Blowout

Blowout by Catherine Coulter Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: Blowout by Catherine Coulter Read Free Book Online
Authors: Catherine Coulter
out who killed my stepfather. Of course I’ll stay at a hotel, maybe under a different name, so the media won’t bother me.”
    â€œNo way, Ms. Markham,” Detective Raven said. He’d been speaking to Savich, and he spoke without even looking at her.
    â€œMy mother needs protection and comfort and support, I don’t. Actually, I think I’d like to have the media find me.”
    Ben said, “Nobody but an idiot wants to deal with the media.”
    Callie drew a deep breath, fanned her hands in front of her. “I thought you would have known. The thing is, I’m one of them.”
    â€œWhat does that mean?”
    â€œIt means, Detective Raven, that you know I was Justice Califano’s stepdaughter, but you haven’t bothered to check out what I do for a living. I’m an investigative reporter for The Washington Post. I’m one of the vultures.”
    â€œWell, sh—” He wanted to curse big time, but didn’t.
    â€œSo some would say,” she agreed, “what almost came out of your mouth. Nice save.”
    â€œSo you caught a reporter jerk in bed with another reporter jerk and you’re the third reporter in this triad?”
    â€œHey, another good save. You didn’t call me a jerk.”
    â€œThe boot doesn’t fit just yet. Damn, what are we going to do with you? Why don’t we go sit down in one our primo interview rooms?”
    Callie looked him up and down. “As long as it’s warm. My feet are wet. Yes, all right, let’s go talk. But I want some tea before you sweat me.”
    Savich laughed. Officer Nancy Kreider said, “Personally, I’d kill for some coffee.”
    â€œThat would be okay, too,” Callie said, then felt a rush of misery. She cleared her throat, aware that they were all looking at her. “The thing is my stepfather believed coffee is the first cousin to evil tobacco and wouldn’t let it through the front door. I once brought a thermos of coffee to their house, had to swig it on the sly.”
    Officer Kreider patted her arm. “I’ll send someone to get us coffee and bring it to the interview room.”
    Sherlock pulled two teabags out of her purse. “Dillon wouldn’t exactly call coffee a first cousin to evil tobacco, but close enough. Could we have some hot water?”
    Callie walked down a corridor of dirty linoleum, the color of lettuce, streaks of muddy water making puddles here and there where the linoleum had caved in, thinking that a Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States of America had been strangled, and they were talking about coffee. There weren’t a wholelot of people around, cops or otherwise. She thought this was odd until she realized it was Saturday morning.
    The small interview room was warm, if nothing else. There were half a dozen chairs and a single scarred table. The walls were painted the same lettuce color as the linoleum in the corridor. Callie thought if she were a criminal, she’d confess, just to get out of this room.
    She shrugged out of her coat, sat down, and slipped her boots off so her socks could dry out.
    No one said anything until the coffee and hot water for the tea arrived.
    Callie looked from Detective Raven, who’d taken off his leather jacket, to the special agents. Officer Kreider sat against the wall, saying nothing. “I was on the debate team in high school. I had quite an edge because my stepfather taught me. My mother wasn’t married to him then, but they’d been seeing each other for at least six months as I remember. He was brilliant, I recognized that even as a self-absorbed teenager. I told him once when he demolished me in an argument that he could probably convince a fencepost to tango.” The instant the words were out of her mouth, Callie burst into tears. Sherlock handed her a Kleenex. She hiccuped, then managed to get herself under control.
    Ben Raven rolled up his shirtsleeves as

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