8
โWELL, THATโSโฆDEFINITELY the beginning,โ I blurt into the silence.
I figured sheโd start with the year her grandfather imported snow to their Southern California home for Christmas, or talk about the caviar- eating Shetland pony she got for her third birthday. Or maybe skip all that and get right to the first time she heard Cosmo Sinclairโs sexy drawling voice, and whether little cartoon hearts bloomed from her eyes in that moment.
Basically, I thought Margaretโs โbeginningโ wouldโve been about a hundred and fifty years later and, you know, involved her on some level.
But thatโs fine! This was interesting too! And sheโs leading the conversation, which was the goal.
I clear my throat while I try to figure out where to go from here. โSo did your family talk about Lawrence a lot? Howโd you learn all of this?โ
That makes her laugh. โNever. From what I hear, my great-grandfather was a miserable man, who no one mourned. But heโd journaled obsessively.
And when he died, his sonโmy grandfather Geraldโfound his diaries in the family safe. Gerald never shared them with anyone else while he was alive. But he willed them to my sister, Laura. They were very close,โ she says. โHe wanted her to burn them after she read them. But she couldnโt bring herself to, for whatever reason. She was always more sentimental than me.โ
Holy shit. Speaking of mother lodes. Journals. From the 1800s, from the founding father of Ives Media. โDoes she still have them?โ As far as I
knew, no one had seen or heard from Laura since well before Margaret disappeared, but because sheโd never been a mainstay of the tabloids, no one was really looking for her either.
โNo,โ Margaret answers. โIโm afraid she doesnโt.โ
Her expression goes distant, almost watery, as if sheโs lost in a memory.
Itโs the same way she looked while telling Lawrenceโs storyโas if she were actually there. As if she herself had lived it, and it still made her ache.
I glance at my notes, looking for a segue, ideally toward something that doesnโt make her freeze up: โThat first hotel Lawrence boughtโdo you happen to know what it was called?โ
She blinks at me for several seconds, like sheโs lost her place in space
and time.
โMargaret?โ I prompt.
โThe Ebner.โ The word seems to stick in her throat.
Curiosity prickles at the nape of my neck. โHave you ever been? Back to visit where the family fortune began?โ
โOnly once,โ she says. โOn a family trip. Just before my parents divorced, they took my sister and me to the mountains for a long weekend.โ
Her faint smile quickly strains and she looks away. โFamily finally sold it off in the seventies.โ
The message is clear. She doesnโt want to talk more about it. Not yet.
I scribble The Ebner into my notebook, along with last family trip with Mโs parents, so I wonโt forget to revisit it once sheโs ready.
โCan I ask,โ I begin cautiously, โwhat made you want to tell that particular story?โ
This time when her eyes come to mine, thereโs real force behind them, all that distance gone and instead a keen sharpness, like she could see right through me if she wanted, or else like sheโs trying to project something directly into my mind, willing me to understand.
โYou wanted to know what it was like to be born into my family,โ she says after a beat. โBefore you can understand that, you have to understand where this all began. My story, every bit of it, is tangled up with what Lawrence did.โ
โDo youโฆdo you mean to Thomas?โ I ask.
โMy great-grandfather was a cold, cruel man with no qualms about taking what wasnโt his,โ she says, that surprisingly powerful, potent gaze of hers still fixed on me, the kind of charisma that can hold a person captive.
I let the silence linger like an invitation. But uncertainty flashes across her face. Any second, sheโs going to retreat again, that maddening push-pull of any great interview. I make a snap decision and lean forward, stopping both recordings.
Her silvery brows lift in surprise. โIs that allowed?โ
โWe havenโt agreed to anything yet, other than a conversation,โ I say.
โA monthlong conversation, sure, but just a conversation. If you end up wanting to do the book, we can record things later. But if this is making you nervous, letโs forget it for now.โ
You can trust me, I think at her, between every line.
