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It’s that moment, some people walked away.

 

 Meaning, No. No contact with the outside world. No television or radio or telephone or Internet. Just you and what you bring in your one suitcase.

 

 Meaning more people walked away.

 

 The people who walked away, the first-round survivors. The smart ones who get to tell their own story. The camera behind the camera behind the camera, Mr. Whittier would say. They’ll have their ultimate truth—but just about that night.

 

 Those poor idiots sold short.

 

 We all saw the advertisement, just in different ways. On different bulletin boards around town, it said:

 

 

 WRITERS’RETREAT:

ABANDON YOUR LIFE FOR THREE MONTHS.

 

 Just disappear. Leave behind everything that keeps you from creating your masterpiece. Your job and family and home, all those obligations and distractions—put them on holdfor three months.Live with like-minded people in a setting that supports total immersion in your work. Food and lodging included free for those who qualify. Gamble a small fraction of your life on the chance to create a new future as a professional poet, novelist, screenwriter. Before it’s too late, live the life you dream about. Spaces very limited.

 

 

 The advertisement was printed on an index card. A recipe card. Boxed inside a dashed line, like a coupon you’d cut out. And at the bottom was a phone number. It was Mrs. Clark’s number, stapled to the cork bulletin board in the library foyer. By the restrooms in the back of the supermarket. In the Laundromat. That advertisement on an index card, one week it was everywhere. The next week, it was nowhere.

 

 All the cards had disappeared.

 

 People who saw it, if they called the phone number, they got a recording of Mrs. Clark saying the coffeehouse, the time and date we should all meet.

 

 Already, in our minds, here in the red-and-yellow fake firelight, we could picture the future: the scene of us telling people how we’d taken this little adventure and a crazy man had kept us trapped in an old theater for three months. Already, we were making matters worse. Exaggerating. We’d say how the place was freezing-cold. There was no running water. We had to ration the food.

 

 None of that was true, but it does make a better story. No, we’d warp the truth. Blow it up. Stretch it out. For effect.

 

 We’d create our own incestuous orgy of people and animals for the world to gossip about.

 

 The little backstage dressing room we each got, talking about it, we’d load it with poisonous spiders. Hungry rats. Not just Director Denial’s cat hair sticking everywhere.

 

 A ghost. We’d put a ghost in the old theater to build the story, make room for special effects. Oh, we’d haunt this place ourselves, pack it with lost souls.

 

 We’d turn our lives into a terrible adventure. A true-life horror story with a happy ending. A trial we’d survive to talk about.

 

 Except for Lady Baglady with her handful of dead husband. Miss America with her fetus, snowballing bigger and bigger, cell by cell, inside her. And Miss Sneezy with her mold allergy, the rest of us wanted more. More pain and suffering to dredge up, later, on national talk shows. Those television shows Miss America talked about. Even if we never sparked a good idea, never wrote our masterpiece novel, this three months trapped together could be enough to make a memoir. A movie. A future of not working a regular job. Just being famous.

 

 A story worth selling.

 

 For now, sitting around the glass fireplace, we’re ticking off the details we need to remember to create this scene on national television. So we could advise “on the set” in making the movie “authentic.” The story of how we were kidnapped and held hostage and every day Miss Sneezy got more sick and the baby inside Miss America got bigger.

 

 No one will say it, but Miss Sneezy’s death would make a perfect third-act climax. Our darkest moment.

 

 The perfect ending would be the landlord stumbling in after the lease has expired, just in time to rescue the fragile Miss America. The demented Lady Baglady. A few of us would come limping out, squinting and weeping, into the sunlight. The rest of us would be carried out on stretchers and slid into ambulances for a siren’s trip to the hospital. The movie could jump ahead a little to show us all standing bedside as Miss America gives birth. Then jump again, to show us at the funeral for Miss Sneezy. The ghost of poor Miss Sneezy, sacrificed to juice the plot.

 

 We’d have Agent Tattletale’s camera for video support. The Earl of Slander’s audiocassettes for voice-over.

 

 Then, as completion, Miss America would name her new child Miss Sneezy, or whatever her first name had been. A sense of the circle mended. Of life going on, renewed. Poor, frail Miss Sneezy.

 

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