Stein’s face remained expressionless. Breslow waved his cigar to indicate the expensively furnished room, the cut-glass chandeliers and the illuminated cabinet containing a collection of valuable porcelain figures at which Stein seldom glanced. ‘You have made for yourself the life you want. Can the world of business really offer you anything?’
‘Spit it out, Max,’ Stein told him.
‘Very well. Suppose I was able to arrange a sale of your papers? Suppose we were to include a provision that gave you a percentage of the film profits made, as well as putting a lot of money in your pocket? What would you say to getting out quickly and easily, and giving your attentions to something else?’
When Stein replied, his voice was gruff and his speech was slow. ‘I’ve told you before, Max. I am just the front man for a syndicate. I don’t own these papers. I just own a very small share in them. The people I’m working with trust me and rely on my judgement. I have to stay close to this deal and make sure my syndicate gets fairly treated.’
‘And why not?’ said Breslow. ‘Who’s talking about selling anyone short? What I’m telling you is that a big financial backer could take over this project and make more money out of it than we ever could. I know a corporation which has diversified into movies, TV, books and paperbacks. There would be cash up front, Charles. And a company like that could never come under the sort of physical threats that the British are subjecting us to.’ He rubbed his arm again. ‘Have you got the documents here in the house?’
‘Don’t crowd me, Max.’
‘Very well,’ said Breslow. He placed his cigar in the ashtray in such a way that it was clear he had finished with it. Then he got up to leave.
‘You mad at me?’
‘My friend, how could that be possible? We are virtually partners, are we not? I’m worried about you. I wish you’d tell me something I can do that might help either or both of us in this present predicament.’
‘I’ll phone you tonight, Max.’ Stein rang the spoon against his cup reflectively. ‘Or, failing that, first thing in the morning.’
‘Very well, Charles, but make sure you double-lock your doors tonight. These people mean business.’
‘I still got a few tricks up my sleeve,’ said Stein.
Max Breslow smiled condescendingly. ‘Of course you have, Charles. But let’s hope you do not have to demonstrate what they are.’
Billy had arrived and had parked his Thunderbird by the time Breslow was ready to leave. Both Steins stood by Breslow as he got into the driver’s seat and nervously touched the controls of his wife’s yellow Chevette. It was not a car that Max Breslow liked to drive; only in the big Mercedes did he feel really at home.
‘ Benedict Canyon will be better at this time of day,’ said Billy, who had just returned from taking Mary Breslow back home. ‘It will take you to the Van Nuys turnoff. The Ventura Freeway was already crowded when I was heading back. Or take Mulholland Drive.’
Breslow shook his head. The hillcrest route provided dramatic views across the valley and back across Los Angeles, but it was a steep and winding road with soft edges that required an element of caution. ‘No, I’ll stick to the freeway,’ said Breslow. ‘A determined driver would find it easy to force this little car off the road, and there are places where a car could disappear into the undergrowth for weeks.’
‘Whatever you say,’ said Stein, ‘But I think you’re overreacting.’
‘We’ll talk on the phone when you’ve had a chance to think about everything I’ve said.’
‘Sure thing,’ said Stein.
The Chevette backed off the ramp with a roar of engine and a puff of smoke; then, as Breslow got the feel of it, it started off down Cresta Ridge Drive, negotiating each hairpin with exaggerated care.
‘What’s eating him?’ said Billy.
The two men went inside and Charles Stein told his son everything that Max Breslow had said. Billy walked round the large sitting room, restlessly fingering the notes of the grand piano and helping himself to one of his father’s favourite coconut cakes. At the end of the long story, Charles Stein waited for his son’s reaction.
‘I sure wouldn’t want anything to happen to Mary,’ said Billy Stein.
His father sighed noisily. ‘It’s Mary now, is it? You only met her at lunchtime. What’s hit you? Love at first sight?’ he inquired. ‘Or are you writing a new musical for Streisand? Are you going to keep circling the carpet, mooing like a lovesick cow?’
Billy smiled anxiously. ‘I knew you were going to blow your top,’ he said. ‘I told Mary that you had this hang-up about Germans, and that you would be certain to hit the ceiling.’
Billy noticed that his father was blinking very rapidly. In spite of the stillness of his father’s large frame and his inscrutable face, Billy recognized this as a danger signal. ‘You been discussing me, eh? You cruised along in the little old T-bird, with Mantovani oozing out of the stereo, and talked about your dad’s shortcomings. Tell me, Billy. Did she exchange confidences? I mean, did she tell you a few of good old Daddy Max’s little passions and preoccupations?’
Billy was smiling with amused exasperation, waving his hands in an effort to still his father’s wrath. ‘All I said was… if you were listening to me, dad… you’d know that all I said was that I wouldn’t want anything to happen to her. Right? You don’t have to throw some kind of one-man race riot.’
‘Now my kid is lecturing me on intolerance. Listen, Billy, did I ever tell you about some years of my life I gave up to fight the Nazis?’
‘Did you ever tell me anything else?’
The argument had settled into its usual style, and neither of them took it too seriously. Charles Stein muttered something inaudible and ate the last of the coconut cakes.
‘You didn’t tell me about how lucky I was having a fancy education and the Cessna and the T-bird and the boat and everything.’
‘Don’t press your luck, Billy,’ said Stein, and his son was careful enough to accept the warning.
Charles Stein went over to the red house-phone and pressed the button to connect him with the phone in his housekeeper’s apartment. ‘I’m going out now,’ he told her. ‘Could be I’ll be back very late tonight. Don’t open the door for anyone. Make sure you double-lock the doors and check the window catches. I hear there were more break-ins up the hill last week. And it’s Friday, the 13th, Mrs Svenson.’ He hung up without waiting for his housekeeper to reply.
‘Where are you going?’ asked Billy.
‘Visiting a pal,’ said Stein, and Billy knew that he would get no more from his father.
19
Charles Stein was not the kind of man commonly seen in the entrance lobby of the Gnu Club. His unkempt appearance and off-hand manner deceived the staff into believing that he was a tourist or a drunk looking for a small beer and some go-go dancers. The receptionist was a slim young man with rimless spectacles, who had committed to memory the faces of most of the big-spending clients and was able to recollect the names too. He exchanged a glance with a large man sitting inconspicuously behind the coat-check hatch. Silently, the man put on his peaked cap, stepped out on to the soft carpeting and stood where the spotlight that was directed upon the long-stemmed roses illuminated his ‘security guard’ arm badge and the big biceps muscles too. ‘Good evening, sir.’ The guard employed that veneer of exaggerated politeness which is unmistakably an intimidation.
Stein blinked at him but did not answer.
‘I said, good evening, pal.’
‘I am not your pal,’ said Stein, ‘and if you will step aside I’m going upstairs.’
‘Oh, that’s what it’s all about,’ said the guard wearily. ‘You came in to use the John?’ Over Stein’s shoulder he made a pained face at the young receptionist.
‘No,’ said Stein.