The Lives Between Us (4 page)

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Authors: Theresa Rizzo

Tags: #Fiction, #Political, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Family & Relationships, #Love & Romance, #Medical

BOOK: The Lives Between Us
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Edward and staff passed security, their leather shoes slapping the stark linoleum floor as they adjusted ties, buttoned jackets, and put on their game faces. At their approach, the reporters slid cell phones into their pant pockets, stuffed notes in deep attaché cases, and grabbed their microphones. Turning on blinding floodlights, cameramen hefted cameras to their shoulders and jockeyed for prime positions among the throng of bobbing pro-lifers now waving their signs and shouting his name. The two groups faced off, familiar, respected, wary competitors.

Edward leaned into Ben, whispering, “Noelle’s computer crapped out, and she’s got a miserable cold. She deserves a little chocolate.”

Ben frowned. “That’s it?”

Edward grinned and shook his head. With that attitude, Ben wasn’t likely to find a woman to marry him anytime soon.

Edward advanced and moved to the side so he wouldn’t block the path of the few other late-night travelers. The crowd predictably moved with him like a huge amoeba—a fluid, shifting people-mass circling him.

One eager reporter pushed forward and thrust his black microphone at Edward’s face, coming inches from whacking his nose. Edward put out a hand to lower the instrument to an acceptable distance. From his side, Ben stepped in front of him, a slight but helpful barrier, giving Edward a few seconds to compose himself while he prepped the crowd.

Ben raised a hand to quiet everybody, but several seconds later resorted to a loud, sharp whistle. Edward raised his eyebrows and bit back a grin at the less-than-dignified, but effective, maneuver, making a mental note to ask Ben if he’d learned that subtle trick at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government.

“The Senator’s thrilled with your heartwarming reception. He regrets that he doesn’t have more than a few minutes, but he’s agreed to take several questions.” Ben stepped aside, baring Edward to the reporters, demonstrators, and millions of viewers that might be awake to watch the late-night news.

He smiled cordially. “Thank you all for coming out tonight. I’m touched by such a warm homecoming.” He greeted them in a raspy voice roughened by months of overuse. He nodded at the familiar face directly in front of him. “Roger?”

“Senator, how does it feel to have won again?”

“I haven’t won yet.” Yet with the withdrawal of his opponent, Edward now ran unopposed.

“Even if Mr. Levinson hadn’t withdrawn, recent polls give you a twenty-three percent edge.”

No need to kick a man while he’s down, especially when he just had a life-threatening heart attack and faced a long recovery. “I’m very pleased at the opportunity to serve the great people of Michigan again, however, not at the expense of a man’s health. Carl Levinson was a worthy adversary and a good man, and I wish him a speedy recovery.” He scanned the sea of reporters. “Joe?”

“Despite having a reputation for being conservative, you supported Proposal 1, which would raise state sales tax from 6 percent to 7 percent. What would you say to those who claim that nearly 40 percent of the predicted revenue generated would go to special interest groups?”

“In general I
am
against raising taxes, yet upgrading our infrastructure is critical for both safety and economic reasons. Proposal 1 is an imperfect solution, but it’s one that’ll make our roads and bridges safer. May 5th, the voters will decide if it’s a viable solution or not.” He looked to the back of the room and pointed to a woman reporter. “Margaret.”

“Do you think that it was your pro-life stance that got you re-elected—rather, gained you a healthy lead over Mr. Levinson?”

“Among other things.” Edward’s mouth twitched in amusement; it took more than a single issue to get elected to the United States Senate. When reporters weren’t stirring the pot, they were trying to simplify everything and wrap things up in a tidy bow.

“Don’t you think it’s unfair to force your personal religious beliefs on the rest of us?” a husky female voice to the side asked.

Edward schooled his face not to frown as he zeroed in on the unfamiliar reporter. She had curly brown hair, delicate facial features, red-rimmed eyes, and a rosy nose—like she had Noelle’s nasty head cold, but she didn’t sound congested. She looked to be in her mid- twenties—the perfect age to fight for any and every cause. She stood with feet spread apart and arms crossed over her chest in a defensive posture. Her raised chin matched the challenging gleam in her eye.

How the hell did she get through?
His staff had done a poor job of spot-checking the crowd tonight.

