eyes gave a ficker o recognition. Dance,
as an expert in kinesics and body language, knew that she gave o cop
vibrations, even when not intending to.
Join us or lunch, Kayleigh said to the big man.
No, thank you, maam. Ill be outside.
No, its too hot.Better there.
Well, get an iced tea or soda. And come in i you need to.
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20 / Jeery Deaver
But without ordering a beverage, he steamed slowly through the dim
restaurant and, with one glance at a wax museum cowgirl twirling a lasso,
stepped outside.
The skinny bartender came around, carrying menus and a erce
admiration or Kayleigh Towne, who smiled at the young man in a mater-
nal way, though they were about the same age.
Kayleigh glanced at the jukebox, embarrassed that it was her voice
serenading them.
So, Dance asked, what happened?
Okay, Ill tell you. She explained that as she was doing some prep
work or the Friday-night concert a strip lightone o the long ones
above the stagecame loose and ell.My God. Youre all right?
Yeah, ne. Aside rom a sore butt.
Bobby, sitting next to Kayleigh, gripped her arm. He looked at her
protectively. I dont know how it happened, he said in a low voice. I
mean, it was a strip light, a cyc light. You dont mount or dismount it or
a show. It was there permanently.
Eyes avoiding everyones, big Tye Slocum oered, And you checked
it, Bobby. I saw you. Twice. All the lights. Bobbys the best roadie around.Never had an accident like that beore.
I itd hit her, Alicia said, anger in her voice, man, that would have
been it. It couldve killed her.
Bobby added, Its a thousand watts. Could alsove set the whole place
on re, i the lamps had shattered. I cut the main power switch in case
they did. Im going to check it out better when Im back tonight. Ive got
to go to Bakerseld and pick up a new amplier and speaker bank.Then the incident was tucked away and they ordered lunch. Dance
was in ghting trim ater the two-week-long kidnapping caseshed
shed nine poundsand decided to splurge with an order o ries with
her grilled chicken sandwich. Kayleigh and Tye ordered salads. Alicia and
Bobby had tostadas and opted or coee, despite the heat. The conversa-
tion turned to Dances musical website and she talked a bit about her own
ailed attempts at being a singer in San Francisco.
Kathryn has a great voice, Kayleigh said, displaying ve or six kine-sic deception clues. Dance smiled.
A mans voice interrupted. Excuse me, olks. Hey, there, Kayleigh.
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It was the young man rom the jukebox. Smiling, he nodded at Dance
and the table and then looked down at Kayleigh.
Hello. The singers tone had gone suddenly into a dierent mode,
bright but guarded.
Didnt mean to be eavesdropping. I heard there was some problem.
You all right?
Just ne, thanks.
Silence or a moment, the sort that means, Appreciate your interest
but you can head o now.
Kayleigh said, Youre a an?
Sure am.
Well, thanks or your support. And your concern. You going to theconcert on Friday?
Oh, you bet. Ill be there. Wouldnt miss it or the world. You sure
youre okay?
A pause, bordering on the awkward. Maybe Kayleigh was digesting
the last sentence.
Sure am.
Bobby said, Okay, riend. You take care now. Were going to get back
to lunch.As i the roadie hadnt even spoken, the man said with a breathy laugh,
You dont recognize me, do you?
Sorry, the singer oered.
Alicia said rmly, Ms. Towned like some privacy, you dont mind.
Hey, Alicia, the young man said to her.
The personal assistant blinked. Obviously she hadnt recognized the
man and would be wondering how he knew her name.Then he ignored her too and laughed again, his voice high, eerie. Its
me, Kayleigh! Edwin Sharp. Your shadow.
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