Rachel Potter looked fired up and itching for battle as she approached him, microphone in hand, while her beefy cameraman hovered behind her filming it all.
“Mr. Devine, Rachel Potter, Channel Forty-Four News. I understand that NYPD is investigating you in connection with the murder of Sara Ewes, a story I previously broke. Do you have a comment, Mr. Devine?”
“No.” He pushed past her as people on the street gawked and started whispering.
Potter raced after him, the power pack on the back of her waist jiggling with the movements.
“Are you denying that you are a suspect in Sara Ewes’s murder? Are you denying that you had a relationship of a sexual nature with her? Are you denying that you are the father of the child she aborted? Are you denying that you had a motive to kill her?”
It was like machine-gun fire, only with words.
Devine allowed this barrage to go on for a half block as more damaging and lurid statements in the form of questions that the woman never expected answers to rained down on him like explosives from carpet-bombing planes.
“Is this live?” he asked, suddenly whirling around so fast she bumped into him.
“Would it be a problem for you if it were?” she said in a simpering manner. She stuck the mic in his face. “So, talk to our viewers, Mr. Devine. Here’s your chance. Tell us your side!”
“Okay, do you deny taking me prisoner in your news van while attempting to coerce me into giving you a scoop because you said you wanted to get away from shitty Channel Forty-Four and make it to the big-league single-digit stations?”
He stood there, and Potter stood there, her face shedding color like a landing plane did altitude, while the camera shot was jumping due to Beefy’s trying hard not to bust a gut.
“How dare you make such an accusation!” she wailed.
“Took the words right out of my mouth, lady.”
He turned and stalked off. This time Potter did not follow.
He dialed up an Uber and took it to Ewes’s old home in Park Slope.
Old home. It makes it sound like she’s been gone for decades instead of days.
Ellen Ewes answered his knock. She was dressed in jeans, a sleeveless white blouse, and sandals. The inside of the house was warm. It would be winter in New Zealand now, he thought. Maybe they were trying to take in as much heat as possible before heading back.
Fred Ewes was in the living room drinking what looked to be lemonade. He had on jeans, too, and a lavender polo shirt. He looked up absently at Devine. Ellen and Devine sat across from each other.
Ellen began: “The police have told us some things.”
“Really, such as?”
“They traced the clinic that Sara used for the abortion.”
“How did they do that?” asked Devine.
“I’m not sure. It was a place outside the city.”
“Were the doctors able to provide any information to the police? Do they know who the father was?”
“No, at least not that they’ve told us.”
Devine sat back, looking and feeling disappointed.
“If they had, would your name have come up?”
“Why would you ask that? Is it something Sara mentioned?”
“No, she was not very transparent with me on her relationships.”
“I thought you two were close. You said you talked pretty much weekly.”
Ellen looked uncomfortable with the question. “The fact is, Sara and I were estranged over the last year or so. She seemed to have changed.”
“Changed? How so?”
“She was not the girl that I raised,” replied Ellen.
“I don’t understand.”
“You don’t have to. I just want to know if you could have been the father.”
“Okay, do they know how far along Sara was?” asked Devine.
“Eight weeks. At least that’s what we were told.”
“And when did she have the procedure done?”
“In December,” Ellen replied.
“Then I was not the father. I hadn’t even met her at that point.”
“But you had sex with her? Outside of marriage?”
“Is that the reason for the estrangement? Sara was having sex outside of marriage?”
“That is not how we raised her.” She glanced at her husband. “Fred?”
He didn’t look at her or Devine. He merely said, “Young people sometimes make . . . poor decisions.”
Ellen rolled her eyes at this mild rebuke and shook her head. “Yes, very poor. She took the life of our grandchild, which is a mortal sin.”