“And you would be?”

“Skylar Kendall,
Detroit Chronicle
. Your pro-life stance is a personal moral choice—one that compels you to block life-saving stem cell research. Don’t you think it’s unfair to impose
your
religious beliefs on Michigan citizens?”

Skylar Kendall? The unusual name didn’t take him long to place—the reporter who never passed up an opportunity to not-so-subtly gut him in every article she wrote.

“I support stem cell research. I do not support creating embryos for the sacrificial purpose of taking their stem cells.” He turned to the opposite side of the room to call on a familiar reporter. “Wendy?”

“Come on, Senator,” Ms. Kendall blurted out before Wendy could open her mouth. “It’s your job to represent the will of the people, not further your own moral agendas.”

Edward stiffened and returned his attention to the irritating reporter. He chose his words carefully and modulated his tone. He forced stiff facial muscles to relax. “It’s also my job to uphold the Constitution. The right to life is a constitutional entitlement. I encourage ethical lines be drawn in a way that respects
all
human life.”

“What constitutes ‘a life’ is a notorious gray area, but what
is
crystal clear is that over two million Michiganders voted for lifting the ban on stem cell research. In passing Proposal 2, Michigan people spoke loud and clear, yet you persist in trying to undermine this progress by creating bills that increasingly limit and regulate stem cell researchers.

“This regulation costs money, time, and could lead to Michigan’s brightest scientists moving to more hospitable states. Stem cell research is predicted to be an eight billion-dollar industry by 2016. How can you
possibly
justify your stem cell position when it’s handicapping Michigan’s economy?”

Anger vibrated off the young reporter in almost visible, palpable waves. This was personal for her.

“Michigan gained 44,000 jobs so far this year and unemployment rates have dropped to 6.3%—rates not seen since 2002. Professional and business services, manufacturing, education and health services all continue to show robust growth. With Detroit’s emergence from bankruptcy, we’ve a chance to be a part of a spectacular restoration.”

Out of the corner of his eye, he saw Ben’s circling index finger indicating that he should wind up.

“Thank you again for this warm welcome, and I look forward to serving you.” Edward smiled and nodded, then turned from the microphones and cheering crowd.

Annoyed that he’d allowed Ms. Kendall to goad him into a defensive response, Edward stalked to the waiting cars.

Well, that was hardly smooth
.
Thank God the election’s nearly over.

 

* * *

 

The Senator was eloquent and well spoken. As mesmerizing as a snake charmer. Skye moved with the crowd toward the exit door. Her gaze fixed on the back of the Senator’s head. His staff piled into the two identical dark Lincoln Town cars, while Hastings fished his cell phone from his suit coat breast pocket and angled the screen until he could see it.

A concentrated expression, as if making a mental note, flickered across his face. Phone still in hand, the Senator turned and faced the crowd. With a smile and a final wave, he climbed into the waiting car.

He was good; she’d give him that. But Hastings couldn’t really believe that crap he’d spouted; more than likely he was fooling himself, too.

 

 

 

Chapter 4

 

 

“Dear Darlene?” Skye’s eyes popped wide as she stared at the executive editor of the
Detroit Chronicle
. An advice column? “You’re kidding, right?”

“Nope. Darlene’s taking a leave of absence, so when you come back, you’ll be covering for her.”

“Karen, about what happened at the airport...” Skye swallowed hard. “I know I was out of line. I shouldn’t have gone to the press conference. But I just found out my niece died, and I went a little crazy.”

Hands clasped, Karen leaned forward onto her elbows. “Which is the
only
reason you’re not being terminated. I talked Stanley into approving a one-week suspension—without pay. When you come back, you’ll answer six to eight letters a day and I’ll pick the best ones to go to print. And, Skye,” her boss paused and peered at Skye over her reading glasses. “Do
not
waste my time. Simple, helpful advice.”

Suspension, without pay? That’d hurt, but she deserved it. Dear Darlene? Now, that was just plain humiliating.

Skye tried to keep the pleading from her voice. “I know it was unprofessional, and I promise nothing like that will ever happen again. I’ll write Senator Hastings an apology—I’ll even apologize in person if you want me to, but...an advice column?”

