the crooked nose. On the one hand, I felt sorry for her because Paul was only using her to make me jealous, and on the other, knowing that with one crook of my little finger she would be manless gave me an odd feeling of power.
Pam Silberstein stopped by my office the next day at noon. âWow! Are we eating at The Four Seasons today?â
I was wearing a black, knee-length dress with suede curlicues around the heart-shaped neckline, a diamond teardrop pendant with matching earrings, and my long braids were curled and pinned into a stylish French roll.
I pulled my purse out of a desk drawer and grinned. âThis isnât about you. I have a date tonight.â
âYou look marvelous. He wonât be able to take his eyes off of you.â
As I put my coat on and followed Pam toward the elevators, I hoped that she was right.
Pam waited until we were seated at Café Un Deux Trois on 44 th Street and had ordered our foodâsalmon with béarnaise sauce for me, French onion soup and a Caesar salad for herâbefore she hit me with the news.
âIâm leaving Welburn, Jackie. I gave Leigh my resignation this morning.â
âDo you have another job?â
She smiled triumphantly. âYouâre looking at the new head of trade paperbacks for Hamilton Welsh & Hamilton.â
I was sad for me and happy for her. âOh, Pam. It wonât be the same without you.â
âIâm going to miss you, too, kid. There is another opening at Hamilton for a senior editor and I wish you would consider taking it.â
Oh, what a tempting offer! To get away from Craigâs offensive book, Annabelleâs dark, empty office, the atmosphere of grim uncertainty. It would be so easy to pack up and walk away from it all but then I would look as though I had something to hide.
I shook my head. âThe media is still harping on the morning I was rushing to meet with Jamal. As soon as Annabelleâs killer is behind bars, Iâll be glad to leave Welburn Books. If I make a move before that, it will look very bad for me.â
She toyed with her silverware. âHave you heard anything more about the investigation?â
âOnly what I read in the papers.â
And then I remembered Alyssa. âPam, I know an extremely talented editor who is looking for a new senior editor spot. Would you take a look at her resumé?â
âAbsolutely. Did she get laid off or something?â
I started telling her Alyssaâs story and her face got redder and redder as I went on.
âThatâs horrible,â Pam said when I finished. âYou tell Alyssa that Iâd like to see her right away. Iâm going to make sure she gets a job and if Marlene Rashker doesnât like it, I donât give a damn.â
âThanks, Pam.â I felt pleased.
Our food arrived and we dug in with gusto.
âTell me something, Jackie. Is Craig Murrayâs book any good?â
âJust between you and me?â
âI swear.â She crossed her heart.
âItâs pure crap.â
She burst out laughing and coughing into her napkin. âI knew it. You poor dear. Can it be fixed?â
âHell, no.â
âDid you tell Annabelle?â
âI let her know that it had a ridiculous premise, but of course I said I could fix it. She really didnât want to hear anything else.â
Pam shook her head and took a sip of water. âThatâs why Iâm getting out. Craig Murray seems like a nice guy but heâs going to run the company into the ground and take a whole lot of reputations with him. Mine wonât be one of them.â
âCraig is a very nice man,â I agreed.
âI donât think he killed her,â Pam said quietly.
Keith had said the same thing but I pretended the thought had never occurred to me. âCraig? A killer? Why would you say something like that?â
âOh, come on, Jackie. He is probably suspect number one on
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