L.A. Dead (Stone Barrington 6)
Page 49
"It'll take me at least half an hour, depending on traffic. See you then," he said hurriedly, before she asked where he'd be coming from. He hung up and went back out to the deck. "I'm going to go and see her now," he said.
Arrington stood up, put her arms around him and gave him a soulful kiss. For the first time-for the first time since she'd run off with Vance-he responded the way he wanted to. Arrington stepped back and patted him on the cheek. "Poor Stone," she said. "Don't worry, you can handle it." She turned him around, pointed him toward the door, and gave him a spank on the backside, like a coach sending in a quarterback with a new play. "I'll order in some food and fix us some dinner," she called, as he reached the door.
"Don't start cooking until I call," he said. "I don't know how long this is going to take."
The mob at the Colony gate had boiled down to one TV van and a photographer, and although they stared at him as he drove through, they didn't seem to connect him with Vance Calder's widow. A few miles down the Pacific Coast Highway, there was an accident that held up traffic for half an hour, giving Stone more time than he wanted to think.
Women, he reflected, usually broke it off with him, for lack of commitment. He had never been in the position of breaking off an engagement, and he dreaded the thought. By the time he got past the accident and made it to the hotel, he was an hour late.
Dolce opened the door and threw herself into his arms. "Oh, God, I've missed you," she whispered into his ear. It did not make Stone feel any better that she was naked. It seemed that women had been flaunting nakedness all day, and he had never been very good at resisting it. He pushed her into the suite and closed the door. "Please put something on; we have to talk."
Dolce grabbed a robe and led him into the living room. Stone chose an armchair so he wouldn't have to share the sofa with her. "I'm sorry you came here," he said. "It was the wrong thing to do, in the circumstances."
"What circumstances?" she asked.
"Arrington is in trouble, and until I can get her out of it, I can't think about anything else."
"She killed Vance, didn't she? I knew it."
"She did not," Stone said.
"I could smell it as soon as I arrived in this town. The newspapers and TV know she's guilty, don't they?"
"They don't know anything, except the hints the cops are dropping."
"The cops know she's guilty, don't they?"
"Dolce, she passed a lie detector test this afternoon, a tough one, by a real expert."
"You need to think she's innocent, don't you, Stone? I know you; you have to believe that."
"I do believe that," Stone said, although Dolce was still shaking her head. "The police are trying to railroad her, because they can't find the real perpetrator, and I can't let that happen."
"Are you still in love with her, Stone?"
"Maybe; I haven't had time to think about that." In truth, he'd hardly thought of anything else. "Dolce, we very nearly made a terrible mistake. Let's both be grateful that we were spared a marriage that would never have worked."
"Why would it never have worked?"
"Because we're so different, tempermentally. We could never live with each other."
"Funny, I thought we had been living with each other for the past few months."
"Not permanently; we were playing at living together."
"I wasn't playing," she said.
"You know what I mean. We were… acting our parts, that's all. It would never have worked. I wish you hadn't come."
"Stone, I'm here, because you're my husband, and you need me."
"Dolce, I am not your husband, and I'd appreciate it if you'd tell the hotel that."
"Have you forgotten that we were married last Saturday, in Venice, by the mayor of the city?"
"You know as well as I do, that ceremony is not valid without a religious ceremony to follow."
"We took vows."