| Previously...
Under Victor's
mind control, Heather attempted to shoot Jordan. Brett
arrived to stop her but not before taking a bullet in
the shoulder. Brett and Jordan got Heather restrained
and tried to decide what to do. When Suzanne showed
up, Jordan panicked. Victor kidnapped Heather
and Suzanne and took them to his yacht at the marina.
Jordan and Brett met Eddie at the slip and saw
that it was gone. Meanwhile, Blake told Benji
that something was going down at the marina and they
needed to get there because it had to do with Suzanne.
Episode
95
"One
Man Show"
.
. . . . . . . March, 1996 . . . . . . . .
On the day that his wife left him,
Victor Distefano sent his boys off to school, phoned his best friend Nathan in Paris, fixed himself a
bourbon and soda, watched a recording of his performance in King Lear, and then decided he was going
to kill himself.
It came to him when
he realized he couldn’t imagine going on without her. They had shared many years together, had two
sons, were popular among their peers, and had amassed a great fortune due to
his popularity as a leading movie star.
His entire life had been devoted to Sylvie and their marriage. Now, after a brief affair with Jordan Rydell,
she decided that she was no longer in love with him. She packed her things and she moved to Fresno to be with her
family.
After
he finished his drink, he calmly wrote a three page suicide note. He was quite pleased with the result. It was an epic masterpiece, mixing drama with
humorous anecdotes and a few Shakespearean quotations. In it he listed his top ten performances,
boasting of the wide range of genres they had encompassed. He
decided he should have taken up writing in addition to his tenure as a stage
and screen actor. He was quite sure his
final words would be studied in theatre groups, borrowed for monologues and
quoted in journals. It was the literary work of the nineties.
He sealed the pages
in an envelope, addressed it to his fans,
and then walked to the garage and got a rope.
He fashioned a crude noose and threw it over one of the wooden beams
that lined the living room ceiling. He
pulled a chair from the dining room and climbed up, positioned the noose around
his neck, and prepared to take his last breath.
“Goodbye world,” he
said, then summoned the first line he could think of that would describe his
life and death. “I am a man - more sinn’d against than sinning.”
When
his cell phone rang, he sighed with irritation before plucking it from his
interior chest pocket. He looked at the
display and saw that it was Alex Reynolds calling.
“Alex,
so good to hear from you,” he said after answering.
“Thank
you. I’m sorry about the short notice,
but James and I are having a dinner party tonight at the mansion. He wanted me to invite you
and Sylvie. There’s a role he wants to discuss with you. “
Victor
rubbed his chin with his thumb and forefinger.
“What kind of role?” he inquired with a certain amount of curiosity in
his voice.
“Well,
not so much a role as a voiceover for his Chinese documentary.”
The
prospect was intriguing to Victor.
Documentary voiceover? This was
new territory. An untapped resource to
his talents. How could he think of killing himself before he
mastered every aspect of acting?
“Victor?”
Alex asked. “Are you there?”
He
nodded. “Yes. Sylvie
won't be able to make it, but tell James I will be there. Now if you’ll excuse me, I really should save
my voice.”
After
he hung up, Victor pulled the rope from around his neck, got off the chair and
went to the mirror to practice his vocal exercises.
“Today
is not a good day to die,” he said, stretching his mouth and jaw while admiring
his technique. For a brief moment he
wondered if he would be able to hold it together in the face of so many
onlookers who would be attending the dinner party. Would they know his wife left him? Would they gossip and sneer?
The
thoughts boiled over until he’d come to a solution. Was he not a classically trained actor? Hadn’t he worn many faces over the
years? Adopted personas and
characters? He would simply create a new
one. One whose wife had not fallen in
love with another man and left him.
.
. . . . . . .
That
evening he proceeded to the dinner party and talked in length to James about
the voiceover. His new character was
convincing. No one regarded him as a
lonely man whose wife had abandoned him.
It was an acting triumph. On the
way home it began raining heavily. He
went inside and moments later there was a visitor at the front gate. He could hear her screams through the
driving rain.
“Damn
you Sylvie!” Suzanne screamed, her tears washing away in the rain as she
grabbed the cold bars and shook the gate surrounding the house. “You get out here right now! I want you to tell me to my face what you did
to my family!”
“Mommy,
stop!” Heather cried from the car. She
honked the horn in hopes of garnering her attention.
“Is
that you, Suzanne?” Victor called through the wind and the rain. He approached from the house dressed in an
orange rain slicker and carrying a black umbrella. “What are you doing out here?”
“I
want to talk to you wife!” Suzanne screamed.
“Sylvie’s
gone,” he replied over the howl of the wind. He continued using his adopted persona. It wouldn’t do for Rydell’s wife to see him a
broken man. “She left for Fresno this morning. I know what she and Jordan did, Suzanne. It doesn’t matter now. Just go home.”
