Could there be archetypes in a real life murder mystery? Of course there can. You know that cliché story of the big scary man who comes with a gun to come kill you and the love of your life, while alone in the car, about to get it on? That's no fake story. For Betty Lou Jensen and David Faraday, that's the sad reality. There are so many archetypes in the book. It's like that horribly, cheaply made Netflix movie you cant stop talking about. A young couple was going on a date one night. Their original plans were to go to a concert, and then to a party afterward, but plans changed and they ended up at "Lover's Lane," which later on would be known as one the places the mysterious "Zodiac Killer" would kill his first-known victims. The couple told their parents they would be home at 11:00 pm, but like the over-used story goes, they disobeyed their prior promises to their parents, and that's where things start to go wrong. Sitting in Lover's Lane, so no one could see them, they noticed a man pull up next to them. The man steps out of his car with a gun and well.. you know the rest. Had the cliché teens not disobeyed their plans, and promises, they may still be alive. This is only the start of the Zodiac's cliché works in his murder career. Isnt it sad when your life becomes a real life archetype?