“It’s not that it doesn’t feel right.” I touched his hand. “It’s just that I didn’t vote for your administration….” Molinari laughed out loud. “But just for the record, it wasn’t the wrong thing to say.”
That made him smile, too. “It’s getting late,” he said. “I have some things to attend to up here. I’ll be seeing you soon enough.”
Then Molinari waved down the block for his car. The black Lincoln drove up. The driver climbed out and opened the door for me. Still not completely sure that I was doing the right thing, I got in.
Suddenly something hit me and I rolled down the window. “Hey, I don’t even know what flight I’m on.”
“Taken care of,” Molinari said. He waved and slapped the side. The car started to pull away.
As soon as we were on the highway, I shut my eyes and began to review the day, but mostly my dinner with Molinari. After a while the driver said, “We’re here, ma’am.”
I looked outside and saw that we were at some remote part of the airfield. Yep, I can be wowed. Waiting for me on the tarmac was the Gulfstream G-3 jet I had flown up in that morning.
Chapter 52
JILL HAD IT ALL planned out. And in her mind, it was going well.
She had come home early and prepared one of Steve’s favorite meals, coq au vin. In truth, other than half a dozen kinds of eggs, it was the only thing she knew how to cook—or at least that she was confident about.
Maybe tonight they could talk about how to proceed. She had the name of a therapist that a friend had given her and Steve had promised he would actually go this time.
She had vegetables simmering in the pan and was about to add wine when Steve came home. But when he walked up the stairs, he seemed to look right through her. “Look at us,” he said. “You’d think we were an ad for domestic bliss.”
“Trying,” Jill said. She was wearing pressed jeans and a pink V-necked T-shirt, and she had her hair down the way he liked it.
“Just one thing wrong.” Steve tossed his newspaper down. “I’m going out.”
Jill felt her stomach sink. “Why? Look at me, Steve. I’ve gone to a lot of trouble.”
“Frank needs to bounce a proposal off me.” Steve reached across to a fruit basket and took a peach. There was a part of him that seemed almost to be gloating, amused that he’d ruined the evening.
“Can’t you see Frank at the office tomorrow? I told you, there was something I needed to talk about. You said okay. I’ve got all this food.”
He took a bite out of the peach and laughed. “You break one night before eight and get it in your head to play Alice on The Brady Bunch, and I’m the one blowing the script?”
“It’s not a script, Steve.”
“You wanna talk”—he sucked out another bite of the peach—“go ahead. In case you’ve forgotten, it’s still my check that pays for those Manolo Blahniks. The market the way it is these days, the only thing scarcer than the Ice Queen with an urge to have sex is a promising deal. Given the odds, I’ll throw in with the deal.”
“That was really cruel.” Jill glared at him. She was determined to hold herself together. “I was trying to do something nice.”
“It is nice.” Steve shrugged, took another bite. “And if you hurry, you might still cat
ch one of your girlfriends to share this special moment with you.”
She saw herself reflected in the window, suddenly feeling ridiculous. “You’re an incredible bastard.”
“Aw…” Steve whined.
Jill flung the spatula down, grease splattering over the counter.
“That’s a five-thousand-dollar slab of limestone you’re redecorating there,” Steve said.
“Goddamn you,” Jill cried, her eyes starting to well up with tears. “Look what I’m trying to do for you.” Everything had fallen apart. What was she trying to hold on to anyway?
“You belittle me. You criticize. You make me feel like crap. You want to walk out that door, go…. Get out of my life. Everyone thinks I’m crazy for wanting to keep this together anyway.”
“Everyone…” She saw the venom in his eyes, the switch suddenly tripped. He grabbed her by the arm and squeezed it hard, forcing Jill down to the floor. “You let those bitches run your life. I run your life. Me, Jill…”