by Stuart Woods
“My very point,” Kate said, “but Will doesn’t think that is an impediment.”
“And I think Stone can figure out why,” Will said.
“Because it looks like none of the candidates is going to have anything like a majority of the delegates going into the first ballot at the convention.”
“Right you are.”
“So, for the first time in I-don’t-know-how-long, we’d have a brokered convention?”
“Since 1952,” Will said, “when Adlai Stevenson got the nomination. We’ve had some close brushes since, but not the real thing. The primary process usually works to nominate a candidate.”
Stone thought about that. “I was just thinking about Gore Vidal’s play The Best Man, which dealt with that subject.”
“Do you remember what each candidate needed to get the nomination?”
“Yes, the support of an earlier president, a Trumanesque figure.”
“Right.”
“Well, I don’t think Kate would have any trouble getting the support of the sitting president, would she?”
“I’m trying to get him to withhold that support,” Kate said.
“Actually, she doesn’t have to try,” Will said. “It would be politically impossible for me to support her.”
“The Republicans would say you’re trying to create a dynasty,” Stone said.
“Not just the Republicans,” Will replied. “A lot of Democrats, too, especially the three or four leading candidates.”
“So, you’d have to sit back, clam up, and wait for the convention to sort it out—after the first ballot.”
“Exactly,” Will said.
“You don’t really think anybody’s going to buy that, do you?” Stone asked.
“Of course not. All the commentators and not a few of the delegates will say I’m pulling all the strings.”
“And how would you handle that?”
“By not pulling any strings.”
“You mean you’d actually sit out the nomination without showing the slightest support for Kate?”
“Not so much as a nod or a wink,” Will replied. “And not a word of advice to her or any of her supporters on obtaining the nomination. If she gets it, then I’ll shoot my mouth off at every opportunity, of course, but after tonight, I won’t say a word to her or anyone else on the subject, except ‘no comment.’”
“You see how crazy this is?” Kate said.
“Kate,” Stone said, “let me ask you a question: do you think you’d make a good president?”
“I think I’d make a sensational president,” Kate said.
Stone turned to Will. “And, Will, do you think she can beat Taft Duncan?”
“In my last word on the subject, yes,” Will said. He looked at his watch. “I’d better hurry,” he said. “I’m sneaking into the Blue Note to hear Chris Botti’s last set.”
“Can I come with you?” Stone asked. “I’m a big Chris Botti fan.”
“No, you have a meeting to attend.”
“What meeting is that?”
“In about an hour the twenty people who wrote me those letters are arriving here for a drink with Kate, so I can’t be here. But you can.”
Will got up and shook Stone’s hand. “Hope to see you soon, Stone, but when I do, I don’t want to hear a word about Kate’s plans.”
“Gotcha, Will.” He and Kate watched him disappear out the door, two Secret Service agents close behind him.
“Well,” Kate said, heaving a sigh. “Now I have only you to help me greet the throng.”
“What are you going to say to them?” Stone asked.
“I think it’s better if you hear it at the same time they do,” she said. “Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have to get into something more presidential.” She got up and left Stone to contemplate his dessert.
3
Kate came back at five minutes before the hour and handed Stone a sheet of paper. “Here’s the list of the invitees. The good news is, every one of them accepted.”
Stone scanned the list quickly. “This is a great tribute to you,” he said. He knew half a dozen of them, at least slightly; Bill Eggers, the managing partner of Stone’s law firm, Woodman & Weld, and Mike Freeman, CEO of the world’s second-largest security firm, Strategic Services, were close friends. Half of them were women, either politicians or businesspeople.
Kate took back the list and shoved it into the pocket of her jacket.
“Your suit looks great, perfect for the occasion,” Stone said.
“I won’t be wearing Chanel suits often after tonight,” she said. “I’ll have to expand my J. Crew wardrobe, though. They’re bringing some things for me to look at tomorrow.”
“Are you nervous about this meeting?”
“I am. It’s the first time I’ve ever asked for anyone’s support, except for Will. Will you introduce me when everyone’s here?”
“Of course. Is there anything in particular you’d like me to say?”
“Just say what Will would say, if he were here. Thank them for their letters, which Will turned over to me, and explain his hands-off position.”
“He’s serious about it, then?”
“Dead serious. He says he won’t even discuss it with me. And explain to them that they shouldn’t try to discuss it with him.”
“You know this is going to be in the papers tomorrow, don’t you?”
“I wouldn’t be shocked,” she replied. “Someone will blab, it’s human nature, I suppose.”
The doorbell rang, and Kate led Stone into the living room to await the guests while the butler answered the door.
• • •
Half an hour later, all of the invitees had arrived and were at least halfway through their first drink. Kate nodded at Stone; he stood and tapped his signet ring loudly against his glass, then set down his drink. Silence fell.
