The Last of the Stanfields

“Poison-pen. That’s good. I don’t know. To save time, I guess?”

“The fact that you can understand such twisted reasoning doesn’t exactly cry innocence, you know.”

“Granted, but maybe it does cry . . . intelligence?” he asked.

“Sure, with a nice dash of modesty on top.”

“Someone is messing with us. Why, I have no idea. But we have a way better chance of unmasking him if we join forces.”

“Well, don’t you think the poison-pen would see that coming?”

“Yes, I do. But it’s a risk he chose to take.”

“Why he and not she?” Even though I’d been assuming it was a man as well, I didn’t want him to know that.

“Good point.”

“Whatever happened to trusting each other? I’m the one who brought it up in the first place.”

“Which definitely cries sincerity, or at least proves you’re smart.”

“Smarter than you, you mean?”

Once again, our eyes locked, and we studied each other for what felt like ages. And once again, we were saved by the bell as the waitress arrived to take our orders. George-Harrison asked for a lobster roll, never taking his eyes off mine. I was too engrossed in the stare down to think up something original to order, so I ordered the same.





22

MAY

October 1980, Baltimore

May had tried three times to get hold of Edward, to no avail.

Their second date had been just as magical as the first. Even though she still had feelings for Sally-Anne, May was falling for Edward. And judging by his tender care and thoughtfulness, he seemed to feel the same way. May was showing Edward a whole new world, one that was beginning to grow on him. It was like Pygmalion in reverse—the girl who came from nothing was the teacher; the privileged man, the student.

And so what if Sally-Anne was upset? She had been in a blind fury at everyone for days now, so May’s actions didn’t seem to make a whole lot of difference. At the editorial meeting, Sally-Anne had rebuffed the entire team, shutting down any ideas they pitched and picking fights at every turn. It had come as a relief when she’d ended the meeting early.

The source of all that rage was a mystery. If Sally-Anne enjoyed Keith so much, she should have been happy to have him all to herself. May could see the whole situation pretty clearly. Sally-Anne couldn’t bear May being involved with Edward, and seeing him shower her with attention while he ignored his own sister disgusted her. But May saw no reason to feel guilty about any of it. She hadn’t tried to seduce Edward; he was the one tripping over himself to win her over. Sally-Anne had it all wrong that Edward would chew May up and spit her out once he’d gotten what he wanted. After that passionate kiss on their first date, Edward had walked May to her door and said good night. Two days later, he had treated her to an unforgettable meal at an expensive restaurant. As they sat down, May had peered in wonder at the rows of cutlery, and Edward had softly clued her in: “Work your way from the outside in, one at a time.”

The day after that, they went shopping and bought each other gifts. Edward draped a ravishing scarf around her shoulders, while May bought him a striking leather wallet. He slipped the wallet into the inner pocket of his suit jacket and patted his heart.

“I’ll keep it right here.”

Edward had even driven May out to Kent Island for the weekend. He had treated her to a lush suite in a sprawling manor atop a dune facing the sea. They spent most of that weekend making love. She had never been spoiled so thoroughly. May’s only regret was not being able to share her newfound joy with her closest friend. Despite Sally-Anne’s juvenile and selfish behavior, May still had sympathy for her and felt she understood. Nonetheless, there was no way Sally-Anne’s pigheaded, jealous attitude could last. There was nothing shallow or selfish about this budding love story. May resolved to find a way to get the siblings to patch things up. A brother and a sister were meant to get along. She was convinced the two of them could make it work.

May wanted to build trust with Edward, so she decided to take the first step herself during that weekend on Kent Island. She told him about the newspaper as they walked arm in arm along the beach.

“It may still be only a pipe dream for now,” she lied. “But the two of us are going nowhere at the Sun. Our managers are chauvinists who think the only thing women are good for is serving coffee, and that we should all just stick to research.”

Edward seemed appalled by that notion, and asked May more about the dream project. What type of editorial point of view did they envision? She walked Edward through the broad strokes and he was nothing but encouraging, praising her fearlessness and hard work in the quest for truth. But nonetheless, Edward advised her to be cautious. Exposing corruption, abuse of power, and partisan politics came at great risk. If she didn’t tread lightly, sooner or later she would end up drawing the wrath of the powerful.

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