"So, it isn't just to get the scoop on what's up with the pairing of the Blake figure skating couple, then."
"No, it isn't," the
Boston Globe
entertainment reporter, Denise Standish, said to her sports reporter counterpart, Todd Stevens, as they drove down to Colorado Springs from the Denver airport Holiday Inn in a rental car. "Jeff Davenport is engaged to one of their coaches, Tracey Parsons, and he wants to know how and if she fits into any hanky-panky with those pairs skaters." Jeff Davenport owned the
Boston Globe
along with a whole hell of a lot of other stuff too. He was quite a catch and so there always was speculation what the woman was after when he was seeing someone seriously. Of course, his current squeeze was quite a catch too. Tracey Parsons had struck gold in women's singles skating in the last two Olympics, so she was as much a celebrity as Davenport was.
"And I'm finding this out just now?" Stevens asked.
Denise Standish's response was a bit testy. "You were into your cups on the flight and weren't much company at the hotel last night. It's not like we had time and opportunity to discuss our brief. I didn't know you hadn't discussed this with Jeff as well."
"I'm not on 'Jeff' terms with Mr. Davenport as you seem to be. And I don't travel well."
"And yet you fly all over the country taking in sporting events for the
Globe
," she said. She wasn't giving up testy. She'd jumped at this assignment as soon as she'd heard that Stevens would be the other reporter. Stevens, a former Olympic gymnast, was a dreamboat. All of the women at the paper had been trying their damnedest to get into bed with him, and she'd figured this gave her an opportunity to accomplish that. But, after going to dinner together, he'd said it was time for him to hit the sack, and before she had an opportunity to suggest he didn't have to do it alone, he was at the elevators, pushing buttons. They hadn't even been given rooms on the same floor.
"I do what I have to to keep a job," Todd said. "I know it's dumb. I have no trouble swinging high off the ground on the rings. But I don't like being cooped up in a wobbling airplane. I didn't like flying before I went to work for the
Globe
, so, what career did I pick? Sports gymnast, which meant I was flying all over the country for a long season. But I'll be OK—at least until we fly back."
I don't want you just OK, Denise was thinking. I want you in bed, the same as most of the other women at the paper want—and they all fume that you are ultrapolite to them but you've ignored every signal any of them has broadest to you.
"So, we're to be spies as well as reporters when we get to the Blakes' ranch outside of Colorado Springs," he said as they coasted down I-25 toward Pike's Peak and Cheyenne Mountain. The pairs figure skaters, Sydney Blake and her new partner, Vlad Starnovic, trained at the Broadmoor Skating Club near the Ice Skating Hall of Fame complex in Colorado Springs. The two had paired up just a year ago, but they'd already won gold in the annual U.S. nationals; followed by a fine sixth-place finish at the 2022 Beijing Olympics, where the top spots were tied up by the Japanese, Russians, and Chinese; and then an even-better fifth-place finish at the Worlds in March. The
Globe
reporters were descending on them the first week of April to do an article about how they'd risen so fast in the face of changing partners.
For the prior six years, Sydney Blake—initially Sydney Rainer—had partnered with Hank Blake. They'd been married for four years. Then, after a series of sports injuries, Hank had hung up his skates and turned coach at the Broadmoor Club. Sydney hadn't wanted to stop, and another skater, a Russian-turned-American, Vlad Starnovic, with a previous partner whose father had bought him for her was abandoned. Sydney picked him up, and they were doing better as a team now than the Blakes had done together. Starnovic never had clicked with his previous partner. Someone had heard him say he didn't like to be a bought man, and the gossip columns had played that up. After Sydney and Vlad teamed up, Hank Blake became one of their coaches.
"Who all is going to be at this ranch we're going to?" Stevens asked.
"The Blakes. They own the ranch. But Vlad Starnovic and Tracey Parsons live there too. Cozy, no?"
"Yes, that does sound cozy—but in what way, I wonder," Stevens said. "Who is really paired with who?"
"I think that's what we're supposed to find out. The gossip is that Starnovic is fucking Sydney Blake and Hank is being cuckolded, whether wittingly or not. The question there, beyond whether it's true or not—Starnovic is a real hunk, which has given rise to the rumors and he'd been rumored to be fucking his previous partner—is where Tracey Parsons fits in. Are she and Hank Blake a pair and that's why he doesn't seem to mind having lost his wife and partner to the hunky Russian? If so, I don't think Jeff Davenport wants to pursue marriage with her. He's already struck out on two marriages."
"But what we write—"
"Doesn't have to include everything we find out," Denise completed for him. "We're signed up to do a fluff piece on the."
"So, how do we—?"