Private Scandals

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Book: Read Private Scandals for Free Online
Authors: Nora Roberts
us, Deanna?” Roger pinched her arm as he swung up beside her.
    “I know you guys can’t get through the day without me.” Deanna wove her way through the noisy newsroom toward her desk. Phones were ringing, keyboards clattering. On one wall, current shows from CBC and the other three networkswere flashing on monitors. From the smell of things, someone had recently spilled coffee.
    “What’s our lead?” she asked Roger.
    “Last night’s fire on the South Side.”
    With a nod, Deanna sat at her desk. Unlike most of the other reporters, she kept hers meticulously neat. Sharpened pencils stood points down in a flowered ceramic cup, a notepad aligned beside them. Her Filofax was opened to today’s date.
    “Arson?”
    “That’s the general consensus. I’ve got the copy. We’ve got a taped interview with the fire marshal, and a live remote at the scene.” Roger offered her his bag of licorice. “And being a nice guy, I picked up your mail.”
    “So I see. Thanks.”
    “Caught a few minutes of Angela’s this morning.” He chewed thoughtfully on his candy. “Doesn’t discussing adultery so early in the day make people nervous?”
    “It gives them something to talk about over lunch.” She picked up an ebony letter opener and slit the first envelope.
    “Venting on national television?”
    She lifted a brow. “Venting on national television seemed to have helped the Forresters’ relationship.”
    “Looked to me like the other couple was heading for divorce court.”
    “Sometimes divorce is the answer.”
    “Is that what you think?” He kept the question light. “If your spouse was cheating, would you forgive and forget, or would you file papers?”
    “Well, I’d listen, I’d discuss it, try to find out the reason it happened. Then I’d shoot the adulterous swine full of holes.” She grinned at him. “But, that’s just me. And see, hasn’t it given us something to talk about?” She glanced down at the single sheet in her hand. “Hey, look at this.”
    She angled the sheet so they could both see it. In the center of the paper, typed in dark red ink, was a single sentence.
    Deanna, I love you.
    “The old secret admirer, hmm?” Roger spoke carelessly, but there was a frown in his eyes.
    “Looks that way.” Curious, she turned the envelope over. “No return address. No stamp, either.”
    “I just pulled the mail out of your box.” Roger shook his head. “Somebody must have slipped it in.”
    “It’s kind of sweet, I guess.” She rubbed a quick chill from her arms and laughed. “And creepy.”
    “You might want to ask around, see if anybody noticed somebody sneaking around your mail slot.”
    “It’s not important.” She tossed both letter and envelope in the trash and picked up the next.
    “Excuse me.”
    “Oh, Dr. Pike.” Deanna set down her mail and smiled at the man standing behind Roger. “Did you get lost on your way out?”
    “No, actually, I was told I’d find you here.”
    “Dr. Marshall Pike, Roger Crowell.”
    “Yes, I recognized you.” Marshall offered a hand. “I watch you both often.”
    “I just caught part of your act myself.” Roger slipped his bag of candy into his pocket. His thoughts were still focused on the letter, and he promised himself he’d slip it back out of her trash at the first possible moment. “We need copy on the dog show, Dee.”
    “No problem.”
    “Nice to have met you, Dr. Pike.”
    “Same here.” Marshall turned back to Deanna when Roger walked away. “I wanted to thank you for keeping things sane this morning.”
    “It’s one of the things I do best.”
    “I’d have to agree. I’ve always thought you report the news with clearheaded compassion. It’s a remarkable combination.”
    “And a remarkable compliment. Thanks.”
    He took a survey of the newsroom. Two reporters were arguing bitterly over baseball, phones were shrilling, an intern wheeled a cart heaped with files through the narrow spaces between desks.

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