'Nope,' she said, grinning. 'Surprises are the bomb!'
'Not always,' he cautioned.
'What do you mean by that?
'Nothing. Jump is a lucky guy.'
'And I'm a lucky girl.'
'Didn't I already tell you that?'
They exchanged a look.
'Well... I guess I'm outta here,' she said.
'Have a safe trip.'
'I will.' Impulsively she kissed his cheek. 'See you in L.A.' Then she hurried from the plane.
Chapter Thirteen.
The first thing Lola did upon arriving home was rush upstairs, shut herself in the bedroom and call her lawyer, Otto Landstrom. 'You've got to help me, Otto,'
she pleaded. 'This is urgent.'
'What's the problem, Lola?'
'I want a divorce.'
'That's impossible. You only recently got married.'
'It simply isn't working out. Europe was especially bad, and the truth is...
marriage is not for me.'
'What does Matt have to say about your change of heart?'
'He doesn't know. I want you to tell him.'
'You want me to tell him?'
'Yes,' she said persuasively. 'After all, you are my lawyer. You're supposed to take care of this kind of thing.'
'I'm a lawyer, not a marriage counsellor,' Otto said, sounding pissed. 'I can't call him up and say, "Your wife is divorcing you".'
'Why not?' she said petulantly.
'Does he have any hint you're thinking of divorce?'
'No. We just got back, and all he's interested in is sitting in front of the TVO checking out what sports programmes he missed.'
Otto sighed. 'Exactly why did you marry him, Lola?'
"Cause I thought I could make it work. And anyway,' she added truculently, 'you advised me to, along with everyone else.'
'Then why are you divorcing him?'
'He's boring, Otto. And since when did I need a reason to get divorced?'
'You always need a reason.'
Why did everyone have to make it so difficult? 'You're my lawyer, Otto,' she said sharply. 'This is an instruction. Do it.'
Otto did not appreciate her tone. The time was coming in the not too distant future when he would give up representing movie stars. They were too much damn trouble. 'When do you expect me to take care of this?' he asked.
'Like yesterday. I'll go to a spa with one of my sisters and you can tell him then. That way he can be gone by the time I get back.'
'When are you leaving?'
'Maybe tomorrow,' she said vaguely. 'I'll let you know.'
'I'll do it, Lola. But you have to talk to him first. At least give him some indication that all is not well.'
'I'm not good at confrontations,' she wailed, mad at Otto for refusing to make it easy for her. 'You handle everything, that's what I pay you for.' She clicked off her phone. God! How come Otto was making it such a major deal? She shelled out big bucks for him to take care of business - including personal.
The intercom buzzed, and Jenny, her assistant, informed her that her mother was on the phone.
Damn! She'd have to tell her family before they read about it in the tabloids.
They'd all been at the wedding, her many cousins and other assorted relatives, mingling with the stars, their mouths half open in awe as they recognized all the famous faces.
She'd tell Mama first. Claudine Sanchez was fond of Matt, and why shouldn't she be? In her mind her daughter had married a white-bread sports hero.
Yeah, sure. A loafer. A sponger. A man who expects me to pay all the bills.
On the other hand her dad wasn't so crazy about Matt. 'He don't have that macho thing goin',' Louis Sanchez had complained the first time she'd brought him home. 'You'd be smarter to find yourself a Latino man.' A cave-man grin. 'Sexy, like me.'
Yeah, well, Louis Sanchez should know all about that. Mr Stud. The bull of the neighbourhood.
Lola often wondered how Claudine had put up with his philandering over the years. She would never take that kind of crap from a man: it was disrespectful and insulting.
Hmm... she'd better arrange that visit to a spa with one of her sisters. Both of them enjoyed all the perks that came with her stardom. They loved it when she went to an award event and scored a huge basket filled with thousands of dollars worth of stuff, which she always handed over to them. She was very generous to her family - Mama called it sharing the luck. Recently she'd bought her parents a house in Hancock Park. It had cost a fortune, but it had been worth every dollar to see the look on Claudine's face. Her dad wasn't so thrilled, he didn't like leaving the old neighbourhood and his many cronies, so she'd bought him a new red Corvette to make up for his loss. That soon shut him up. Now he could visit his lady-friends in style.
