Paradise
Matt’s heart froze at the thought of the details of the divorce being divulged. Meredith had divorced him on grounds of desertion and mental cruelty, which, respectively, would make his proud young wife look pitiful and helpless when the press got through with her. Neither image was anything but devastating for the temporary president of a national corporation who hoped to be permanently appointed to that post when her father retired.
The story was continued on page three, and Matt yanked the page over and ground his teeth at what he saw. Beneath a bold caption that read Menage à Trois? there was a picture of Meredith smiling at Parker as they danced at some Chicago charity affair, and a similar picture of Matt—dancing with a redhead at a charity ball in New York. Beneath those was a story that began with a report about Meredith having snubbed Matt at the opera a few weeks before, and then went into the details of their individual dating habits. Matt punched the intercom button just as Eleanor hurried into his office. “What the hell’s happening with those calls?” he demanded.
“Pearson and Levinson aren’t expected in until nine,” she recited. “Your pilot is doing a check flight right now with the new engine, and I left word for him to call the instant he lands, which should be in about twenty minutes. Joe O’Hara is on his way back here with the car. I told him to wait in the parking garage, to avoid the reporters in the lobby—”
“What about my wife?” Matt interrupted, unaware that he’d automatically called her that for the second time in five minutes.
Even Eleanor looked tense. “Her secretary says she’s not in yet, and that even if she was, Miss Bancroft’s instructions were to tell you that all future communications between the two of you are to be handled through your lawyers.”
“That’s changed,” Matt said shortly. Reaching up, he ran a hand around his nape, absently rubbing the tense muscles, wanting to get to Meredith before she tried to deal with the press on her own. “How did her secretary sound when you talked to her—did she sound like everything was normal over there.”
“She sounded like she was under siege.”
“That means she’s getting the same calls you’ve gotten this morning.” Moving out from behind his desk, Matt grabbed his coat, and headed for the door. “Have the attorneys and the pilot call me at her number,” he ordered. “And call our public relations department. Tell whoever’s in charge to keep the press on ice here and not to antagonize them. In fact, treat them very nicely and promise them a statement this afternoon at—one o’clock. I’ll call from Meredith’s office and notify P.R. where to tell them to assemble this afternoon. In the meantime, give them a damned brunch or something while they’re waiting.”
“You’re serious about the food?” she said, knowing his normal method of dealing with the press when they intruded on his private life was either to avoid them or to tell them, in slightly different words, to go to hell.
“I’m serious,” Matt gritted out. He paused at the door for one last instruction. “Get through to Parker Reynolds. He’ll be surrounded by press too. Tell him to call me at Meredith’s office, and in the meantime tell him he is to tell the press exactly what we’re telling them here.”
At 8:35 Meredith stepped off the elevator and headed toward her office, glad of the chance to work and escape the thoughts of Matt that had kept her awake most of the night and then made her oversleep. Here, at least, she’d be forced to put her personal problems aside and concentrate on business.
“Good morning, Kathy,” she said to the receptionist, then she glanced around at the nearly deserted area. The executives, who worked late hours, rarely came in before nine o’clock, but the clerical staff was normally in evidence long before now, ready to go to work promptly at 8:30. “Where is everyone? What’s going on?” she asked.
Kathy gaped at her and swallowed nervously. “Phyllis went downstairs to talk to security. She’s having your phone calls held at the switchboard. Nearly everyone else is in the coffee room, I think.”
Frowning, Meredith listened to the persistent ringing of unanswered telephones up and down the corridor. “Is it someone’s birthday?” she asked. It was a ritual for everyone on the two administrative floors to wander up to the coffee room sometime during the day to have coffee and cake on the occasion of an employee’s birthday, but never before had that created such an unusual and unacceptable dearth of needed personnel. Her own birthday was two days away on Saturday, Meredith realized, and for a split second she wondered if there was some sort of early surprise party being given for her.
“I don’t think it’s a party,” Kathy said uneasily.
