“Nothing else?”
“Sure, food and beverage manager. I mean, my boss isn’t going anywhere, but in a new hotel, things are fluid. He might get promoted.”
“An astute observation. You have access to the wine and spirits storage room, don’t you?”
“I’m in charge of it,” Gennaro replied. “Word is, you found something illegal in there.”
“You might say that,” Rifkin replied. “Any idea what it was?”
“I heard a guy came out of there in what looked like a diving suit. Lobsters?”
Rifkin laughed. “I’ll bet you know what that suit was.”
Gennaro shrugged. “I go to the movies, I watch TV.”
“Tell me, Michael, you’re a bright guy-speculate for me how whatever he found in there got in there.”
Gennaro tilted his head back and stared at the ceiling, then he looked back at Rifkin. “How big was it?”
Rifkin held his hands out to demonstrate.
“No bigger than a case of wine, then? My guess would be that a supplier’s delivery man brought it in there on a hand truck with several cases of wine or liquor.”
“Any idea of which supplier?”
“We buy from four suppliers: I give them a list of what we want, and they bid. I always take the lowest price for, say, a case of Absolut Vodka or Knob Creek bourbon.”
“Same for the wines?”
“Yes, but if we specify a wine and a vintage, all four might not have it. If I don’t get a low enough bid, then I go to the Internet before I accept, then the delivery would be made by UPS.”
“What else do you do on the Internet, Michael?”
Gennaro tilted his head to one side in thought. “Shopping for clothes, shoes, sex toys, household appliances. I use Google to look for stuff.”
“E-mail?”
“Yeah, but not so much.”
“Why not?”
“I guess I don’t have all that many friends. In this business you work nights. It doesn’t lead to an athletic social life. The cell phone works better for me.”
“How many cell phones do you have?”
A flick of an eyebrow. “Ah, just one, an iPhone.”
“Like it?”
“Yeah, it does a lot more than I know how to do with it.”
Rifkin closed the file in front of him. “Well, I guess that’s about it. Thanks for your time, and I hope the job goes well for you here.” Rifkin held out his hand.
Gennaro shook it, then got up and took a step toward the door.
“Oh, Michael?”
Gennaro stopped and turned around. “Yeah?”
“What’s your religion?” Rifkin saw Gennaro’s jaw tighten.
“Catholic,” he replied.
“Thanks, Michael.” He gave the man a little wave and watched him go. Just before he closed the door he looked back.
Rifkin turned to his two agents, who were sitting at a nearby table. “I want a membership list of every mosque in L.A., starting with Studio City and spreading out from there. I don’t care how you get them.”
50
Stone and Dino had breakfast on the patio beside the pool. “I don’t know what to do with myself today,” Stone said. “It’s the first time since we arrived that my mind hasn’t been full of what I have to do today.”
“That sounds like a complaint,” Dino said.
“No, just an observation. I don’t really want to leave the house today. All the guests are checking in, and it’s going to be chaos out there.”
“Why chaos? People check into hotels all the time.”
“Yes, but not all on the same day and with as much security.”
“You have a point.”
“The concert tonight will be great,” Stone said.
“Viv and I are looking forward to it.”
Peter and Ben appeared and joined them.
“Where’s Hattie?” Stone asked.
“I couldn’t get her up. I think she’s nervous about her performance tonight, and sleep postpones having to think about it.”
“Hasn’t she done a lot of performing?”
“Sure, but this is her first appearance in a professional setting. Before, it was all student stuff.”
“I guess that makes sense.”
“Dad, Dino, Ben and I have some good news.”
“Good news I can always use,” Dino said. “Pardon the rhyme.”
“You’re pardoned, Pop,” Ben said.
“So what’s the news?” Stone asked.
“The three of us are going to have a production deal at Centurion,” Peter said.
Stone looked alarmed. “When?”
“Don’t worry, Dad, it’s for after we all graduate.”
Stone relaxed a little. “What’s the deal?”
“We haven’t worked that out yet,” Peter said, “so I’ll want your help on structuring the contract.”
“You’re going to need showbiz help,” Stone said. “Let me talk to Bill Eggers about somebody in the L.A. office who does entertainment law. Leo Goldman is a nice guy, but he’s going to be a tough negotiator.”
“See? That’s just the kind of advice we need.”
“So, Ben,” Dino said, “you’re going to produce?”
“Executive-produce,” Ben replied.
“What’s the difference?”
“There are often several producers on films, even several executive producers, but that’s mostly a billing argument. We’re going to run a leaner operation, but I’ll still want an experienced line producer to do the day-to-day production work.”
“Sounds good.”
“And, Peter,” Stone said, “you’ll write or direct?”
“Both,” the boy replied, “though I can see just directing, if somebody comes to us with a good script already written.”
“Sounds good.”
“What’s really good is, Leo showed us Vance’s old bungalow, which has been empty since his death, and he’s going to redo it for us, to our specifications.”
“That sounds wonderful!”
“Yeah, but I don’t have any experience with that kind of space planning.”
“Why don’t you talk to James Rutledge? He was trained as an architect, then he was with Architectural Digest, and now he does just the sort of thing you need. You were at the High Cotton Ideas party-did you like that place?”
“Oh, wow, did I!”
“Well, Jim was the designer on that. Get Leo to send you the plans, then send them to Jim for a look.”
“He’s sending them over today, so I’ll call Jim as soon as we’re back.”
“Can’t hurt to start early.”
Hattie wandered onto the patio, looking sleepy, and sat down.
“Good morning,” Stone said.
“Is it?” Hattie asked, looking at the sky and squinting. “I can’t tell.”
Stone laughed. “Trust me, it is. Are you all ready for your performance tonight?”
Hattie looked alarmed. “I forgot about that. Don’t remind me.”
“Relax, you’ll do fine.”
A waiter appeared and took everybody’s breakfast order.
Steve Rifkin had not slept well. He had doubled his crew for the overnight search of The Arrington’s theater, where the two presidents would hold their joint signing and press conference at ten A.M., and now he was up early and walking around The Arrington’s theater, having a final look for himself.
His search detail leader approached. “Don’t worry, boss,” he said, “this place is clean.”
“We’re missing two bombs,” Rifkin said.
“I understand that, but I don’t think the other two even made it onto the property.”
Rifkin looked around. “All right, seal this place-nobody in here that isn’t essential to the press conference. There’s a list-stick to it.”
“Right, boss.” The man went away to do his work.
Hamish McCallister arrived at the theater, along with at least a hundred other reporters, each with his credentials hung around his neck. He found a seat in the fourth row of the theater, which was a structure half-embedded in the landscape on the north side of the hotel’s grounds. He stood in front of his seat and looked around the big room as his colleagues, many of them recognizable from television, filed into the theater. This, he reflected, would have made a wonderful target for one of his three small bombs, killing the two presidents and most of the media representatives present.