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"What I can't figure out is how you fit in," Charlie said. "You must have played an important role in that past time, or they wouldn't all have ganged up on you in this lifetime."
"I know who I was," Sarah said. "In that other lifetime I was one of the *afflicted children.' "
"What makes you think that?" Charlie asked her.
"I know it from my dreams. The visions I saw in the crystal ball were of the future, but my dreams were memories of the past, and all of those dreams were experienced from the viewpoint of a child. The victims had reason to hate me. I triggered the witch-hunt.!"
"You couldn't have been Ann Putnam," Charlie said, frowning. "Ann received her punishment in her own lifetime. She was excommunicated, which was a fate worse than death in Salem Village, and then she became a semi-invalid. Before she died, she was finally granted Communion, but only after she delivered a public confession and begged G.o.d's forgiveness."
"I know," Sarah said. "And it was that way with most of the others. In general the *afflicted children' led miserable lives. All except for Betty Parris. Betty didn't even get a slap on the wrist. Her father sent her to Boston to live with relatives, and she had a happy childhood and a wonderful life. Don't the rules of karma say that what goes around comes around? If we don't pay our debts in one lifetime, we pay them in another?"
"Betty was only nine years old," Charlie protested.
"That's not too young to take responsibility for your actions. It was Betty who started the witch-hunt, and Betty who could have stopped it. All she had to do was confess to her father."
"Who may or may not have believed her," Charlie said. "We can't second-guess the past, we can only learn from it. How did your mother react to Eric's story about the hazing?"
"She didn't buy it," Sarah told him. "She took one look at that gallows and announced, *We're out of here!' Rosemary and I are moving back to Ventura. She's already made arrangements to have our furniture s.h.i.+pped as soon as we find a new apartment. And the great thing is that she's been able to get her old job back! She'll be teaching at a different grade level, but at least it will be at the same school."
"What about Mr. Thompson?"
"She seems to have lost all interest in him," Sarah said. "She says he can follow us if he wants to, but she doesn't seem concerned about it. Just like flicking a switch, she's become the old Rosemary. It's like she just can't wait to take control of her life again."
"It's the same with my folks," Charlie said. "Now that our karma has been satisfied, they're making plans to leave Pine Crest as soon as I graduate. Dad says he wants to open another bookstore, but he isn't sure where yet."
"I'm going to miss you," Sarah said.
"When you see me again, I'll be skinny."
"I don't know that I want you to be skinny. I've gotten kind of used to you."
She leaned over the bed to plant a goodbye kiss on his cheek. Instead he reached up and cupped her head in his left hand, so that he was in charge of her kiss and it landed on his lips. It was not, as she would have expected, the fumbling kiss of a boy who was unused to dating but the practiced kiss of a man who knew exactly what he was doing.
Charlie released her head and smiled at her astonishment.
"In one of my former lifetimes I was Casanova," he said. "I'll tell you about it when I visit you. Or maybe it would be better to save it for the cruise s.h.i.+p?"
"The choice is yours," Sarah said, trying to keep her voice steady and having a hard time doing it. She drew a long breath to stabilize herself and reached into her purse. "I brought you a little memento to make sure you don't forget me."
"Fat chance of that," Charlie said.
"Stop trying to be funny."
She took out the crystal paperweight and placed it on the windowsill next to the flowers. Sunlight streamed through it, throwing rainbows on the sheets of Charlie's bed.
It was clear and transparent as window gla.s.s.
A Biography of Lois Duncan.
Lois Duncan is the author of more than fifty books for young adults. Her stories of mystery and suspense have won dozens of awards, and many have been named Best Books for Young Adults by the American Library a.s.sociation. Some of her novels have been adapted for film, including I Know What You Did Last Summer and Hotel for Dogs.
Lois Duncan was born Lois Duncan Steinmetz in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on April 28, 1934. Her parents, Lois and Joseph Janney Steinmetz, were both professional photographers. Since her parents' work required travel, Duncan and her brother often tagged along, and these trips supplied Duncan with ample writing material. Duncan began writing poetry and stories as soon as she could spell. By age ten she was submitting her work to magazines, and she had her first story published nationally when she was only thirteen years old.
That same year the family moved to Sarasota, Florida. Duncan spent many hours daydreaming and writing near the family's house on the beach. Through her teen years her work was frequently published by magazines such as Seventeen and the Sat.u.r.day Evening Post.
Duncan briefly attended Duke University, but left school after one year to marry and start a family. She didn't abandon writing, however, and she published her first book, Debutante Hill (1957), after winning a contest conducted by Dodd, Mead & Company, a major publis.h.i.+ng house that has since ceased operations. Her work helped support her family while her husband attended law school.
Duncan had three children with her first husband. After they divorced, Duncan moved to Albuquerque, New Mexico. There she taught journalism at the University of New Mexico and finished her own college degree. She met and married Don Arquette, with whom she had two more children. Even while producing hundreds of articles for magazines such as Reader's Digest and Ladies Home Journal, Duncan penned dozens of books.
Duncan's novels are often filled with suspense and a sense of the eerie and supernatural, with elements including mystic visions and ghostly presences. In books such as Gallows Hill (1997), her protagonists face unexplainable phenomena while being pressured by cla.s.smates or friends to fit in and ignore their instincts. Much of Duncan's fiction, such as Ransom (1966), They Never Came Home (1968), and The Twisted Window (1987), hinges on missing children, abductions, and the terror of accidental separation.
