Authors: James J. Kaufman
Tags: #Fiction, #Women journalists, #Fathers and daughters, #Bank fraud
While Katherine had never heard of the
Twin Forks Press
, the job description was what she was looking for and she felt that she possessed the required skills. Besides, she had to get a jobâand soon. She liked the idea of
Mother Jones
, particularly the intern program with the nationally respected magazine, but knew a thousand dollars a month would hardly scratch the surface of the cost of living in Washington, much less begin paying her debts.
She Googled the
Twin Forks Press
, copied all the information to her iPad, and read it as fast as she could. A small weekly in Southampton, a town on the eastern end of Long Island . . . too small, she determined, except that further digging revealed that the
Twin Forks Press
reported to the Northeast Print and Media Group, which she knew was growing rapidly and getting a lot of attention. Owner Solomon Kaplowitz was a Pulitzer-prize winning author and editor with a remarkable prior historyâbut why had he left Gannett and the
Rochester Democrat & Chronicle
for a weekly newspaper in a resort community of 55,000 year-round residents? The only way to know, Katherine decided, was to ask him.
Katherine's cell phone rang, showing her mother's number, just as she finished making notes in preparation for her call to the
Twin Forks Press
. “Hey, Mom, what's up?”
“Hi, Kat,” her mother said.
Katherine detected trouble in her mother's voice.
“What's wrong?”
“Nothing. I'm fine. I'm on shift, but it's quiet and I wanted to hear your voice. That's all. How are you?”
“Okay, a little stressed about finding a job, paying my bills, Susan . . . stuff like that. But I have some ideas about work I want to check out . . . too soon to talk about them.”
“What I really wanted to know is how you and I are doing,” Beth said so softly Katherine could hardly hear her. “Even though you're trying to be nice to me, I know you are really pissed . . . about the lying thing. I want to know how you are getting through it . . . if you are.”
Silence for a few beats.
“Mom, I don't want to deal with this right now,” Katherine said. “I'm trying to focus on getting a job, starting my career, paying my bills, and maybe even having some fun.”
“Well, I need to know. I'm worried sick about all of this. It's all I think about. I'm distracted at work, and it's getting old.”
More silence.
“Why does this always have to be about you?” Katherine said at last, not liking the tone of her voice or her mother's, and immediately becoming angry with her mother and herself.
“I'm sorry, Katherine. You know I can't change what happened. Neither can you. We have to move on.”
“I'm not doing this. Not now,” Katherine said. “We've discussed all of this. You've explained it all. You decided to lie. You felt it was the only way to go.”
“Are you going to try to talk to your . . . father?”
“Mother, for God's sake, leave me alone. You've done your part. You made the call. It is what it is. What I do or don't do is complicated, but it's up to me. Not you.”
Katherine could now hear her mother crying, and was fighting a battle not to cry herself.
“I'm sorry is all I can say. I know it's not enough. Maybe someday you'll have your own call to make, and maybe then you'll understand,” Beth said. Katherine heard the line go dead.
Katherine stormed out of the apartment and ran into the square. The day had turned colder and rainy, matching her darkening mood. She walked around the square to Fourteenth Street at a fast clip, watching the vendors pack up their small booths, and then covered the same ground again. She stopped at the pizza parlor, devoured a single slice, and gulped down a steaming hot coffee. She tried to reach Susan, left a message, and went back to her apartment, which, like her universe, was fast growing way too small.
Why didn't she have a boyfriend to call at a time like this? Why didn't she have a boyfriend in any event? She liked men. In fact, she loved men. Too much at times. Why did these relationships never seem to work out? Okay, she was too busy with school. But that was over now.
Katherine gathered her composure, sat down at the kitchen table, and took out her cell phone. She pulled the
Twin Forks Press
phone number from her contacts, picked up the phone, dialed, and asked for Mr. Kaplowitz.
She was surprised to hear the response, “That's me.”
“Mr. Kaplowitz?”
“Yes. To whom do I have the pleasure of speaking?”
“Katherine Kelly, sir. I read your ad online at ire.org. I'm a recent graduate of the Fletcher Thomas School of Journalism, and I would appreciate the opportunity to talk to you about the position.”
