Rick and Sid Brooks met in the studio commissary, where they took a table in the area reserved for executives.
“It’s nice that we can meet in public now,” Sid said.
Rick was embarrassed. “It feels better to me, too.” They had hardly sat down, when people began dropping by the table to say hello to both of them.
“I think people are glad to see you back,” Rick said.
“I’m glad to be back.”
“Did you have a chance to go over the deal with Hy this morning?”
“Yes, we talked a couple of times. I know he spoke to you about revisions.”
“Yes, the contract is being typed now, and they’ll deliver it to us before our lunch is over. Sid, have you thought about what sort of staff you’re going to need in New York?”
“A little. I’ll need a secretary, maybe two; I won’t know until we’re under way. I’ll need a couple of assistants to read scripts and reports and a couple of typists to produce final scripts. We’ll need some equipment, too: mimeograph, furniture, et cetera.”
“I think the office suite the network is providing is furnished, but if you need anything more or better, let us know.”
“I’m going to need a personal assistant on the set, too, especially when I’m directing, but I may be able to use one of the script readers for that.”
“Our New York office is small, but please lean on them for anything you need. They’ll know the good personnel agencies and that sort of thing.”
“Good.”
“Eddie wants us to film simultaneously with the live performances. We’ll get a lot more mileage out of the reruns over the years if we don’t have to settle for Kinescope quality.”
“Do you think that’s technically feasible?”
“There are a lot of problems to solve, but I’ve got some of our people here working on it now. As it stands, it looks like the best way is to do two live performances, one for each coast, followed by a filmed performance. Still, there are SAG and craft union problems to deal with, and the economics of the situation may be harder to solve than the purely technical.”
“I can see how that might be.”
“We’ll have an office for you here this afternoon. I think it’s a good idea to have an office on each coast, and you’re going to need an apartment in New York, of course. If you want to buy, instead of rent, we’ll help with that. Also, Eddie has bought an apartment at the Carlyle for the studio, and you can stay there until you’ve found a permanent place.”
“I don’t think I want to buy until we’re sure this thing is going to work,” Sid said. “I don’t want to dig in, only to find out after a few months that we’re being cancelled.”
“As you wish.”
Someone had approached their table, and Rick looked up to see Tom Terry. “Hi, Tom. Have you met Sid Brooks?”
“No, I haven’t.”
“Sid, this is Tom Terry, our head of studio security. Tom, Sid is going to be running a new two-hour live drama TV show for us in New York, but he’ll be out here some of the time, too.”
“Welcome aboard,” Tom said, handing Sid a card. “Let me know if there’s anything I can do for you.”
“Any news on the search for P. J. O’Toole?” Rick asked.
“Nothing new this morning, but...” Suddenly, Tom stopped talking and was staring across the room, looking stunned.
“Is something wrong, Tom?” Rick asked.
“My God,” Tom said.
“Tom, what is it?”
“Everything just fell into place. Rick, please follow me; I may need you.”
“What for?”
“To make an arrest.” Tom strode off across the large room.
Rick excused himself and followed, wondering what the hell was going on. Tom seemed to be headed for a table where a lone man was just sitting down.
“Jerry!” Tom said. “How are you?”
Jerry, the driver, looked up. “Hi, Tom. I’m great, thanks.”
“Jerry, have you met our head of production, Rick Barron?” Rick had just arrived at the table.
Jerry got to his feet and held out his hand.
“Rick this is Jerry... I’m sorry, Jerry, I don’t know your last name.” Jerry shook Rick’s hand.
“O’Toole,” Jerry said, shaking Rick’s hand.
“Peter Jerome O’Toole?”
“Patrick Jerome.” Jerry turned and offered Tom his hand.
“I thought something like that,” Tom said, taking hold of Jerry’s outstretched hand and pinning his wrist to the table.
Jerry looked alarmed, and then he suddenly understood what was happening. “Let me go,” he said, trying to free his hand.
“You killed her, didn’t you?”
Jerry’s expression turned to panic.
“What are you talking about?”
“You drove her all week long, got to know her, got to want her, didn’t you? You waited for her at the house on that Sunday, and when she arrived, you came on to her. When she resisted, you dragged her around behind the garage, where you beat her and raped her in the bed of ferns. When she tried to scream you strangled her. Rick, frisk Jerry, will you?”
Rick started around the table, but Jerry reached under his jacket with his left hand and produced a revolver. Before Rick could reach him he had fired twice at Tom and had started running.
Tom fell backward onto the floor, clutching his belly. Panic ensued in the commissary, women screamed, people ran from the building.
Sid Brooks had run across the room and joined Rick, who was kneeling over Tom. “Sid,” Rick said, “do what you can to help Tom.” He grabbed a waitress who was running by. “You call the doctor at our infirmary, then call an ambulance and the police. Hurry! Sid, I’ll be back as soon as I can.”
Rick ran from the building and looked up and down the studio street. Two blocks down, he saw Jerry O’Toole sprinting down the street, then taking a right turn. Rick grabbed a passing man in cowboy gear. “I’m Rick Barron. Find a phone, call the front gate and tell them to seal it. Nobody gets out, got it?”
“Okay,” the man said.
“And be quick about it.” Rick ran after Jerry. A block down he passed the studio doctor and a nurse in an electric cart headed toward the commissary. Rick turned right, where Jerry had turned, and suddenly found himself on a New York City street, the studio’s most-used standing set.
Jerry was nowhere in sight.