Tuck had already added a photo of the Sellica crime scene to the macabre collection tacked to her more-than-half of the bulletin board. How’d she get that, so quickly? Jane had tried to avoid looking.
Channel 11 hadn’t called back.
All in all, another fun day in Jane world. And the prospects for tomorrow were no better. In fact, they might be worse.
She forced a smile. She would go home, put on sweats, have a glass of wine, turn on some Diana Krall. Watch a movie. Call Amy. Go visit Eli for a game of Psychonauts; maybe his mom, Neena, would be up for a chat. See if Mrs. W had some leftovers. Almost home. She was not afraid.
But Jake. He would go ballistic over tomorrow morning’s headlines. Jane had hung around the newsroom for a while, still bemused over the identity of the real Tuck, who seemed driven but friendly enough. At some point, BRIDGE KILLER CHANGES TACTICS popped up as the headline in the dummy edition. The press room had held the front page for Tuck. As long as there were murders, Miss Tucker Cameron was queen bee.
The train’s doors hissed open, jolting Jane back to reality. Her stop. Corey Road. She grabbed her purse and tote bag from the train’s gritty floor and clattered down the steps to the street.
Her mind spiraled around Sellica’s murder. Was there anything she knew that Jake should know? If there were, should she tell him? Could she? She really wanted to talk to him. She really, really wanted to find out what he thought about Sellica. Maybe she could just call him, all business, totally reporter, and say-
Jane jumped as her cell phone rang. She clutched a hand to her throat, then burst out laughing, the sound disappearing into the night. Lucky no one was here to see how jumpy she was. She looked around, spooked. A police car on patrol, lights off. Sidewalks deserted. Safe. And maybe it was Jake calling.
The phone rang again. She clicked it on, stepping into the protective glow of a streetlight. It better not be Channel 11 again. Jerks. She missed TV. Missed her old life. But that door was closed.
“This is Jane.”
“Jane Ryland?” A woman’s voice. Low, not quite a whisper.
“Yes?”
“This is Moira Lassiter. I apologize for phoning so late.”
Good news? About time. “Oh, Mrs. Lassiter. Thank you for calling. And it’s not so-”
“Jane?” Moira Lassiter interrupted. “I can’t talk now. About that interview. Let’s do it.”
16
“May I help you?”
Holly Neff stared at the beauty behind the desk. That woman should be, like, on television, not answering phones in some campaign office on a Saturday morning. Maybe she was someone’s daughter, had the job because of who she knew or how she looked. It didn’t matter. Holly had to get inside. Upstairs.
The lobby was completely decorated for the campaign, lots of posters and photos. The music was pretty loud. Groups of people hurried by, holding up badges hung around their necks. Miss Beauty Pageant hardly looked at them.
Elevator bells dinged, doors opened, people came out, others elbowed their way inside. She had to get upstairs.
Oh. The woman was waiting for her to answer. Lots of lipstick.
“Thank you so much,” Holly said. She felt a little strange with all her hair pulled back, and she wasn’t used to not wearing makeup. She’d never go out looking like this, so dowdy and plain-except today. And she wasn’t used to wearing the geeky glasses. Well, it would all be worth it. Holly zipped open one pocket of her carryall, feeling for the folder inside. Her camera was there, too, safe in its pouch. She pulled out a little spiral notebook she’d gotten at the drugstore. It had a picture of an American flag on the front.
“I’m a very enthusiastic Lassiter supporter.” She held the notebook up so the woman couldn’t miss it. “I’ve been to all the rallies. And I think it’s time I got involved.”
She looked for a nameplate or a name tag, since you were supposed to call people by their names, but there wasn’t one.
“I’m-” She paused, remembering her plan. And her secret name. “-I’m Hannah,” she said. Bright smile. Hannah. Then she waited.
The woman didn’t introduce herself. Whatever. Didn’t matter. Holly knew from her phone calls that the volunteer office was on the third floor. So was the communications department, where the press people were. Owen’s office was the only one on the fourth floor. Holly-Hannah simply had to get upstairs.
“Do you have an appointment?” the receptionist asked. The phone rang, and Holly waited while she answered it, saying, “Lassiter for Senate.” The woman pushed some buttons on the phone console, then looked at Holly again. It seemed like she didn’t love her job.
“Oh, well, no, I don’t, but this is such an important election, you know?” Holly had practiced what she would say, and it seemed just right. “I do the neighborhood newspaper? I’m like, kind of a neighborhood reporter? I write while my kids are at school. And I’d love to do a story about Governor Lassiter. Maybe I could get a quick tour of headquarters? See what it’s really like inside a campaign?”
She watched the woman look her up and down. Well, fine, go ahead. Holly looked perfect. She tried not to smile. Perfectly awful. A coat she’d gotten at a cheapo store, an acrylic scarf, stretchy wool gloves. The blonde behind the desk, all that chest showing even under that sweater, hideous. She’d assume she was seeing some nerdy housewife, trying to get out of the house and have a life. As if.
“If you’d like an interview with the governor,” the woman was saying, “you’ll have to go through our press office. I could take your name and number.”
The woman yanked a sliding shelf from under the desktop. Holly could see a list of names and phone extensions taped to it, but it was too hard to read upside down. “Or you can contact Sheila King directly. She handles press. Extension 403.” The woman looked up at her. “Do you need to write that down?”
The blonde’s lipsticky mouth went tight, as if Holly were bothering her. Pretty snippy for a receptionist. The phone rang, then rang again. Holly waited, so patiently, while the woman answered the calls.
“Lassiter for Senate. Please hold. Lassiter for Senate.”
It made Holly smile to hear his name.
“Oh, I don’t need an interview with the governor, gosh no.” Holly tried to look as if the thought had never crossed her mind. “Can I call Sheila King from here? Maybe someone could show me how it all looks, and I could maybe get some shots of it for the paper?”
Another call came in, then another. The phone woman kept answering, looking more and more annoyed. Another group of somebodies talked as they waited at the elevator, comparing pieces of paper, voices bouncing off the marble walls.
The woman behind the desk stood up. She was smiling, patting her hair, adjusting that sweater. But she was looking past Holly, beyond her shoulder. The people at the elevator stopped talking, every one of them, and turned the same direction. So Holly had to turn, too.
And there was Owen Lassiter. Striding through the revolving door and into the lobby. The bustle of the evening swirled into the building with him, the clatter of traffic, the wind, sirens peeling down Causeway Street. His hair was blown, cheeks ruddy, white shirt so white. She could almost feel the force field around him. Two men in suits trotted to keep up, one of them, a youngish man not far behind, carrying a stack of papers.
Holly’s hand went to her heart. Owen Lassiter. I needed to find him, but he found me! She tried to remember to breathe.
“Mrs. Wilkes.” The candidate was talking to the woman at the desk. He took her hand in both of his. “Welcome, Kenna. Rory told me you’d be here.”