“Good. Talk.”
“Well, I have the qualities and skill-set you're looking for.”
“Either that or a lot of chutzpah.”
Katherine smiled. “Well, I did poke a little beyond the ad, about you, the
Twin Forks Press
, and its affiliations. May I come out and meet you?”
“Of course. When?”
“Whenever is convenient for you. I'll rent a car and drive.”
“How about sending me some information first so that I may have the benefit of learning about you before we meet? Résumé. Background. Perhaps a first-person piece about what you learned in your master's program, how you liked it, what kind of reporter you want to be and why. And most of all, what you think sets you apart from other candidates. Can you have all of that e-mailed to me by this afternoon?”
“Yes, no problem.”
“Okay, then. We'll make it tomorrow. It will be quieter on a Saturday. If you get an early start, you might be able to get here by 11:00 a.m.”
“I'll see you in the morning. I look forward to meeting you, Mr. Kaplowitz. Thank you.”
“Call me Sol. I look forward to meeting you, too.”
“Hi, Ben.”
“Preston. I just found that I have the report. It actually came into the office a week ago, but there was some confusion because it was marked âPersonal and Confidential' and I have been out of town. Would you like to come down to the office?”
“You've read it?” Preston rose from the couch, tiptoed past P.J.'s room, where Marcia was occupied with their son, and stepped into his den and closed the door for privacy.
“Yes.”
“It's confidential?”
“Yes.”
Preston could feel his pulse pounding through his veins.
“No, just tell me.”
“Congratulations. You're the father of a beautiful twenty-three-year-old girl.”
Silence.
“Preston, are you there?”
“Yeah. I'm here,” Preston said in a barely audible voice. “Thank you, Ben. I hope my daughter likes me,” he said before hanging up.
Preston sat down at his desk and stared blankly at his collection of tastefully framed pictures. A headshot of Marcia before they were married, Marcia and Preston together, Preston and Casey in the mountains, snapped by their guide when they went looking for Joe, and P.J., the day after he was born. Preston got up and found Marcia in the kitchen.
“Honey, we need to talk.”
“In the closet?” Marcia asked with a slight smile. For some reason that Preston knew Marcia never understood, whenever he had a really sensitive subject he wanted to discuss, he dragged Marcia into his walk-in closet as if his suits and pants and shoes would somehow insulate him and no one would hear.
“I just got a call from the lawyer I consulted about . . . the paternity issue.”
“And?”
“I'm the fatherâher father.”
“How long do we have to stay in the closet, Preston?”
“What do you mean?”
“Well, there is some duality to the question. Can we leave this closet now, go to the kitchen, have a cup of coffee, and discuss this situation? I mean, how are you going to handle this? What are you going to do? What are you going to say? To whom? Stuff like that. And maybe you can tell me what you know about her, starting with her name?”
Preston and Marcia went to the kitchen, sat on the stools at the fancy butcher block table, and Marcia poured coffee.
Preston told his wife what little information he had about Katherine. “I don't have to do anything. No one knows about this except my lawyer and you,” he said.
“And you. You know about it.”
“I mean . . . I'm talking about burden of proof and all of that. It's not on me. On the other hand, honestly, while I'm anxious about all of this, I'm also intrigued. Katherine's apparently done very well. I'd like to know more about my daughter.”
“I can understand that,” Marcia said.
“What do you think I should do?”
“We've covered this ground. Again, don't go there. Just make a decision. Then I'll make mine.”
“That's not fair. Back when we were having problems you were always complaining that I didn't open up and talk to you . . . that I was . . . distant. Now, I am talking to you, and you're pulling back. What I decide, obviously, involves you.”
“Don't put this on me. I was not involved when you created this situation. This is, after all, your daughter, not our daughter. You have to determine whether you are going to reach out to your daughter or not. You don't know how any of that is going to turn out, nor do I.”
Preston got up and started pacing, ending up looking out of the window at the Park. He was tired of the conversation with Marcia and disappointed in her response, but he also knew that she didn't create this quandary. He turned to Marcia.
