Trust Me on This - Jennifer Crusie [9]
Didn’t this woman ever just walk anywhere? Every time he saw her, she was moving full tilt. She’d run Bond into the ground with all that energy. The thought of Bond as recipient of the brunette’s energy made him envious. Harry had told him to make a move on her again. It was his duty to draw a little of that energy for himself.
He straightened to go join her, and then stopped. She was on the phone, checking her watch, and then she hung up and sat down, obviously waiting for someone. Alec relaxed back into his chair to see what she was up to.
Fifteen minutes later, a little blue-haired woman in a silver-gray suit got off the elevator and crossed toward her, and Alec sighed. He knew her, Trella Madison, an old friend of his aunt’s, and he also knew she was every con man’s dream: friendly, wealthy, and dumb as a rock.
It was starting.
“Thank you for meeting me,” Dennie said, sinking into a gilt chair next to Trella. The huge overplush lobby wasn’t the best place for an interview—the gold furniture and red-flocked walls made the place look like a nineteenth century Whores “R” Us—but Dennie couldn’t afford to be choosy. “You have no idea how much I appreciate this,” she told Trella.
“Well, I really just came to tell you that I couldn’t possibly talk to you about Janice.” Trella beamed at her. “And really, I wish you would just forget this whole thing. You seem like a nice person.” She patted Dennie’s hand.
“Oh, I am.” Dennie leaned forward and projected sincerity with every cell in her body. “And I do sympathize with Professor Meredith. Truly, I do. That’s why I want to do the interview with her. The press can be savage on something like this.” She beamed back at Trella, trying to look intelligent, compassionate, warm, and honest at the same time. It shouldn’t have been hard, she felt all of those things, but trying to keep them on her face made her feel like a fraud. “If you could just tell her that I mean only the best for her, and I mean the best—”
“You know, dear, I think it’s a mistake to talk to the press,” Trella said, a trifle abstracted. “Sometimes they misquote you, and then sometimes they don’t, and you’ve really said those things, which can be so much worse.”
“Don’t think of me as the press,” Dennie said, trying not to let her intensity flatten the little woman. “Think of me as a friend with a tape recorder. Think of me as somebody who would not dream of misquoting anyone because this is the biggest story of my career, and I want desperately to get everything right.”
“I don’t think careers like this are good for a woman,” Trella said. “They make a woman hard.” She tilted her head at Dennie. “You don’t look hard yet. Although there is that line between your eyes. Lines are so bad. Why don’t you just find a nice man and forget this?” Trella patted Dennie’s hand again.
Dennie clenched her teeth and tried to remember that if she ripped Trella’s head off, she’d never get the Meredith interview. “Well,” she said carefully instead, “don’t you think that since I’m not hard yet, that I would be a good person—”
“Miss Banks?”
Dennie jerked her head up at the man’s voice. He was a young suit, probably early thirties, painfully thin, prematurely balding and visibly uncomfortable. He was standing beside Janice Meredith.
This could not be good.
“Miss Banks? I’m Paul Baxter, the manager here, and I was wondering if I could see you for a moment?” The man’s voice was pleading.
“Why?” Dennie asked, keeping a wary eye on Janice.
“I forgot to tell you, dear,” Trella said. “I did call Janice and mention I was meeting you. I hope you don’t mind—”
This is bad, Dennie told herself as her heartbeat moved into overdrive. Nothing I can’t handle, but it’s bad.
Janice Meredith broke in. “It’s very simple, Miss Banks. I have reported your harassment to Mr. Baxter.