WIN Coben, Harlan (best ebook reader for surface pro .TXT) đ
Book online «WIN Coben, Harlan (best ebook reader for surface pro .TXT) đ». Author Coben, Harlan
âI have permission to tell you this,â Sadie begins. âJust so we are clear. Itâs no longer attorney-client privilege because, well, youâll see.â
I say nothing.
âYou know about my hospitalized client?â
âJust that.â
âJust what?â
âThat you have a client who was hospitalized.â
This isnât true, by the way. I know more.
âHow did you find out?â Sadie asks.
âI overheard someone in the office talking about it,â I say.
This is also a lie.
âHer name is Sharyn,â Sadie continues. âNo last name for now. It doesnât matter. Names donât matter. Anyway, her case is textbook. Or it starts out textbook. Sharyn is doing a graduate degree at a large university. She meets a man who works at the same university in a somewhat prestigious job. It starts off great. So many of these do. The man is charming. He flatters her. Heâs super attentive. He talks about their grand future.â
âThey always do that, donât they?â I say.
âPretty much, yeah. Itâs not fair to label every guy who starts sending you flowers and showering you with tons of attention as a psychoâbut, I mean, there is something to it.â
I nod. âNot all overly attentive boyfriends are psychosâbut all psychos are overly attentive boyfriends.â
âWell put, Win.â
I try to look modest.
âSo anyway, the romance starts off great. Like so many of these do. But then it starts to grow weird. Sharyn is in a study group that includes both men and women. The boyfriendâIâm going to call him Teddy, because thatâs the assholeâs nameâdoesnât like that.â
âHe gets jealous?â
âTo the nth degree. Teddy starts asking Sharyn a lot of questions about her guy friends. Interrogating her, really. One day, she checks the search history on her laptop. Someoneâwell, Teddyâhas been looking up her guy friends. Teddy shows up at the library unannounced. To surprise her, he says. One time he brings a bottle of wine and two glasses.â
âAs cover,â I say. âA faux romantic gesture.â
âExactly. The behavior escalates, as again it always does. Teddy gets upset if her study sessions run too late. Sheâs a student. She wants to go to a campus party or two with her friends. Teddy, who works as an assistant coach, insists on going. Sharyn starts to feel the walls closing in. Teddy is everywhere. If she doesnât respond to his texts fast enough, Teddy throws a fit. He starts accusing her of cheating. One night, Teddy grabs Sharynâs arm so hard he bruises her. Thatâs when she breaks up with him. And thatâs when his psycho stalking starts.â
I am not a good sympathetic ear, but I try very hard to appear like one. I try to nod in all the right places. I try to look concerned and mortified. My resting face, if you will allow me to use that annoying colloquialism again, is either disinterested or haughty. I struggle thus to engage and look caring. It takes some effort, but I believe that Iâm pulling it off.
âTeddy shows up unannounced begging her to take him back. On three separate occasions, Sharyn has to call 911 because Teddyâs pounding on her door after midnight. Heâs pleading with her to talk to him, says sheâs being unfair and cruel not to hear him out. Teddy actually cries, he misses her so bad, and eventually he convinces her that sheââhere Sadie makes quote marks with her fingersâââowesâ him the chance to explain.â
âAnd she agrees to meet?â I ask, mostly because I worry Iâve been silent too long.
âYes.â
âThis,â I say. âThis is the part I never get.â
Sadie leans forward and tilts her head to the side. âThatâs because while youâre trying, Win, youâre still too male to get it. Women have been conditioned to please. We are responsible not just for ourselves but everyone in our orbit. We think it is our job to comfort the man. We think we can make things better by sacrificing a bit of ourselves. But youâre also right to ask. Itâs the first thing I tell my clients: If youâre ready to end it, end it. Make a clean break and donât look back. You donât owe him anything.â
âDid Sharyn go back to him?â I ask.
âFor a little while. Donât shake your head like that, Win. Just listen, okay? Thatâs what these psychos do. They manipulate and gaslight. They make you feel guilty, like itâs your fault. They sucker you back in.â
I still donât get it, but thatâs not important, is it?
âAnyway, it didnât last. Sharyn saw the light fast. She ended it again. She stopped replying to his calls and texts. And thatâs when Teddy upped his assholery to the fully psychotic. Unbeknownst to her, he bugged her apartment. He put keyloggers on her computers. Teddy has a tracker on her phone. Then he starts texting her anonymous threats. He stole all her contacts, so he floods mailboxes with malicious lies about herâto her friends, her family. He writes emails and pretends heâs Sharyn and he trashes her professors and friends. On one occasion, he contacts Sharynâs best friendâs fiancĂ©âas Sharynâand says she cheated on him. Makes up a whole story about some incident in a bar that never happened.â
âImaginative,â I say.
âYou donât know the half of it. He starts sending Sharyn messages, pretending to be her friends saying what a fool she
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