The Search for Certainty Friday was the one evening each week that Holly spent entirely with Kate, usually along with other mothers and their daughters met through Kate''s school. This particular Friday, the plan was an early meal at a restaurant, followed by a movie. At dinner, the women were protective, as always, but they''d recently initiated a new freedom: letting the girls sit at a nearby table on their own. The tables were close enough for Holly to see that her daughter wasn''t eating much--it interfered with talking--but she didn''t bug Kate about that in front of her friends; she was eight now, old enough to be embarrassed. If you took away their twenty-five-year age difference, Holly and her daughter were like twins: both slender with short dark hair and large blue eyes, both liked to talk and to laugh, and both loved movies. This particular Friday, their movie would be Jurassic Park. After dinner Holly decided to leave the car at the restaurant and take advantage of the extra-warm night by walking the two blocks to the theater with Kate. None of the other mothers chose to walk, one of them noting, "The sun will be down when we get out, and I don''t want us to have to make our way back to the car in the dark.
" So Kate and Holly enjoyed the walk on their own. At the theater, they joined the six other mothers and their seven daughters, who were already doing what Steven Spielberg has made worthwhile for millions of people: standing in line. A man ahead of them looked at Holly as if they knew each other. He was about thirty years old, tall and a little pudgy, with very short blond hair. He was wearing loose-fitting sweatpants and a too-small T-shirt with the words AFRAID OF THE DARK across the chest. Holly was sure they''d never met. Just as he appeared about to say something, she decided to turn away. At that moment, he asked her, "Ladies night out?" "Uh-huh," Holly (sort of) responded.
She was thinking about Jeff Goldblum, her favorite actor. To her, the dinosaurs would be only a distraction. The man had another question. Taking in all the mothers and daughters he asked, "What''s the idea, safety in numbers?" Holly nodded, but she was thinking, Bug off. She wasn''t sure why, but she knew she did not like him. After the line, after the candy debates with the girls ("But we''re still hungry!"), after the who''ll-sit-next-to-who contest, and after all the mid-movie trips to the bathroom, the world was saved from prehistoric predators and the group was gathered in the lobby, saying goodnight. One of the other mothers offered Holly and Kate a ride to their car, but Holly declined: "It''s just a couple of blocks and even after that film, I''m not afraid of the dark." As she heard herself saying those words, she felt apprehension about walking, just a soft whisper that said Don''t--so she changed her mind and accepted the ride.
At that moment, Kate needed to use the bathroom (again), so the other girls piled into the van and waited. Keeping an eye on the bathroom door and an eye on the anxious-to-leave kids, Holly overruled that soft whisper and concluded that the logical thing to do was walk back to her car. It didn''t make sense to keep everybody waiting, and anyway, she thought, I don''t want to be one of those people who''s scared to walk a couple of blocks. She called out to the mother driving the van: "Hey, we''ll just walk." "You sure?" "Yep." But the moment the van pulled out of the parking lot, Holly wasn''t sure anymore. She was uneasy about that man, that man she didn''t like in line. Not much to be concerned about, she told herself, but as she and Kate walked along the quiet street, past closed shops and empty parking lots, Holly felt something unfamiliar to her, but also unmistakable: fear, fear of that man.
But she wondered why. Maybe he''d been within earshot when she''d declined the ride and registered that they''d be walking; that might be part of it. He appeared to be attending the movie alone, and that might have been part of it. He was intrusive and looked at her strangely, and that was definitely part of it, but even without knowing all the reasons, Holly listened to her fear. When Kate said something about their neighbor''s dog looking like a dinosaur, Holly laughed but was really just taking an opportunity to throw her head back and look down the street. Bad news: That man was following them. Should she run? Cross the street? Scream? Just as she started to consider these options, fear took over and said, in effect, Do what I tell you to do, and I''ll get you both through this. Holly put her hand on Kate''s arm and sped up slightly.