“Oh,” Meredith said, dumbfounded by this unprecedented negligence on the part of a normally conscientious clerical staff. Stopping in her office to drop off her coat and briefcase, she headed directly for the coffee room. The minute she walked over to the coffeepots, two dozen pairs of eyes riveted on her. “It sounds like a fire drill out there, ladies and gentlemen,” Meredith said with a matter-of-fact smile, dimly surprised by the taut silence and gaping stares of the assembly, who all seemed to be clutching newspapers. “How about answering some of those phones?” she added—needlessly, because they were already stampeding out of there, mumbling “good morning” and “excuse me.”
She’d just sat down at her desk and was taking the first sip of her coffee, when Lisa raced into her office, clutching a huge armload of newspapers. “Mer, I’m so sorry!” she burst out. “I bought every damned copy from the newspaper stand out front so they wouldn’t have any more to sell. It’s the only way I could think of to help you!”
“Help me?” Meredith asked with a startled smile.
Lisa’s mouth fell open, and she clutched the newspapers tighter, as if to hide them. “You haven’t seen the morning paper, have you?”
Alarm traced a finger up Meredith’s spine. “No, I overslept and didn’t have time. Why? What’s wrong?”
With visible reluctance, Lisa slowly laid the stack on Meredith’s desk. Meredith tore her eyes from Lisa’s pale face, looked at the paper, then half rose from her chair. “Oh, my God!” she breathed, her stricken gaze flying over the print. She put down her coffee cup and stood up, forcing herself to read more slowly. Then she turned to page three and read the more sensational and personal article on that page. Finished, she looked at Lisa with glazed panic in her eyes. “Oh, my God,” she whispered again.
They both jumped as Phyllis slammed Meredith’s door and rushed toward them. “I’ve been in security,” she said, her short hair disheveled, as if she’d been raking her fingers through it. “We were swarming with reporters at the main doors, waiting for us to open. They started getting in at the employee entrance, so Mark Braden let them all in and told them to go to the auditorium. The phone has been ringing off the hook. Most of the calls are from reporters, but you also had calls from two of the board members who want to talk to you immediately. Mr. Reynolds has called three times and Mr. Farrell called once. Mark Braden wants instructions. So do I!”
Meredith tried to concentrate, but her insides were trembling with sick dread. Sooner or later a reporter would dig up the reasons for her marriage to Matt. Someone would talk—a servant, an orderly at the hospital—and the world was going to know that she had been a silly, pregnant teenage bride of an unwilling husband. Her pride and her privacy were about to be torn to shreds. Other people made mistakes and broke rules, she thought bitterly, and got by with it. But not her—she had to pay again and again and again.
It suddenly hit her then, what else everyone was going to think when that sham lawyer revealed the details of her divorce, and she felt the room tilt sickeningly. Because her father hadn’t settled for something nice and decent like irreconcilable differences, she was not merely going to be portrayed as some promiscuous teenager without enough sense to use birth control, she was also going to be the pathetic object of desertion and mental cruelty!
And Parker—dear God, Parker was a respectable banker and the papers were going to drag him into this
mess.
She suddenly thought of Matt and what this was going to do to him, and she felt violently ill. When people learned he’d subjected his sad little pregnant wife to mental cruelty and then deserted her, his reputation and character would be destroyed beyond recall. . . .
“Meredith, please—tell me what to do.” Phyllis’s imploring voice seemed to come from very far away. “The phone on my desk is ringing right now.”
Lisa held up her hand. “Give her time to think—she just saw the newspaper when you walked in.”
Meredith sank down in her chair, shaking her head to clear it, knowing she had to do something—anything. For lack of any other ideas, she said slowly, “We’ll follow the same procedure we follow whenever something newsworthy happens at the store—notify the switchboard to screen all calls and have those from reporters transferred to public relations.” She swallowed painfully. “Tell Mark Braden to keep herding the reporters who come here to the auditorium.”
“Yes, but what do you want public relations to tell the reporters?”
