the moment, Arringtonâs personal representative. I have her confidence and a power of attorney.â
Blumberg looked Stone in the eye. âYou and Arrington ever have a thing, Stone?â
âWe were living together in New York when she suddenly married Vance.â
âYou want me to represent her?â
âIf it becomes necessary.â
âI think youâre right about my presence being a red flag; the media would play that big. Hereâs what we do. I donât so much as even speak to Arrington, unless we find out sheâs going to be arrested.â
âI might be able to get advance notice of that, if it happens.â
âGood. If you do, I surrender her to the D.A. I can arrange that. From then on, Iâm her lawyer, not you; Iâm running the case.â
Stone shook his head. âIf it comes to that, Iâll want to be involved every step of the way.â
âThatâs not how I work.â
âThen I can only thank you for your time,â Stone said.
Blumberg thought for a moment. âWhat do you want?â
âSecond chair; partner in decision-making; no move without my agreement.â
âAll right,â Blumberg said. âAre you licensed in California?â
âNo.â
âIâll deal with that. Iâll want a hundred-thousand-dollar retainer up front, against a half-million-dollar fee, the remainder payable before the trial starts.â
âTo include all your expenses,â Stone said.
âAgreed. If I can stop it before it goes to trial, Iâll bill her at a thousand dollars an hour.â
âTo include your associates and staff.â
âDone.â Blumberg held out his hand, and Stone shook it.
âIâll draft a letter appointing you and get a check drawn, immediately after any arrest.â
âWhen is Arrington returning home?â
âTomorrow, I think.â
âWhere are you living while youâre here?â
âIn the Caldersâ guesthouse.â
âI donât want the two of you to spend so much as a single night under the same roof. Move out before she gets home.â
âAll right.â
Blumberg looked at his watch and stood up. âIâve got to run,â he said.
âOne thing, Marc,â Stone said. âI donât want you to mention this to anybody âstaff, wifeâ anybody .â
âThat goes without saying,â Blumberg replied.
Stone walked him to his car. âThanks for coming,â he said.
âDonât worry about a thing,â Blumberg said breezily. âIâll get her off.â
Stone waved good-bye, then went to his own car. You probably will, he thought, but I hope to God it doesnât come to that.
He went back to his desk, called Dolce again and got the same message. It only made him angrier. He was glad to be having some company tonight.
Fifteen
Â
Â
Â
S TONE AND BETTY SAT AT A GOOD TABLE AT SPAGO BEVERLY Hills. âI remember when this was another restaurant,â he said. âI had lunch here a couple of times, in the garden.â
âIâll give you a little Beverly Hills gossip,â Betty said. âYou know why the old place failed, after many years as a success?â
âTell me.â
âThe story is, a group of prominent wives were having lunch here, when they overheard the owner make an anti-Semitic remark. They told their friends, their friends told their friends, and within two weeks, the place was empty. It went out of business not long afterward.â
âIâll bet youâre full of Beverly Hills gossip,â Stone said.
âYou bet I am.â
âThen tell me, was Vance sleeping with Charlene Joiner?â
Betty smiled. âWhat do you know about Charlene Joiner?â
âJust what I read in the papers during the presidential campaign. She had once had an affair with Will Lee, back when he was first running for the Senate,
Barbara Freethy
Emma Calin
Rae Carson
Erin Hunter
Fern Michaels
Ainslie Paton
Ruth White
Tom Leveen
Annie Jocoby
Greg Bellow