“I'm going to meet Katherine, talk with her. I'm going to tell her that this is a shock to me and must be a shock to her as well. I want her to be aware that I didn't know until now that I am her father, that I don't want her to think that she was abandoned by me.”
“I understand,” Marcia said. “I really do.”
Preston dialed the cell phone number Beth had given him.
“Hello,” Beth answered.
“Beth, this is Preston.”
“Hi, Preston. Can I call you back? I'm at the hospital, but I'll be off shift in about thirty minutes.”
“Sure, call me on my cell,” Preston said and gave her the number.
A little over a half hour later, Preston's cell phone rang. He quickly answered.
“Sorry I couldn't talk earlier,” said Beth. “Occupational hazard.”
“I'd like to talk to your . . . our daughter. Can you tell me where I can reach her?”
“Thank God, Preston. I can't tell you how much that means to me. I'm not sure how she's going to respond. She's upset with me at the moment. Why don't you contact her through her e-mail first and let her decide whether to give you her cell number?”
“That sounds like a sensible idea, under the circumstances. Go ahead with the addressâI have a pen and paper.” Preston recorded the information.
As she inched along, she caught up on her phone calls. She retrieved the private investigator's card and after some thought, gave him a call.
“Hi, Angelo, it's Katherine Kelly. We met outside the Flatiron Building.”
“I know. What d'ya need?”
Katherine laughed. “You really know how to smooth-talk a lady, Angelo.”
“Come on, let's have it.”
“I'd like to have you get some information on someone, but I don't have any money to pay you right now.”
“Don't worry about that. We're both just starting outâme as a PI, I mean.”
“I'd like you to find out what you can about a man named Preston Wilson. A Google search presents his extensive automobile dealerships, and I have information that he lives at Trump Tower.”
“How deep?”
“I'd like to know what there is to know.”
“What's your interest in this guy, if I may ask? He giving you trouble?”
“No, it's not like that, Angelo. But it's complicated. That's all I'd like to say about it at this point. I have an exit coming up.”
“Gotcha. No problem. I assume you want this yesterday?”
“Today will be fine,” Katherine said with a laugh. “Actually there's no deadline on this, Angelo. Since you're doing it pro bono, you probably should work me in when you can.”
“I get that. You and me will help each other. If you like my work, you can refer me business. I figured that was sort of a given when we first met.”
“Thanks, Angelo.”
“You got it,” he said.
Katherine noticed the congestion had disappeared as she got closer to the Nassau County line. She checked her iPhone for directions as she continued east. The GPS wanted her to continue on the LIE all the way to Manorville, exit seventy. But she decided to get off the expressway early, taking Route 112 south to Montauk Highway to explore some of the little towns along the South Shore, many of them with Native American names. She drove through Patchogue and continued east through Shirley, and Speonk. She detoured off Montauk Highway, slowed down to admire some of the charming old houses in the Remsenburg area, and other sections of rural farmland. The scenic countryside reminded her, surprisingly, of Marion, the Finger Lakes, and rural sections of upstate New York. She eventually reached the Hampton Bays area and the entrance to Long Island's South Fork, and the Hamptons, a playground for some of the world's richest and most famous people.
The closer she got to the Hamptons, and to the ocean, the more she recognized the hedgerows and the mansions behind them that she had heard and read so much about, with fewer rural patches in between. Katherine was surprised by the swift changes between farming country and trendy little towns or villages. The highway veered northward to Shinnecock Hills, and then turned southeast again. Finally, she reached Southampton, noting the upscale nature of the community: stately colonial style expansive homes behind more carefully trimmed hedgerows and interesting shops with artistic signs and catchy names.
On her right, she passed the Southampton Town Hall and the Bridgehampton National Bank. She found the
Twin Forks Press
on the southeast corner of Hampton Road and Lewis Street, in a three-story wood frame house with a barn-style roof covered in Shaker shingles. The ground floor front consisted of two large windows with a wooden door in the middle; the house as a whole had an Early American feel. Clearly, this was not the
New York Times
.
