“He’s eating people!” Jared said indignantly.
I laughed. “I’m not saying it’s not horrible,” I said. “I’m just saying Buffalo Bill was creepier to me, I suppose.”
“Okay, that I’ll grant you,” Jared nodded. “But let’s be honest; who would you be more scared to come across in real life?”
“Both,” I said immediately.
“If you had to choose.”
“Ugh…”
“Come on,” he prompted. “Give me an answer…and think about it.”
“Well, I suppose I’d be more terrified of coming across Hannibal.”
“Thank you!”
“It’s only because he’s so damn charming and intelligent. You’d probably invite him to your house for tea and ask him for advice… It would never even cross your mind that he was a murderer, let alone a cannibal.”
“Finally, something we can agree on.”
I laughed and breathed an intense internal sigh of relief. It was just like old times, almost. This was exactly how it used to be in the beginning, before we had been a couple and when we had just started to get to know one another. Jared’s initial tone, which had started off slightly weary, had turned happy and upbeat and over the course of our conversation, we both relaxed.
Neither one of us mentioned anything about the trial, Brent, or our relationship. In fact, we didn’t talk about ourselves at all. I didn’t ask him about work, and he didn’t ask me about mine. We just spoke about movies and actors and timeless classics that we needed to watch again. I barely felt the time pass by, I was just so thrilled to be talking to Jared. I was even more thrilled that he was giving me this much.
I had half expected him to ignore my call or make some polite excuse after a few minutes. But he did neither, and before I knew it, we had been on the phone for almost two hours.
“Rachel?”
“Yes?”
“I’ve got to go,” he said. “My shift starts in an hour, and I have to get ready.”
“Oh, right… Of course,” I said. “I’m sorry about keeping you…”
“You didn’t,” he said. “I had fun talking to you.”
I felt a little trickle of hope, and happy tears rushed to my eyes. “I had fun talking to you, as well,” I said.
“Goodnight.”
“Goodnight,” I replied back.
A second later, the line went dead, and I sat in the park for a few minutes longer, wondering if this was a brave new beginning or simply the beginning of the end.