'Rosita says he was murdered.'
'If Rosita said nice day, I'd check it out. She lies all the time, about little things, just to stay in practice. I swear, I've caught her in the most idiotic inconsistencies. What she majored in, for example. What part of Boston she grew up in. Who lies about stuff like that? She's crazy.'
'Crazy,' Tess agreed, but she wasn't going to allow Whitney to distract her so easily. 'So does being Lionel's favor buddy guarantee you Japan? Was that the deal?'
Whitney lifted her chin, which had a smear of chocolate on it. 'It doesn't hurt. Look, I kept you pure in all this by not telling you everything. You did your job beautifully and you made good money doing it. What's your problem?'
'The problem is you told me some lies as well.'
'Not really. I just left out a few details here and there.'
'What about Feeney's alibi?'
Again, Whitney waited Tess out to see what she knew, or had guessed. She picked up a third Milano, but was rattled enough to eat it as a normal person would.
'Did Feeney really tell you that he was with me that night, or was that your way of ensuring I would take the job, because I'd be so worried about him I'd want to protect him?'
'I did ask Feeney where he was that night, and he did say he had been with you.' But Whitney could no longer make eye contact. In fact, she couldn't even face Tess, shifting her body so it was a three-quarters turn away from her. 'He didn't remember what time he left you. In fact, he doesn't remember much about that night at all. He more or less blacked out. I knew if you thought he needed you as an alibi, you'd be hooked. You've always had a soft spot for him.'
Tess saw Feeney walking north on Eutaw after their last angry conversation. He had been furious with her, absolutely enraged.
'What did you tell him? I mean, you had to make sure that Feeney and I didn't compare notes, right? How did you arrange that?'
Whitney's voice was almost inaudible now. 'I told him you were hard-up for cash and he should keep his distance from you, because you had denied knowing him to the bosses. I also told him you said you were keeping an open mind about who had done it, and you wouldn't cut him any slack if you thought he was the one. But he wasn't, so what was the big deal?' She finished off her Scotch. 'I think my confession slate is clean now. Am I forgiven? Do you want to assign me some form of penance?'
Tess felt dizzy, the way a child feels after turning in endless circles, staring up at the sky. Bad enough to have been used and manipulated by Lionel. But Whitney had been his willing agent, playing friend against friend in order to get the Tokyo bureau. It was one thing to use the elevator technique, quite another to have taken everyone for a ride.
'Why did you call me tonight? You could have handled this alone.'
'Maybe I figured it was my last window of opportunity between boyfriends. Or are you double-dipping now, keeping the little boy at home while you let Sterling take you out on the town?'
'You're jealous.'
'Of Sterling? No, losing to him at squash was as far as I was willing to go to advance my career. Not that he ever asked. But don't worry, Tesser, I'm sure you'll have another date with him. You always have another date. Me, I have my job. If I'm lucky, I'm going to have a foreign assignment, then come back to an editing position. Very few women run newspapers. I plan to be one of them.'
'Why? So you can end up like Colleen in there, passed out on your sofa on a Saturday night, in an empty apartment, with no friends, no family?'
'Colleen is
'The other editors are men. Look around you, Whitney. It's not just Colleen. It's you, it's Rosita. Work is all you have. Jesus, you're still living at your parents' place because you've never taken the time to find an apartment of your own. Most of your relationships last about two weeks, when the guy realizes Friday night is reserved for
Whitney stood up, dusting cookie crumbs from the lap of her tweed trousers. 'Look, I have to go. Do you want a ride back to your place, or do you want to walk?'
'I'll walk.'
'Any more flaws of mine you want to enumerate, failings you want to catalog? I said I was sorry.'
'No, in fact that's the one thing you haven't said this evening.'
'Well, I'm saying it now. I'm sorry. Isn't there something you'd like to say in return?'
'Yes, yes, there is.' Tess fluttered her fingers. 'Sayonara, Whitney.'
Chapter 26
Tess ended up staying at Colleen Reganhart's until dawn broke. She had postponed leaving after Whitney's exit, stalling to make sure there would be no awkward encounters at the elevator, or on the street. Then, just when she thought it was safe to go, Colleen began retching. Her old college instincts kicked in; it was inhuman to leave someone alone in that condition. Fortunately, tending to Esskay had inured Tess to cleaning up after others. It was almost refreshing to deal with a mess that required nothing more than paper towels and some Lysol.
She sponged off the sofa and Colleen's face, then helped her upstairs, to a bedroom as barren as the rooms below-a bed, a nightstand, and several stacks of newspapers. At least the plain white sheets felt expensive, and the duvet was real goose down. She tucked Colleen in, positioning a plastic wastebasket next to the bed, then went downstairs and made a pot of coffee, resigned to a long night. Luckily, Old Mother Reganhart's cupboard was not quite bare-she had a pound of Jamaican Blue coffee and ten packs of Merits in the freezer, an almost empty carton of half-and-half in the refrigerator, and an economy-size box of microwave popcorn on the counter.
Tess passed on the popcorn, finishing off the Milanos while reading one of Colleen's books, a collection of Molly Ivins columns. The
She smiled in spite of herself, wondering how long Whitney's voice would live in her head, how many more times she would think of something funny or trenchant, then realize the observation belonged to Whitney. Maybe it was a good thing Whitney had sold her soul, throwing a couple others in for good measure, to get the Tokyo job. Baltimore was too small a town to hold two friends who couldn't be friends anymore.
'Any coffee for me?'
Colleen's voice had the rough-hewn rasp one would expect from someone who had been on both sides of a tequila bottle in the last twelve hours, but it was otherwise pleasant. Tess found a
'I'm afraid I used the last of the half-and-half.'
'That's okay, I take mine black.' Cory gulped the coffee as if it were medicine she had to force down. 'Where's Talbot? She contract this job out to you?'
'She left first and I was about to leave, but you-you weren't feeling very well. I thought someone should stay here, in case you did an Edgar Allan Poe. Although they say he died from rabies now, not in a drunken stupor.'
'Kind of you,' Colleen said, in a tone that made clear she didn't necessarily respect kindness. 'But I don't remember much about last night, except for the quitting part. That was fun.'
'Whitney said you threatened Lionel Mabry, too.'
'Threatened him? All I did was rattle off a series of large, ungainly objects I wanted to insert into a particular