they were worried about Beaumontâs sanity during that crucial period between the first book and the second. One says he believes Beaumont may have attempted suicide following the publication of The Sudden Dancers, which earned more critical acclaim than royalties.
Asked if be ever considered suicide, Beaumont only shakes his head and says, âThatâs a stupid idea. The real problem wasnât popular acceptance; it was writerâs block. And dead writers have a terminal case of that. â
Meanwhile, Liz Beaumont kept âlobbyingââBeaumontâs wordâfor the idea of a pseudonym. âShe said I could kick up my heels for once, if I wanted to. Write any damn thing I pleased without The New York Times Book Review looking over my shoulder the whole time I wrote it. She said I could write a Western, a mystery, a science fiction story. Or I could write a crime novel. â
Thad Beaumont grins.
âI think she put that one last on purpose. She knew Iâd been fooling around with an idea for a crime novel, although I couldnât seem to get a handle on it.
âThe idea of a pseudonym had this funny draw for me. It felt free, somehowâlike a secret escape hatch, if you see what I mean.
âBut there was something else, too. Something thatâs very hard to explain. â
Beaumont stretches a hand out toward the neatly sharpened Berols in the mason jar, then withdraws it. He looks off toward the window-wall at the back of his study, which gives on a spring spectacular of greening trees.
âThinking about writing under a pseudonym was like thinking about being invisible,â he finally says almost hesitantly. âThe more I played with the idea, the more I felt that I would be . . . well . . . reinventing myself. â
His hand steals out and this time succeeds in filching one of the pencils from the mason jar while his mind is otherwise engaged.
Thad turned the page and then looked up at the twins in their double high chair. Boy-girl twins were always fraternal . . . or brother-and-sisteral, if you didnât want to be a male chauvinist pig about it. Wendy and William were, however, about as identical as you could get without being identical.
William grinned at Thad around his bottle.
Wendy also grinned at him around her bottle, but she was sporting an accessory her brother didnât haveâone single tooth near the front, which had come up with absolutely no teething pain, simply breaking through the surface of the gum as silently as a submarineâs periscope sliding through the surface of the ocean.
Wendy took one chubby hand from her plastic bottle. Opened it, showing the clean pink palm. Closed it. Opened it. A Wendy-wave.
Without looking at her, William removed one of his hands from his bottle, opened it, dosed it, opened it. A William-wave.
Thad solemnly raised one of his own hands from the table, opened it, closed it, opened it.
The twins grinned around their bottles.
He looked down at the magazine again. Ah, People, he thouhtâwhere would we be, what would we do, without you? This is American star-time, folks.
The writer had dragged out all the soiled linen there was to drag out, of courseâmost notably the four-year-long bad patch after The Sudden Dancers had failed to win the NBAâbut that was to be expected, and he found himself not much bothered by the display. For one thing, it wasnât all that dirty, and for another, he had always felt it was easier to live with the truth than with a lie. In the long run, at least.
Which of course raised the question of whether or not People magazine and âthe long runâ had anything at all in common.
Oh well. Too late now.
The name of the guy who had written the piece was Mikeâhe remembered that much, but Mike what? Unless you were an earl tattling on royalty or a movie star tattling on other movie stars, when you wrote for People your byline came
Douglas Preston, Lincoln Child