Elaine’s, late.
Stone Barrington sat with his client, Mike Freeman, of Strategic Services, and his former partner from his NYPD days, Dino Bacchetti, over the ruins of dinner and a bottle of excellent Cabernet.
That was good, Mike said. I never knew how good the food was here, until you started bringing me.
Comfort food, Dino said.
Elaine sat herself down in the spare chair. Comfort food? she asked. Is that some kind of crack?
It’s high praise, Stone said quickly, not wanting to get her started. Elaine’s did not enjoy a high reputation with the food critics of the local media, because they didn’t come often enough to get the good tables, but the regulars knew how good the food was, and that was all she really cared about.
I’ll take high praise, Elaine said.
Stone’s cell phone hummed on his belt, and he dug it out of its holster. Stone Barrington.
Stone, it’s Arrington, she said. Stone and Arrington had once been a very big item, to the extent of his having fathered a son by her.
Well, hello there, he said. I thought I’d never hear from you again. They had spent one night together in his Maine house, on Islesboro, at Dark Harbor, and then she had taken her leave, saying it was over.
I want to hire you, she said.
I’m for hire. How’s Peter?
He misses his father, she said.
Stone wondered which father she meant, himself or her late husband, movie megastar Vance Calder, whose son the world believed Peter to be. Stone didn’t know what to say.
I mean Vance, she said. He hardly knows you.
All right, Stone said. Why do you want to hire me?
I’m going to say this fast, because I’m sleepy, and I want to go to bed. I know you’re at Elaine’s at this hour, but I’m not.
So, say it fast.
You remember Centurion Studios? A large Hollywood film factory.
I believe so.
You remember that Vance owned a third of the shares when he died?
I didn’t know it was that much.
He’d been buying the stock for many years, every time somebody died and some shares became available.
Got it.
There’s a stockholders’ meeting coming up, and there will be a vote on whether to sell the studio. It has always been closely held, and Vance wanted to keep it that way.
Who’s buying?
I don’t know, some corporation or other. They’ll sell the property to developers, and the studio will just be a letterhead.
And what do you want me to do?
Vote my shares against the sale, and do what you can to get the other stockholders to vote against it.
How many are there?
A couple of dozen, maybe. I’ll send you a list, along with my signed proxy, to the Bel-Air house. You can have the guesthouse, as usual. Manolo and Carmen will take good care of you.
Manolo and Carmen were the Filipino houseman and his wife who ran the place. Stone knew he would be taken care of very well indeed. All right, I guess I can manage that.
Can you get there tomorrow?
Or the day after, Stone said. He wanted to fly himself in his new airplane...