It was only 10:15, so Katherine turned around, drove a few blocks and found a Starbucks, freshened up, and ordered a cup of coffee to go. Returning to the address she'd verified earlier, Katherine grabbed the black leather Tumi briefcase her mother had given her for graduation and briskly entered the
newspaper office.
She was greeted by a man of average height with curly black hair, a warm smile, and an outstretched hand. He wore thick horned-rim glasses with round frames and appeared to Katherine to be in his fifties.
“Hi, Katherine. Sol. Welcome.”
“Thank you, sir,” Katherine replied, thinking he looked a little like Lou Grant in the old
Mary Tyler Moore
television show.
Sol led her past the reception area to his office at the end of the hall.
“You made good time. Would you like some coffee?”
“No, thank you, Mr. Kaplowitz, I just grabbed a cup down the street.”
“Call me Sol. If you were Southern you would agree and still call me Mr. Kaplowitz, but you're from New York. By the way, where are you from in New York? You don't sound like the city, certainly not the Bronx.”
“I'm from Marion, a small village in upstate New York, north of the Finger Lakes Region and south of Lake Ontario.”
“I know where it is.”
“I was inspired reading your biography. It's one of the reasons I'm here.”
“What are the other reasons?”
“I'm eager to start my career, and I need money. I have an internship offer from a highly ranked magazine in Washington, D.C., and the chance to work in the nation's capital would be great, but frankly, I'd prefer a tougher challenge. Besides, I can't live on a thousand dollars a month, and my research indicates that my chances of being allowed to run with a good story in today's economic and journalistic environment, before I have proven myself as a reporter, are slim to none. I'm impatient and eager to be given a real chance to show what I know I can do.”
Sol pushed his chair back and went to a credenza where he poured himself some coffee. He looked at Katherine to see if she had changed her mind about coffee, and she shook her head.
“Your assessment of the industry is correct,” he explained. “Major daily papers are folding, with literally thousands of journalists losing their jobs. Investigative reporting is no longer seen as a good investment. Papers can't afford to take the risk. They're under immense pressure to cut back on print and shift their focus to the Web. I worry about how discouraged our young people are not finding jobsâthe whole jobless issue,” Sol said.
Katherine nodded in agreement. “I've talked with journalists-to-be in and out of Fletcher, and many of them are worried not only about whether they will get a job or have to freelance, but if they do get a job, how little they'll be paid, the way their pay will be calculated, how long their jobs will last, and whether their pay will be based on page views or other metrics.”
“Yes. So let me tell you a bit about the
Twin Forks Press.
Fortunately, I had the money and the desire to make the investment. It also helped to be connected to the Northeast Print and Media Group.”
“For me, this really comes down to security or opportunity,” Katherine said.
“Which do you choose?” Sol asked.
“It's a false choice. I have to be practical and live with reality, but if I'm given a chance and enough money to live on, I'll forego security in favor of expanded opportunity.”
Katherine and Sol talked for a few more minutes about issues in newspaper management, before he invited her to stay for lunch. They walked west on Hampton Road a few blocks to the Fish Tank, a charming little restaurant featuring a large tank filled with live lobsters.
As they entered Katherine took in the delicious aroma of fresh seafood cooking. Several diners, she saw, were enjoying steamed clams and crab legs. She could not resist having a closer look at the lobsters.
“This place is an institution in Southampton,” Sol said. “Owned and run by the same family for three generations. I was introduced to it by Donald Louchheim shortly after he bought the
Southampton Press
in 1971 at the age of thirty-four. He is one of my heroes. It's sort of like a senior law partner, tired of dealing with all the management issues in a huge firm, throwing away the support system and following his romantic dream to practice his way.”
“And that's you, tooâwhy you bought the
Twin Forks Press
?”
Their waitress brought water to the table, interrupted their conversation, and took their orders. Katherine was tempted to have the lobster but settled for the crab sandwich.
Sol ordered flounder and then continued.
“Yes. At some point, the idea of being an editor and publisher and having the ability to decide what stories were truly worth pursuing, aside from the anticipated reader reaction, seemed more meaningful to me. Fortunately, I had enough money to not only purchase the
Press
and fund the operations, but to take the inherent risk of developing and following through with stories whether the subjects liked it or not.”
