JACKIE COLLINS IS HOTTER THAN EVER!
With twenty-eight “undeniably scintillating” (Booklist) international bestsellers and 400 million copies of her books sold, “the queen of glamour fiction” (San Antonio Express-News) reigns supreme!
“If anyone knows Hollywood, it’s Jackie Collins.”
—New York Daily News
“When it comes to name-dropping and page-turners, nobody surpasses Collins.”
—Entertainment Weekly
“Collins is a storyteller extraordinaire.”
—The Cleveland Plain Dealer
“Jackie knows her way around the stretch limos, beds, bathrooms, and bordellos of the Who’s Who sex addicts of Lotusland and Manhattan.”
—The Beverly Hills Courier
“Collins knows how to turn up the steam.”
—USA Today
“Jackie Collins’s act is polished to a diamond gloss.”
—The Detroit News
“Even the tiniest nuances of naughtiness rarely escape the author’s anthropological eye. . . . One of the bestselling writers of our time.”
—Los Angeles Times
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FOR TRACY, TIFFANY, AND RORY WITH ALL MY LOVE.
“Nobody is allowed to fail within a two-mile radius of the Beverly Hills Hotel.”
—Gore Vidal
PROLOGUE
He stood in the living room of the small house in Philadelphia. He stood and stared at the three of them. Three pigs. Three laughing faces. Teeth and eyes and hair. Three pigs.
There was a black rage within him. A rage which beat at his head from the inside.
The television was on in the room. Archie Bunker mouthing futile jokes. Canned studio laughter.
And more laughter. In the room with him. More inane laughter.
His mother. Mousy wisps of brown hair. A sagging body and a sagging mind.
His father. Balding. Skinny. False teeth that clicked in and out at will.
Joey. He had thought she was different.
Three pigs.
He walked to the television set and raised the sound.
They took no notice. They were too busy laughing. At him. Yes. They were laughing at him.
The rage was in his head, but outwardly he was calm. He knew how to make them stop. He knew.
Fast and fluid. Before they had time to stop laughing and start thinking.
Fast and fluid. The machete swung in a lethal circle.
Fast and fluid as the blood spurted. His mother and father felled with the first lethal sweep.
Joey. Swifter, younger. Her eyes bulging with horror, as clutching at her wounded arm she staggered toward the door.
You’ve stopped laughing now, Joey. You’ve stopped laughing now.
He swung the machete again, felling her before she could progress further.
They did not scream. Not one of them.
He had taken them by surprise, just as soldiers were trained to do. Only he wasn’t a soldier, was he? He wasn’t a soldier.
Sobs began to shake him violently. Strange silent sobs which convulsed his body as he wielded the machete. Dealing with all three of them equally. Indulging in a frenzy of grisly deathblows.
The television drowned out the sounds of the carnage. Archie Bunker. Canned laughter.
And the machete continued to whirl and slash as if powered by some demonic force.
BOOK ONE
1
Elaine Conti awoke in her luxurious bed in her luxurious Beverly Hills mansion, pressed a button to open the electrically controlled drapes, and was confronted by the sight of a young man clad in a white T-shirt and dirty jeans pissing a perfect arc into her mosaic-tiled swimming pool.
She struggled to sit up, buzzing for Lina, her Mexican maid, and at the same time flinging on a marabou-trimmed silk robe and pressing her feet into dusty pink mules.
The young man completed his task, zipped up his jeans, and strolled casually out of view.
“Lina!” Elaine screamed. “Where are you?”
The maid appeared, inscrutable, calm, oblivious to her mistress’s screams.
“There’s an intruder out by the pool,” Elaine snapped excitedly. “Get Miguel. Call the police. And make sure all the doors are locked.”
Unperturbed, Lina began to collect the debris of clutter from Elaine’s bedside table. Dirty Kleenex, a half-finished glass of wine, a rifled box of chocolates.
“Lina!” Elaine yelled.
