Authors: Carolyn Haines
Cece had arrived in a white dress that was simply dazzling: sleek, slinky, and sophisticated. I gave her a thumbs-up from across the room and indicated I wanted to talk to her when she had a moment. She'd have the lowdown on every guest. She was snared immediately by Dean Joseph Grace. He stood eye-to-nipple, continually smoothing back his silver-streaked dark hair as he talked.
Within seconds, their conversation grew heated. They both glanced across the room at
I was getting ready to check on Cece when I heard Madame's voice, raised high, from a corner of the room. She was arguing with a tall man whose silvery hair was badly in need of a cut.
Madame was clearly furious. She had to crane her neck to look at the tall man, and her expression was one of tight hatred. Even as I considered intervening, a hand on my arm pulled me up short.
"Sarah Booth, I need to speak with you."
Harold's gaze was intense, but there was the hint of amusement in his eyes. I felt a throb in my left thumb, the one Harold had suggestively sucked one cold November night in the magically lighted driveway of his home.
"Can we meet?" he asked.
"When?" I glanced over at Madame, whose face was beet-red.
"Tomorrow is Christmas," Harold said. "Have dinner with me. I'm cooking a tur-duck-en. It's a turkey stuffed with duck and hen. Seven o'clock," he said. "I'm even making sugarplums."
"Fine," I agreed, anxious to see what vile thing Brianna was doing to Madame. In our little outdoor tete-a-tete, Madame had actually given me something to worry about. To my knowledge, Brianna had never written a word. But she did give interviews--to tabloids. And in them she took obvious pleasure in dissecting her past lovers. There was a cruel streak in her a mile wide, and if
"Shall I pick you up?" Harold asked.
I surprised myself with the sudden anticipation I felt. "That would be wonderful, Harold. Now I have to check on something."
"Private eye business?" he asked, a worried gaze straying toward the arguing group. "Madame's upset. This whole book idea worries me.
"I'll try and find out what's happening," I hedged, not wanting to admit to anything.
"You'll have to give me all the details tomorrow evening."
"We'll trade," I promised, slinking toward the arguing group until I was in eavesdropping position.
"
"Cinematically speaking, the Delta era was the formative time for his character," the thin man said, nostrils flaring wide. "Those years must be included in the movie. As will the war years. Of course there may be cuts, but I will decide when and what to delete. Brianna has assured me that I will have complete artistic control. I demand that." His gaze seemed to dare Madame to resist.
Brianna clasped her hands in front of her hungry hipbones. She didn't need food; she fed on the suffering of others. "I've worked my tail off to get Sam to even consider this project,
"Artistic control isn't the same as good judgment,"
"Gilliard is a pauper who couldn't get backing to make a film if he had a script written by God," the thin man replied. "And let me remind you,
"
"It's okay. Rosalyn, dahling, you know how those people are." He put a hand on her small waist. "Don't worry for a moment. I'm totally in charge." He took Madame's arm but it was Layton Rathbone he looked at. Brianna's father was standing beside a piano. He turned away abruptly and went after Brianna.
"Is something wrong?" It would have been pointless to pretend I wasn't eavesdropping.
"A trifle,"
His grip on my arm was firm but his hand was freezing as he led me away from Madame and in the opposite direction Brianna had taken. "Who is that self-centered bastard?" I asked him.
"Oh, a
I almost stumbled as the name hit me.
"The
Sam Rayburn? Producer of
Marilyn Goes Blonde!"
It was the
blockbuster
conspiracy
movie
about
Marilyn Monroe and her alleged murder with the use of Thorazine suppositories.
"Brianna assures me that he isn't an impostor. Very touchy breed. But don't take anything he says too seriously.
"What exactly
will
your biography cover?" I asked.
"Now if I told you, there would be no suspense. Look around. Everyone here wants to know what I'm including in my book. Tell me something, Sarah Booth. What's the most important element in writing?" he asked.
I realized he was talking to me as if I were actually writing a book. Now my lie would snap me on the butt. Still, I had to make a stab at it. "In nonfiction, the truth would be important. In fiction, I suppose it would be in creating a believable story."
"Dean Grace, our authority on everything, would give you an A for that answer."
"And you?" I was curious to hear his answer.
"Think a little harder. Why would I be motivated to publish my life history now?" He didn't wait for me to guess. "Revenge, malice, money. Or possibly truth." He let that sink in. "Good fiction is life laid bare, the actual emotional truth. Nonfiction is the illusion of truth. In nonfiction, detail is boiled down to a fine syrup. Truth is no longer a raw substance but a by-product of a process. The individual telling the story determines the process based on his own particular pathology. Right?"
I nodded, captivated by him and what he was saying.
"This by-product, labeled truth, has many uses. To sweeten, to flavor, to soothe, to tempt. To extract revenge." He waved an elegant hand around the room in a grand gesture. "They're all concerned what
my
truth will be." He laughed. "After two decades of being forgotten, it's wonderful to again feel the power of commanding attention." He selected a pickled mushroom and held it to my lips. "And for all of this fun, remember to savor the tiny pleasures, Sarah Booth. They're the only ones that truly count. Excuse me." He stepped back slightly and announced that dinner was served.
To my dismay, I was seated between a graduate student and the dean. They'd obviously come to the party together and chatted--over and through me--about books, authors, and Mississippi's place in the world of the literati. Of course they both knew everything about each subject. And what they didn't know, the bookstore owner across the table was glad to fill in.
During the delicious pumpkin soup, I learned of their importance in
"To
Madame's gasp was the only sound. Even the cutlery stilled.
"My death would benefit no one,"
I've been drained. But what abomination do you fear, Bronson? We'd love to know. I could hazard a guess if you'd like."
At that moment the waiters burst out of the kitchen with the cheese course. As they served, the tension grew. Only
When the waiters left,
Bailey Bronson tried to rise but sat back down heavily in his chair. His hand trembled as he reached for his wine.
Time seemed to flat-line and stretch. I'd spent a few awkward weeks in a sorority house back in my younger days, but I'd never been in a room where the air seemed to itch as if it had been lightly salted. Everyone at the table focused on his or her food, except for Brianna. She blew a kiss across the table to her father. His smile was both tolerant and proud.
The kitchen door opened again and the waiters returned.
"Ah, the salad,"
Beneath the clatter of china, individual conversations once again sprang up. I sat back in my chair and sipped my wine, examining the faces of my fellow diners. They were all practiced at the art of facade. Only Madame and Willem Arquillo made no attempt to hide their discomfort.
At last dessert was served, a persimmon parfait made from fruit
Conversation rose in pitch and volume, and I was still left wondering why a man as charming as Lawrence Ambrose would choose to spend an evening with these tedious people. The purpose of the evening--the real purpose--and my role in it remained unclear.
Still,