“You
tell her to come back here and tell me that to my face!” Suzanne screamed
amidst a flood of tears and rain.
“Go
home!” he yelled. His character didn’t
care that Sylvie had left him. “I’ve
moved on and you need to move on too!
This isn’t helping you or your children!’
Suzanne
shook the bars and wiped her eyes. “Damn
you Victor Distefano!” she screamed.
“I’m not going to let her get away with this! I’m not going to let either one of them get
away with this!”
“Mommy,
don’t!” Heather cried, running out of the car and pulling Suzanne back. “Let’s go home! Please!”
Suzanne
finally started back to the car, pushing her sopping wet hair from her
face. “It isn’t fair,” she cried
somberly. “But they’re going to pay for
this! I swear they’ll pay for this!’
They
drove off and Victor went back inside, pleased with himself for downplaying the
situation. It wasn’t until the next day
that he learned of their accident on the cliff.
Heather’s medical crisis was only minor compensation for what Jordan had done
to him. A better scenario would have
been Jordan himself perishing in the crash.
.
. . . . . . .
Weeks
later, he attended another party at the Blackthornes. His new persona accompanied him. It was getting harder to differentiate it
from his real self. The party was for the
premiere of Beijing Dance. He enjoyed a brief conversation with Renee
and Kenny DeWitt about Jordan and his family.
“It’s
so tragic,” Renee said, her arm latched through Kenny’s. “That poor girl.”
“Jordan says
she’s going to recover,” Kenny said.
“Thank
God,” Victor said with as much sincerity as he could muster. His character was very compassionate, he
decided. Someone that a person could
confide in.
“Yes,
but she can’t remember anything about the accident. Poor Suzanne blames herself. She was upset and shouldn’t have been
driving. Especially in the rain.”
“It
could happen to anyone,” Victor agreed.
“She
doesn’t see it that way,” Renee sighed.
“I mean this is really tearing her apart. I’m afraid she’s going to lose it.”
“I’m
sure she’s not going to lose it, Renee,” Kenny argued.
“You
don’t know that. I think she needs to
see a psychiatrist. She and Jordan
barely communicate. I can only do so
much. She needs a professional. Someone who can really listen and offer some
guidance.”
“That’s
exactly what she needs,” Victor said with a reassuring smile.
.
. . . . . . .
The
next day he paid Lenny Korvanski a visit in the makeup building at Sunset Studios. Lenny had worked there for years, was a long-time
friend of Nathan’s, and owed him a favor or two. He collected what he needed, modeled for a
latex mask, and went off to set up his new office space.
It
wasn’t hard to start a chain of communication that eventually led to Renee
recommending a newly arrived psychiatrist to Suzanne. By the time she wound up on the couch in his
office, he had everything in place. It
was easy enough to fool her. The mask,
the beard, the glasses, different mannerisms, not to mention his knack for summoning
various dialects. The new
character he’d adopted finally had a name.
Dr. Julian Wainwright.
“Your
guilt over your daughter’s accident is a powerful thing,” he said to her. “It’s my job to help you cope with that
guilt.”
“I’m
just tired of feeling this way,” Suzanne cried on the leather sofa in the small
office. “I hate what Jordan’s affair has done to my
family. If he had never slept with
Sylvie Distefano, I wouldn’t have been driving that night, Heather wouldn’t
have been in the car with me, and she wouldn’t have almost died on that cliff.”
“Has
he seen her again?” Victor asked.
“Sylvie, I mean.”
She
shook her head. “No. She moved to Fresno shortly after. She left her husband and their boys. God, they ruined so many lives with their
selfishness.”
“And
yet you stay with him. Why?”
Suzanne
broke down in tears, wiping her eyes and trying to regain her composure. “For Heather.
She’s recovering but she’s different.
She hasn’t remembered the accident or what led up to it. They don’t know that she ever will. I just can’t take away the only thing that
she knows. Her family.”
“You
mentioned a man,” Victor went on. “Jordan’s
brother. Where does he fit in?”
She
shook her head dismissively. “He
doesn’t. Troy is sweet and attentive and he’s helped
me through all of this. I can talk to
him about things that I can’t with Jordan.”
Victor
fidgeted with his beard and glasses, rising from his chair. “You’re very upset,” he began. “I’d like to try something to help you relax
and to help you deal with some of this guilt.
I have some experience in hypnotherapy.”
“Hypnosis?”
Suzanne asked. “Do you think that would
help?”
He
walked over to her and placed a hand on her shoulder. “It’s worth a try.”
For
the next few weeks he’d succeeded in planting a powerful hypnotic
suggestion. One that would lead to her
murdering her husband.
.
. . . . . . .
The
night it was set to happen he threw a party for Blake’s fifth birthday
just in case he needed an alibi. Jordan came. He didn’t argue or throw a tantrum or kick
him out. He didn’t think it was
something Dr. Wainwright would do. Dr.
