False Pretenses (13 page)

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Authors: Catherine Coulter

BOOK: False Pretenses
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Kogi faithfully dusted the piano, though the lid was closed most of the time.

She didn't bother with any Armani suits. She went to Bergdorf's and bought six suits off the rack. They were all severely tailored, expensive, but not, of course, designer. She liked the look. The new Elizabeth Carleton.

She told Adrian two days later, on a Wednesday morning, without preamble, “I know you know I've been learning things about business. However, now I fully intend to take over. You can either help me to the fullest extent of your power, or I will find someone else. I won't tell you why I've made this decision. Suffice it to say that the decision is made and is irrevocable. There is a power now, and it is Elizabeth Carleton, not Timothy Carleton or any power-hungry minions: I'd like to meet with the rest of our group. There's a project that I wish to begin immediately. You will please inform our team that my first priority is to get rid of Brad Carleton. I want a meeting in my office at three o'clock this afternoon, and I want suggestions on how to accomplish this goal. Do you have any questions, Adrian?”

He stared at her. She said nothing more, just looked at him patiently. Suddenly he smiled. “I have a couple of excellent books for you to read, Elizabeth. Why
don't you look them over while I inform the others of the meeting and the agenda.”

“Thank you, Adman,” she said. “Get me the books.”

“That's just the beginning, Elizabeth.”

“I know.”

 

Elizabeth looked around the table at the five men. They were still in shock, she thought, and suppressed a grim smile. She'd seated herself at the head of the table, the power seat, and said, “Since Rod brought you in, each of you has come to exercise tremendous power in your specific area. You've done quite well. Each of you is used to dealing with change, indeed, you're masters at initiating changes that benefit both you and ACI. Now it is I who am doing the initiating. I'm taking over and I wanted you to hear it from me. If any of you have a problem with working for me, you may leave now.”

Coy Siverston said slowly, “Adrian said you wanted to learn enough to step in.”

“Yes.”

“I should like to know why, Elizabeth. I don't think it's too much to ask. For example, are you displeased with our running of things?”

“I have already said that each of you has done well. Now, as to why, that is none of your business. I'm quite serious, don't think I'm being a frivolous woman. I will no longer be a figurehead. You will work for me, not around me or over me. Is that clear to everyone?”

Silence.

“I see,” Elizabeth said. “I suggest we take a poll. Let's begin with you, Adrian.”

“I want to head up the strategic planning of ACI. Of course I'm behind you.”

“Coy.”

“You have no experience, Elizabeth, you are a musician.”

“All true. Your point?”

“It will be difficult, not only for you but for all of us. I'll agree if you agree to listen to us, really listen to us.”

“I agree. I'm not stupid.”

“Very well,” said Coy.

The three other men each agreed, as she'd known they would. Edgar Derby, her very overweight computer genius, was sweating as if he'd soon be out of a job. Had the Carletons gotten to him? She shook her head, remaining silent. No, she didn't think so.

“Now,” she said. “Let's move on to my priority project. Adrian, do you have suggestions on how to get Brad Carleton out?”

Before he could reply, Rod Samuels came into the office. “Sorry I'm late, Elizabeth. Gentlemen.”

“Sit down, Rod. We've actually just begun. From now on, this project will be known as OBC. Oust Brad Carleton. You see, I'm already learning how letters stand for things. Rod is here because he's our expert on the legal end of things. Now, Adrian, please continue.”

“. . . his books checked out clean as a whistle, as you know.”

“Yes, I know. The reason they did was that there was a leak. That leak no longer exists. I can assure all of you of that.”

“How can you be so certain, Elizabeth?” Rod asked. “Who was the leak?”

“I am certain and I won't tell you who the leak was. I will assure you that it was not poor Avery. Coy, let's have another surprise audit of Brad's books.” She watched Coy write something in his ubiquitous notebook.

“Edgar, what do you think?”

Edgar Derby had little to say. He popped down one of his high-blood-pressure pills. Benjamin Hallimer scratched his bald head and mumbled inanities. He
desperately wanted to get off by himself and do some thinking. It was his way. Oran Wicks looked interested, but uncertain, faced with this new Elizabeth.

Elizabeth turned finally to Rod Samuels. “Rod?”

“Forget the legalities, forget the deals made with the estate. Go for his balls.”

“My sentiments exactly,” said Elizabeth. At the blank looks around the table, she explained, “Brad is reputed to be gay. He is also thinking of marrying a senator's daughter. Now, does this give you any ideas?”

Adrian said very softly, “A private detective, photos perhaps, leverage.”

“This is hardball,” said Coy.

“The very hardest,” agreed Elizabeth. “Let's get under way without delay. Now, let's go to the next item. I want to know, I mean
really
know, all our major companies and their top management. I've given myself six months. Adrian will make up an agenda. I'll spend three days studying each company, then we'll pay the management an on-site surprise visit.” She paused a moment, then looked around the table at each man in turn. “If,” she said very quietly, “anything discussed among us goes outside this room or if any of the management turn out not to be surprised by my visit, I will fire every one of you. No exceptions.”

Adrian and Rod remained after the other men had filed out, each with his assignment.

“There's one other thing,” Elizabeth said. “Adrian, remember that awful scene with Catherine Carleton that evening at the restaurant?”

“Too well,” he said on a grimace.

“Do you remember the man she was with?”

“Vaguely. Why?”

“His name is . . . was, Chad Walters. He was murdered. He was a drug dealer and the police have in
essence closed the book. Gang-related and all that. I've given it a lot of thought. I don't think it was.”