In 1989, Duncan suffered a great tragedy when her youngest daughter, Kaitlyn, was shot to death at age eighteen. The crime was never solved, and Duncan's own investigation into the Albuquerque shooting became the basis of her 1992 nonfiction t.i.tle Who Killed My Daughter? The book digs into the original murder investigation, and describes how Duncan's daughter and members of the Albuquerque police force seem to have been caught in a complicated web of organized crime.
Lois Duncan now lives with her husband in Florida, where she continues to write.
Duncan was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on April 28, 1934. Her parents, Joseph Janney and Lois Foley Steinmetz, were professional photographers.
Duncan's parents enjoyed creating homemade Christmas cards. Because Duncan was named after her mother, her parents called her "Mimi," and that nickname appears on some of those cards. Duncan insisted on switching to "Lois" when she started school.
Duncan's brother, Bill, was born in 1937. This was his first appearance in a family Christmas card.
In kindergarten, Duncan composed rhymed verse, which she recited at show-and-tell. Instead of the praise she expected, she was punished and had to give up her snack. Her teacher thought Duncan was lying about writing the poems and had stolen them from a published writer. At age ten, Duncan began submitting stories to magazines. Her ma.n.u.scripts were rejected, but she kept on writing and submitting, until she had acc.u.mulated so many rejection slips that her mother asked her if she wanted to paper a wall with them.
In 1946, Duncan's family moved to Sarasota, Florida, where Duncan and her brother grew up in a rustic, isolated beach house. Today Siesta Key Beach is lined with hotels, but during Duncan's childhood you could walk for miles and never see a soul. It was a perfect place for Duncan to scribble in notebooks and start pecking out stories on a manual typewriter.
Duncan is pictured here in 1950. She dreamed about becoming a professional writer, and at age thirteen, she made her first sale to a national magazine. Because her name, Lois Steinmetz, was the same as her mother's, she decided to use her middle name, Duncan, as a pen name. She continued writing for magazines throughout her teens and eventually earned enough money to buy herself a Jeep.
Duncan's photographer parents often traveled on a.s.signments for magazines. Whenever possible Duncan and her brother went with them, and those expeditions served both as business trips and family vacations.
Everybody in Duncan's family was expected to act as a photo model. This picture, which Duncan's father took of her on a Florida beach, ended up as the cover of Collier's magazine in 1949.
Duncan shown with her two oldest children, Robin and Kerry. A son, Brett, soon followed. Duncan attended Duke University for one year and then dropped out to get married. She wrote her first young adult novel, Debutante Hill, when she was twenty and entered it in a contest. It won the Seventeenth Summer Literary Award and was published as a result. When Duncan's husband entered law school, she continued to write books, which helped pay for his tuition and support their growing family.
In 1962, Duncan divorced, then moved to Albuquerque, New Mexico, with her children. She continued to write books, some of which were starting to win awards, and taught a cla.s.s in magazine writing at the University of New Mexico. In 1965, she married Don Arquette, an electrical engineer who worked in missile design. Arquette adopted her three children and raised them as his own.
In 1967, another son, Don Arquette Jr. (Donnie), joined the family. This portrait was taken one year later, in 1968.
In 1970, another daughter, Kaitlyn Arquette (Kait), was born, and Duncan's family was complete.
The 1970s were happy years, filled with camping trips, ski trips, and the everyday activities of a busy family. Duncan continued to write while also maintaining the family's home. This 1973 photo is the final picture of all family members together before the oldest children started to fly the nest. Back row: Kerry and Brett; front row seated: Don with Donnie, and Duncan with Kait.
Duncan became a student at the University of New Mexico, taking cla.s.ses while also teaching there. In 1976, she graduated c.u.m laude with a BA in English.
Duncan's youngest child, Kait, shown here at age eighteen, graduated from high school with honors in 1989. Kait dreamed of becoming a doctor. She rented her own apartment in Albuquerque, and her boyfriend, Dung Nguyen, moved in with her. Once she was living with Dung, Duncan believes, she discovered that he and his friends were part of a Vietnamese gang and were involved in interstate criminal activities.
On July 15, 1989, Kait announced to her parents that she was breaking up with Dung and had ordered him to move out. That night, while driving to her parents' house after dinner with a girlfriend, Kait was chased down in her car and shot twice.
When police closed the unsolved case as a "random drive-by shooting," Duncan wrote a nonfiction book, Who Killed My Daughter?, to motivate tipsters and to prevent the case from disappearing. Duncan believes that Kait was murdered because she was preparing to become a whistle-blower. Once the book was published, Duncan's family began to receive death threats. They all fled Albuquerque in fear for their own lives.
Although Kait's murder became a cold case, Duncan and Arquette continued their personal investigation with the help of outside detectives. They post their findings online at www.kaitarquette.arquettes.com.
After the publication of Who Killed My Daughter?, many other families of murder victims contacted Duncan, sharing their own experiences with incompetent and fruitless investigations. Duncan and Arquette created a website, www.realcrimes.com, to bring these cases to the media's attention. Duncan helps the families tell their stories and Arquette compiles their doc.u.mentation.
Duncan also volunteers as a resource counselor for a women's crisis center to help women in desperate circ.u.mstances find the help they need.
Duncan has now written more than fifty books and has received many awards. She is most proud of her Margaret A. Edwards Award, which is presented by the American Library a.s.sociation to honor an author for a distinguished body of work for young adults.
The most recent movie based on one of Duncan's novels is Hotel for Dogs (2009). Other film adaptations are forthcoming.
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EBOOKS BY LOIS DUNCAN.
FROM OPEN ROAD MEDIA.
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