Wainwright was compassionate. Besides,
it was probably the last time he’d see Jordan alive.
He’d already mailed
the CD to Suzanne. Once she heard the
song, it would activate the suggestion and the rest would take care of
itself. Finally he would have his
revenge.
The next day there was
nothing in the newspapers that detailed the brutal murder of the acclaimed film
producer. Victor began to feel
anxious. He drove by the house a few
times but saw nothing, not even a car in the driveway.
The suspense
killing him, Victor went to Sunset
Studios to see Suzanne. She was to
start work today on Monaco. He was waived on through the gate and proceeded up to the sound stages.
Upon entering, he found James and Frank frantically storming about the
set.
“Well somebody’s
got to know where the hell she is!” James was shouting into the phone. “I don’t care if Jordan isn’t available. Get me her goddamn agent!”
The film’s co-star,
Jack Childers, passed by Victor who stopped him with a tug of his sleeve.
“Jack, what’s going
on?” he asked.
The man
shrugged and screwed up his face.
“Suzanne didn’t show up for her call this morning.”
“Where is she?”
“Beats me. But James and Frank are pissed. They’re talking about replacing her with
Catherin Montana.”
Victor frowned and
listened intently as James continued his frantic phone call. He began to wonder if something had gone
amiss during the night. Did Suzanne
finish the job or not?
He decided to wait
it out. Two days passed and he kept
checking the newspapers. One the second
day he positioned himself a block way from Jordan’s house, watching for any
movement. That night at ten-thirty the
car pulled into the driveway and Jordan stepped out onto the
pavement. Victor’s jaw dropped.
.
. . . . . . .
He spent the next
week locked away in his bedroom, refusing to leave or to answer to anyone,
including his children. Eddie called
Stormy who told his mother who came by to check out the situation.
“Victor!” Alex
called from the bottom of the stairs.
“Victor, it’s Alex! Please come
downstairs!”
When he didn’t
answer, she tentatively walked up and positioned herself outside the
door. She knocked firmly and waited for
a response.
“Go away!” he
screamed.
“Victor, I won’t
leave until you open the door. Now I
don’t know what’s gotten into you but you have to talk to me.”
“It’s over,” he
said. “My wife is gone and my life is
over. Nothing I’ve done can stop that.”
“What have you
done?” Alex demanded and tried the lock again.
“Victor, answer me.”
“I only wanted to
make him pay.”
“Who?” Alex asked. “Make who pay?”
Silence followed,
prompting Alex to try the door again.
She twisted the doorknob over and over, hoping to jar it loose. A moment later, the door opened and Victor
stood before her.
“Hello Syl,” he
said. “I knew you would come back.”
Alex regarded him
carefully. “Victor, it’s me, Alex. Alex Reynolds. Is everything okay?”
He looked at her
with confusion evident in his watery eyes.
“Alex, I’m sorry,” he said with a nervous laugh. “Of course.
Of course you’re not Sylvie. I should
know that, shouldn’t I?"
“Victor-“ She was alarmed by the nonsensical things he
was saying to her. He looked positively
lost.
Victor walked into
the bedroom and sat down. Holding his
head in his hands, he tried to sort things out in his head. Dr. Wainwright was slipping away. The confident, caring, compassionate man was
out of his grasp. All he felt now was
the same sense of despair the day Sylvie left and he tried to kill himself
“I’m calling Dr. Madison,”
Alex said, pulling her cell phone from her purse and dialing the number for her
psychiatrist. She knew he made house
calls, and if there was ever a time this was it.
Dr. Madison
prescribed a psychotropic drug that Victor took for the next twelve years. Dr. Wainwright had vanished. He no longer needed him to cope. In his mind, he’d killed him. He acted it out with the utmost care and
detail.
Then one day he
found the three page suicide note that he’d written the day Sylvie left tucked
away in a bureau. Every emotion, every
feeling of betrayal, and every ounce of resentment toward Jordan Rydell came
flooding back to him. He stopped taking his pills.
.
. . . . . . .
When Heather Rydell
was revealed to be Will Thomerson’s killer, he knew what he had to do. Dr. Wainwright was dead, so a new persona was
created in his place. Dr. Erich Anderson
became his next character project. He
paid Lenny another visit at Sunset
Studios. The hypnotherapy took much
longer this time. Heather was resistant
to the treatment. She couldn’t remember
much of what happened so the challenge was greater. But once he had put her in his control, he
was sure that his plan would work.
He called her last
night at her condo, certain that it was time to put the plan into motion. He had no other alternative. Her overbearing husband, Brett Armstrong, had
discovered his disguise. It was only a
matter of time before he put two and two together. Then
they would call Dr. Madison and learn of his troubles.
“Are you alone?” he
asked when Heather picked up the phone.
“Yes.” She peered out into the living room where
Brett and Jordan were talking.