“No get excited, señora,” the maid said stoically. “No intruder. Just boy Miguel sent to do pool. Miguel sick. No come this week.”
Elaine flushed angrily. “Why the hell didn’t you tell me before?” She flung herself into her bathroom, slamming the door so hard that a framed print sprang off the wall and crashed to the floor, the glass shattering. Stupid maid. Dumb-ass woman. It was impossible to get good help anymore. They came. They went. They did not give a damn if you were raped and ravaged in your own home.
And this would have to happen while Ross was away on location. Miguel would never have dared to pretend to be sick if Ross was in town.
Elaine flung off her robe, slipped out of her nightgown, and stepped under the invigorating sharpness of an ice-cold shower. She gritted her teeth. Cold water was best for the skin, tightened everything up. And, God knew, even with the gym and the yoga and the modern-dance class it still all needed tightening.
Not that she was fat. No way. Not a surplus ounce of flesh on her entire body. Pretty good for thirty-nine years of age.
When I was thirteen I was the fattest girl in school. Etta the Elephant they called me. And I deserved the nickname. Only how could a kid of thirteen know about nutrition and diet and exercise and all that stuff? How could a kid of thirteen help it when Grandma Steinberg stuffed her with cakes and latkes, lox and bagels, strudel and chicken dumplings?
Elaine smiled grimly. Etta the Elephant, late of the Bronx, had shown them all. Etta the Elephant, former secretary in New York City, was now slim and svelte. She was called Elaine Conti, and lived in a six-bedroomed, seven-bathroomed, goddam Beverly Hills palace. On the flats, too. Not stuck up in the hills or all the way over in Brentwood. On the flats. Prime real estate.
Etta the Elephant no longer had a sharp nose, mousy hair, gapped teeth, wire-rimmed glasses, and flat tits.
Over the years she had changed. The nose was now retroussé, cute. A perfect Brooke Shields, in fact. The mousy hair was a rich brown, cut short and tipped with golden streaks. Her skin was alabaster white and smooth, thanks to regular facials. Her teeth were capped. White and even. A credit to Charlie’s Angels. The unbecoming glasses had long been replaced with soft blue contact lenses; without them her eyes were slate-gray and she had to squint to read. Not that she did a lot of reading. Magazines, of course. Vogue, People, Us. She skimmed the trades, Variety and The Hollywood Reporter, concentrating on Army Archerd and Hank Grant. She devoured Women’s Wear Daily and Beverly Hills People, but was not really into what she termed hard news. The day Ronald Reagan was elected President was the only day she gave a passing thought to politics. If Ronald Reagan could do it, how about Ross?
The tits, while nowhere near the Raquel Welch class, were a perfect 36B, thanks to the ministrations of her first husband, Dr. John Saltwood. They stuck defiantly forward; no pull of gravity would ever harm them. And if it did, well, back to good old Johnny. She had found him in New York, wasting himself doing plastic surge
ry for a city hospital. They met at a party and she recognized a plain lonely man not unlike herself. They married a month later, and she had her nose and tits fixed within the year. Then she talked him into going to Beverly Hills and setting up in private practice.
Three years later he was the tit man, and she had divorced him and become Mrs. Ross Conti. Funny how things worked out.
Ross Conti. Husband. Movie star. First-class shit.
And she should know. After all, they had been married ten long years and it hadn’t all been easy and it wasn’t getting any easier and she knew things about Ross Conti that would curl the toes of the little old ladies who still loved him because after all he was hitting fifty and his fans were not exactly teenagers and as each year crept by it was getting more and more difficult and, God knew, financially things were not as good as they had been and each film could be his last and . . .
“Señora.” Lina hammered on the bathroom door. “The boy, he go now. He want pay.”
Elaine stepped out of the shower. She was outraged. He wanted paying—for what? Pissing in her pool?
She wrapped herself in a fluffy terry-cloth robe and opened the bathroom door. “Tell him,” she said grandly, “to piss off.”
Lina stared blankly. “Twenny dollar, Meesus Conti. He do it again in three day.”
