Part Three
I'd been home for six weeks, going utterly stir-crazy when Sydney came back to Washington, unusually, in the middle of the week.
I greeted her. By then I was on my feet more and was actually able to stand and greet her with a big hug and held her there for as long as I could manage. Just holding her like that aroused me and, feeling my erection poking into her, she looked up at me and grinned.
"I guess you're feeling better."
"Loads. What brings you here in the middle of the week?"
"Paul Goodhue called me to ask if I thought you were feeling good enough to come into the newsroom this afternoon."
"Damn. I'd love to get out of here for a while. It will tire me out, but I don't care."
"I think they're planning a little 'Welcome Back' celebration in your honor. "
"I hate those things. I don't need any big welcome."
"Stephen, maybe they need to do something in your honor. I've been impressed. People really seem to care for you, and they haven't been able to see you for more than a month now."
"Alright. It will be worth it if it means getting out of here."
"Okay. Let's go pick out a suit for you. And you need to shave."
Sydney fussed over me for a while and I got in the shower and shaved, then put on a suit, a necktie and bent over to tie my shoes. The process was only modestly painful now compared to when I first got home when everything was excruciating.
When we were ready to go, a little before noon, I told Sydney that I'd call an Uber.
"No need," she said with a bit of a grin. "You're a VIP now. The Post has provided you with a car and driver for the foreseeable future. They're very eager to get you back to work."
"Oh, man...I don't know about that."
"It's part of your security arrangements. The security team doesn't want you to travel to and from home by yourself. They think it's too dangerous."
"I can't live like this Syd," I said. "I can't live like a VIP, with an entourage all the time. I won't be able to work like that."
"It won't be forever. The newspaper is too cheap to do it for long. Let's just enjoy it for today."
After a short drive in the security team's big, black SUV, we arrived at the Post with time to spare. Everyone from the guards at the front desk to the admins we passed along the way seemed happy to see me, and I heard more than one person shout "Welcome back, Mr. Bradley."
But when I entered the newsroom, I was blown away.
Sydney and I walked in from the corridor, and we were greeted by Cindy Park, who came over and gave me a big hug and a kiss on my cheek. When Cindy let me go, I realized the whole newsroom was on their feet applauding. Paul Goodhue came up to greet me, as well as all the rest of the top brass at the paper. I walked around for a while, greeting people and shaking hands when Goodhue, looking at his watch, called me over in front of a big screen TV that had been set up in the newsroom.
"Folks, I'd like to call your attention to this screen." Then he grabbed the remote and turned up the volume. On the screen a woman I recognized as an editor from the New York Times was at the podium at some big gathering.
"And the 2023 Pulitzer Prize for Non-Fiction goes to Stephen Bradley of the Washington Post for his book "Plunder: How a minor insurance broker ripped off the government for $1 Billion."
The newsroom again erupted into raucous applause, complete with hooting and hollering and cries of "Way to go Bradley!"
Paul again asked for quiet. "The Pulitzer Committee called me last week after they'd decided to give Stephen the award. Said they knew he probably would not be able to come to New York to collect his prize, so they sent it to me to award to him."
Paul turned to a small table behind him and opened a box, pulling out the usual framed medal. "Stephen, congratulations. I know I speak for everyone here when I say that no one could deserve this more." He handed me the award and shook my hand and then continued. "I'd like to point out that no one in the history of the Pulitzer Prize has ever won five times before now."
Paul turned the podium over to me and as I stepped up to speak, I realized that we were on camera, and my little acceptance speech was being carried live in New York at the awards luncheon.
"Thanks to all of you. Thanks to the committee for this incredible honor. I am humbled by your selection and will rededicate myself to the pursuit of uncovering inconvenient truths." More applause, both in the newsroom and in New York.
"Most of you know that I experienced a little altercation a few weeks ago with two men who seemed to have taken issue with some of my work." There was some laughter at that understatement. "I came out of it quite a little bit the worse for the experience, but I'd like to make it clear today, that no matter what threats we face or what intimidation we experience, we can't allow that to deter us from pursuing those inconvenient truths. We need to look out for each other, but we need to continue the work, continue holding people to account." More applause.
"My recovery from that experience has been long and painful. I'd like to thank the two people who have made it immeasurably easier." I reached past Paul to Cindy, and took her hand, pulling her up close to me. "These two women -- my love Sydney Thomas and my best friend, Cindy Park -- have been with me every step of the way these last two months. I literally could not have made it without their help."
While the newsroom applauded them, I gave them both hugs and the festivities began to break up.
Later, in my office with Sydney and Cindy, I was starting to sag.
"I thought I'd want to stay and work the rest of the day, but I'm really feeling the fatigue," I said.
"The docs said you're going to feel that way for a while. You might have to settle for working half days for a while."
"I know... I just have so much I need to do."
"You have a team now of ten people, me included," Cindy said. "Put us to work."
With that, we called the team into my office. Syd excused herself, and Cindy started introducing me to some of the newer faces. I think everyone of them was under 30 or 35 maybe, and I had them start by filling me in and letting me get a lay of the land.
"Okay. I'm going to ask Cindy to honcho this, but we need to create a timeline, starting from when the book was published on November first through today, chronicling every step Jerome Beckwith took and another timeline chronicling every step Rodney Cameroon took since then up to Cameron's death. These two travel all the time, and they don't fly coach. Billy, do you know anyone at the FAA who can get you the tail number of Beckwith's private plane?"
"I can get that," he said.
"Okay, once we have that, let's start tracking that tail number. Find out where he was immediately before Cameron's death, and where he was the night I was attacked. Kevin, what have you heard from HHS about the security video and the visitor logs."
Kevin smiled broadly at that -- he put a stack of documents and two thumb drives on my desk. "It's all there. I ran through the visitor logs, didn't find anything that stood out, but I might not know what to look for. There are dozens of entries there from Beckwith's company -- people coming and going on work for the NHIA. But you'd expect that. And there's hours of video. It will take me days to review it all."