“Good evening to all of you,” Stone said. “My name is Stone Barrington. I know some of you and look forward to getting to know you all over the next few months. The president was unable to join us, as he has an extremely important appointment to hear some jazz down in the Village.”
That got a good laugh.
“And, I should tell you, that wasn’t a joke. The president won’t be joining us at any of our meetings or speaking to any of us or anyone else about the subject of this meeting. He recognizes that this is the beginning of an unusual—no, a unique political campaign, and he believes he can best serve the interests of his party and his country by staying the hell out of it. So, please, when you next see him, make no reference to Kate and her campaign. He did want you to know, however, that after the convention has made its choice, he will have a great deal to say about his wife’s campaign to you and to anybody else who will listen. Now, Kate wants to talk to us and tell us how we can help.” He turned and extended a hand toward the first lady.
“Ladies, gentlemen, you know why you are all here, because you started this. You were kind enough to get together and write individually to Will, suggesting a course of action. Will immediately turned your letters over to me, and told me to get on with it, if that’s what I wanted to do. That is what I want to do, and I am going to need your continuing help and advice. Since this is all your fault, you are now the steering committee for my campaign.”
“How much is it going to cost us, Kate?” someone called from the back of the room.
“All I want from you is your friendship, your affection, your wisdom . . . and a check for a million dollars payable to a superPAC that’s being set up as we speak.” Loud laughter. “And that’s just for starters, because I am going to ask each of you—at the moment we secure the nomination—to get on the phone and start raising twenty-five million dollars each, and the smaller the contributions, the better. That will give us half a billion dollars to run on—about half of wh
at we’ll need for the whole campaign.
“Now, I know it will be difficult for all of us not to discuss this with anyone else—spouses, lovers, business associates, barbers, bookies—but every day you can keep your mouth shut about this evening and our mutual intentions, the stronger the move we make will be when we make it. I’m doing half a dozen exit interviews while I’m in New York, and I don’t want to have to face questions about my political intentions. At this moment, you are the only people who know of my intentions. Now, everybody grab a seat, if you can find one, and start asking me questions.”
Stone sat quietly and marveled at how knowledgeable, fluent, concise, and witty Kate was when fielding the questions. She was going to be great on the road and in town hall meetings. The questions went on for an hour, then there was another half hour of chatting, exchanging of business cards, and congratulating Kate. Stone was the last to leave.
“I thought that went just perfectly,” he said to Kate at the door.
“I thought so, too, Stone, and thank you for being here and helping me in Will’s absence.”
“I’m very glad to be here, and I’ll be very glad to help in any way I can. Let me know when you need my check.”
They hugged and kissed, and Stone left the apartment feeling that he had been part of something historic. As he waited for the elevator, the doors opened and Will Lee stepped out. “How did it go?” he asked, then threw up a hand. “No, I don’t want to know.”
“How was Chris Botti?”
“Brilliant.”
“So was Kate.”
Will clapped his hands over his ears, and Stone got onto the elevator, laughing.
When he got home, he found a pocket recorder and dictated an account—everything he could remember about the evening.
He went to bed excited.
4
Stone took his breakfast tray off the dumbwaiter, along with the two morning papers, the New York Times and the Daily News.
As he ate his eggs and bacon he went over the lead stories of both papers: not a word about last night’s event. He switched on the TV and was greeted by the sight of the president leaving the Blue Note. A local reporter stuck a microphone in his face.
“Mr. President, where’s the first lady? Couldn’t you get a date?”
Will laughed. “She had a dinner date with somebody else,” he said.
“And who was that?”
“She wouldn’t tell me.” He got into the waiting SUV and drove away.
• • •
Immediately after Stone reached his desk, Joan buzzed. “John Fratelli to see you.”
“Again?”
“He says it’s urgent.”
“All right, send him in.”
Fratelli appeared in the doorway, still carrying his suitcase.
Stone waved him in. “So, Mr. Fratelli, why aren’t you at a bank opening an account?”
“I tried,” Fratelli said, holding up his suitcase to display three bullet holes.
“Are you hurt?”
“The money stopped the rounds,” he said. “I wasn’t heeled, so all I could do was hide behind my bag.”
“Did you call the police?”
“I didn’t think that was such a good idea.”
“I see your point,” Stone said. “What bank did you go to?”
“One on the corner of Forty-second and Third. I forget the name.”
“And you never got inside?”
“No.”
“Any idea who shot at you?”
“We’re still under lawyer confidentiality?”
“Yep.”
“I don’t know if you’re old enough to remember,” Fratelli said, “but a long time ago, some guys stuck up a freight terminal at JFK and walked away with a big crate full of money that was being shipped to a foreign bank.”
“I’m old enough to remember,” Stone said. “And I suppose your friend Buono was one of them?”
“He was their leader,” Fratelli said, “and some of them were unhappy with their cut. Eddie took half, something like seven million, and the others split the rest. They got away clean, and Eddie told them all to lie low for eighteen months, not to buy anything expensive or showy, just to live regular, you know?”
