Part 35 (1/2)
Just then the heavens opened again and, across the cut-up pitch wearing dark gla.s.ses, cream Chinos, a cream silk s.h.i.+rt, a pale blue blazer braided with jade-green silk and carrying a black umbrella across the front of which was written 's.h.i.+t, it's raining', sauntered Red Alderton.
'Sorry, Dad,' he said, without a trace of contrition. 'I got held up. Lucky you had Perdita to fill in. I'd never have played so good, and this hangover would not have fitted under my helmet. No, f.u.c.k off, I've got nothing to say to you,' he snapped, as the paparazzi paparazzi swooped. swooped.
'I'd have disinherited you if we'd lost,' said Bart furiously.
'I guess you would.' Red put his head on one side. 'And Mom will probably disinherit me anyway, so I better go make my peace. Well done,' he added to Perdita. 'You're definitely not just a pretty a.s.s.'
After Luke had checked his horses he took Perdita for a drink at the Players Club. She was no longer invisible now. Everyone congratulated her. Immediately Bart drew her aside and, without even consulting Chessie or Luke, invited her to stay at Alderton Towers.
'You can't stop in Luke's pokey rathole any more.' 'I like it,' protested Perdita.
'Well, Luke can't like sleeping in a mobile home.' 'Sure I do,' said Luke.
'Well, come for Christmas dinner. We have it at El El Paradiso.' Paradiso.'
Luke raised an eyebrow in the direction of Leroy who was looking up, showing the whites of his eyes like two sickled slices of boiled egg, his legs splayed out behind like a frog. He was still carrying his polo ball and thumping his tail.
'Oh, bring the G.o.ddam dog too if you must,' said Bart irritably, 'but I'm not having him terrorizing my Rottweilers.'
Infuriated with Red, Bart was doubly anxious to bring Luke back into the fold. Like many men whose business enemies were legion, he valued family ties very highly, even while constantly abusing them. His aim was to have Luke financially dependent on him like the other two so he could manipulate him. The neatest thing he could do would be to buy Perdita. Half an hour later he and Chessie had to leave to change for some silver wedding party. Perdita sensed that Bart would rather have stayed and gone through every play of the match. Chessie was equally reluctant.
'Just another lot of geriatrics whinnying at Bart and thinking what an unsuitable marriage he's made,' she said bitterly as she drained her gla.s.s of champagne.
She's far too young for that kind of evening, thought Perdita. Just before he left, Bart thrust something into Perdita's hand.
'Go buy yourself something nice,' he said. 'Chessie'll take you to Worth Avenue.'
Glancing down, Perdita saw it was a wad of $1,000 bills.
'I can't,' she said, trying to sound shocked.
'Sure you can. You'd get a fee as a pro. You sure played a pro's game this afternoon.'
Perdita waltzed back to Luke. 'Look what your father's given me.'
Jesus, I could do with that right now, thought Luke. Perdita'd played so well, he wanted to take her to Chez Colbert and pour Moet down her all night, but he simply couldn't afford it. He'd been financially crippled buying and flying back four horses of his own from Alejandro's who might take weeks to adjust to the Palm Beach climate. He still had to pay grain bills and the grooms' salaries. Nor had the fat cheque promised by Hal Peters arrived yet, and he felt it was uncool to ha.s.sle.
He tried to persuade Bibi to come out with them, but she said she had too much work and had to fly straight back to LA.
'You played super,' she said to an amazed Perdita. 'You must be floating on air.'
Perdita giggled. 'I'm floating on hairs. The first thing I'm doing tomorrow is get my legs waxed.'
'Very painful, worse than childbirth,' warned Bibi. 'I'll hold your hand,' said Luke. 'No one shall accuse me of not being present at the waxing.'
33.
The rain had stopped, giving way to a glorious evening with a huge apricot-pink moon and clouds rising like an indigo tidal wave on the horizon. Orion was lying on his back with the Dog Star above him. It was hard to tell the other stars from the lights of the incoming planes. The air was as soft as a shawl round Perdita's shoulders.
'Isn't Palm Beach the most heavenly place in the world?' she said, taking Luke's hand.
Red was waiting for them at Cobblestones, the famous polo bar. Early diners were devouring huge steaks, veal and french fries, or mountaineering through vast salads in the front room, which was very light, decorated in ice-cream colours with some rather crude paintings of polo games on the walls.
'Don't think my father would fork out two million for any of those,' said Red, sweeping them into the darker bar at the back. He was already very high and giggly, drinking green devils, a lethal concoction which included vodka, crme de menthe and cointreau. Immediately he ordered a bottle of Dom Perignon for Perdita and Luke. Luke bought a packet of crisps for Leroy, who sat on a bar stool as close to his master as possible. and cointreau. Immediately he ordered a bottle of Dom Perignon for Perdita and Luke. Luke bought a packet of crisps for Leroy, who sat on a bar stool as close to his master as possible.
'You'll have to drop that ball now,' said Luke, 'if you want a potato chip.'
'I gotta job for that brute,' said Red. 'I'll buy him a dozen polo b.a.l.l.s if he eats Auriel's Yorks.h.i.+re terriers. She ordered them tuna-fish sandwiches on the airplane and they threw them up just as we were landing.'
Then, taking Perdita's arm, he spun her round towards a square doorway concealed in the back of the bar.
'That, my darling, is the famous disappearing door. When husbands barge in here looking for their errant wives, the lovers nip out through that door. And that's the phone where all the players make a.s.signations with people they shouldn't. I don't know why they don't install a second booth for Juan O'Brien and Jesus.'
A crowd had soon gathered round them, congratulating Perdita, admiring Red's blue blazer with the green silk braiding, and asking him what the h.e.l.l had happened.
'Auriel gave me a Ferrari today in the colour of my choice. I chose red to match my hair and my bank balance. I couldn't just leave her and fly back.'
'What we all want to know,' asked Bobby Ferraro, the great American player who was so strong no horse ever answered back and who was playing for the Kaputnik Tigers in Luke's charity match, 'is what's she like?'
'OK,' said Red. 'Got more st.i.tches in her face than I have in this coat, but OK.'
Over the laughter, Bobby Ferraro insisted: 'No, what's she like in the sack?'
'Pretty good,' said Red, grinning. 'Takes some getting used to. First time she gave me a b.l.o.w. .j.o.b, her wig came off in my hands. I haven't been so embarra.s.sed since they repossessed my helicopter.'
Everyone yelled with laughter.
'You're a s.h.i.+t, Red,' said Luke, shaking his head.
He had tried to call Angel to get him to join them, but Angel was still out carousing.
'Miguel and Juan are hopping you've brought this greaseball over,' said Red. 'They wanted another cousinthey could manipulate. They'll give him a hard time. So will Bibi. She's got awful bossy.'
'Not when she sees Angel,' said Perdita.
Luke turned to talk to Bobby Ferraro, who was handsome in a chunky Neanderthal way.
'Bobby's known as All-Brawn because he's so thick,' Red told Perdita. 'Comes from Montana. They turn the ponies out at night there. If the wolves don't catch them, they know they're fast enough to play polo.'
He yawned; his fingers drummed on the bar. He was getting restless.
Unnerved, Perdita blurted out: 'What did you read at university?'
'Dirty books mostly.'
'Sorry - what did you major in?'