"Yes, I understand. I just want to make sure you understand what we’re talking about here. We are talking about someone with a great deal of money to invest and someone else who’s in a business that absolutely depends on fresh input of capital. Does that make sense to you?"
"Certainly, sir. But remember that Miss Phillips’s company is awash in new capital right now from the proceeds of her film. That may not be her highest priority at the moment."
"I’m sure she’ll recognize the long-term value of my interest. If not, take a different approach; don’t you have somebody there with contacts in the film industry?"
"Well … I believe Harvey Greenspan, in our Los Angeles office, has a number of clients who are connected with the studios."
"Then have him call in some favors, use whatever connections he’s got."
There was a polite rap on the door of Jeff s hotel suite. "Bellman, sir. The man from Brooks Brothers is here for the fitting."
"I have to go, Alan," Jeff said into the phone. "You can reach me at the Fairmont when you’ve got this arranged."
"I’ll do what I can, Mr. Winston."
"Do it soon. I’d hate to have to take my account elsewhere, after all these years."
The offices of Starsea Productions, Inc. were located in a two-story white stucco building south of Pico, in a nondescript commercial area between MGM and Twentieth Century-Fox. The reception area was done in blue and white, with a billboard-sized poster for the movie behind the reception desk. An eclectic mix of abstract art and undersea photographs decorated the other walls, and on the large, Spanish-tile coffee table were displayed half a dozen books reflecting the themes of the film: Intelligent Life in the Universe, The Mind of the Dolphin, Programming and Metaprogramming in the Human Biocomputer … Jeff flipped through a collection of color plates of Jupiter from the first Pioneer mission and waited.
"Mr. Winston?" The cheery little brunette receptionist smiled professionally at him. "Miss Phillips will see you now."
He followed her down a long corridor, past half a dozen open office doors. Everyone he saw was on the telephone.
Pamela Phillips’s spacious office had the same blue-and-white color scheme as the reception area, but there were no movie memorabilia on the walls, no Pollock prints or photographs of dolphins. Here there was one visual motif, repeated in a dozen variations: mandalas, wheels, circles.
"Good morning, Mr. Winston. Would you care for some coffee or juice?"
"I’m fine, thanks."
"That’ll be all, then, Natalie. Thank you."
Jeff studied the woman he had waited a month to see. She was tall, probably five ten; wide mouth, round face, very little makeup; straight, fine blond hair in a modified Dutch-boy cut. Jeff was glad he’d outfitted himself at Brooks Brothers; Pamela Phillips was dressed for business, in a well-tailored gray suit and high-necked maroon blouse with matching low-heeled shoes. No jewelry, except for a small gold lapel pin in a design of concentric circles.
"Have a seat, Mr. Winston. I understand you wished to discuss Starsea Productions as an investment opportunity?"
Right to the point, no dillydallying or amiable warm-up chatter. Like a mid-eighties corporate woman, in 1974.
"Yes, that’s right. I find myself with some excess capital to—"
"Let me make it clear from the outset, Mr.—"
"Jeff, please."
She ignored his attempt at first-name familiarity, went right on with what she’d been saying. "My firm is privately financed and wholly self-supporting. I granted you this appointment out of courtesy to a friend, but if you want to invest in the motion-picture industry I’m afraid you’ve come to the wrong place. If you’d like, my attorney could draw up a list of some other production houses that might—"
"It’s Starsea that interests me, not the business in general."
"If the company ever goes public, I’ll see that your broker receives an offering. Until then…" She was rising from behind her desk, hand extended, ready to dismiss him.
"Aren’t you even curious about my interest?"
"Not particularly, Mr. Winston. Since the film opened in December, it’s generated a great deal of interest in many quarters. My own energies are devoted to other projects at this point." She extended her hand again. "So if you don’t mind, I have a busy schedule…"
The woman was making this more difficult than he’d expected; he had no choice but to plunge ahead. "What about Star Wars?" he asked. "Will your company have a hand in that?"
Her green eyes narrowed. "Rumors of upcoming films float around this town constantly, Mr. Winston. If I were you, I wouldn’t listen to everything I hear around the pool at the Bel-Air."
Might as well go all the way, Jeff thought. "And Close Encounters?" he asked. "I’m not sure whether Spielberg would even want to make that now—what do you think? It might seem like kind of a lame follow-up to Starsea."
The anger hadn’t left her eyes, but now it was joined by something else. She sat back down, stared at him cautiously. "Where did you ever hear that title?"
He returned her steady gaze, sidestepped the question. "Now, E. T.," he said conversationally, "that’s a different matter entirely. I don’t see any conflict between the two. Same thing with Raiders of the Lost Ark, of course. Completely unrelated movie. First sequel to that one was lousy, though. Maybe you can talk to him about it."
He had her full attention now. Her fingers nervously stroked her throat, and her face had lost all hint of any emotion but astonishment.
"Who are you?" Pamela Phillips asked in a low voice. "Who the hell are you?"
"Funny." Jeff smiled. "I’ve been wondering the same thing about you."
ELEVEN
Pamela’s house in Topanga Canyon was as isolated and difficult to reach as any home so close to a major city could possibly be, set in the middle of a five-acre plot that had gone wild with vegetation: jacarandas, lemon trees, grape vines, blackberry bushes … all in an undisciplined tangle of unchecked growth. "You ought to trim back some of that," Jeff said as they wound their way toward the house in her Land Rover. She handled the four-wheel-drive vehicle with easy confidence, unaware or uncaring of how incongruous she looked in it, with her smart gray skirt and lacquered fingernails. She’d put her tailored jacket on the back seat and kicked off her shoes to better operate the clutch but otherwise still looked as if she belonged in the boardroom of an insurance company, not driving down a dirt road off an untamed canyon.
"That’s the way it grows." She shrugged. "If I wanted a formal garden, I’d live in Beverly Hills."
"You’ve got a lot of good fruit going to waste, though."
"I get all the fruit I need at the Farmer’s Market." He let the matter drop. She could do whatever she wanted with her land, though it galled Jeff to see such lushness gone to seed. He still didn’t know much about her. After tersely verifying what he’d suspected, that she was a replayer too, she’d insisted on hearing his own story from the beginning, and had frequently interrupted to grill him for more details. He’d left out a lot, of course, particularly some of the episodes with Sharla, and he’d yet to hear anything about her own experiences. Clearly, though, she was a person of many contradictions. Which made perfect sense; so was he. How could either of them be anything else?
The house was plainly but comfortably furnished, with an oak-beamed ceiling and a big picture window on one side that looked over the messy jungle of her property to the ocean far below. As in her office, the walls were hung with framed mandalas of many types: Navajo, Mayan, East Indian. Near the window was a large desk stacked with books and notebooks, and in the center of it sat a bulky, greenish-gray device that incorporated a video screen, a keyboard, and a printer. He frowned quizzically at it. What was she doing with a home computer this early? There was no—