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Showgirls, Battlefield Earth and Mother Dearest for her new romantic interest.

As the relationship progressed, Pam began to post pictures of the couple on the page. Some of the pictures were innocuous. The couple out at a party. Watching a field hockey game together. Sitting under a tree reading.

Some of the pictures, though, were far more intimate.

The first one that caught my attention was the two girls lying in bed, sheets up to their chins, bare shoulders visible. The photo must have been a self-portrait taken by one of the two girls, as a finger smudge obscured part of the right side of the shot.

In another photo, the girls were dressed up in bustiers and garter belts. It looked like they were about to go to some sort of party.

And in another shot, the two girls were snapped kissing passionately. I’d say one thing, they were kind of cute together.

“These all came off the blog?” I said.

“Every one.”

“Were there any photos of Abigail Cole in a bikini? Or on the beach at all?”

Jack squirmed. “Listen, I know she’s a good-looking girl but I’m not about to…”

“No, that’s not why I’m asking. Paulina said when the guy took her, he showed her a photo of her daughter wearing a bikini on the beach. Paulina told me the photo the guy used was private. She said Abigail never posted it online, and she was clear about that. So where did the photo come from?”

“I think I know,” Jack said. “But I need two things to confirm it.”

“What are they?”

“First off, I need you to find out one thing for me online. I don’t have access to it, but either you do or know someone who does.”

“What do I…”

“And the second thing,” Jack said, looking me dead in the eyes, “is that I need to talk to Paulina Cole.”

31

I stood in the middle of Rockefeller Center with my hands in my pockets, watching people go about their day.

The sun was bright and there was just a wisp of breeze.

A tour group passed us by, clinking and clanking as the binoculars and cameras jangled about their necks.

There were lots of tour groups always walking about this area, and they would often look at me in my work clothes like I was some sort of alien species. These people didn’t seem to believe that anyone actually lived or worked in

Manhattan, that we all just bused in day after day and wandered about starstruck, wondering when we might run into Derek Jeter or Sarah Jessica Parker on the street.

I think they believed only celebrities and homeless people lived in the city.

I watched the corner of Fifty-first Street, knowing that’s the direction she’d be coming from. Paulina wasn’t too keen on meeting me up by the Gazette, partly because she didn’t like to move for anybody and partly because when she left the paper she was thought of just about as fondly as Mussolini.

“Parker?” Paulina Cole said. She had just rounded the corner and was staring at me like I’d just thrown a pie at her from across a crowded room. She was wearing black leather boots and a knee-length skirt. Her hair was recently done, and I hated to admit it but she looked pretty good. “You’d better have a damn good reason for calling me up to the Hard Rock Cafe.”

I’d heard Paulina refer to Rockefeller Center by that moniker before. And she didn’t mean it as a compliment.

To her, this neighborhood was a tourist mecca, drastically overpriced, and as close to real New York as the Hard

Rock was to being the real Arnold Schwarzenegger. “I expense my cell phone bill and cab rides, and if you keep calling me I’ll have some explaining to do when the finance department reviews it.”

“Nice to talk to you, too, Paulina,” I said. “Thanks for coming.”

“Don’t thank me. I came because you said you had more information about my daughter.”

“Yeah…you might want to sit down.”

“What, you think whatever you have to tell me is going to make me suddenly pass out in your arms or something?

Get over yourself, Henry. Nothing surprises me anymore.”

“Well, I don’t want to tell you what to do. But there is news.”

“Did you find the man?” Paulina said. She said it like she’d expected us to do so all along. There was no appreciation in her voice. Whatever, that wasn’t quite her style.

“No. But we know where the photo came from. The one of your daughter at the beach.”

“How did you find it? Where did it come from?”

“Well, I’ll let the person who figured it out tell you all about it. Hey, Jack.”

Paulina whipped around to see Jack O’Donnell standing right behind her. He had a massive smile on his face, and he was standing close enough to her that he could almost tickle her nose with his beard.

“Hey, Cole,” Jack said. “Long time. How’s the exhusband and your kid?”

“You’ve got to be kidding me.”

The surprise in Paulina’s voice proved that Jack

O’Donnell was the last person she expected-and wanted-to see.

The reporter stood there, looking like she wanted to kill Jack, kill me, then tear our bodies to pieces.

Instead she merely said, “You’ve got to be fucking kidding me.”

“I am neither kidding nor fucking you,” Jack said.

“But I am going to help you.”

Paulina’s face contorted, as she sneered at Jack. I stood there wondering if this was a good idea. But Jack insisted that this meeting take place. He said it wasn’t a vendetta, and it wasn’t because he needed to get even with the woman who nearly ruined his career. He said it was because it was the right thing to do.

“What the hell do you want, you dried-up old mummy?”

I wondered if Jack still felt like it was the right thing to do.

“You know the old saying, people only call you names if they really care about you? Well, between your sweet nothings and that big kiss of an article you wrote about me, I’m willing to bet most New York psychiatrists would testify that you’re head over heels in love with me.”

“What the hell is this, O’Donnell? Parker, you’d better have a reason for this that goes well beyond morbid curiosity.”

“Jack asked me to set this up,” I said. I didn’t have to worry about throwing Jack under the bus here; he told me he wanted it fully known that this was his decision. “But

I knew you’d want to hear what he has to say.”

“I only want to hear one of two things come out of your mouth,” Paulina said. “One, that you know who threatened my daughter. Or two, you’re leaving this business and wanted to thank me for showing this city what a washed-up, drunk old hack you really are.”

I saw Jack flinch at that, but he stood his ground. Paulina was staring daggers into Jack’s eyes, but he didn’t waver.

“I can’t say either of those,” Jack said.

“Then why the hell am I here? Serves me right for trusting you, Parker.”

“You trusted me for a reason,” I said. “Now hear him out.”

Paulina looked at Jack, shook her head. “I’m surprised you had the balls to poke your head out from whatever rock you’ve been under the last few months.”

“Balls have never been my problem,” Jack said. “It’s knowing when to think with my head instead of my balls that’s gotten me into trouble.”

Had Jack been thirty years younger, I could see these two having the best enemy sex in history.

“Seems like that’s a problem a lot of male journalists have. Even Henry here. Right, Parker? No reporter’s had his life threatened more times in a few years than your protege, Jack. These balls? How would you feel if one day

Henry gets too close to the fire and gets burned to a crisp?”

“Shut the hell up,” I said. Paulina smiled.

“There are those balls I talked about,” she said. “You’re a reporter, Henry, not a soldier. You’re not supposed to have emotion or take sides. And you’re not supposed to come this close to getting yourself killed on every story you report.”

“I do what I need to in order to get to the truth,” I said.