Babe’s throat was suddenly scratchy as steel wool. “I would have said Scottie, but obviously not.”
“No one else?”
“Well, Ash Canfield—I don’t have a secret in the world from her. We made it a policy never to be stoned at the same party. In case one of us had to take the other home.”
“Then let’s ask Ash to look over these photos. How do we get hold of her?”
Babe had graduated to a cane, and she was able to climb the ramp to the Minerva, industrialist Holcombe Kaiser’s two-hundred-foot yacht, without Cardozo’s help. As they reached the deck, noise and lights hit them.
The black-tie extravaganza—one of the hardest-to-wrangle invitations of the season—was in full swing. The masts wrapped in furled sails soared three stories high.
Cardozo was aware of people looking at Babe with hungry ogling eyes, whispering speculations, and he was aware that some of the speculation was spilling over onto him.
He held out the Tiffany-engraved vellum invitation for Beatrice Devens and Escort, and a young, elegantly uniformed butler steered them toward the reception line and called out their names.
Holcombe Kaiser, their billionaire host, greeted his guests with the brisk dispatch of a ruling monarch. “Haven’t seen you in a while, Babe.”
A camera flashed as Kaiser’s lips touched Babe’s cheek.
“Too long,” she said. “This is my friend Vincent Cardozo.”
“How do you do, sir.” It was that faintly ironic use of the word, from superior to inferior. “Thanks for bringing Babe.”
Cardozo knew Kaiser only from news stories, knew he had spent a lifetime piling up dollars and publicity into the Holcombe Kaiser legend, carving himself a conspicuous place in a conspicuous society. Gray-haired, gray-bearded, radiating self-satisfaction, he looked Cardozo impersonally in the eye. “Please meet my good friend Edmilia Tirotos.”
Kaiser had been a widower for over half his life, and Edmilia Tirotos, the four-foot-nine wife of the deposed Indonesian dictator, stood beside him, performing the duties of hostess. Olive-skinned, dark-eyed, her face-lifts giving her a weirdly young smile that she seemed powerless to alter, she wore a diamond tiara that must have accounted for over half the foreign debt of her former fatherland.
“Where the hell are we going to find Ash Canfield?” Cardozo whispered. “This place is worse than a lockup cage.”
“Let’s try the bar,” Babe said.
It was not an easy task. There were open bars fore and aft, and a dozen strikingly handsome waiters circulated with trays of champagne.
At eight thirty the Minerva cast off, its motors churning the Hudson to vanilla mousse. The sun was setting, turning the Manhattan skyline amber.
Babe and Cardozo pried their way through the usual crowd going through the intricate steps of the celebrity gavotte, with amplified dance music played under a striped canopy by Scott Devens and his twelve-piece orchestra.
Inside the ship’s saloon the crystal prisms of a ballroom chandelier scattered tinkling rainbows across oyster damask and walnut paneling, dappling the pink marble fireplace with a Rubens painting above it
Babe found Ash Canfield on a silk sofa, a fair-haired woman in a scoop-bodiced silver gown, eyes sparkling with bold gaiety.
“So this is the famous Lieutenant Vincent Cardozo.” Ash spoke in a whispery, out-of-breath, society-girl voice.
“I didn’t know I was famous,” he said, “but thank you, Mrs.—what do I call you—Lady Ash or Lady Canfield?”
“It’s not a proper title, I’m only Lady Canfield, but why don’t we drop the Lady and you can call me Ash. And yes, you’re very famous among the inner circle of Babe’s friends.”
“Ash,” Babe suggested, “come see the view.”
“I’ve seen that filthy harbor. You forget, Babe, I was born in Doctors Hospital, right on the shores of Manhattan, just like you and every other little girl who ever went to Spence. Rather like Moses in the bulrushes, don’t you think, Lieutenant? Or do I call you Vincent?”
“Call me Vince.”
Ash linked arms with them both. “Now that we’re all cozy, let’s look for a bar. I’m famished for an olive.”
They worked their way out of the saloon. Ash threw out greetings, chatty and frivolous, hyper-radiating giddy good humor.
Cardozo pried them a path down the corridor, through a tumult of celebrity hugs and giggles and pushing.
Babe stopped suddenly in the middle of the corridor. Her eyes had locked on a woman in a strapless gray silk gown and Cardozo wondered what her mind was telling her that he wasn’t tuning in on.
There was a tangible arrogance to the straight set of the woman’s mouth and thin Roman nose and cool wide-spaced green eyes. It took Cardozo an instant to recognize Doria Forbes-Steinman, and it took him an instant longer to realize that Babe was staring not at the woman but at the dress she was wearing.
“Hello, Doria,” Babe said.
Doria Forbes-Steinman turned, standing there behind a wisp of smoke, finishing her cigarette. Her eyes went from Babe to Cardozo to Ash. “Why, Babe, what a surprise. No one told me you were invited.”
“Obviously not,” Babe said. “That’s my gown you’re wearing.”
Doria Forbes-Steinman smiled. “Hello, Ash. Hello, Lieutenant,” she said.
“If you’ve let the others out at the hips and shoulders as badly as this one,” Babe said, “I don’t know whether to sue you for theft or for butchery.”
“I know exactly what to sue you for, darling—libel.”
“Please do. And say hello to Scottie for me.”
Giving Babe the finger, Doria Forbes-Steinman eased herself into a wave of celebrities that was sweeping down the corridor.
“If you want to sue,” Cardozo said, “sue your parents, not her. It was their job to say no.”
“How did she do it?” Babe said.
“Ted Morgenstern.”
“It’s beyond belief. Beneath belief.”
Cardozo found an empty stateroom and herded Babe and Ash inside and closed the door behind them. It was a comfortable rosewood-paneled room, hung with soft blue paintings all bearing the powerfully legible signature of Picasso, as recognizable as the trademark on a Coke bottle. There was a single Monet, which Cardozo had the feeling was Holcombe Kaiser’s way of remembering where he had hidden the safe.
“She has my husband,” Babe said, “and she has my gowns.”
“Let it go,” Cardozo said softly. His hand reached and squeezed Babe’s.
She squeezed back, gratefully, and then she opened the writing board of an antique carved French walnut secretary. She spread the three-by-five-inch photo reductions on the seamlessly inlaid surface of marble and boxwood.
Ash stood there, a wondering stare fixed on her face. “What’s this, lotto? Am I supposed to pick a winner?”
“In a way,” Babe said. “Would you look at these photographs and tell us if you know any of the people?”
For a second Ash seemed to have to process the request, and then she settled herself, a wobbly wisp of Chanel-scented elegance, onto the corner of the blue chintz sofa. She sneaked her glasses out of her purse. Guiltily. The lenses had thick middles to correct the far-sightedness that came with middle age, and Cardozo could see from the way she put them on that she hated wearing them.
She picked up the photos. She stared silently at each one, eyes mechanical, remote, as if she were arranging cards by suit in a hand of bridge. She separated one photo from the others. Her glance turned diagonally across the writing board toward Babe.
“This one.”
“Family snapshots?” The door had opened soundlessly. A man stood in the doorway, then sauntered into the room. Snow-blond brows and lashes made his blue eyes deep and startling. He moved quickly next to Ash and put his arm around her shoulders. “May I peek?” He had the look of an overripe Nordic god, slightly inflated, the blond curls singed in gray. His plaid cummerbund did not manage to disguise the comfortably thickening waist of the tennis player at forty.
He spread the photos out side by side. “Let’s see, our summer vacation in Europe—no, our summer vacation in Billi von Kleist’s lobby. What dreary photos—who’s collecting snapshots of big Mack trucks?”