He added it to the Trolls folder. Then, bowing to the inevitable, he made a new folder, just for the three TalentedTom messages. After a moment, he named it Ripley.
With great effort, he returned to the world beyond his own computer and phone and head, and forced himself to acknowledge some of the other things—some of them very nice things—that were also happening, more or less concurrently.
All good. All good.
And then there was Anna Williams of Seattle, and that was more than good.
Within days of their meeting, he and Anna had settled into what even Jake could not deny was a
He cleaned up his apartment. He began rewarding himself with a daily Skype call to Seattle: Anna on her front porch, himself at his living room window overlooking Abingdon Square. She started to read the novels he recommended. He started to try the wines she liked. He went back to work on his new novel and put in a solid month of focused effort, which brought him tantalizingly close to a finished first draft. Good things upon good things.
And then, toward the end of October, another message came through the JacobFinchBonner website:
What will Oprah say when she finds out about you? At least James Frey had the decency to steal from himself.
He opened the new folder on his laptop and added this to the others. A few days later, there was a fifth:
I’m on Twitter now. Thought you’d like to know. @TalentedTom
He went to look, and indeed there was a new account, but no actual tweets yet. It had the generic egg for a profile picture and a grand total of zero followers. Its profile bio consisted of one word:
He had been letting the clock run out without even attempting to identify his opponent. That had not been a good decision. TalentedTom, he suspected, was preparing to enter a new phase, and Jake had no time left to waste.
Evan Parker was dead: to begin with. There was no doubt whatever about that. Jake had seen the death notice three years earlier. He had even perused an online memorial page, which, though not terribly well populated, did contain the reminiscences of a dozen people who’d known Parker, and they, certainly, seemed to be under the impression that he was dead. It was a simple matter to find that page again, and he wasn’t at all surprised to see that there had been no additional entries to the memorial since his last visit:
Evan and I grew up together in Rutland. We did baseball and wrestling together. He was a real natural leader and always kept the teams spirits up. Knew he’d had his struggles in the past, but thought he was doing really well. So sorry to hear about what happened.
Took classes with Evan at RCC. Such a cool dude. Can’t believe this. RIP man.
I grew up in the same town as Evan’s family. These poor people had the worst luck.
I remember Evan when he played baseball for West Rutland. Never knew him personally but a great first baseman. Really sorry he had such demons.
Bye Evan, I’ll miss you. RIP.
Met Evan in our MFA program up in Ripley. Super talented writer, great guy. Shocked that this happened to him.
Please accept my condolences for your loss, all family and friends of the deceased. May his memory be a blessing.