“I know,” Stone said.
“Well, all of a sudden half a dozen bookies in Brooklyn got paid what they were owed, so right away, the street knew who pulled the job. Then one of them bought a red Cadillac convertible, and all of a sudden there were cops everywhere.”
“As I recall, the busts came only a couple of weeks after the robbery,” Stone said.
“That’s right.”
“Mr. Fratelli, it sounds like what you’re telling me is that Eddie didn’t spend any of his half of the money—what was it? Seven million?”
Fratelli nodded solemnly.
“But you only got the two million in the safe-deposit box?”
Fratelli nodded again.
“Arithmetic tells me there’s another five million out there somewhere.”
Fratelli nodded.
“How many guys did the job?”
“Five.”
“How many are still alive?”
“Two.”
“And where are they?”
“Out,” Fratelli said.
Stone held up a hand. “Don’t tell me who they are.”
“One of them was at Sing Sing when Eddie and me were. He made a couple of attempts to get Eddie to tell what he had done with his money, but I . . .”
“You were watching Eddie’s back,” Stone said.
Fratelli nodded. “For twenty-two years.”
“Did you recognize the man who shot at you?”
“Two of them: one driving, one shooting. Young guys. I don’t know any young guys.”
“Mr. Fratelli,” Stone said, “I think you need to get out of town.”
“But I’ve still gotta—”
“The rest of the money, wherever it is, has been safe all these years—a few months more isn’t going to hurt.”
“I guess I’d better get on a plane, then.”
“No, Mr. Fratelli, not a plane. These days everything gets X-rayed.”
“Train?”
“A better idea, but your shooters might be watching. Same with the bus station.”
“Then how’m I going to get out of town?”
“I don’t suppose you have a driver’s license?”
“Not anymore.”
Stone thought about it. “Do you know what a livery service is?”
“No. Uniforms?”
“Cars—black Lincolns, mostly, with drivers. They’re an expensive way to travel, but you can afford it.” Stone rummaged in his desk drawer, came up with a card, and handed it to Fratelli. “This is a big one, a chain. You don’t want to deal with a small, neighborhood outfit—no telling who owns it. What you do is, you pick a place you want to go, say Pittsburgh.”
“Why Pittsburgh?”
“It’s just an example. You call this service and tell them you want a car to drive you there. They’ll be happy to take cash. Then, after you’re under way, you change your mind and tell the driver you want to go somewhere else, like Boston or Washington, D.C. Anyplace with train service. When you get there, have him drive you to the station and take a train to anywhere you like, except back to New York.”
“Okay, that makes sense.”
“Something else.”
“What else?”
“You need a change in your clothing, to blend in better.”
“What kind of clothing should I get?”
“Go to Brooks Brothers. You know it?”
“Yeah, it used to be on Madison.”
“It still is. Buy a couple of suits, some shirts and ties, the works—a war
drobe. They sell luggage there, too. Buy a couple of pieces, insist that they fit your suits while you wait. Buy a new hat, and when you get a chance, grow some hair, maybe a mustache. Next time you get a haircut, don’t let the barber use electric clippers. You getting the picture?”
“Yeah, I want to look like a regular businessman. But I don’t know where to go after that.”
“Pick someplace nice, take a vacation, enjoy yourself.”
“Maybe Florida,” Fratelli said, smiling a little.
“Don’t tell me,” Stone said. “Another thing, on your way to Brooks Brothers, tell the cabdriver to find a Radio Shack.”
“They still got those?”
“They still got those. Buy something called a throwaway cell phone—you’ll find it useful, and don’t forget to recharge it every night when you go to bed.”
“Who am I going to call?”
“Use it to make hotel reservations on your trip. Another thing, when you open your bank account, ask them to give you something called a debit card. You can use it like a credit card, and they’ll take your charges out of your account.”
“This is all very good advice, Mr. Barrington.”
“Don’t mention it.” Stone picked up the phone and buzzed Joan. “Please hail a cab for Mr. Fratelli,” he said. “I don’t want him standing on the street, looking for one.” He hung up. “Good luck, Mr. Fratelli. I don’t suppose we’ll be meeting again.” Stone leaned a little on that.
“Yeah, right,” Fratelli said. He put some more hundreds on Stone’s desk and left.
Stone’s private line rang, and he picked it up. “Hello?”
“It’s Dino. You up for dinner tonight?”
“Sure.”
“Eight at Patroon?”
“See you there.”
5
Stone arrived at Patroon as Dino was getting out of his car, a large black SUV. He clapped his friend on the back. “No more town car?”
“They stopped making them, and the department got these tanks to replace them.”
A moment later, after a warm greeting from Patroon’s owner, Ken Aretzky, they were seated at their usual table. There was really no replacement for Elaine’s, without Elaine, but Patroon was serving pretty well.