"I thought you wanted to be a reporter."
"Iam a reporter."
"Reporters don't cheat. It'd be unethical to use me to get information."
"Of course it wouldn't. You know about unnamed sources. Come on, you can be my Deep Throat."
"It's a murder investigation. I'd get suspended for leaking information."
"It's a murderconviction. It's a closed case."
"The transcript is public record. Why don't you-?"
"I've got the transcript. I need the police report. It's got the names of all the witnesses and the bullet angles and pictures of the exit wounds. All the good stuff. Come on, Sam." She kissed his neck.
"There's nothing I can do. Sorry."
"The man's innocent. He's serving time for something he didn't do. That's terrible."
"You can talk to the public information officer. They'll give you the department's side of the case."
"Bullshit is all he'll tell me."
"She"Healy said. "Not he." He stood up and walked into the galley. "You have anything substantial?"
"Well, first, everybody I've interviewed said that no way in the world could Randy Boggs kill anyone. Then-"
"I mean to eat."
"Oh." She squinted into the galley. "No."
"Don't mope."
"I'm not," she said quickly. "I just don't have anything substantial. Sorry. Maybe some Fruit 'N Fiber cereal."
"Rune…"
"A banana. It's pretty old."
"I can't get the report. I'm sorry."
"A can of tuna. That's a pretty icky combination, though, if you mix it with the cereal. Even with the high fiber."
Healy wasn't buying it. "No file. Give it up." He walked back with pretzels and cottage cheese. "So where's your little girl?"
She was hesitating. "I took her to Social Services."
"Oh." He was looking at her, his face blank. Not saying anything, eating the cottage cheese. He offered her a forkful she wasn't interested in.
She said defensively, "They were a really, really good bunch of people there. They were, you know, real professional."
"Uh-huh."
"What they'll do is keep her in a foster home for a while then they'll track down her mother…" She was avoiding his eyes, looking everywhere else. Studying his buttons, the stitching of his shirt seams, the trapezoid of floor between his shoes. "Well, it was a good idea, wasn't it?"
"I don't know. Was it?"
"I had to."
"When I was a portable, walking a beat, we found kids sometimes. There's any suspicion of neglect or abuse, you have to bring them in, or get a caseworker out to see them."
Rune said, "Those people are okay, aren't they?"
"I guess so."
She stood up and paced slowly. "What was I supposed to do? I can't take care of a baby."
"I'm not saying-," Healy began.
"Yes, you are. You're saying 'I guess so,' 'I don't know.'"
"You did what you thought was right."
Clench, loosen. Her short, unpolished nails dug into her palm, then relaxed. "You make it sound like I gave her away to the gypsies."
"I'm just a little surprised is all."
"What am I going to do? Keep her with me all the time? It cost five hundred dollars to fix the camera because of her. I had to reshoot eight hours of film. I can't afford a baby-sitter-"
"Rune-"
Volume and indignation rose. "You make it sound like I abandoned her. I'm not her mother. I don't even want her."
Healy smiled. "Don't be so paranoid about it. I'm sure they'll take fine care of her. Have some cottage cheese. What's in here?"
Rune looked. "Apple? Pear? Wait, I think it's a zucchini."
"Should it be that color?"
She said, "It's only until they find Claire."
Healy said, "Just a couple days probably."
Rune stood at the round porthole, looking out over the water, at the way the lights in Hoboken made lines in the waves like runway approach lights. With her eyes she traced them to the land and back again. She watched them for a few minutes, until they were shattered by a passing speedboat. When the colors began to regroup she turned to Healy and said, "I did the right thing, didn't I, Sam?"
"Sure you did." He capped the cottage cheese. "Let's go get something to eat."
Piper Sutton sensed the power she had over him and it made her uncomfortable because it was purely the power of sex.
And therefore a power she couldn't exercise. Or, rather, wouldn'tlet herself exercise.
As she looked at the man across the desk from her, she crossed her legs, and her cream-colored stockings whispered in a reminder of that power. She was sitting in an office exactly two floors above hers -the penthouse of the parent company's monolith.
"We'll have coffee," the man said.
"No thank you."
"Then I will." Dan Semple was a trim forty-four, compact, with short salt-and-pepper hair curling over his forehead in bangs. He was not – like Piper Sutton or Lee Maisel or his predecessor Lance Hopper – a newsman. He'd sold advertising time for local stations, then for the Network, and eventually he had moved into entertainment and then news programming. The lack of reporting experience was irrelevant. Semple's talent was for money – making it and saving it. No one in the television business was naive enough to believe that high-quality journalism alone was enough to make a network a success. And, with a few exceptions, no one was surprised when Semple was given Hopper's job as director of Network News. The similarities were obvious: Hopper had been a great newsman in the incarnation of a son of a bitch; Dan Semple was a great businessman in the body of a cruel megalomaniac.
Although one thing he wasn't the least bit cold about was Piper Sutton.
She had had affairs with various Network executives in the past – only those men, however, who were on a corporate level equal to hers and only those men whom she desired physically or because she truly enjoyed their company. Sutton didn't give a shit about rumors and gossip but one of her few rules of ethics was that she wouldn't use her body to advance her career; there were plenty of other ways to fuck those you worked for.
The affair with Semple had lasted one year, when they were both on the ascendancy in the Network. But that had been four years ago. Then came Hopper's death, one consequence of which was what Sutton had predicted would happen: Semple was named Hopper's replacement. The day after the board announced the appointment she walked into his office to say how happy she was for him and how she'd known how much he'd wanted the job. Sutton had then taken Semple's hand, kissed his cheek and ended the affair.
Since then Semple'd waged an almost adolescent campaign to win her back. Although they saw each other often and dined together and attended benefits and formal functions she'd decided that their intimate days were over. He didn't believe her when she said it was a hard decision for her as well, though it was. She was attracted to him physically and she was attracted to him for his strength and brilliance and decisiveness. Sutton had settled for weak men in the past and had learned her lesson; she had a number of exes to prove it.
This romantic tension was an undercurrent in every conversation she and Semple had. It troubled her that, although Semple respected her immensely for her ability, hedesired her only on the lowest level. The power she had over him was the power of a courtier, not a reigning queen, and that infuriated her – at the same time her continual refusal to resume the affair stung him.
"How was Paris?" she asked.
"Comme ci, comme fa. How is it always? The same. Paris never changes."
The coffee arrived. The executive vice presidents had their own dining room, which delivered their requests for food or beverages on Villeroy amp; Bosch china, carried on parent-company-logoed lacquer trays. Semple poured a cup and sipped it.
"Tell me about this story."
Sutton did, quickly, without emotion.
"Her name is Rune? First or last?"
"Some kind of stage name bullshit. She a cameraman with the O amp;O here in Manhattan."
"What does Lee think?" Semple asked.
"Slightly more in favor of doing the story than I am. But not much."