Though she didn''t know it, fear was readying her body for action: Blood flow in her arms and legs was increasing, lactic acid was heating up in her muscles, her vision was becoming more focused, her breathing and heartbeat more determined. To prepare her for any possibility, fear gave her a dose of the chemical cortisol. Cortisol would help her blood clot more quickly in the event of injury. For a hundred yards, Holly tried not to let her daughter know there was a problem, but the child knew. "Mom, why--" "There''s a strange man following us and I want to get to the car in a hurry." "Let''s run!" Kate said adventurously, but Holly held her daughter''s arm firmly in response. Fear had put a solid plan in her head: Do not run because then he''ll have to run after you, and he''ll be faster than you and Kate. When you reach the car, unlock it with the key instead of the remote control because the remote control would unlock all the doors and you want to unlock only one.
Put Kate in the driver''s-side door and have her climb over to her seat. Then get in yourself, lock the door, hold down the horn while starting the car, and drive away. Most of that happened according to plan, but as she stood waiting for Kate to get across the inside of the car, the man was already at the passenger door. Holly looked directly at him over the roof of her car. Though no words were spoken, they were communicating. The man''s communication was basically this: You are my victim, and Holly''s response was, No, actually, I''m not. Holly heard the latch as the man tried to open Kate''s door: once, twice, and then he gave up. He walked calmly around toward the driver''s-side door.
By then, Holly was in her seat, watching him get closer. Before she could swing her legs into the car, the man was upon her. He was occupied mostly with trying to control her legs, which were kicking powerfully. Holly watched her own impressive resistance with some detachment because she was trying to figure out the origin of a constant loud noise. Then she realized she was holding down the button for the car horn, just as fear had told her to do. Loud as it was, she still heard a soft whisper in her head: Ignition key. While her legs kicked, she regarded the key, amazed to find herself thinking about sticking it into this man''s eyes. She felt no great rush to act because his full attention was on trying to gain control of her uncontrollable legs, and that wasn''t going to happen.
Holly worried that he might have a gun, but fear interrupted her with an assurance she accepted: He does not. His face was right in front of her, and here is what Holly was thinking: I don''t want to stick a key into someone''s eye. I don''t want to hurt him that badly. On the other hand, he obviously plans to hurt me, and I have to protect Kate. If I stick a key in his eye, he''ll stop this, but I really don''t want to blind a person. Obviously though, I''m not going to let him hurt Kate. All this thinking was moot. That''s because as Holly was going over her options, it turns out she already had stuck the key into the man''s eye, and already had placed it into the ignition.
She had already started the car, and the man was already sitting on the ground beside the open door doing what men do when something sharp is stuck in their eye. The force of the car accelerating caused Holly''s door to slam, and immediately, there was silence. That is when she stopped thinking about what to do and slowly realized she''d already done it. "Mom, your seat belt''s not on." Holly took Kate''s hand to reassure her that they were safe. Without any panic, she explained, "That man tried to get in our car without asking for permission, and I didn''t let him. Do you understand?" "I understand, but you forgot to put on your seat belt." Holly put on her seat belt, amazed to see that her daughter had gotten into the car and followed the usual procedure, trusting that she was safe while her mother handled that man.
What an odd experience, Holly thought--not frightening or terrible, but almost calm. Too awful to imagine sticking a sharp object deep into someone''s eye, but not, it turned out, so bad to actually do it. Each time she went over the experience, the word that came into her head was "natural." You attack me when I''m with my little girl, and you get the natural consequence. In fact, she thought the man got away kind of lucky because she could have stuck him in both eyes. That''s when she realized she had stuck him in both eyes. When Holly recounted all this to me months after it occurred, we were standing in the hallway of a television studio where I''d just finished a news interview. I had discussed the fact that violence almost always has detectable pre-incident indicators that we recognize intuitively.
Intuition sends many messengers to warn us, messengers such as doubt, suspicion, apprehension, and hesitation, but the most urgent--and.