typed: (turning)
The cab's a neat little affair.

Stine is sitting in the driver's seat (Paul's in the passenger seat - again), ready to pick up his first fare of the night.


It's the intersection of Mason and Geary when they pick the man up.

(Paul still can't get a good look at his face.

The side mirror doesn't do much thanks to the dark.)


The man asks to be taken to Washington and Maple.

When they reach it, Stine drives one block farther.

(Cherry.)

Stine puts the cab in park.





He's shot once in the head.

The man takes his wallet and keys and tears off Stine's shirt tail.

He wipes down the cab before leaving.




It's only after Paul wakes up that he realizes he'd been holding his breathing the whole time.
typed: (Default)
It's been a while since Paul's been down to Lake Berryessa.

He's lying on a picnic blanket and there's a girl lying next to him.

He knows what happens here.

-- Of course, really.

He wrote the damn article.

They're approached by a man wearing a black executioner's-type hood with clip-on sunglasses over the eye-holes and a bib-like device on his chest that had a white 3"x3" cross-circle symbol and carrying a .45.

He claims to be a former convict, and brings out pieces of precut plastic clothesline to tie them up.



And then he stabs them both.

The girl dies two days later.

The boy survives.



He knows what happens here but that doesn't mean he's prepared for it to happen to him.
typed: (hard at work)
The Blue Rock Springs Golf Course isn't that remarkable a place. Paul's sitting in the passenger seat of a car parked about four miles from Lake Herman Road, arm slung around the back of the driver's seat. In the driver's seat sits a petite young woman, her blonde hair cut short, hands in her lap rather than on the steering wheel.

"Darlene, right?" he asks, tapping the fingers of his other hand on the dashboard. (He doesn't actually have to ask. He knows this place and all the circumstances like the back of his hand.)

"Yeah," she says, and her voice is more a coo than anything else.

What is he supposed to say to her?




"You look nice."

(It's the only thing he can think of.)




He can hear the car coming before he sees it. It parks right behind them (he doesn't bother telling her to go, doesn't bother telling her to just drive and get away).

A man gets out, and Paul can hear his heart pounding.


(I want to see his face.)

He can see the Luger hanging at the man's side as he approaches.



When the man finally arrives at his window, he shines the flashlight directly in Paul's face.

(Godfuckingdammit.

I can't see worth shit.)



"I -- hey."

Three shots each.



She's dead.

Is it his blood?

It hurts.


It fucking hurts and there's blood everywhere and he couldn't even get a look at the sonofabitch's face.

He groans, teeth grinding as he places a hand on his chest, blood spreading through the fabric of his clothing.





Two more shots each and he blacks out.
typed: (aqua velva freak)
He can see the two kids in their car (the boy's mother's Rambler).

Lake Herman Road.

Their first date.

He stands some distance away, hands tucked into his pockets, just watching. He knows how this will play out.



Another car pulls into the turnout and parks beside them. A man climbs out.

Paul can't see his face. God, he wishes he could. He doesn't trust himself to go closer.

(He can't, anyway. He's stuck to the spot.)



The boy gets out of the car as the man gestures.

He's halfway out when the man shoots him in the head.

(The gunshot sends a shock through Paul's spine.)


The boy drops like a stone.

The girl's screaming as she gets out of the car, running for her life, away, away, away.

She makes it twenty-eight feet with five shots through her back before she hits the ground, too.




The man gets back in his car, and drives away.

(The car's tail lights are blinding.)
typed: (catch this guy)
(he never recalls actually falling asleep)


It's been a while since he's stopping thinking about the Zodiac case - in a manner of speaking, of course.

You never really let it go, do you? No.


You can't.



He still remembers sitting on Graysmith's desk, talking as the other man sketched a rough picture of a survivor's description (what - are you drawing), and he snorts to himself. The pier's relatively quiet, if he gets up early enough in the morning. Sitting on the edge of the dock, he swings his legs out over the water, hands grasping the edge.

(He has never had this much to lose before, and the thought of that?

Frightens him.)

Of course, the quiet makes it relatively easy to hear when anyone's coming. Paul hears the footsteps, and almost immediately he can feel the hairs rising on the back of his neck, and he knows what's coming.

Because he can hear the gun clicking, too.



He doesn't move. It'd be no use, anyhow.

He just keeps swinging his feet above the water, head bowed as he feels his heart begin to race, eyes fixed on the spot just above his right shoulder.

He knows what's coming.



And right on cue, the black mass appears, a hood with a white cross and circle, black jacket, black everything.

But something's wrong, and that's what bothers Paul more than anything else. The man standing behind him is too tall, too skinny, and he knows there were other murderers in the Bay Area (he wrote about them, for Chrissakes), but none who imitated the Zodiac killer this strongly.

His brow furrows, and part of him wants to laugh, because, dammit, what a way to die.




Slowly, a hand creeps up into the reflection - and the hood comes off.

At first, the other man looks grim, but a smile quickly establishes itself on his features as Paul feels cold metal pressed to the back of his head.






And Paul does laugh, voice cracking, partially out of frustration, partially out of he-doesn't-know-what.

"Son of a b--"




BANG




(the corpse falls into the water without a sound)

typed: (eyebrow)
Paul’s door leads, as ever, to the houseboat. (A much improved houseboat in terms of cleanliness, we might add.) It opens out onto the living room, which is no longer a refugee camp for loose papers, but actually a living room. The coffee table at the center has a couple of rolls of wrapping paper on one side, and a few books on the other. The ashtrays and glasses that used to litter the surface are nowhere in sight.

There’s also a lamp on, which Paul neatly steps around as he makes his way across the room.