She holds my gaze. Decades ago, when she was at the peak of her fame, she was so open with the press. Always smiling and waving and blowing kisses to the paparazzi, giving glib little quotes to reporters on her way down red carpets or into clubs. Sheโs so different than those old pictures and articles made her seem, so tightly bottled into herself, with only little glimmers of wry charm and sudden blasts of emotion slipping out.
Youโre safe, I think at her.
Her mouth opens and closes twice before any sound comes out, and when she does speak, her voice is quieter, confessional almost.
โBy the end of his life,โ she says, โall my great-grandfather did was ramble about three things.โ
Her lips knit tightly together as she carefully charts her own path forward.
โHe apologized to his brother Dicky, like he was right there in the room with him. Wept about losing him like it had just happened,โ she says. โAnd he argued with Thomas Dougherty. Raged at him, really. Lawrenceโs son, my grandfather, wouldnโt let anyone else into the roomโhe was so afraid of what Lawrence might say, that it might leak to the press. My familyโs
rivalry with the Pulitzers was well underway by thenโan Ives couldnโt sneeze without making it in the papers.โ
I scribble three bullet points. Beside the first, I write apologizing to Dicky, and next to the second, arguing with Thomas. When I see Margaret watching me, I double-check: โWould you rather I didnโt write this down?โ
โThatโs my preference, yes,โ she admits.
I scribble out the note and set my pen aside.
She nods something like a thank-you and then goes on: โAfter word reached Thomas about the silver ore my great-grandfather had cheated him out of, Thomas came back into town, furious. Heโd thought of Lawrence like a brother, after all that time together, and he wanted to know why heโd been betrayed.
โBut Lawrence refused to even meet with him. Day after day, night after night, Thomas stood outside that tiny hotel, screaming for Lawrence to come face him. But my great-grandfather had enough money and enough men in his employ then that he could make himself inaccessible. So eventually, Thomas left. He went to the biggest newspaper he could find back in California, to tell the story of my great-grandfatherโs treachery.
Eventually the reporter came to talk to Lawrence, and Lawrence responded by buying the paper.โ
My jaw drops. โThe San Francisco Daily Dispatch?โ The start of everything for Ives Media? โHe bought it to protect his reputation?โ
She snorts. โOh, he didnโt give a ratโs ass about reputation. When he talked to the reporter, he asked how much Thomas had made off selling the story, because those were the terms Lawrence Ives thought in. When he heard the dollar amount, he knew right away that the news was one more place he could bury his money and watch it fruit.
โHe started mining less, investing more. Bought a beautiful home in San Francisco and sent for his younger sisterโit had always been his plan to bring her to live with him once heโd built a comfortable life. But in the years since heโd been gone, sheโd grown up. Sheโd all but forgotten him.
And worse, sheโd married a Dougherty, another poor farmer. Because of
what Lawrence had done to Thomas, she wanted nothing to do with her brother.โ
After a moment, she goes on, โAt the end of his life, when he wasnโt apologizing to the ghost of Dicky, Lawrence was arguing with a phantom Thomas. Blaming him for everything that happened. Telling him he deserved what he got, to die, drunk and penniless, for being stupid enough to believe that Lawrence was responsible for him. He thought anyone who relied on anyone else would pay for it, eventually. Though Iโve always thought the lesson was that anyone who relies on an Ives will only be hurt for their trouble.โ
I sit for a moment, absorbing that. Margaretโs gaze has gone slightly cloudy, as if this thought is swirling around behind her eyes.
I clear my throat and gently nudge us back on track: โSo what was the
other thing?โ
โExcuse me?โ she says.
โYou said your great-grandfather used to rant about three things,โ I remind her. โWhat was the last thing?โ
A smile tugs at her lips, wispy and unconvincing. โI think we should save that for another day,โ she says, pushing herself up from her chair. โIโm in dire need of a nap.โ
โOf course,โ I say, as cheerfully as I can muster. โButโโ
โJodi will see you out,โ she says, cutting me short with a winning smile.