Raising her gaze to Phyllis’s, Meredith drew a ragged breath and admitted, “I don’t know yet. Just tell them to wait—” She broke off at the knocking on her door, and all three of them turned as the receptionist poked her head inside and said anxiously, “I’m sorry to disturb you, Miss Bancroft, but Mr. Farrell is here, and he’s—he’s very, very insistent about seeing you. I don’t think he’s going to take no for an answer. Shall I use your phone and call security?”
“No!” Meredith said, bracing herself to face Matt’s justifiable fury. “Phyllis, go bring him in here, will you?”
Having carefully observed what office the receptionist had headed for, Matt waited impatiently at the reception desk, ignoring the fascinated interest his presence was generating among the secretaries and clerks and the executives getting off the elevators. He saw the receptionist emerge from Meredith’s office with another woman, and he took a step forward, fully prepared to go over or around both women if Meredith was foolish enough to refuse to see him. “Mr. Farrell,” an attractive brunette in her late twenties said, managing to sound professional despite her wavering smile, “I’m Phyllis Tilsher, Miss Bancroft’s secretary. I’m sorry you were made to wait. Will you come with me please?”
Forcing himself not to outpace her, Matt let her usher him to Meredith’s office, where she swung open the door and stepped aside. At any other time, the incredible sight that Matt beheld would have made his chest swell with pride: Seated behind a baronial desk at the far end of a richly paneled office that shouted of hushed wealth and quiet dignity, with her golden hair caught up in a shining chignon, Meredith Bancroft looked like a regal young monarch who should have been sitting on a throne instead of a high-backed leather chair—a very pale and worried monarch at the moment. Tearing his eyes from her, he glanced at the secretary and unconsciously began taking charge. “I’m expecting two calls here,” he told her quickly, “let me know the instant they come through. Tell anyone else who calls that we’re in a budget meeting and can’t be disturbed, and don’t let anyone else past that door!”
Phyllis nodded and hastily left, closing the door behind her, and Matt headed for Meredith, who was slowly standing up and walking around to his side of the desk. Jerking his head toward the redhead standing near the windows who was studying him with unconcealed fascination, Matt said, “Who is she?”
“Lisa Pontini,” Meredith said absently, “an old friend. Let her stay. Why,” she added in a state of numb confusion, “are we having a budget meeting in here?”
Matt remembered Lisa Pontini’s name from years before. Suppressing the urge to pull Meredith into his arms and try to comfort her—both of which he knew she’d reject—he smiled reassuringly and tried to inject a teasing note into his voice. “It’ll throw the employees off the track temporarily if they think it’s business at its most boring usual up here. Can you think of anything more boring than budgets?” She tried to smile at his humorous logic and couldn’t, so Matt said with quiet force, “With a little luck we’re going to pull through this with only a few scrapes and no scars. Now, will you trust me and do what I ask?”
Meredith stared at him while it sank in that instead of blaming her and her father for this calamity, he was actually going to step in and help. She straightened slowly, feeling a sudden return of her strength and wits. With a nod she said, “Yes. What do you want me to do?”
Instead of replying, Matt smiled at how quickly and valiantly she was rallying. “Very nice,” he said softly. “Chief executive officers never cower.”
“They bluff,” she concluded, trying to smile.
“Right.” He grinned. He started to say more, but the intercom buzzed. Meredith picked up the receiver, listened, and held the phone out to him. “My secretary says David Levinson is on the first line and someone named Steve Salinger is calling you on the other line.”
Instead of reaching for it, he said, “Is this a speaker phone?” Realizing he wanted her to be able to listen, Meredith leaned over and pressed the button that enabled everyone in the room to hear what the caller was saying. As soon as she had, Matt jabbed his finger at the flashing light on the second line. “Steve,” he said, “is the Lear ready to fly?”
“Sure thing, Matt. I just had her up for a check flight and she’s running strong and sweet.”
