The Delilah Complex Read Online Free Page A

The Delilah Complex
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bound to be a number 2.”

Six

    “Y ou can ask her anything you want, but this is our story,” Harry Hastings said. “I want that to be clear. We want to keep our lead and ensure exclusivity. So in exchange for cooperating with you, we want first dibs on anything you find.” He pulled a cigarette from the crumpled pack. Even though the
Times
was a smoke-free workplace, sometimes he broke the rules. No one had ever complained. Especially not when they were in his office.
    “Is that clear?” he asked the two detectives.
    Jordain eyed the stocky man. Even though they were ostensibly on the same side, the
Times
editor was on the offensive. Jordain wouldn’t respond. He’d leave that to Perez. They were in good-cop/bad-cop mode.
    “Crystal,” Perez said with a little more attitude than he felt.
    The two detectives were seated at the round table in the middle of the managing editor’s office. Opposite them, Betsy Young drank from a can of diet soda. So far she hadn’t said a word. Her boss was done laying out the ground rules, which neither detective had any intention of adhering to.
    “Why you?” Jordain asked Betsy. He’d worked with her twice before, and while he never expected a reporter to make his job easier, Betsy had been so desperate to get her story that she’d come close to compromising both cases.
    “I don’t know what you mean, Detective,” she said. Although she was technically answering Jordain, she was looking at Perez.
    Jordain knew exactly what the reporter was doing but ignored it. He didn’t care what kind of game she was going to play. He and Perez would handle her, but inwardly he sighed—why couldn’t it ever be easy?
    “Why, of all the reporters at the
Times…
why, of all the reporters in the city at any paper, do you think you are the one whose name was on that envelope?” Perez asked, taking over.
    She smiled wryly. “Why not me? I’ve covered some of the most important crime stories in the city.”
    Jordain cut in. “Do you know, or have you ever known, Philip Maur? Had any dealing with his firm? Anyone at his firm? Did you write the story about him being missing?”
    He was watching her eyes, but again she was avoiding his and looking instead at the photograph. Behind his desk, Hastings bristled but didn’t say whatever he was thinking. Jordain knew that the managing editor had been around long enough to know that, while not pleasant, this line of questioning was par for the course. The police had to find out if the reporter was in any way involved.
    “Betsy, please. The more you resist the less time you get to work on the story. Do you have any connection to Maur?”
    “No,” she said curtly.
    After a half-dozen more questions that led nowhere, Jordain looked at Hastings. “We’re going to need to see the story before you run it.”
    “We’re not going to run our stories by you, Detective.”
    “I think that you’re going to have to. We need to keep some details out of the paper. Leverage, you understand. Why don’t you just make this easy? We have a murder to solve, Hastings. You don’t really want to hinder our investigation, do you?”
    Hastings weighed this. He hated to give in but was also anxious to get Betsy back to work. She had a story to file. “Why don’t we decide here and now what you want us to keep out of the story.”
    Betsy was gripping a pencil so tightly that her knuckles were white. “I really don’t like the idea of withholding any part of this story, Harry.”
    “Neither do I. Let’s hear them out, though. Detective, what do you want us to keep out of the story?”
    Jordain and Perez examined the photographs.
    “You can run this one,” Jordain pushed the shot of the cadaver’s foot forward. “But not these.”
    His gaze moved to the plastic bag with the hair clippings.
    “And let’s keep out any mention of the hair—” Perez started.
    “No.” It was out of Betsy’s mouth before the detective had even finished his sentence.
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