How could Skye possibly be taken seriously or do any noteworthy investigative journalism while writing an advice column?

Karen took off her glasses and carefully laid them on the desk. “Skye, I’m very sorry for your loss. But this assignment is not a punishment.”

“It—”

Karen held up her hand. “Let me finish.”

When Skye reluctantly nodded, Karen lowered her hand and continued in a softer tone. “You were wrong to go to that press conference —especially intimating that you were representing this paper. I understand you and your niece were very close. I get that stem cell therapy might have been her only hope, but you
cannot
verbally attack a U.S. senator because he does not share your opinion.

“Though you did ask some tough, valid questions, your timing was inappropriate and inopportune.” With a sigh, Karen leaned back in her chair. “You’re filling in for Darlene because I need somebody to cover for her and you need some time and space. You need to get some perspective. Forget the senator.”

Forget the senator who constantly hampered stem cell research and therapy, effectively killing any hope they’d had for a treatment for Niki? Not likely. “I’m better. Really, I—”

Karen pushed her sleeve back to look at her chunky crystal-encrusted watch. “We’ll see you one week and forty-five minutes from today—unless you’d prefer to tender your resignation?”

Skye opened her mouth to object and then clamped it shut. If she turned down this assignment, she’d be researching foot fungus for the next six months. She had to do it.
Great
.
Just great
.

She shook her head. “No. I’ll be back.”

Damn Hastings.

 

* * *

 

Skye devoted her suspension week to researching Edward Hastings and avoiding her sister. She didn’t want to worry Faith with her latest screw-up, and she
had
to get that man out of office before he did any more damage.

Holed up in her apartment, she spent days parked in front of her computer studying websites like OpenSecrets.org and the Federal Election Commission, digging into Hastings’s campaign expenditures, only to become frustrated by the learning curve.

“Waste of time, Skye.” There were watchdog groups who excelled in ferreting out illegal campaign contributions and understood the law far better than she did. If there were anything remotely suspicious, Hastings’s opponent would surely have uncovered it. What was she thinking?

Skye slouched in her chair, picked up her pen, and crossed out “campaign contributions.” Tax returns? Ditto. She crossed out the second item and the third, too. His personal charitable deductions were unremarkable as well, detailing the usual donations to alma maters Harvard and University of Michigan, his church, several pro-life organizations—surprise, surprise—and then a healthy amount to the Marilyn Care Center Women’s Shelter. Dead end.

“Come on, Skylar. Think outside the box.” She tapped the pen against her lip. Something more personal. Too bad Facebook wasn’t around when Hastings had been in college.

“All right. Let’s go at this backwards.” She blew out a deep breath, got out a legal pad, and diagramed a long timeline. “Senator Hastings, this is your life.”

 

* * *

 

After weeks of diligently answering Dear Darlene letters, Skye really looked forward to this dinner with Jenny. She glanced at the car clock and decided she had time for a short visit with Faith before meeting her friend.

Skye drove down the leaf-strewn street past houses draped in sticky white spider webs and huge spiders clinging to houses. Bleached bone skeletons dangled from trees or lay in the grass. A wide variety of silly, scary, artistic, Jack-o-Lanterns guarded porch steps, waiting for their debut just a few nights from now.

Skye frowned and turned away from a neighbor’s display of white ghosts floating across a lawn littered with tombstones. Her hands tightened on the steering wheel. The last tombstone she’d seen had been Niki’s.

Niki had loved Halloween—not so much for the candy, but the opportunity to dress up and be something other than a sick little girl. In costume—for even just one day—she’d been normal.

Skye knocked on the door of her sister’s plain Cape Cod-style home. Without waiting for a response, she pushed through the unlocked back door and climbed the few steps to the hallway. Skye trailed a finger along the pine bookcase Mom had refinished during her antiquing phase. She’d given it a washed green finish, but later Faith had painted chains of delicate daisies, blue bells, and baby’s breath to accent the corners.

Skye had framed a photo of toddler Niki, cuddled with her favorite blanket and fast asleep, on the bottom shelf. Seeing those plump redbud lips and flushed chubby cheeks made Skye’s arms ache in loneliness. Was there any better feeling than the weight of a trusting, sweet baby snuggled close?

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