Sam stood looking at his door for what seemed like a very long time. He was reeling, more than a little bit, and he actually put his arm out and propped himself up against the door, hanging his head and breathing steadily. When he had a better hold of himself, he turned to find Miranda rifling through the drawers of his kitchen.
"What in the world made you think that was a good idea?" Sam said, standing in the kitchen doorway. He kept his distance on purpose; if there ever was a time he was worried about losing his cool, it was now.
"She's right, you know," Miranda said, continuing her search without looking up. "Well partly right, anyway: I don't think I'd have ended up resorting to selling my body if the newspaper didn't work out. Daddy's money might not buy me class, but it would at least keep me from walking the streets. However she's definitely right about a couple things: I am kind of a selfish bitch, and these days all I'm writing is gossipy bullshit. Ahh, here we go."
Miranda pulled a handful of takeout menus from a drawer and fanned them out on the counter.
"Pizza, pizza, Chinese ... oops, closed, so never mind with that ... sushi, and Indian. I'm not really feeling Indian, so what do you think, Sam, pizza or sushi? Are any of these any good?"
Sam just stood there, mouth agape, looking at her.
"Yeah, I'm kind of thinking it's a comfort food kind of night too, so let's go with pizza," she went on, picking up a menu in each and holding them up to him. "Which one of these is the least greasy? I hate it when it's so oily that it just pools on top and you have to dab it with a napkin."
Eventually Sam found his voice. "Wow, you really have gone way off the deep end, haven't you. Are you actively trying to break up my marriage?"
Miranda sighed and took a step towards Sam, and he immediately took a step backward into the hall. She actually had the gall to look wounded.
"First of all, Sam, you're not married," she said. "You're engaged. And the wedding isn't even until NEXT December. But no, obviously I'm not trying to break up your engagement. I'm not a sociopath, just a bitch. You two love each other and you'll be fine. She may never forgive me, but she's never liked me anyways. She's obviously threatened by our friendship and always has been."
"Secondly, she's right about another thing: I am lucky you give me the time of day. I've clearly taken far more in our relationship than I've given. You don't think I know that? But right now, Sam, I need you. Something is happening, to me and maybe to our whole city, and I need you with me to get through this. I need your strength, I need your support, I need your fucking brain, since mine seems to be on the fritz, as fun as the results have been, and most importantly I need your fantastic skill as an investigative journalist."
"Like I said, I have been writing bullshit. It's been a long time since I've even considered sinking my teeth into anything this big, and I frankly don't think I have the chops anymore.
"So you'll have to forgive me, but what I just did right there? It was 100% on purpose. It will take her a couple of days to cool off to the point where she'll even be willing to talk to you, let alone see you. That gives me ... what, 72 hours? ... of a fucking brilliant and tenacious journalist focused entirely on helping me to crack this thing open.
"I need you focused, Sam, and at my side without any other drama. Then we can figure out who Luc is, why half the city's power players are seemingly in his thrall, and how he managed to fuck with my head so significantly that I took a cum shower from a police captain, two commercial real estate developers, the mayor's chief of staff and the head of the business school at State - in front of three dozen other people who were recording it - and came harder than I ever thought possible while doing it.
"So was that manipulative? Yeah, it was, and I'm sorry. I promise I'll find a way to make it up to you - and Viv - later. But we have work to do. And I don't work on an empty stomach, nor have I eaten all goddamn day. So tell me which one of these pizza joints should we order from and let's get started."
Sam just looked at her. He knew he was supposed to be mad at her. The way she'd just purposely created a divide between him and Viv was fucked up. But everything she had just said was entirely logical; actually it was the most logical thing that had happened all day. He shook his head.
"Giuseppe's has better pizza and it's not too greasy. If you want subs instead, Sal's is better."
"Finally! Progress, thank you," she said. "I want pizza, so what do you want on it? And if you're going to insist on getting some fucking ridiculous man pizza like meat lovers or barbecue pulled pork or whatever, we're just going to have to order two, because I want to work tonight not lie around groaning with an upset stomach."
Sam couldn't help himself; he smiled at her. And she gave him back that big dazzling smile she had and he knew he was sunk.
"I'll eat anything you order," he said, "but it's got to have red sauce on it, none of that alfredo sauce or pesto bullshit."
"Alright! I can work with that," she said, and opened the menu. "Okay you get to choose one meat and I get two vegetables. What's your pleasure?"
"Hard to go wrong with bacon," Sam said.
"See, I told you you were brilliant," she said.
She walked out of the kitchen, and reached up and pecked him on the cheek on her way by. She fished her phone out of her purse, and dialed the number on the menu.
"Hello, I'd like to order for delivery," she said into her phone. "Yes I can hold."
She looked up at Sam, phone pinned between her ear and her shoulder, and said, "While we're dropping truth bombs, let's deliver the whole payload. I've got two more."
"Okay," Sam said apprehensively.
"One: whatever's happening to me, it's progressive. I'm definitely crazier now than I was this morning, I'm 100% certain, and it's not just that I'm hangry."
"Got it," Sam said with a nod. "Time is of the essence, and the weirdness has only just begun. That's not great, but it's better knowing that going in. What's the other unexploded ordnance?"
"Viv wasn't the only one who told some truths in that exchange," she said, locking eyes with him. "I wanted to fuck you so badly earlier, if you had given any sign that you would have let me, things would have gotten a lot wilder. Yes, hello? Okay, I would like an extra large pizza with bacon, onions and broccoli please. And six Cokes. Yes that's it. Cash. The address is ... "
***
Sam and Miranda worked well into the night gathering what they knew and building a battle plan for the next few days. Sam had Miranda think about who was at the party; they got down a list of roughly 25 definites and another 10 maybes.
Looking at the names listed out, it didn't take long for Sam to notice connections. Several layers of local and state government were represented, as well as several rags-to-riches underdog types in fields like sports, entertainment, and business. There was very little "old money" represented, and no one from the local churches - maybe that last piece wasn't a surprise, given the type of party it had been.
Eventually he saw how at least two of the recent murder/suicides could fit into this of group, and that began to chill his bones.
Sam had her round out what she remembered about the rest of the previous evening after her performance up on the dais. She'd been led to some sort of dressing room to clean up by a member of the house staff and given a clean men's dress shirt to wear since hers had been destroyed. The other guests were apparently ushered out while she cleaned up; Luc saw Max, Bianca and Miranda out himself.
Miranda had said he'd kissed her gently and told her, "I hope our paths run alongside for a while longer, and if there is anything I can do to help you, do not hesitate to ask."
"Oh, shit!" Miranda said.
"What?" Sam said.