James PaTTERSON “Aga result, they will be our five finalists. As I call each name, Why didn’t any of you will see a figure on your television screen. That is the total always someone more score received by the contestant since she became a semifinalist. | corner. Perhaps none c But one thing ! would point out to you: the point total is not 4 4 urges. But he did have < necessarily a sign of who our eventual winner will be. Being first i 3 by his side through th now is no guarantee of being Grst at the time of our judges’ final = with them. ballot.” 4 4 When he was thro Oh, get on with it, Miss Sweden thinks. And, as if by her com- i E say, they graduated up | mand, Bob Barker does. ; ; : "status af “lover” to “frie “Now our five finalists. Good luck, girls! The first finalist is; i a . In his estimation, th Miss Sweden!” a 7 Whe: woud. waa al Eva's hands fly up to her face. The time it takes her to walkto : q friendship seemed to bi the front of the stage is all the time she needs to stop herself from 3 a crying. ae For Eva, it’s not meant to be. Miss USA, Shawn Weatherly, wins q 7 that year's competition—she'll go on to become a star on Bay- 7 1 watch. But Eva's future is secure nonetheless. After the pageant, 7 q she'll spend three years studying in Stockholm, finish med q a school at UCLA, and become a doctor of internal medicine. & a Along the way, she'll meet Jeffrey Epstein. q 4 People who knew them when they were a couple say that Eva a wanted to marry Epstein. One friend says he considered it seri- q ously. In the end, Eva ended up with a man named Glenn Dubin, 4 though she and Epstein remained very close. And if Eva was the q proverbial “one who got away” Epstein ended up dating other q impressive women—world-class beauties—as he made his Way q in the world. 4 4 106 : ; HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022075