I jam my mouth shut and nod acceptance: Iโve been excused.
Margaret turns and sweeps from the room.
โข โข โข LATER, I LIE on the sofa at the little overgrown bungalow Iโm renting, ignoring my still-unpacked bags in favor of doing research. If this was an interview for a Scratch piece, I couldโve simply sent a list of questions to one of the fact-checkers to follow up on. In fact, if I get this job, it might be worth hiring someone freelance to do my legwork so I can focus on the writing and interviews themselves, but until I have someone, itโs up to me.
I look back on my list of things to check out, and start with Dillon Springs, Pennsylvania.
All of this was so long ago that birth and death records werenโt even being filed yet. Thereโs no way to confirm most of what Margaret told me, since itโs anecdotal, but as we move forward in history, Iโm going to need to be able to verify everything.
I text a couple of freelance fact-checkers to get their availability in the coming months, then go back to reading about Dillon Springs, a tiny town that does, in fact, consider itself โthe birthplace of modern American journalism,โ a fairly lofty claim, especially considering that Lawrence Ives never once went back to Dillon Springs and it was his San Franciscoโborn son who became the true media magnate of the family.
Lawrence had owned three newspapers by the time he died, but he had no involvement in how they were run day to day. His son, Gerald, Margaretโs grandfather, was the one to push into the business of news.
As far as I can tell, there are no prominent Iveses still in Dillon Springs, though Iโm guessing if Margaret did a DNA test, weโd be able to find a slew of cousins, given how large a family her great-grandfather was born into.
Next I search for Thomas Dougherty, but if any more of his story is out there, the first five pages of search results donโt yield it. I try his name along with Dillon Springs, but still have no luck.
From there, I move on to reading about the first big mine lode, and the forty-two tons of silver, a number confirmed by multiple sources, codified into history by now, becauseโwhile, honestly, Ives made his fortune across multiple industriesโthis particular mine and its treasure offered the punchiest, most impressive headline.
Headline. It jump-starts something in my brain.
I open a new browser and run a search for Ivesโs first newspaper acquisition, rather than scouring my preinterview notes. There it is: the San Francisco Daily Dispatch. If Lawrence bought it out, then Iโm guessing the story about Thomas Doughertyโs betrayal at Lawrenceโs hands never ran, but I send an email to their archives department to see if they have any
copies of issues from that far back that havenโt crumbled into dust, just in case.
Then I start looking for information about the inn Lawrence bought, and something strange happens.
The Ebner Hotel comes up right away, exactly where Iโm expecting it, in the Nevada town where the Ives fortune began.
The issue is, while the hotel is a historic landmark built during the gold rush, it wasnโt called the Ebner until after the family sold it, in the 1970s.
When Lawrence acquired it, it had been called the Arledge, and then in 1917, it had been renamed the Nicollet, for the duration of the Ivesesโ ownership of it.
So why didnโt Margaret call it that? It wouldnโt have been called the Ebner untilโฆfortyish years after her one visit. Why would her first reaction be to call it by its current name?
Itโs a small, probably meaningless discrepancy, but the way her voice stuck when she said the name keeps wriggling in the back of my mind.
Maybe she has been back there since her family sold it off. But why wouldnโt she want me to know that?
Or am I just overthinking a meaningless mistake?
I fire off a text to the group chat, and when I donโt get a quick reply, I message Theo too: Can I run something by you?
Luckily, he replies quickly. What kind of thing?
Work thing, I say.
My phone starts ringing immediately.
If thereโs one thing Theo Bouras canโt resist, itโs a good mystery.
Probably why heโs never been quite ready to make things official with me.
Mystery is not my strong suit.
โHi,โ I say brightly, answering the call.
โAlicccce,โ he says, drawing my name out in a teasing way that makes
me shiver.
โTheo,โ I say.
โWhat have you got for me this time?โ he asks.
