Claire pulled away angrily. "Coke is real. Dragons and goddesses aren't."
"You keep your reality." Rune stood up and took Courtney by the hand and led her up onto the outer deck. "Come on, honey, I'll read you a story."
An hour later Courtney asked, "One more, please."
Rune debated, flipping through the book of fairy stories. She glanced down into the galley and saw
Claire doing a small line of coke off her compact mirror.
"Okay," Rune said. "One more, then off to bed."
She looked at the story the book had fallen open to and laughed."The Snow Princess." Which seemed like a good choice since Claire had a nose blizzard going at the moment.
"'Once upon a time-'"
"In a land far away," Courtney yawned and lay down with her head. in Rune's lap.
"That's right. '… in a land far away, there lived an old couple who never had any children.'"
"I'm a children."
" 'The man and woman loved each other dearly but dreamed about how happy they would be if only they had a daughter to share their life with. Then one winter, as the husband was walking home through the forest, he saw a snowman that some children had built and he had an idea. He went home and together, with his wife, they built a little princess out of snow.'"
"What's snow?"
"Last winter, that white stuff."
"I don't remember," the girl said, frowning.
"It comes out of the sky and it's white."
"Feathers."
"No, it's like wet."
"Milk."
"Never mind. Anyway, the couple went to bed and all night long they wished and wished real hard and what do you think happened?"
"They got a little girl?"
Rune nodded. " 'In the morning when they woke up there was the most beautiful little princess, who looked just like the girl the couple had made out of snow the night before. They hugged her and kissed her,. and they spent all their time playing with her and taking the little girl for walks in the forest. The couple was so happy…
"'Then one day a handsome prince came riding along through the snow, and saw the snow princess playing in a snow-filled field beside the couple's house. They looked at each other and fell in love.'"
"What's-?" Courtney began.
"Never mind that. The thing is he wanted the snow princess to come live with him in his castle at the foot of the mountain. The snow princess's parents were very sad and begged her not to go but she married the prince and went off to live with him in the castle.
" 'They were very happy throughout the winter, then one day in early spring the sun came out, strong and hot, as the snow princess was walking with her husband…'"
Rune paused and read ahead in the story – to the part where the sun gets hotter and hotter and the princess melts, the water running through her husband's fingers into the ground until there's nothing left of her. She looked up at the girl's expectant face and thought: We've got a problem here.
"Go on," Courtney said.
Pretending to read, Rune said, "Well, the sun was so hot that the snow princess remembered how much she missed her parents and she kissed her husband good-bye and climbed back up to the mountain village, where she moved back in with her parents, and got a job and met a neat guy, who was also made out of snow, and they lived happily ever after."
"I like that story," Courtney said in her tone of an official pronouncement.
Claire came out on deck. "Time for bed."
Courtney didn't complain much. Rune kissed her good night then helped Claire put her pajamas on her and get her into bed.
"You know, if you're interested," Claire said, "it's much easier to meet men in Boston."
"You want me to go to Boston with you? Just to meet men?
"Sure, why not?"
"Because most men are damaged, to start with. Why should I go somewhere where it'seasier to meet men? I'd think you'd want to go where it's harder."
"What's wrong with men?"
"Haven't you noticed something?" Rune asked. "How many men do you know whose IQ matches their age?"
"You gonna marry Sam?"
"He's a great guy," Rune said defensively, uneasy with the M word. "We have a good time…"
Claire sighed. "He's twenty years older than you, he's going bald, he's married."
"He's separated," Rune said. "Anyway, what twenty-five-year-olds with hair have you met that're such good catches?" Admitting to herself, though, that the married part was definitely an ongoing problem.
"You move to Boston, you'll be married in six months. I guarantee it." Claire pirouetted. "How do I look?"
Like a hooker, circa 1955.
Rune said, "Stunning."
Claire grabbed her bag and slung it over her shoulder. "I owe you one."
"I know you do," Rune said and watched her clatter unsteadily down the gangplank on high-heeled saddle shoes.
6
The note on her desk the next morning, from Maisel, was to the point.
Sutton 's office. The minute you come in!
– Lee.
Rune had received a lot of notes like this and they were usually the preface to flunking a course, getting fired or getting yelled at.
Heart pounding, she left her Morning Thunder tea on her desk and walked out of the studio. In ten minutes she was standing in front of Piper Sutton's secretary. Yesterday's look of terror at Rune's unauthorized entry had been replaced by a subtle gloat.
Rune said, "I'm supposed to see-"
"They're waiting for you."
"Is it okay to-?"
"They're waiting for you," the woman repeated cheerfully.
Inside, Sutton and Maisel turned their heads and stared as she approached. Rune stopped halfway into the big office.
"Close the door," Sutton ordered.
Rune obeyed then walked into the room. She smiled at Maisel, who avoided her eyes.
Oh, boy, she thought. Oh, boy.
Sutton's eyes were flint. She said, "Sit down," just as Rune was dropping into the chair across from the desk. Rune felt a shiver down her back and the hairs on her neck stirred. Sutton tossed a copy of one of the city's tabloids on her desk. Rune picked it up and read a story circled in thick, red ink that bled into the fibers of the newsprint.
NETWORK WANTS TO FREE KILLER OF ITS EXEC
By Bill Stevens
The story was short, just a few paragraphs. It recounted how a reporter fromCurrent Events was investigating Randy Boggs's conviction for Lance Hopper's murder. Boggs's defense lawyer, Fred Megler, had no comment other than to say that his client has always maintained his innocence.
"Oh, shit," she muttered.
"How?" Sutton tapped her glossy fingernails on the desktop. They were as red and hard as the finish on a Porsche. "How'd it happen?"
"It's not my fault. He lied to me."
"Bill Stevens?"
"That wasn't the name he gave me. I was at the Department of Corrections and this guy came up and said he worked for the press department and could he help me and he was real nice and he even told me things off the record so I assumed it was okay to-"
"Assumed it was okay?" Sutton's voice rose. She lifted her eyes to the ceiling. "I don't believe it."
Maisel sighed. "This's the oldest trick in the book. Jesus, Rune, you fucked this one up. Stevens is a beat reporter for the paper. He covers the government agencies. When he sees a reporter who's new and doesn't recognize him he finds out what their assignment is then scoops them."
"You walked right into his arms." Sutton lit a cigarette and slapped the lighter down on the desktop. "A fucking babe in the woods."
"He seemed like a nice guy."
"What the hell does 'nice' have to do with anything?" Maisel asked, exasperated. "This is journalism."