“It’s time,” he
told her. “Hear my voice, Heather. You must come to the Yacht Club. Meet me at cabin 13.”
She hung up, walked
to the window in a trance, and climbed down the fire escape.

.
. . . . . . . Present Day . . . . . . . .
The fog grew
thicker as night rolled into the marina.
The Emporer II bobbed up and
down on the water, a single light emanating from its interior cabin. On the deck, a deadly scene was
unfolding.
Victor stood on the
deck of the yacht, restraining Suzanne with an arm around her neck and a gun
pointed at her head. She twisted in his
grasp, whimpering and crying in horror at the sight of her daughter standing in
a trance on the outside of the deck railing.
Her eyes were open, staring out into the blanket of fog. Her feet were dangerously close to the
edge. Another few inches and she would
plummet down into the choppy ocean water.
In her hazy state, she would never survive.
“Let us go,
please!” Suzanne cried, struggling in Victor’s clutches. “Why are you doing this to us? Victor, please!”
“Why?”
he asked, a chilling smile spread across his face. “Why, you ask? Ask your loving husband why. Ask him what his
actions have done to my family. Ask him
if sleeping with my wife was worth all the pain and the misery. Ask him if he was prepared to lose everything
like I have. ASK JORDAN WHY!”
She
winced, cringing away from him but he tightened his arm around her neck. She’d
never been more terrified in her life, both for herself and for her
daughter.
“This
has nothing to do with Heather!” she pleaded, gasping for air, choking on her
own tears. “Let her go! Please, Victor! Tell her to step down from the rail!”
“And
ruin my only chance of retribution?” he cackled. “No, I’m afraid not. Jordan has foiled every other
attempt I’ve made to pay him back for what he did.”
“What?”
Suzanne asked, confusion setting in.

Back
on the docks, Benji and Blake arrived and raced toward Eddie who stood peering
out into the fog. The yacht had all but
disappeared into the gossamer. He turned
and shook his head as if to warn them of the perilous circumstances.
“Eddie,
what’s going on?” Benji demanded.
“What’s this about my mother?”
“She’s
with my father and Heather,” he explained.
The
information processed slowly and with great difficulty. Any mention of his mother in the present
tense was something he was unfamiliar with.
“Where?”
he simply asked.
“Out
there,” Eddie told him and motioned toward the water. “On my father’s yacht. He took them.
Like, against their will.”
“What
the-“ Blake uttered, turning around and pacing in a small circle. “What are you even talking about, dude? This is our dad. You’re saying he kidnapped them?”
“That’s
just it. He isn’t out dad,” Eddie
corrected him. “Not when he’s off those
pills. Dr. Madison said he’s someone
else. He pretends to be other people and
then he starts to believe it. The pills
were the only thing keeping him sane.”
“Jesus!”
Blake shouted. He stopped and turned to
Benji. “This is because of your family, isn’t it? Your freaky family turned my dad into a
psycho!”
Benji
blinked, looking at his best friend and feeling for once in his life at a loss
for words. “I don’t know, I-“
“Your
dad had an affair with my mom and that’s why she left us!” Blake shouted,
grabbing Benji by the shirt and pushing him down onto the dock. “She left us because your father was nailing
her!”
“Blake,
stop it!” Eddie leapt forward and pulled
his brother off of him. Once he’d successfully
gotten them separated, he eyed him with contempt. “You knew?”
“Yes,
I knew!” Blake yelled with irritation, wiping sweat from his forehead with his sleeve.
Benji
remained on his back, watching them with wide eyes.
“But
how? You were only five when she left.”
“I
heard them arguing once.” He gritted his
teeth and turned toward Benji again.
“About how our mother didn’t love our father anymore. Jordan Rydell took her from him! He screwed her and then he brainwashed her
against my father!”
“Sounds
like your mom was a slut,” Benji said and jumped to his feet.
“You
ass,” Blake spat, roaring toward him with his fists clenched.
“Knock
it off!” Eddie ordered and shoved his brother away. “Focus on what’s important. Our father is out there somewhere with Heather
and her mom, and he’s probably going to kill them.”
Benji
looked out into the water. “Where’s my
dad?”

The
speedboat slowed when it got near the yacht.
Jordan
cut the engine and silenced Brett with a finger over his lips. They could hear Suzanne’s cries coming from
the top deck.
Jordan
maneuvered the small boat over to the ladder and pointed upward. Brett nodded and followed him, his shoulder
aching each time he pulled himself up on the rungs. Once on the deck, they crouched down, making
sure they were hidden from view. They
could see Heather standing perfectly still against the rail as if ready to
jump.
“It
was supposed to be him in the car
that night!” Victor was saying, still restraining Suzanne. “Jordan was supposed to die on that
cliff. I fixed the brakes but I didn’t
know it would be you driving. When you left my house that night with
Heather and it was raining I had no idea what was going to happen. It didn’t even occur to me that you had taken
his car.”