“I don't quite understand,” Rod said, looking at her closely.

“I think one of the Carletons, Laurette probably, had him killed. You see, Catherine was on the verge of making a pretty nasty scandal. Walters probably had her hooked on coke. I want to hire another private detective to check into it for us. Can you handle that, Rod?”

“My God, Elizabeth. The Carletons are a lot of unpleasant things, but murderers?”

“You forget that someone killed Timothy,” she said very quietly. “I didn't. Who else comes to mind?”

“For God's sake, not one of his family.”

“Perhaps you're right. I don't know. But if they were responsible for Walters' death, that information would give us more leverage, more power.” She paused a moment, her hand now a fist. “I've got to know.”

Two days later, on the second page of the New York
Post,
it was reported that the police had arrested a small-time cocaine supplier, Juan Ramirez, for the murder of Chad Walters. The man's motive was that Walters was trying to take over his operation in Atlantic City. The evidence cited seemed conclusive.

“Damn,” Elizabeth said. “I really thought that you'd stop at nothing, Laurette.” She paused a moment, then continued aloud to her empty bedroom, “Laurette, you and Michael are either the luckiest people alive, or you're smarter than I thought.”

Probably the latter, she thought.

11

“I
'm proud of you, Elizabeth. You are in control of your life. To you, my dear.”

Elizabeth smiled at Christian Hunter and clicked her wineglass to his. “Thank you, Christian. It's been a wild three months. I have no problem at all sleeping now. The minute my head hits the pillow, I'm out like the proverbial light.”

Christian glanced at the newspaper on the coffee table. “The Boston
Globe
?”

“Yes,” she said, and picked it up. “It contains the engagement announcement of Mr. Rowen Chalmers and Miss Amanda Montgomery. His second marriage and her third. I was wondering if I should send a gift or perhaps a letter of condolence to Miss Montgomery. Although,” she continued, looking away from him, “she should have enough experience now to know when she's being duped.”

Christian heard only the mocking amusement in her voice, and relaxed. “You were well rid of him,” he said.

She kicked off her shoes and put her feet up on the
table and leaned her head back against the sofa cushion. “You know something, Christian?”

“Not yet, but I'm patient.”

She laughed a little. “I'm at last feeling worthy to be a member of the human race. I'm still scared that I'm going to do something or say something very stupid, but I get less scared every day.”

“Just make sure you don't lose your humanity along the way, Elizabeth.”

“As in ceasing to trust people?” Her voice was light, but his sensitive ears picked up her cold determination.

“As in there are people that can and should be trusted. As in me, Elizabeth.”

“I do trust you, Christian. After all, you saved my life. Why would you want to destroy it?” He said nothing to that, and she continued after a moment, “I've simply learned to keep business and personal matters completely separate. It keeps things simpler.”

She didn't see the pained look on his face. He began to fill his pipe.

“I'm proud of you,” she said after a moment, her voice teasing. “You aren't playing shrink with me.”

“The last thing you need is a shrink, my dear. However . . .”

“Yes?”

He was sucking ferociously on his pipe. “You need to spend more time with me.”

“If I'm not mistaken, Christian, we are together at least twice a week.” She sighed, turning her head to face him. “Have I told you lately how much I appreciate you? You don't care if I'm rich or poor. You just care about me. A friend like you must be unique.”

A friend. Nothing more, at least not yet.

“Play for me, Elizabeth.”

She wiggled her toes. “Just so long as you don't expect me to put my shoes back on.”

He wanted Chopin, and that's what she played. For
him. She never played for herself anymore. When she looked up finally, she saw that his eyes were closed. “Are you asleep, Christian?”

He didn't move a muscle. “No. More, if you please.”

Because she hadn't practiced in a long time, she was aware of a slight burning in her forearms. No more Chopin etudes. She skipped to her favorite theme song from James Bond, “Nobody Does It Better.”

“Is that supposed to tell me something?” he asked lazily when she finished.

“You got it. Now it's late and I have an eight-o'clock meeting tomorrow morning. Friday night, Christian?”

“Yes,” he said, rising. “I've got a new place to take you. The star is a black jazz pianist, and he improvises so well he should be recorded while he's doing it.”

She watched him shrug into his tweed jacket. He was becoming so dear to her. Solid, that was Christian. And he never pushed her. She raised her face for his parting kiss.

It was light, barely brushing her lips. “Good night, Elizabeth.”

Christian took the elevator downstairs, bade good night to Gallagher, knowing that after his departure Gallagher would lock up the building tighter than a tick. He took a cab to Susan's apartment on Fiftieth near Madison. She was waiting for him, just as he knew she would be, just as she was supposed to be.

He was hard, trembling with desire. “Now,” he said. “Now.”

Why don't you get her to do this?
But Susan didn't say it aloud. She led him into her bedroom and unzipped his pants. He never took long, not after spending the evening with
her.

Then he lay on the bed on his back, saying nothing.

Susan had long ago learned to keep her thoughts to
herself and her mouth closed. She brought him a glass of brandy.

What, she wondered, did this Elizabeth Carleton have that she didn't have? Money, that was all. But money couldn't matter to Christian. He was so rich, she bet he didn't even remember where all his assets were. No, there was something else that woman had, a very big something.

Finally she said, her voice tentative, “I'm taking piano lessons.”

That got his attention. He reached for his pipe.

“What do you think, Christian?”

“I think you should do as you please, Susan. It's late. Thank you. I'll see you on . . . Friday—late, I'm afraid.”

“Yes, Christian. All right.”

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