“So, um. It’s about a ten-minute drive from here,” he says, drawing a set of keys from his jacket pocket, and grabbing an umbrella from a stand by the front door (better safe than sorry – the rain’s been a bit on and off throughout the day).

“And by ten, I am considering traffic. Which shouldn’t be too big of an inconvenience.”
typed: (Default)
The houseboat is a cozy affair. Not too big for one person, not too small for two.

But right now?

It looks fit for maybe a rather unconcerned cat. There are papers everywhere, clothes thrown around haphazardly, and an obscene number of ashtrays and half-empty glasses. (There are also drugs, but these are the first things Paul takes care of upon returning. You saw nothing.)

There's one couch, an armchair, a coffee table, and a TV, which is currently playing PONG against itself (for who knows how long, really).

It's lived in, if nothing else. As much as Paul complains about it, home is home is home. It's where he's lived for ... some time, now, and he's grown used to its ups and downs. It's familiar, it's safe (for a given value of 'safe', anyway), and it's home.

Paul takes a moment to drink in the fact that he's back home and healed, and then turns to face Kate, holding his arms out to either side before dropping them again.

"Welcome aboard."

typed: (in profile)

It's been a while since Paul Avery started living with the oxygen tank.

(Besides using it to help him breath, he hasn't done anything else that the doctors told him to.)

He spends his evenings in the bar he used to frequent while under the employ of the Chron, smoking and drinking away his miseries.

Tonight is no different. He's sitting at the bar, watching the TV.

But then - something he wasn't expecting:

"In the decade since the Zodiac's last cipher was received, every federal agency has taken a crack at decoding it. But today, where those agencies have failed, a cartoonist has defeated it. How did you do it?"
 
Avery draws a deep breath from the tank, balefully eying the screen.

He recognizes the man there. Young, full of hope and naivete. It makes him sick.

Robert Graysmith.

"Oh, just a lot of books from the library, and, uh, I love puzzles, so... I- I- I- just-"

"Then what did you ever do about it? If it was so fuckin' important,
what
did you ever do? You hovered over my desk, you stole from
wastebaskets, am I being unkind? Oh, that's right, I forgot.
You went to the library."

"The fuckin' library."

typed: (wtf guys)
"Mr. Avery, you've been diagnosed with pulmonary emphysema."



Somehow, he's not surprised, sitting slumped in one of the chairs at the doctor's office.

As for what they're asking (stop smoking stop boozing stop whatever else it is you're doing), he knows he isn't going to do any of it.

(And he knows he's going to destroy himself.


Well, get himself farther down the abyss than he already is, anyway.)




What follows the diagnosis is what shocks him.

They hand him a small oxygen tank, mask attached to it with a tube.

He takes it with a numb sort of horror, metal cold in his fingers. He holds up the plastic mask, looking at it through the light.

(They say he'll have to carry it with him wherever he goes.)




Shit.




Paul gets home and closes the door behind him, slamming his back against the door and sinking down against the wall.



The Zodiac case destroys lives.





He discards the tank on a couch, and heads immediately towards the Milliways door.




-- it leads to a simple closet.


oh god, no, please, please, no, no, no, no, no



He closes the door, opens it again.

Nothing.


And Paul Avery backs away from the door, stumbling towards the couch, and gropes for the oxygen tank.


One deep breath.


Two deep breaths.





And his heart is only beating faster and faster.


And he wonders if, maybe, the place was just a part of his case-addled imagination.

(it wasn't IT WASN'T)








But nevertheless, he gets the sinking feeling he won't be back for a very, very long time.

He grabs the closest slip of paper, and pulls a pen from his breast pocket.

In shaking script, he writes


Don't look for me. 
P.A.




He slips it under the door.




"At least do that for me."





(When he looks back in the closet some time later, the paper's gone.)
typed: (hard at work)
Paul Avery is hired.

At the Sacramento Bee.

On the crime beat.

-- He promised he wouldn't. Wouldn't go back to writing stuff like this.

But as he sits, alone, in his houseboat, the memories come flooding back.

Trying to get Toschi to let him in on the details, trying to help -- hey, bullitt! you gonna catch this guy or not? -- getting that letter -- don't tell me that's a piece of bloody shirt-- shit! holyfuckingcrap -- trying to use Graysmith as a kind of working dog -- you go find the papers, i'm going to stand here and attempt not to vomit -- drinkingsmokingswallowing away a lot of his sorrows and finally walking out.

I AM NOT AVERY.
I AM NOT AVERY.

I AM NOT AVERY.



Walking out.

He almost doesn't remember why he did it, anymore. Why he gave that up. Why the fucking hell he gave that job up, when he knew, he knew it was (ironically) the only thing that kept him sane.

(He works, he goes insane. He doesn't, he gets even worse.)


I AM NOT AVERY.

He doesn't try to pretend that he doesn't scan the newspapers for reportings of the Zodiac. He doesn't try to pretend that he doesn't occasionally wonder if throwing out all of his Zodiac files was the right thing to do.

I AM NOT AVERY.

Sitting on one of his couches, surrounded by empty bottles and still-burning cigarette butts, he tries to collect himself. He tries to convince himself that he can do this, that he can return to working free from any stigma or guilt.

I AM NOT AVERY.


(He can't.)


He drinks, and coughs. God damn it all to hell and back again. He looks at the lapel pin in his fingers, and, after the briefest moment of hesitation, throws it against the opposite wall.


I AM NOT AVERY.





(He cries, for the first time in years.

Rage, desperation, sadness.

He feels everything and nothing.

He knows he's not complete without a story.

He knows he won't function for long with one.)



Paul Avery falls asleep as the sun rises, surrounded by empty bottles, glasses, and ashes.

Lost on the floor, the lapel pin catches slivers of the sun.

I AM NOT AVERY.

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