• • •
Ross Conti swore silently to himself. Jesus H. Christ. What was happening to him? He couldn’t remember his frigging lines. Eight takes and still he was screwing up.
“Just take it easy, Ross,” said the director calmly, placing a condescending hand on his shoulder.
Some frigging director. Twenty-three if he’s a day. Hair hanging down his back like a witch at Halloween. Levi’s so tight the outline of his schlong is like a frigging beacon.
Ross shook the offending hand off. “I’m taking it easy. It’s the crowd—they keep distracting me.”
“Sure,” soothed Chip, signaling to the first assistant. “Calm them down for chrissakes, they’re background—not auditioning for Chorus Line.”
The first assistant nodded, then made an announcement through his loudspeaker.
“Ready to go again?” asked Chip. Ross nodded. The director turned to a suntanned blonde. “Again, Sharon. Sorry, babe.”
Ross burned. Sorry, babe. What the little prick really means is sorry, babe, but we gotta humor this old fart because he used to be the biggest thing in Hollywood.
Sharon smiled. “Right on, Chip.”
Sure. Right on Chip. We’ll humor the old schmuck. My mother used to love him. She saw all his movies. Creamed her panties every time.
“Makeup,” Ross demanded, then added, his voice heavy with sarcasm, “That’s if nobody minds.”
“Of course not. Anything you want.”
Yeah. Anything I want. Because this so-called hotshot needs Ross Conti in his film. Ross Conti means plenty at the box office. Who would line up to see Sharon Richman? Who has even heard of her except a couple million television freaks who tune in to see some schlock program about girl water-ski instructors? Glossy crap. Sharon Richman—a hank of hair and a mouthful of teeth. I wouldn’t even screw her if she crawled to my trailer on her hands and knees and begged for it. Well, maybe if she begged.
The makeup girl attended to his needs. Now, she was all right. She knew who the star was on this picture. Busily she fussed around him, blotting out the shine of sweat around his nose with an outsize powder puff, touching up his eyebrows with a small comb.
He gave her a perfunctory pinch on the ass. She smiled appreciatively. Come to my trailer later, baby, and I’ll show you how to give a star head.
“Right,” said Chip the creep. “Are we ready, Ross?”
We are ready, asshole. He nodded.
“Okay. Let’s go, then.”
The scene began all right. It was a simple bit of business which involved Ross saying three lines to Sharon’s six, then strolling nonchalantly out of shot. The trouble was Sharon. She stared blankly, making him blow his second line every time. Bitch. She’s doing it purposely. Trying to make me look bad.
“Jesus H. Christ!” Chip finally exploded. “It’s not the fucking soliloquy from Hamlet.”
Right. That’s it. Talking to me like some nothing bit player. Ross turned and stalked from the location without a backward glance.
Chip grimaced at Sharon. “That’s what happens when you’re dealing with no talent.”
“My mommy used to love him,” she simpered.
“Then your mommy is an even bigger moron than her daughter.”
She giggled. Chip’s insults did not bother her. In bed she had him under control, and that was where it really mattered.
• • •
Elaine Conti drove her pale-blue Mercedes slowly down La Cienega Boulevard. She drove slowly so as not to spoil her nails, which she had just had done at a sensational new nail clinic called the Nail Kiss of Life. Wonderful place, they had wrapped her broken thumbnail so well that even she couldn’t tell. Elaine loved discovering new places; it gave her a tiny shot of power. She pushed in a Streisand tape and wondered, as she had wondered countless times before, why dear Barbra had never had her nose fixed. In a town so dedicated to the perfect face . . . and God knew she had the money. Still, it certainly had not harmed her career—nor her love life, for that matter.
Elaine frowned and thought about her own love life. Ross hadn’t ventured near her in months. Bastard. Just because he didn’t feel in the mood.
Elaine had indulged in two affairs during the course of her marriage. Both of them unsatisfactory. She hated affairs, they were so time-consuming. The highs and the lows. The ups and the downs. Was it all worth it? She had decided no, but now she was beginning to wonder.
