“Who?” I snap, distracted.
She emits a small sigh of worry, then, as if asking, lowers her voice. “Detective Donald Kimball.”
Yes, the room turned sharply at that moment, and yes, my idea about the world changed when I saw the name Donald Kimball printed in a book. I forced myself not to be surprised, because it was only the narrative saving itself.
I did not bother rereading the rest of the scene.
I simply placed the book back on its shelf.
I had to think about this.
First thought: How did the person who said he was Donald Kimball ever see this original unread manuscript with the details of Amelia Light’s murder in it? A murder that was identical to the one that occurred on November third in the Orsic Motel.
Second thought: Someone was impersonating a fictional character named Donald Kimball.
He had been in my home.
He had been in my office.
I suddenly realized—hopefully—that everything he had told me was a lie.
I suddenly hoped that there had been no murders.
I hoped that the book I had written about my father was not responsible for the deaths “Donald Kimball” had relayed to me.
(Will I find out later that this Donald Kimball’s private number was, in fact, Aimee Light’s cell phone number? Yes.)
But then I thought: If Donald Kimball was responsible for the murders in Midland County, then who was Clayton?
As I thought about this I glimpsed something by my shoe.
There was a drawing from a children’s book I had made when I was a boy.
One of a number of pages that had scattered to the floor as I rifled through my closet.
These pages were from an illustrated book I had written when I was seven.
The book had a title.
The title was “The Toy Bret.”
I slowly reached down to pick up the title page but stopped when I saw the tip of a black triangle.
I pulled the other pages away until the entire sheet was revealed.
And I was confronted with the wrecked stare of the Terby.
As I moved the pages around, I saw the Terby replicated a hundred times throughout a book I had written thirty years ago.
The Terby emerging from a coffin.
The Terby taking a bath.
The Terby nibbling the white petal of a bougainvillea flower.