So, Megan thought, he already knows what I told him, but he probably can’t prove it.
“My second question goes more to motive — why someone would try to get James Winters in trouble. Hardly anyone outside of Net Force — and the Explorers — knew the captain before he went on Washington People. That’s where the interviewer tried that trick question and got the reaction everyone saw on Once Around the Clock. The local reporter, Jay-Jay McGuffin, took a lot of grief from Net Force Explorers after the show aired. Kids from all over the country wanted a piece of him.”
“You’re making a case for young McGuffin to seek revenge against James Winters,” Wellman said in his most professorial voice.
“I was wondering if he had a friend higher up in the network,” Megan said. “Someone on Once Around the Clock.”
“Someone like Tori Rush,” Wellman finished for her. Not only did he sound like a teacher, the teacher was clearly disapproving of his student’s answer.
“Tori Rush started out in HoloNews local outlets in the western states,” Wellman said. “She never worked in Washington, whereas Mr. McGuffin has only worked in the D.C. area. As far as we’ve been able to ascertain, there is no connection — friendly or otherwise — between the two of them.”
“Then where did she get the clip of Winters?” Megan asked in frustration. “She can’t scan every episode of every local news show—”
“An interesting question,” Wellman responded. “One I haven’t been able to find an answer for.”
That reminded Megan of the answers Anna Westering hadn’t been able to get. “Do you know anything about the foreign investors who bought up I-on Investigations? It seems like a weird investment, picking up a failing cop shop.”
“I-on has been remarkably profitable under its new management,” Wellman pointed out.
Yeah, Megan thought. Telling lies for fun and profit. That’s bound to pay better than catching errant spouses in the act.
“How about the new head honcho?” she asked.
“Ah, the elusive Mr. Kovacs.” Wellman allowed himself a slight smile. “There’s very little about him on the record — and what records exist are remarkably war-torn. The village where he was supposedly born no longer exists. His school records were wiped out when a cruise missile went off-course. There are some college records for a Marcus Kovacs, but he seems to disappear for years. And he wasn’t very forthcoming when we interviewed him.”
“The Fifth Estate actually went up and asked him questions?” Megan said. “Won’t that warn him that a story is coming out about his association with Tori Rush?”
“No,” Wellman replied. “He was under the impression he was being profiled by a small business journal.”
Megan stared at him. “After all the stuff you said about journalists abusing their power — aren’t you doing the same thing?”
“A profile will appear in that journal,” Wellman said stiffly. “But we’ll be able to use the information as well.”
“You did lie to him, though.”
“A stratagem.” Wellman’s pink face went pinker still. “We have to live in the world as it is. Kovacs would have boxed us out the minute he learned we knew he was working for Tori Rush. He’d claim client privilege, and we probably wouldn’t even have gotten any general information on his company. This way The Fifth Estate got information on I-on and images of Kovacs — he’s remarkably camera-shy — and The Review of Small Business got a story as well.”
“You have pictures of Kovacs?” Megan said.
“A few.” Wellman’s small smile appeared again. “He told our photographer he was a very busy man.”
“Could I see one?” Megan requested.
Know your enemy, she thought.
Wellman dug around on his desk and came up with a sheaf of flatcopy images. “This is the one we’re considering for our story,” he said, holding up one of the pictures.
Marcus Kovacs was a remarkably hairy man. A thick, full beard covered his jaw, meeting unfashionably long hair that brushed his collar. Both his beard and his mane of hair were dark, flecked with gray.
“He looks more like a poet than a private eye,” Megan said. “Much less the head of a company.”
Out of sight of the pickup, her hands danced on her computer’s keyboard, ordering an image capture from the holographic display. Now she’d have this picture of Kovacs, as well.
Wellman ran through a sequence of images. Apparently deep in thought over the answer to one of the interviewer’s questions, Kovacs ran a hand through his leonine mane, revealing that at least one ear hid behind all that hair. The next picture his hand was down, moving toward the camera. The third picture just showed the palm of his hand.
“That was the end of our photo session,” Wellman said dryly. “It seems Mr. Kovacs has the temperament of a poet, as well. His background, however, seems to be in finance. That’s what he told our interviewer. He had been hired by the takeover group to spruce up the company, probably with the idea of reselling it. But he proved himself to be a more than competent manager, not merely juggling the books, but actually making tremendous profits where none had previously been made.”
While pushing the company’s mission into the gutter of falsifying evidence, Megan thought.
“Two final questions,” she said. “When is your story coming out…and why are you telling me all of this?”
“You have a most refreshing directness, Ms. O’Malley — and a touching innocence, if I may say so.” Professor Wellman removed his glasses, cleaning them with a small piece of cloth. But out from behind the lenses, his eyes seemed even sharper as he looked at her.
“My dear young lady, you’re a source on a high-profile story,” Wellman said. “At some point, as this story develops, The Fifth Estate may turn to you for a reaction from one of Captain Winters’s protégés. We’ve already tried contacting the captain directly. He’s strictly incommunicado at the moment.
“Anyway, when the time comes for us to seek information, I hope you’ll remember that we were generous in answering your questions. Quid pro quo, you see.”
The only thing I see is that I’m bumping into a lot of Latin on this case, Megan thought grimly. And everything else is Greek to me.
“In answer to your first question, the Rush/I-on story is scheduled to come out in two weeks.” Wellman frowned. “Because we cover the media, we have to make sure all of our facts are absolutely true before we publish. I think we’ll end up regretting that policy. Events are moving faster than I’d wish. Instead of exposing the story, we may end up as a footnote in a much larger media frenzy.”
“Meaning?” Megan said, almost afraid to hear his answer.
Wellman tried to keep his tone gentle, but his words hit Megan like brutal blows. “Meaning our voice will just be lost in the stampede, once Captain Winters is indicted for Stefano Alcista’s murder.”
Leif took a call from Megan O’Malley and got a storm of worried anger as well as a few nuggets of information.
“Hey, what does a retired journalism professor know about the law?” he said, trying to make her feel better. But he had to admit that his words sounded hollow even in his own ears.
About an hour later Leif received a virtmail notice for another special meeting of the Net Force Explorers for the next day. Coming after Megan’s call, this looked ominous.