'You must do something for your sisters next,' Mama had informed her before she'd left for the South of France. 'They need your help.'
Why? They both had husbands. Still, to appease Claudine she'd agreed to create a trust to pay for her nieces' and nephews' future education. It wasn't such a hardship because she could certainly afford it, and she adored the kids, especially as she knew she could never have any of her own. That was her secret, a secret she kept close to her heart. A secret that haunted her and drove her crazy.
She clicked on her phone. 'Hi, Mama.'
'Welcome home, Miss Movie Star,' joked Claudine. 'I'm happy you're safely back.'
'Thanks.'
'Did you have a wonderful time?'
'Of course.'
'Who did you see? What did you wear?' Claudine was totally into hearing all the details.
They chatted for a few minutes, then Lola promised to phone her in the morning.
Next she called Tony. His voicemail picked up.
'Hey,' she purred into the receiver, 'guess who's back in town?'
When she finally made her way downstairs, Matt was still in the library, switching sports programmes on the TVO.
'What're you searching for?' she asked impatiently.
'I've got plenty of catching up to do,' he said, busy clicking his remote.
Obviously it did not take much to turn Matt on.
'Can't you do it later?' she said, yawning. 'I'm going to bed and you'll disturb me when you come up.'
'Go to bed later,' he advised. 'That way you won't get jet-lag.'
'What're you, an expert?'
'Why are you so bad-tempered lately?' he asked, taking his eyes off the TV for a moment.
She shrugged. This seemed like a good opportunity to give him a hint. 'We don't seem to be getting along so good, do we, Matt?'
'I think we get along fine.'
'It's just that now we're married, you don't do anything. And if you want the truth, it bugs me.'
'I told you,' he said firmly. 'I gave up tennis because I'm writing a screenplay and planning on being an actor. Give me time and I'll surprise you, you'll see.'
'It's not that simple.'
'Yes, it is,' he said stubbornly.
'No, it's not,' she countered.
'You made it from nothing,' he said pointedly. 'Why can't I'
'Because you've got to be realistic, Matt. You're married to me.'
'So?'
'So there's no way you can go out on auditions for bit parts. It wouldn't be dignified for either of us.'
'Then put me in one of your movies,' he said. 'You have plenty of control.
Elliott Finerman likes me. I could even play the lead in New York State of Mind.'
Was he insane? 'You're not an actor,' she reminded him sharply. 'You're a tennis player.'
'And what were you before you started acting?' he retaliated. 'I seem to remember that you were a waitress.'
'The difference is that I wanted to be an actress ever since I was a little girl,' she said heatedly. 'It was my lifelong ambition. I worked hard to get where I am today.'
'Yeah,' he sneered. 'And what did you have to do along the way, Lola?'
'Excuse me?' she said, outraged.
'Is it true what they say about Merrill Zandack?'
'Who's they? And what do they say?'
'That he has to get serviced by all the actresses he works with.'
'Oh, for God's sake,' she hissed, prancing out of the room.
Now she didn't feel so bad. Matt had a stupid dumb-ass attitude. Let Otto go ahead and do her dirty work. She didn't care any more.
Martha and George Cheney lived in a large house in St lohn's Wood, an upmarket area of London. George, a retired stockbroker, worshipped his daughter. Shelby reminded him of her mother: she was kind and giving with a genuinely sweet nature. It often surprised him that she'd chosen to become an actress. Such a strange and difficult profession.
Martha Cheney had invited them to stay at their house, but Shelby knew it would not be a good idea, for Linc was extremely demanding. He expected room service, cable TV and all the amenities of a luxury hotel. Instead, she'd opted for a suite at the Dorchester, where Linc would have everything he required - including a gym where he could perform his daily workout.
Ever since he'd read the unfortunate USA Today interview, Linc had been in a foul mood. He absolutely refused to believe her protestations of innocence.
'Goddamn it, Shelby. You should be smart enough to know that journalists twist your words,' he said, once they were settled at the hotel.
'Hasn't it ever happened to you?' she asked, tired of his relentless complaining.
'Yeah,' he retorted. 'When I was young and stupid. You've been a working actress for long enough. You should know better.'
'In future I'll have a publicist and a tape-recorder present so I can prove it to you.'
'You must have said some of those things.'