“Hello, there.” He kissed her.
“Oh, hello,” she replied. “I was nearby when Kate finished with her appointments, so I didn’t bother to call.”
“You didn’t need to,” Stone said, signaling a waiter and ordering them drinks.
“My God!” she said. “There’s Martin Stanton. I want to go and say hello.”
“No,” Stone said, taking her arm. “Not now. He is entirely engaged at the moment, and we don’t want to interrupt.”
She looked at him through narrowed eyes. “You are wicked.”
“They’re getting along so well, why interrupt them? Why don’t we go next door and see Ben’s house?” He led her out a door to a terrace and found a flagstone path to the house next door. Others were streaming down it as well. As they approached the house Stone saw Ben and Tessa chatting with Leo Goldman Jr., the CEO of Centurion Studios.
“Stone!” Leo shouted, then grabbed his hand.
“Good to see you, Leo. May I present Ann Keaton?”
“How do you do, Ms. Keaton?”
“Ann is deputy manager for Kate Lee’s campaign.”
“I know your name well from our donor lists, Mr. Goldman,” Ann said. “In fact, you’re on my list to call.”
Leo began slapping his pockets. “I seem to have forgotten my checkbook,” he said.
“That’s all right,” Ann said, “I’ll hunt you down later.”
“Seriously,” Leo said, “the check is literally in the mail.”
“I’ll alert the postal services.”
Stone and Ann progressed into Ben’s beautifully furnished house and found a pair of comfortable chairs.
“I didn’t see the governor,” Ann said. “He didn’t make it?”
“He did, inviting the vice president, too, and he has already moved on to his next engagement.”
“Then you didn’t get a chance to talk with him?”
“We had a very nice chat, and we understood each other perfectly. You heard that Senator Stockman died?”
“I had a call ten minutes ago.”
“Funniest thing happened as we were discussing how Stanton’s gifts would so well qualify him for a Senate seat. Seconds after the announcement on the six o’clock news, the governor’s phone rang, and guess who it was?”
“I’ve no doubt it was Marty.”
“Collins didn’t take the call — in fact, he turned off his phone.”
“Do you think he got your message?”
“Certainly he did. He’s a very astute young man, and without actually saying so, he let me know that if Stanton fails to get a majority of the delegates on the first ballot, he would be with Kate. I suggested that if Stanton knew he had the Senate seat for a backup, he might be easier to deal with at the convention.”
“And how did he react to that?”
“We were in perfect agreement. Of course, he didn’t say a word that would prevent him from giving the seat to someone else, or that he would support Kate if Stanton failed, but he intimated it, in the way that politicians do.”
“And how did Marty and Charlene Joiner happen to meet?”
“I will cheerfully take the blame for that one,” Stone replied. “I think they’re made for each other, now that Marty is functionally single again.”
“I said you were wicked, didn’t I?”
“You did, and I’m grateful for the compliment.”
“I hope Marty can’t contain himself and starts squiring Ms. Joiner around the city while everybody who is anybody in the party is in town.”
“It’s just the sort of brazen behavior that might help, isn’t it?”
“I long to see their photograph together on every front page.”
“Then we’ll have to take one, won’t we?” Stone said. “Or better, get Peter to.” He took out his phone and pressed a speed-dial button. “Peter? It’s your father. Would you be kind enough to take or have someone else take a photograph of the vice president nuzzling Charlene Joiner? It would be so nice to have as a souvenir. Thank you.” Stone hung up. “Consider it done.”
“And I know just who to e-mail it to,” Ann said, “for the maximum possible effect.”
9
Stone and Ann had a look around Ben’s house, then returned to Peter’s.
“I got the photograph,” Peter said.
Stone gave him Ann’s e-mail address, then he looked around the room. “What happened to the veep and Charlene?”
“Gone,” Peter said. “I heard him tell an aide to call Spago for a table.”
“Very good,” Stone said.
“Very good indeed,” Ann said, as she dialed a number. “The VP and Charlene Joiner will be arriving at Spago shortly,” she said to whoever answered. “Greet them and e-mail me the shots.” She hung up.
“Who was that?”
“A photographer acquaintance of mine,” Ann said. “He hangs around outside chic spots, waiting for celebs to show. He also has two spotters cruising the ones where he can’t be and they communicate by cell phone and he rushes over on his motorcycle.”
“In that case, please hold Peter’s shots,” Stone said. “Maybe use them later if you really need them.”
“All right, I’ll save my ammo.”
A buffet table was operating now, and they served themselves dinner.
“I didn’t get any lunch today,” Ann said.
“Poor girl.”
“Kate ran me off my feet. She visited four caucuses, spoke at two luncheons, and went to three cocktail parties, and she was still making ’em laugh at the end. Now she has two dinners to attend, but she excused me.”
“Good Kate,” Stone said, digging into his paella. A waiter brought them glasses of wine. “Are you encouraged by how things are going?” he asked Ann.
“They’re going so well, it scares me,” she replied. “Something’s got to go wrong soon, and I hope it doesn’t sneak past me.”
“Not much gets past you,” Stone said.
“You’re catching on pretty quick, yourself,” she said. “You’ve managed to find out what’s on the governor’s mind and plant lascivious things in the veep’s head and it’s not even eight o’clock yet.”
They had just finished dinner when Immi Gotham turned up, causing heads to snap. She came and greeted Stone, who introduced her to Ann.
“We’re all looking forward to your performance at The Arrington,” Stone said.
“I’m looking forward to it, too,” she replied. “Hattie and I have been rehearsing.” Immi was stolen away by somebody.
“I like it out here,” Ann said. “The quality of celebrities is better than in New York, and when they turn up, they’re more relaxed. Hattie is a pianist?”
“A brilliant one. And a composer, too. She scores all of Peter’s films.”
“All two of them?”
“And more to come. He and Ben never stop working, and Leo Goldman is thrilled to have them on the Centurion lot. They’ve turned Vance Calder’s old cottage into their offices.” Calder, the late movie star, had been Peter’s stepfather.
“How old can Peter be? Twenty-five?”
“Not that old. The boy is a prodigy.”
“Does he get that from you?”
“No, and not from his mother, either. It must be some sort of genetic mutation.”
“And who are Billy and Betsy Burnett?”
“That one is difficult to explain,” Stone said. “Someday, when I’ve known you for forty or fifty years, I’ll tell you the whole story. Billy is a jack-of-all-trades who has become an associate producer with Peter and Ben. He knows more about everything than anyone I know. And anyone you know, too. He can fix anything, build anything, and fly airplanes — he’s been instructing Peter, Ben, and Hattie. And I wouldn’t want to have him for an enemy.”
“I like his wife, Betsy.”
“She handles Peter’s PR, schedules interviews, and makes his travel arrangements, among other things. She’s made herself invaluable in the production office.”