Greg Iles 3-Book Thriller Collection: The Quiet Game, Turning Angel, The Devil’s Punchbowl. Greg Iles
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СКАЧАТЬ to meet me—but I don’t think she’s the newspaper publisher. She looks more like a French tourist. She’s wearing a tailored black suit, cream silk blouse, and black sandals, and she is clearly on the sunny side of thirty. But as I check my watch, she turns face on to me and I spot a hardcover copy of False Witness cradled in her left arm. I also see that she’s wearing nothing under the blouse, which is distractingly sheer. She smiles and signals that she’ll be off the phone in a second, her eyes flashing with quick intelligence.

      I acknowledge her wave and wait beside the door. I’m accustomed to young executives in book publishing, but I expected something a little more conventional in the newspaper business, especially in the South. Caitlin Masters stands with her head cocked slightly, her eyes focused in the middle distance, the edge of her lower lip pinned by a pointed canine. Her skin is as white as bone china and without blemish, shockingly white against her hair, which is black as her silk suit and lies against her neck like a gleaming veil. Her face is a study in planes and angles: high cheekbones, strong jawline, arched brows, and a straight nose, all uniting with almost architectural precision, yet somehow escaping hardness. She wears no makeup that I can see, but her green eyes provide all the accent she needs. They seem incongruous in a face that almost cries out for blue ones, making her striking and memorable rather than merely beautiful.

      As she ends her call, she speaks three or four consecutive sentences, and a strange chill runs through me. Ivy League Boston alloyed with something softer, a Brahmin who spent her summers far away. On the telephone this morning I didn’t catch it, but coupled with her face, that voice transforms my suspicion to certainty. Caitlin Masters is the woman I spoke to on the flight to Baton Rouge. Kate … Caitlin.

      She holds out her hand to shake mine, and I step back. “You’re the woman from the plane. Kate.”

      Her smile disappears, replaced by embarrassment. “I’m surprised you recognize me, dressed like I was that day.”

      “You lied to me. You told me you were a lawyer. Was that some kind of setup or what?”

      “I didn’t tell you I was a lawyer. You assumed I was. I told you I was a First Amendment specialist, and I am.”

      “You knew what I thought, and you let me think it. You lied, Ms. Masters. This interview is over.”

      As I turn to go, she takes hold of my arm. “Our meeting on that plane was a complete accident. I want an interview with you, but it wouldn’t be worth that kind of trouble. I was flying from Atlanta to Baton Rouge, and I happened to be sitting across the aisle from you. End of story.”

      “And you happened to be reading one of my novels?”

      “No. I’ve been trying to get your number from your parents for a couple of months. A lot of people in Mississippi are interested in you. When the Hanratty story broke, I picked up one of your books in the airport. It’s that simple.”

      I step away from the door to let a pair of middle-aged women through. “Then why not tell me who you were?”

      “Because when I was waiting to board, I was sitting by the pay phones. I heard you tell someone you didn’t want to talk to reporters for any reason. I knew if I told you I was a newspaper publisher, you wouldn’t talk to me.”

      “Well, I guess you got your inside scoop on how I killed Hanratty’s brother.”

      She draws herself erect, offended now. “I haven’t printed a word of what you told me, and I don’t plan to. Despite appearances to the contrary, my journalistic ethics are beyond reproach.”

      “Why were you dressed so differently on the plane?”

      She actually laughs at this. “I’d just given a seminar to a group of editors in Atlanta. My father was there, and I try to be a bit more conventional when he’s around.”

      I can see her point. Not many fathers would approve of the blouse she’s wearing today.

      “Look,” she says, “I could have had that story on the wire an hour after you told it to me. I didn’t tell a soul. What better proof of trustworthiness could anyone give you?”

      “Maybe you’re saving it for one big article.”

      “You don’t have to tell me anything you don’t want to. In fact, we could just eat lunch, and you can decide if you want to do the interview another time or not.”

      Her candid manner strikes a chord in me. Perhaps she’s manipulating me, but I don’t think so. “We came to do an interview. Let’s do it. The airplane thing threw me, that’s all.”

      “Me too,” she says with a smile. “I liked Annie, by the way.”

      “Thanks. She liked you too.”

      As we step into the main dining space of the restaurant, a smattering of applause starts, then fills the room. I look around to see whose birthday it is, then realize that the applause is for me. A little celebrity goes a long way in Mississippi. I recognize familiar faces in the crowd. Some belong to guys I went to school with, now carrying twenty or thirty extra pounds—as I did until Sarah’s illness—others to friends of my parents or simply well-wishers. I smile awkwardly and give a little wave to cover the room.

      “I told you,” says Caitlin. “There’s a lot of interest.”

      “It’ll wear off. As soon as they realize I’m the same guy who left, they’ll be yawning in my face.”

      When we arrive at our table, she stands stiffly behind her chair, her eyes twinkling with humor. “You’re not going to pull my chair out for me?”

      “You didn’t look the type.”

      She laughs and takes her seat. “I wasn’t before I got here. Pampering corrupts you fast.”

      While we study the menus, a collection of classic Cajun dishes, I try to fathom how Caitlin Masters wound up in the job she has. The Examiner has always been a conservative paper, owned when I was a boy by a family which printed nothing that reflected negatively upon city worthies. Later it was sold to a family-owned newspaper chain which continued the tradition of offending as few citizens as possible, especially those who bought advertising space. In Natchez the gossip mills have always been a lot more accurate than anything you could find in the Examiner. Caitlin seems an improbable match, to say the least.

      She closes her menu and smiles engagingly. “I’m younger than you thought I’d be, aren’t I?”

      “A little,” I reply, trying not to look at her chest. In Mississippi, wearing a blouse that sheer without a bra is practically a request to be arrested.

      “My father owns the chain. I’m doing a tour of duty down here to learn the ropes.”

      “Ah.” One mystery cleared up.

      “Okay if we go on the record now?”

      “You have a tape recorder?”

      “I never use them.”

      I take out a Sony microcassette recorder borrowed from my father. “The bitter fruit of experience.”

      Our waitress appears and takes our orders (crawfish beignets and iced tea for us both), then stands СКАЧАТЬ