“You’re
responsible for the crash?” Suzanne wept in disbelief. The guilt she’d carried around for so long
was useless. Victor had been the one to
cause the accident that wiped out Heather’s memories and that set into motion
so much heartache.
“Yes,
but a lot of good it did me,” Victor said, jamming the barrel of the gun into
her temple. “Jordan ruined everything. He stopped you from killing him. I gave
you one simple instruction, and that idiot Troy Beauchamp came in and messed
everything up. You killed him by mistake
and then you got yourself thrown into a mental institution!”
“Oh
my God,” Suzanne sobbed, realization finally dawning. Victor and Dr. Wainwright were the same
person. He used their sessions to get
her to do his bidding.
Jordan
watched helplessly. Victor had a gun and
Heather was perched to take a nose dive into the choppy ocean waves. He had to approach him with care.
He
searched the deck for a weapon he could use.
Inside an emergency kit he found a flare gun. Motioning to Brett, he handed it over to him
and whispered a quickly hastened plan.
Brett nodded, taking the flare gun from him and darting across the deck
where he hid behind a sail post.
“And
if that wasn’t enough,” Victor went on.
“He ruined everything yet again.
Tonight he was finally going to meet his maker. Heather was poised to end his miserable
selfish life. Even that didn’t work.”
“I
won’t let you hurt my daughter!” Suzanne screamed.
“Oh,
I’m sorry,” Victor said wickedly.
“Didn’t I tell you? You’ll be
dead too. If I can’t have Jordan’s
blood on my hands, then I’ll have his precious wife and daughter’s. At least then he’ll know what it feels like
to lose the most important person in his life.”
“No!”
Suzanne cried, struggling with all her might.
“Heather! Heather please wake
up! Wake up and snap out of it!”
“It
won’t help!” Victor said. “Mine is the
only voice she hears.” He turned to
Heather and spoke loudly. “Heather, I
want you to take a step forward.”
“God,
no!” Suzanne protested, sobbing uncontrollably.
“Heather, no! Don’t, baby,
please!”
As
instructed, Heather took a step forward.
Her feet were half over the edge of the deck. She didn’t see the ten foot waves rolling
against the hull of the vessel, tearing apart driftwood that bobbed along the
surface.
“She’s
going to die!” Victor shouted. “And
you’re going to watch her die! Then I’m
going to kill you and deliver your bloody heart to Jordan’s doorstep so he can see
that his actions have consequences!”
“Please…”
Suzanne whimpered.
“Heather…”
Victor continued. “I want you to take
another step forward.”
Suddenly,
Jordan
realized he had no time to waste. He
darted from his hiding spot and raced to the deck railing. He could see Heather positioning one foot in
front of the other, stepping into mid-air.
She started her descent. Jordan
leapt forward, arms outstretched.
Suzanne’s screams pierced the night.
With
less than a second to spare, Jordan
managed to grab hold of Heather’s right hand, stopping her from falling to the
choppy ocean waves. He saw her look down
and then up again. For a split second it
seemed that she had come out of the spell.
He recognized his daughter somewhere behind her frightened eyes.
“Not
this time!” Victor shouted when he realized what was happening. “You won’t ruin it this time, Jordan. I won’t let you!”
He
fired the gun into the air, then hit Suzanne with the ball of his hand. She tumbled back and slammed against the
deck. Before she knew it, Victor was
standing over her with the gun aimed at her head.
“Time
to say goodbye again, Suzanne,” he said, moving his finger onto the
trigger. “Sorry your big return was so
short lived.”
“Victor!”
Brett yelled to get his attention.
When Victor looked
up from his task, Brett pointed the flare gun at him and fired two shots into
his chest.
Fire
spread quickly, first igniting his arms and then making its way to his
chest. He howled in pain, swatting at
the flames and dropping the gun in sheer panic.
Brett
took the opportunity to aid Jordan
in pulling Heather to safety. He dashed
to the edge of the deck and grabbed Heather’s other hand. Together they hoisted her up until she was
safely back on the yacht.
“Oh
my God, are you okay?” Brett asked, looking into her eyes.
She
looked around their surroundings, first at Jordan and then back at Brett
again. Slowly she nodded her head in
reply.
“I
think so,” she said.
Brett
and Jordan looked at each other, relieved that she seemed to have snapped out
of the hypnotic state Victor had put her in.
Jordan’s
worst fears were that she would remain in her altered state indefinitely the
way Suzanne had. Maybe his daughter was
stronger than he’d realized.
He
turned just in time to see Victor engulfed in flames from head to toe. He darted over to Suzanne and pulled her out
of harms way. Together they watched as
Victor ran about the deck, arms flailing, his entire body a massive ball of
fire. He screamed and howled in pain,
rolling on the ground in a desperate attempt to smother the flames.
Finally,
he raced to the edge of the railing. The
last thing they heard before he jumped was a chilling final warning.