“Good. Hold on.” Matt put that call on hold, picked up the other line, and said to Levinson without preamble, “Have you seen the newspapers?”
“I’ve seen them, and so has Bill Pearson. It’s a mess, Matt, and it’s going to get worse. Is there anything you want us to do?”
“Yes. Get down to Belleville and introduce yourselves to your new ‘client,’ then bail the bastard out of jail.”
“Do what?”
“You heard me. Bail him out of jail and convince him to turn over his files to you as his attorney. When he has, you can do whatever is necessary to keep our divorce decree from getting into the hands of the press—assuming the son of a bitch still has a copy of it. If he doesn’t, then do what you have to in order to convince him to forget all the details.”
“What were the details? What grounds did he put on the petition?”
“I wasn’t in a rational frame of mind when I received a copy of the damned thing, but as I recall, it was desertion and mental cruelty. Meredith is here, I’ll ask her.” Looking at Meredith, he gentled his voice. “Do you remember any other details—anything else that could be embarrassing to either of us?”
“There was the check for ten thousand dollars my father gave you to pay you off.”
“What check? I don’t know anything about that, and there’s no mention of it in any of my papers.”
“My copy of the decree refers to it and says you acknowledge receiving it.”
Levinson heard all that, and his voice reeked with irony. “That’s just damned great! The press will have a field day conjecturing about what was so wrong with your wife that you, who didn’t have a cent at the time, couldn’t stomach her, even with her money.”
“Don’t be an ass!” Matt interrupted furiously before Levinson said anything else to upset Meredith. “They’ll paint me as a gold digger who deserted his wife. All of this conjecture is irrelevant if you get down to Belleville and get Spyzhalski under control before he starts spilling the works tomorrow.”
“That may not be so easy. According to the news, he’s determined to represent himself. He’s obviously a crank who’s looking forward to putting on a big show for the benefit of the court and the press.”
“Change his mind!” Matt snapped. “Get a postponement on his hearing, and get him out of town where the press can’t find him. I’ll take care of the bastard after that.”
“If he has files, they’ll have to be turned over eventually as evidence. And his other victims are going to have to be notified.”
“You can deal with that later with the prosecuting attorney,” Matt said curtly. “My plane is waitin
g for you at Midway. Call me when you’ve taken care of everything.”
“Right,” Levinson said.
Without bothering to say good-bye, Matt ended that call, and returned to his pilot. “Get ready to take off for Belleville, Illinois, within the hour. You’ll have two passengers. There’ll be three passengers on the way back, and you’ll be making a stop somewhere to unload one of them. They’ll tell you where.”
“Okay.”
When he hung up, Meredith gazed at him, a little dazed by his methods and speed. “How,” she asked on a choked laugh, “do you intend to take care of Spyzhalski?”
“Leave that to me. Now, get Parker Reynolds on the phone. We’re not out of this yet.”
Meredith obediently called Parker. The moment he answered, it was obvious he regarded the situation as grave. “Meredith, I’ve been trying to reach you all morning, but they’re holding your calls.”
“I’m so sorry about all this,” she said, too worried to consider the inadvisability of having this conversation on the speaker phone. “Sorrier than I can say.”
“It’s not your fault,” he said with a harsh sigh. “Right now we have to decide what to do. I’m getting bombarded with warnings and advice. That arrogant son of a bitch you married actually had his secretary call me this morning to give me instructions about how I should handle things. His secretary! Then my board of directors decided I should make a public statement disclaiming all knowledge of any of this—”
“Don’t!” Matt interrupted furiously.
“Who the hell said don’t?” Parker demanded.
“I said it, and I’m the son of a bitch she married,” Matt snapped, his eyes narrowing on Lisa Pontini, who was suddenly sliding down the wall, convulsed with laughter, her hand clamped over her mouth. “If you make a statement like that, it will look to everyone like you’re throwing Meredith to the wolves.”
“I have no intention of doing anything of the sort!” Parker countered angrily. “Meredith and I are engaged.”