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Long before the murderous rampage, long before the
saga of fugitive love and violence, long before the hostages on
Lange Street, Joe Palcyznski was known as a ladies' man.
He had GQ looks, a buff body, an expensive sports car, money to
burn and a questionable past that clung to him like heavy cologne.
He was a "bad boy," the type that always seems to attract
women, particularly young ones.
Imagine being a high school girl of 16, maybe 17. How can you not
be flattered by the attentions of this handsome guy who makes time
to pick you up from school in his Nissan 300 ZX? He shows you an
album filled with photographs of more than a dozen girls he's known
-- young, slim, glossy-haired, smiling. It's clear he can have any
woman he wants.
Instead, he chooses you. And it takes your breath away.
In the beginning, dating "Joby" is like starring in a
romantic movie. He's 5-foot-8, 175 pounds of martial arts muscle,
with sandy-brown hair and hazel eyes. Endlessly polite. Clean-cut,
almost preppie; even his jeans are pressed. He has a job as a lifeguard
and friends who jump whenever he snaps his fingers. You know he's
calling when your pager flashes the number of his hero:007.
On your first date, he takes you to meet his mom, Miss Pat, who
is real pretty and couldn't be nicer. Anyone her son loves, she says,
she loves, too.
Joby has seen a few things you'd rather not know about. So you
don't listen much when he talks about making hit lists, buying weapons,
being locked up. You believe people can change.
You really tune it out when he blames those other girls for getting
him in trouble. You know you're nothing like them.
He phones constantly. He buys you flowers and gifts. Takes you
horseback riding, arranges picnic lunches in the park. You go out
on his Jet Skis, drive around like royalty.
He tells you how beautiful you are, how special. He says he's going
to be with you forever -- no matter what.
It seems too good to be true.
It is.
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