“We’ll be back!” he
cackled. “We’ll be back and then you’ll
be sorry!”
Moments later they heard the splash as his body
hit the water. Jordan raced to the edge of the
yacht and peered down. Through the
blackness of night and the thick layers of fog it was impossible to see
anything. Ominous silence followed. There were no sounds of struggling in the
water or of splashing as he tried to swim to safety.
“He’s dead,” Brett
said when he appeared behind him.
Jordan shook his
head. “I don’t think so.”
“Come on. He won’t be able to make it back to
shore. And even if he did, do you think
it’ll take any time for someone to spot him?
He’s probably burned beyond recognition.
That’s gonna be impossible to overlook.”
Jordan sighed, hoping
that Brett was right. Victor had caused
too much pain for his family as it was.
The last thing he wanted to do was sit around waiting for the day when
he might come back.
They both turned,
confronted with the unexpected sight of Heather and Suzanne embracing one
another amidst a flood of tears and joy.
Jordan
ran a hand over his face, uncertain of what the next step was in this whole
mess. Victor may be out of the way, but
Suzanne’s reappearance was only bound to complicate matters with Heather and
Benji.

Jordan steered the yacht
back to the dock through the dense fog.
Brett sat holding Heather while Suzanne stared off in deep
concentration.
By the time they
reached the shore, the lights from an approaching police car became visible through the
haze. Once Jordan stepped down onto the damp
wooden planks, he saw that Benji was waiting.
They stopped and looked at each other for a moment before Suzanne came
down after him.
Jordan looked at his son
and then back at Suzanne, waiting in anticipation for some kind of explosive
reaction from either one. Instead, Benji
regarded his mother carefully for a moment or two. He didn’t move or react, instead simply
stared at her as if gauging whether she were real or not.
Finally, “Benji,”
Suzanne uttered, her hands nervously finding a place to rest.
No reaction. Benji, desperate to piece together the
confusing course of events, labored over what to say or do. All he could see when he looked at her was
the woman who abandoned him when he was five years old. He thought his father had killed her in cold
blood. He’d thought so for his entire
life. Not that that was her fault, but
if she was alive then she did nothing to prove it to him.
“Benji, I’ve missed
you so much,” Suzanne said, tears welling up in her eyes.
Irrevocably, he
made his decision. Without leaving time
for protest, he turned and darted away, disappearing into the night.
“Benji!” Jordan called
after his son. “Benji, wait!”
Suzanne looked at
him and shook her head. She knew it
would be impossible for him to forgive her yet, if ever.
Jordan had barely enough
time for concern before Eddie and Blake approached, demanding answers.
“Where is he?”
Eddie asked. “Where’s my dad?”
Jordan took a deep
breath, trying desperately to find an easy way to break the news to the two
young men. “I’m sorry, Eddie. We tried to reason with your father but he
was…” He took a breath and before
continuing, “he was insane.”
“Duh,” Eddie
lamented and offered a scrunched up face.
“I know he’s insane. So where is
he?” He turned to the yacht and raised
his voice. “Dad! Hey, Dad, get out here and take your goddamn
medication already!”
Jordan shook his head and
placed a hand on Eddie’s arm. “No, son,
he’s not in there.”
“So where is he?”
Eddie demanded. “Don’t tell me he got
away. We need to get him in to his
shrink before he really goes off the
deep end.”
“He tried to kill
them,” Jordan
said. “Several times. Your father was not thinking clearly. He went overboard, Eddie. I don’t know if he survived.”
“You don’t know?”
Blake asked, his voice filled with hostility.
He looked out at the water. “What
do you mean you freaking don’t know?”
“The water’s pretty
choppy, and with the fog…” Jordan
decided they didn’t need to know that they set their father on fire. The whole ordeal was hard enough as it
was. “He jumped.”
“You Rydell’s ruin
everything,” Blake said through gritted teeth. “Every last one of you!”
“Blake, lay off,”
Eddie said in hopes of calming down his little brother.
“You came back,”
Blake went on, pointing to Suzanne, “but my mom is still gone and never calls
us. We haven’t even seen her in I don’t
know how long. Now my dad may be dead
and we’re supposed to just take it?
Whatfuckingever. I am so done
with this.”
With that, he
turned and raced to his car. Eddie
turned to Jordan
and thanked him for telling them. He
went after Blake in hopes of calming him down.
With the latest
series of outbursts behind them, Jordan geared up for the next set
of problems. Detective Callahan
approached from the police car. A
uniformed officer hovered behind. She
looked at Jordan
and smiled as if to say how did I know
you would be here?
"Mr. Rydell, were
you aware that there was a fog warning issued at the marina tonight?” Stephanie
said, resting her hands on her hips.
“Yet you were out on the water in this….thing. Need I remind you that you are out on bail
and anything you do can be subject to re-incarceration? That means you can spit on the sidewalk and I
can haul your ass back to jail.”
