square coffee-stained table. âHaving a productive day, Mr. Gold?â He doesnât wait for an answer. He spins the laptop around, opens it, and gazes at the screen. âBlank? A blank screen? Again?â
Zachary grabs the computer and spins it back around. âWhat do you mean again? What are you talking about?â
The hazel eyes lock on Zachary, now with cold menace. âIsnât that why you stole your book from me?â
âHah!â Zachary canât help a scornful laugh from escaping. âIs that why youâre here, Cardoza? Youâre crazy. Youâre messed up. You need to leave now.â Zachary jumps to his feet as if to chase the man away.
Cardoza doesnât move. He clasps his hands together on the tabletop. âWord for word, Mr. Gold. Line by line. You stole my book. But Iâm not a vindictive man. I just want a little payback.â
Zacharyâs mind spins. Once again, his eyes search the small room for someone who could rescue him. âCardoza, you need help,â he murmurs. âYouâre deluded.â
This man is insane , Zachary thinks. But is he dangerous?
And then: Do other authors have to put up with this kind of harassment?
And then: Does he really think Iâm going to give him money?
âPleaseâleave me alone,â Zachary says softly. âIâm asking you nicely.â
âI canât, Mr. Gold. âI canât leave you alone. I donât know how you uncovered my manuscript. But you know Iâm the one who created the Howard Striver character. He is based on my older brother, after all.â
Zachary is still standing, hands on the back of his chair. âIâm begging youââ he starts.
Cardoza shakes his head. âIâm not going anywhere.â He motions for Zachary to return to his seat. âI think you and I are going to develop a very close friendship.â That cold smile again. âUnless you want the world to know you are a thief and a fraud.â
Zachary sees the women push out the front door with their strollers. This is his chance. He ignores his suddenly racing heartbeats, grabs the laptop in one hand, leaves the case on the floor, spins to the front and runs.
âLook out!â A young long-haired young man carrying a muffin and a tall coffee cup leaps back as Zachary bolts past him.
Zachary is out the door. Nearly collides with the two strollers. The women have stopped to adjust the babies in the seats. They glare at him as he stumbles and skids to a stop, turns, and runs up Amsterdam Avenue.
A mild, hazy day of early spring. The air feels cool on his blazing hot face. He dodges two men with handcarts, making a flower delivery to the store next-door. Runs past a man setting up his shawarma cart on the corner, a brief whiff of grilled meat as he passes.
Zachary has to stop at the corner as a large Budweiser truck rumbles through the red light, horn wailing like a siren.
Which way? Which way?
He glimpses a dark blur behind him. Is Cardoza following him?
Zachary shields his eyes with one hand and squints into the sunlight. Yes. The big man is chasing him. Head down like a bull stampeding a toreador. A glint of silver, a flash of light in his hand.
Is he carrying a gun?
3
Maybe itâs a phone.
Zachary darts behind the beer truck, crosses the street.
I can outrun him, but it would be better to hide. Especially if thatâs a gun in his hand.
The branch library stands in the middle of the block. The front window appears dark. Is it open? With the budget cuts, itâs closed a lot of days. Zachary trots to the door, tugs the handle. Yes. Open. He swings the door just wide enough to slip inside.
Shouts outside. Is it Cardoza? The sound cuts off as the glass door closes behind him.
The librarian, a young woman, black bangs cropped across her forehead, red-framed glasses glinting in the light over the front desk, perched on a tall wooden stool, almost lost
Ditter Kellen and Dawn Montgomery
David VanDyke, Drew VanDyke