โAre you sure youโre not too busy?โ
โNah,โ he says. โIโve got you on speaker while Iโm developing.โ
For work, his photos are all digital, but his real passion is film, so on his off days, heโs usually in his home darkroom, or out shooting.
โIโm trying to figure out why a source might lie about something trivial,โ I say.
โAnd by source, do you mean Margaret Ives?โ he teases.
โI just mean generally,โ I say.
โHow trivial are we talking?โ he asks, clearly intrigued.
โLike saying theyโve only been somewhere once, but maybe theyโve been there more than that,โ I say. โMaybe more recently than they said.โ
He hums. โLikeโฆsomewhere a crime has been committed, perhaps?โ
I tuck my phone between my shoulder and ear and sit back down in front of my computer, searching for news stories about the Ebner and garnering nothing much of interest. โMaybe,โ I say. โBut probably not.โ
He thinks again. โMaybe it was, like, a rendezvous spot. Maybe she was having an affair. Cheating on the Boy Wonder of Rock โnโ Roll before he
died.โ
I roll my eyes. โI never said she.โ
โFine,โ he relents. โMaybe this person was cheating on their husband, Cosmo Sinclair.โ
I take a sip of my now-cold afternoon coffee and swish it around in my mouth, like I might be able to taste the answer. Cosmo was already gone before the Nicollet Inn became the Ebner.
If Margaretโs hiding a visitโor multiple visitsโitโs not because of an affair.
Besides, an affair might be a shocking revelation, but this is a woman who also wore her wedding dress to her husbandโs funeral, knowing full well thereโd be miles of paparazzi in every direction. Iโm not sure Iโd buy her cheating on him, and Iโm even less convinced sheโd feel the need to hide it so long after the fact.
โOr I donโt know,โ Theo says, breaking into my thoughts. โMaybe she just forgot. The woman is, like, eighty-something.โ
โNever said Iโm talking about a woman,โ I remind him. โOr about an eighty-something-year-old, for that matter.โ
โWhy not just ask her?โ he says.
โNext time I talk to them,โ I reply, โI will. But thatโs not until Tuesday.โ
โSo sheโs giving you a couple of days off,โ he says. โInteresting.โ
Thereโs a distinctively flirty edge to his voice. It makes my stomach flip-flop in a not entirely pleasant way. I know what heโs getting at: that I could come home and we could hook up. And that sounds pretty nice.
But a few weeks ago, when Iโd sent a screenshot of one of his late-night text messages to my friends, Bianca had pointed out something that had been bothering me ever since.
Have you noticed, she wrote, that this man NEVER just asks you to hang out? He literally only ever sets you up to ask HIM to hang out.
Cillian wrote back, Iโve noticed. He is my enemy.
Priya chimed in, As long as youโre getting what you want out of this arrangement, ignore the haters, Alice.
The thing is, Iโm technically not. I wouldโve gladly agreed to be Theoโs girlfriend months ago if it was on the table. But it wasnโt, and there wasnโt anyone else I was interested in, so I didnโt really see the point of giving him an ultimatum. So weโd continued on like this, and it was mostly fineโI really liked being with him, whenever we actually were together.
But Iโd been paying attention since Biancaโs observation. And she and Cillian were right.
Every text was what are you up to tonight, or a picture of a bottle of nice bourbon heโd gotten, or a shirtless photo he thought might be enticing but was mostly just embarrassing, no matter how good he looked in it.
The man would not just say, Hey, Alice, want to come over tonight?
And because I hadnโt taken any of his bait since that fateful day in the group chat, I hadnโt seen him for my last two weeks in LA before shipping out this way.
โAlice?โ he says now, in my ear. โYou still there?โ
โYeah, but Iโve actually got to go,โ I say. โThanks for the help.โ
โAnytime,โ he says.
He thinks he means it, but he doesnโt.
โข โข โข AFTER PERUSING ONLINE for a solid hour, I find a place to pass a Saturday night.