“He didn’t take the
yacht,” Suzanne spoke out timidly.
Behind her, Brett and Heather stepped down from the top deck of the
yacht.
Stephanie frowned,
knowing she recognized Suzanne from somewhere but unable to place it. “And you would be?”
“His wife,” she
said, then immediately corrected herself.
“Ex-wife.”
Stephanie raised an
eyebrow and surveyed the group again.
“Suzanne Rogers?”
“Yes.”
“I see.” Her eyes settled back on Jordan. “Looks like we have a lot to talk about.”

Benji gulped from a
flask of vodka while he careened through traffic in West
Hollywood, leaving the blanket of fog behind him, as well as the
screwed up dysfunction that was his family.
Blake had been right. They were
all freaks. He didn’t know where his
mother had been for nearly thirteen years and right now he couldn’t care
less. If his father had screwed around
with Blake’s mom and that’s what sent his dad insane, then maybe they deserved
whatever he’d tried to do to them. All
he knew was that someone had died because of his parent's screwed up lives, a
death that had screwed him up for as
long as he could remember.
He went back to Area and found Summer Solomon before she
left with Van, who was so wasted that he didn’t notice when she slipped away
with Benji instead. By the time he
realized she’d disappeared, they were making out in the alley behind the
club.
“Are you sure it’s
safe?” Summer asked and looked around the dark alley. “What if someone sees?”
“They won’t,” Benji
told her, his tongue finding its way around the inside her mouth. He lifted her onto the hood of his car and
spread her legs, his fingers returning to their original spot where they’d been
so warm and welcomed before being pulled away a few hours earlier.
“I haven’t done
this before,” Summer said, throwing her head back and closing her eyes as Benji
ran his tongue down the nape of her neck.
“Maybe we should go somewhere else so we can-“
“We’ll be fine
here.” He took charge, pushing up her
skirt and unbuttoning his jeans all at the same time. Inside, he groaned with irritation at her
faux innocent disposition. She was no
unplucked flower. He had four fingers in
her before she even flinched.
He opened her shirt
and admired her small breasts. She
wasn’t wearing a bra but she really didn’t need one. He had a bigger chest than she did. Either way, it wasn’t her breasts that he was
interested in.
“Do you like them?”
she asked with an unconvincing attempt at being coy.
“Yeah,” Benji
replied and pushed her head down between his legs. He closed his eyes and groaned while she
worked on him. He pulled his shirt off
and pushed her down onto the hood of the car.
Finally, he entered her and began thrusting back and forth with great
intensity. He appreciated the look on
her face, which he decided was halfway between a smile and that of excruciating
pain. Maybe she was a virgin after all.
Ten minutes later
he was zipping up his jeans and reaching for his shirt while heading for the
car door.
“Can you take me
home?” she asked, fastening her bra and inching her skirt back down her
legs.
“Sure,” he said
while being alerted to a text message on his phone. He flipped it open and started to read. “Where?”
“Palos Verdes,” she
responded.
Benji looked up
with a frown. “Huh? I’m not driving to freakin’ Palos
Verdes. I’ll call you a cab.”
“Hey!” Summer
shouted and watched as he got into the car and took off through the alley.
Once he’d pulled
out onto Cienega, Benji glanced back at his text. It was from Scott Kelly and it offered a
simple cryptic warning.
Pool boy gave me the clap - U better get tested asap

Cedars-Sinai was busy with emergencies due to car
accidents caused by the fog. The
emergency room buzzed with activity.
Inside a private room, Heather sat next to Brett while the nurse
finished stitching his shoulder. He held
her hand and repeatedly kissed the top of her head. He’d never been more scared in his life as
when they got on that yacht and saw her about to fall overboard. In her state of mind she would never have
been able to keep afloat. The fact that
he almost lost her didn’t escape him for a second.
“How is Violet?”
Heather asked. “Is she safe? Does she miss me?”
"Yes, she’s safe,”
he said. “She’s with Rachel, Brooke’s
nanny. She misses her mom a lot, you can
count on that.”
A smile formed on
Heather’s lips as she thought about their beautiful daughter.
“Do you remember
much?” Brett asked her after a long period of silence.
She shook her
head. “No.”
The news was
unsettling. He’d hoped that something
would have triggered her to remember. It
seemed pointless. Everything was out in
the open but she was still missing so many pieces. Maybe they would come back in time, he
decided. No more secrets. He’d make sure Jordan followed through. Heather would have to deal with everything if
she was going to get better. The
accident, the night Suzanne murdered Troy,
the sessions with Victor. There could be
no more secrets.

“No more secrets,” Jordan
said in the interrogation room at the police station.
“That is the whole story. You can
corroborate it with anyone. My
son-in-law or my daughter. Victor Distefano
kidnapped her. She’ll testify to
that. He hypnotized her and tried to get
her to kill me tonight.”