The last one had taken place over two years ago. She blushed when she thought about it. What absurd risks she had taken. And with a man who could do her absolutely no good at all except fix her teeth, and they were already perfect. Milton Langley, her dentist—and probably everyone else’s with money in Beverly Hills. How indiscreet of her to have picked him. But really he had picked her. He had sent his nurse scurrying off on an errand one day, climbed aboard the chair, and made fast and furious love to her. She remembered the day well, because he had climaxed all over her new Sonia Rykiel skirt.
Elaine giggled aloud at the thought, although she hadn’t giggled at the time. Milton had poured mouthwash over the damaged garment, and, when his nurse returned, sent her over to Saks to purchase a replacement. After that they had met twice a week in some dreadful motel on Santa Monica for two hot months. One day Elaine had just decided not to go. End of that little episode.
The other one wasn’t even worth thinking about. An actor on one of Ross’s films. She had slept with him twice and regretted both times.
Whenever she mentioned their lack of a sex life to Ross he flew into a rage. “What the frig do you think I am? A machine? I’ll get it up when I want to—not just because you’ve read some crap sex magazine that says you should have ten orgasms a day.”
Ha! She was lucky if she got ten a year. If it hadn’t been for her trusty vibrator she would have been climbing walls.
Maybe his erection would return if the movie he was doing turned out to be a hit.
Yes. That was what Ross needed—a massive shot of success would be good for both of them. There was nothing like success for putting the hard-on back in a man’s life.
Carefully she made a left on Melrose. Lunch at Ma Maison was a must on Fridays. Anybody who was anybody and in town invariably showed up. Elaine had a permanent booking.
Patrick Terrail, the owner of Ma Maison, greeted her at the entrance to the small outdoor restaurant. She accepted a kiss on each cheek and followed a waiter to her table, keeping an eagle eye out for anyone she should acknowledge.
Maralee Gray, one of her closest friends, was already waiting. She nursed a spritzer and a sour expression. At thirty-seven Maralee maintained more than a shadow of her past prettines
s. In her time she had been voted the most popular girl in high school and Miss Hot Rod 1960. That was before she had met, married, and divorced Neil Gray, the film director. Her father, now retired, owned Sanderson Studios. Money had never been Maralee’s problem. Only men.
“Darling. I’m not late, am I?” Elaine asked anxiously, brushing cheeks with her friend.
“Not at all. I think I was early.” They exchanged you-look wonderfuls, admired each other’s outfit, and cast their eyes around the restaurant.
“And how’s Ross making out on location?” Maralee asked, extracting a long black cigarillo from a wafer-thin gold case.
“You know Ross—he makes out wherever he is.”
They both laughed. Ross’s reputation as a cocksman was an old Hollywood joke.
“Actually he hates everything,” she confided. “The script, the director, the crew, the food, the climate—the whole bug-ridden setup, as he so charmingly puts it. But Maralee, believe me”—she leaned confidentially toward her friend—“he’s going to be dynamite in this movie. The old Ross Conti—full-force.”
“I can believe it,” Maralee murmured. “I’ve never counted him out, you know that.”
Elaine nodded. Maralee was a true friend, and there weren’t many of them around. In Hollywood you were only as hot as your last hit—and it had been a long time between hits.
“I’m going to have my eyes done,” Maralee announced dramatically. “I’m only telling you, and you mustn’t mention it to a soul.”
“As if I would!” Elaine replied, quite affronted. “Who’s doing it?”
“The Palm Springs connection. I’ll spend a couple of weeks there—after all, I have the house. Then I’ll come back and nobody will know the difference. They’ll just think I was vacationing.”
“Wonderful idea,” Elaine said. Was Maralee stupid or what? Nobody took a vacation in Palm Springs, even if they did have a house there. They either weekended or retired. “When?” she asked, her eyes flicking restlessly round the restaurant.