Rum Room sits tucked behind a row of scraggly trees, on the opposite side of the road from Little Croissant, though a half mile down the road.
I never wouldโve seen it from the street, and itโs not close enough to the beach to be a proper tourist spot, which is better for my purposes.
Itโs also only a ten-minute walk from my rental, so I leave my car behind and head over.
It looks like a small ranch home, with a wooden deck wrapped around its front half, green-and-white-striped awnings hanging over its rectangular windows. Several massive live oaks lean over the patio, multicolored Christmas lights strung haphazardly between them to illuminate the wooden tables below, all of which are full.
I walk up the ramp to the front door, past both a neon hot dog sign and a fake shark head, mounted directly to the white clapboard exterior.
The inside of the restaurant is an exercise in chintzy maximalism, every inch clad in either tropical wallpaper, tacky hot dogโrelated signs, or jewel- toned tile. A host dressed in black greets me with a smile and an efficient nod. โDo you have a reservation with us tonight?โ
โNo, sorry,โ I say.
โHow many?โ he asks.
โJust one,โ I say, peeking over his shoulder toward the bar. One open stool, wedged between two groups. โCan I order food if I sit there?โ
โDefinitely,โ he says. โOtherwise, weโre probably running at about a thirty-minute wait.โ
โThe bar works great for me,โ I tell him, and he gestures me past. I squeeze between the two parties and plop my bag on the counter. โSorry,โ I
tell the woman next to me when I accidentally elbow her while trying to get my jacket off.
โNo prob,โ she says, then turns back to keep talking to her friend.
Something in my chest wilts. Maybe I shouldโve just bitten the bullet and invited Theo to come visit me. This could be a long, lonely month.
Especially if, moving forward, interviews are as short as this morningโs. I do a quick scan of the room. Two more doorways jut off from this one, to a larger dining room, but this one is mostly filled with two-topsโpeople having a drink while they wait for a proper table.
My heart lifts a little when my gaze reaches the back corner. The one closest to the bathrooms.
Haydenโs dark head is bent over a laptop, a half-eaten salad forgotten at his left elbow, and a glass of water to the right of his computer.
I leave my stuff behind and dismount my stool to go say hi.
Just like at Fish Bowl, he doesnโt look up even when Iโm standing right beside him, his focus singular and intense on his screen.
โAre you stalking me?โ I ask.
He jumps in surprise, like he had no idea I was there. Then his gaze locks on me, and a horrified expression crosses his face. โOf course not,โ he says. And then, as if he needs proof: โI was here first.โ
โHayden,โ I say. โIโm kidding. Itโs a tiny island. Weโre bound to keep running into each other. Relax.โ
He does. Visibly. But only for a second. Then, seeming to remember something, he stiffens and shuts his computer.
โIโm not here to spy on you,โ I promise. โI just saw you from the bar and thought it would be weird not to say hi. So, hi.โ
His eyes wander from me to the bar and back again. โYou make friends fast.โ
โIโm not with them, actually,โ I say. โBut who knows what two rum cocktails might do?โ
He opens his mouth, closes it again, and nods.
The silence starts to curdle into something awkward. โHave a good
night!โ I say, and begin to turn.
โAlice?โ
I pause, swivel back to him.
โDo you want to sit?โ he asks.
I study him, trying to read his serious expression. โI canโt tell if youโre just being polite or if thatโs a real invitation.โ
The face he makes, I am nearly certain, is an actual smile, no matter how faint. โYou can basically always assume that Iโm not just being polite,โ he says.
This makes me laugh. That probably shouldโve occurred to me sooner.
Itโs not like heโs been a paragon of manners in the last few days since we
first met.
โI wouldnโt want to interruptโฆโ I say.
โYouโre not,โ he insists. โI need to be done working. I needโฆa
distraction.โ
I smile. โA distraction?โ
He winces. โI didnโt mean that to soundโโ
โA distraction sounds nice,โ I say.