“But your daughter
was the one who shot your son-in-law,” Stephanie said for clarification. “Isn’t that what you told me?”
Jordan closed his eyes
with regret. “Yes, but she was under his
control. You have to understand
that. She didn’t know what she was
doing. Just like Suzanne didn’t know
what she was doing when she killed Troy Beauchamp.”
Stephanie clasped
her hands under her chin and pondered the complicated story. “So your ex-wife murdered your brother, and
your daughter shot her own husband. What
exactly has Victor Distefano done? His
hands are clean from where I stand.”
“He orchestrated
the whole thing!” Jordan
insisted, frustrated beyond belief that he had to go over it again. “He was after me. He tried to kill me three times. And tonight he kidnapped my daughter and her mother. He would have killed them both but-“
“But you set him on
fire and killed him,” Stephanie finished for him. She shook her head and walked across the
room. “I’m sorry but forgive me if I
don’t see your side of this. A man is
dead and the only people who can corroborate your story are your wife who is a
confirmed mental patient; your daughter who doesn’t remember anything; and your
son-in-law, a self-proclaimed former con man.”
Jordan ran his fingers
through his hair. “Just look into
it. You’ll see that I’m right. There’s got to be something. Victor had to have slipped up somewhere.”
“Oh we’re checking
on it,” Stephanie said with certainty, then looked directly at Suzanne. “But in the meantime, I’m going to have to
place you under arrest, Miss Rogers.”
“What?” Jordan bellowed. “You can’t be serious!”
“She did
just confess to the murder of Troy Beauchamp,” Stephanie said and motioned to
the uniformed officer behind her.
Suzanne opened her
mouth to respond but no words would come.
She looked nervously at Jordan
and then back at the officer as he placed a pair of handcuffs around her
wrists.
“Jordan-“ she began, terrified.
“Don’t worry.
I’ll call Kenny. He’ll find
something to incriminate Victor. There’s
got to be a way we can prove our story.”
“And what if we
can’t?” Suzanne asked in tears. She
broke down as the officer led her off to the processing area.

Scott Kelly lived
in a one-story mid-century glass house on Mulholland Drive. Since his split with his wife, Shailene, he’d
began renting it month to month. Benji
had only met him there once during one of their later hookups.
He stopped his car
in the gravel driveway and got out.
Opening the trunk, he rifled through a pile of sports equipment until he
came across an aluminum baseball bat.
Gripping it tightly in his hand, he started up to the front door and
rang the bell. Moments later, Scott
appeared in the doorway dressed in a velour track suit.
“Hey, Benji,” he
said and glanced around to see if anyone saw him drive up. “What are you doing here? It’s not safe. If a reporter showed up-“
“What do you mean
you got Chlamydia?” Benji shouted. “Are
you kidding me right now?”
“Keep your voice
down,” Scott said and gestured into the house.
“Come inside. I don’t need the whole neighborhood hearing about my-“
Benji gritted his
teeth, lifting the bat and slamming it into Scott’s ribcage. He watched him collapse to his knees,
groaning with pain as he hit the pavement.
“Wha-?“ Scott
groaned breathlessly. The wind had
gotten knocked out of him and he struggled to catch his breath.
Benji raised the
bat again and swung it down onto his back.
This time Scott fell flat against the cold cement.
“I….didn’t….know….”
Scott murmured, eyes squeezed shut in excruciating pain.
“Bullshit.” Benji slammed the bat into his head. “You make a habit of spreading that shit
around?”
He choked on his
own vomit, coughing and wheezing as blood sprayed from his nose and mouth. Benji threw the bat aside and kicked him in
the ribs with one shattering blow after another.
Scott remained
motionless in a pool of blood. His face
was black and blue and his eyes were swollen shut. Benji kicked him one final time in the head,
turned and went back to his car. When he
got there, he remembered the bat so he turned back, snatched it up from the
yard and glared at Scott one final time.
Turning, he dumped
the bat into his back seat and started the engine. He peeled away and proceeded down the winding
road. By the time he got to the bottom
of the hill, he was trembling uncontrollably.
He pulled over and slammed his hands against the steering wheel in
anger. He knew none of it had anything
to do with Scott.
He felt claustrophobic
inside the car so he pushed the door open and got out. He grabbed the bat from the back seat and
smashed it against his car repeatedly; breaking glass and denting metal until
he was physically out of energy and could no longer move his arms.
He
walked to the side of the road and threw the bat as far as he could down the
hill. Burying his face in his hands, he
screamed at the top of his lungs. His voice and all of its agony echoed through
the canyon.
Next time....
Miranda
nervously prepares for her plastic surgery while getting
encouragement from a surprising source. James
levels an attack on Alex. Jordan is questioned
by the police about another crime. Renee's defenses
are weakened.
Read
Episode 96
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