“The inherent risk of telling the truth?” Katherine asked. “Such as being sued?”
“All of that. We're in the business of the truth, and we're being challenged more every day.”
“I understand,” Katherine said.
“I was intrigued reading your story, particularly your description of what your mentor, Simpson, asked you to write aboutâ the influence of someone outside your family on a family memberâand why. Do you agree with him that you are holding back and need to learn how to find the emotional core of the story?”
“No. I thought he was off his tree,” Katherine said with a laugh. “But I'm taking it seriously, because I respect him and there probably has been some holding back. It's all about balance. I'm working on it.”
Sol smiled and seemed to approve. He asked more questions about Katherine's master's program, probing in detail about her Medicare/Medicaid fraud project and how she'd gotten her sources to talk. They finished lunch, Sol paid the bill, and they returned to his office and took seats in the conference room.
Katherine peppered Sol with her own nuanced questions about himself, his family, his newspaper days, the history of the
Press,
and his acquisition of it. Sol patiently answered each of her questions and told Katherine his own story, the stuff not in his biography, including what led up to his winning the Pulitzer Prize. He talked about his family, his upbringing first on Long Island and then in Palm Beach, Florida, about his wife, Rachel, and their two children, Sandra and John. Katherine took notes as fast as she could write.
The more Sol talked, the deeper Katherine drilled. She wanted to know as much as she could about the
Twin Forks Press
and his relationship to it, its circulation, how many people were employed, what they did, and specifics about the relationship with the media group, economically, control-wise, and otherwise. She'd heard plenty of stories from graduates about the difficulty of finding a job in journalism that would provide sufficient pay and security and knew from her research the pressure the print medium was under. She was reassured to learn how large and well-staffed this weekly wasâand well-funded.
For his part, Sol inquired in equal depth about Katherine's background, Marion, what it was like growing up there, what she did, who she did it with, what she liked, what she didn't, how she felt about her undergraduate studies, and how she felt about living in New York City, having been raised in such a small village.
“I've never been to Marion, New York,” he admitted, “although I am aware of it. Coincidentally, we have an East Marion on the North Fork, just a few miles away.”
Their conversation continued, thorough on both sides, never missing a beatâat least until Sol noted, “In all of your discussion about your mother and grandfather, I don't recall you saying anything about your father.”
“I didn't,” Katherine said. “That's a complicated subject, Sol. Do you feel it's necessary for me to go into it at this point?”
After a considerable pause, Sol looked straight at Katherine. “No, I don't,” he said. “You've been frank and open with me about your situation, what you want, and where you'd like to go. I appreciate your coming down here so quickly and spending this time with me. As I see it, investigative journalism is more than a business. It's an insatiable, never-ending pursuit of the truth. That path can be arduous, and even painful, requiring at times, enormous discipline.”
Katherine decided to simply listen and not say a word. She waited.
“I've talked to and read e-mails from a number of candidates who have responded to my ad,” said Sol. “You told me on the telephone that you had the qualities and skill-sets I was looking for. I agree.”
Katherine nodded modestly in thanks. Again she held her silence, her heart beating so loud in her ears that she was sure Sol could hear it across the table. So far, so goodâhe was saying the right things. She was in the middle of crossing her fingers, mentally, for a phone call back, when Sol Kaplowitz said the words she almost couldn't believe she'd heard. “I'll pay you three thousand a month and cover your moving and business expenses, Katherine. And I have an assignment in mind that should be just the challenge you're looking for.”
“That sounds interesting. And what about work hours?”
“Long and unpredictable,” Sol said. “Why don't you go back to New York, think about my offer, and let me know by Monday?”
Katherine knew she'd done all the thinking she needed. “I'll tell you what I'd like to do, Sol. I'd like to go back to my apartment, find a way to get out of my lease, pack my things, go to Marionâmy Marionâspend a few days with my mother and grandfather, find an apartment I can afford, move to Southampton, get settled, enjoy Memorial Day, and the day after go to work for the
Twin Forks Press
. How do you feel about that?”