spent a lot of time in Greece. According to the article Iâd found online this morning, the estate sat on several acres of manicured lawns. It had two pools, a grotto, a tennis court, a koi pond, fountains, pergolas, and more statues than the ancient Chinese Terra Cotta Warriors and Horses museum exhibit.
Iâd gone with one of my black business suits this morning and teamed it with Jimmy Choo pumps, and a cherry red Marc Jacobs carryall, a take-me-seriously look I hoped would assure Sheridan Adams that I had everything under control for her party. I didnât, of course, so all the more reason to look as if I did.
Isnât that what fashion is all about?
I channeled my momâs Iâm-better-than-you expression and rang the doorbell, and a servant in a white uniform let me into the foyer, which had roughly the same square footage as a Costco store. She directed me to a sitting roomâmy entire apartment would have fit inside itâand told me Mrs. Adams would be with me shortly. I pulled out my cell phone, took pictures, and sent them to Marcie.
â Tell me nothing is wrong.â
Sheridan Adams, whom I recognized from this morningâs Internet search, sailed into the room. The word âsailedâ popped into my head because she had on what appeared to be an old-school naval uniformâwhite bell-bottom pants, a blue and white striped top, sneakers, and a canvas bucket hat.
I guess I shouldnât complain about how my mom dressed at home.
The article Iâd read gave Sheridanâs age as forty-two, but I was pretty sure sheâd already crossed over into youâre-seriously-old territory. She was rail thin, and all that time spent in the tanning booth had turned on her, leaving her with skin the texture of a circus elephant. Her hair was a number of shades of blond and totally fried. It stuck straight out, forming a nest, of sorts, for her hat to sit on, so I guess it was working for her.
Since she had so much money, she seemed eccentric rather than like that crazy aunt nobody ever talked about.
â Tell me,â Sheridan insisted.
âNothingâs wrong,â I said. I tried for my you-can-trust-me voice, but I donât think I pulled it off.
â Somethingâs wrong,â she insisted. âMuriel? Muriel?â
Sheridan turned in a circle, then shouted, âMuriel!â
âIâm right here, Mrs. Adams,â a young woman said as she rushed into the room juggling an iPad, a cell phone, and a day planner. She was young, with short, dark, sensible hair and glasses that made me think of Velma in the Scooby-Doo cartoons, though I doubted she was having as much fun as the Mystery, Inc. gang.
Muriel gave me a quick smile. âHi, Iâm Mrs. Adamsâs personal assistant,â
I introduced myself and said, âNothingâs wrong.â
âI figured that,â she said quietly.
âActually, thatâs why Iâm here, Mrs. Adams,â I said, using my thereâs-nothing-to-be-alarmed-about voice. âIâm working closely with Vanessa on your event and want to assure you of absolute continuity in the preparation and execution of your plans.â
Okay, that was a total lie, but I didnât want her calling L.A. Affairs and complaining about me.
âWhat happened toâ?â Sheridan pointed at Muriel.
âJewel,â she said.
âJewel,â Sheridan said. âShe was Vanessaâs assistant. I liked her. Where is she?â
I figured that Jewel was so fearful of having to work for Vanessa again, she was probably hiding in an abandoned bomb shelter somewhere in the Mojave Desert.
âUnfortunately, Jewel had some personal issues she had to deal with,â I said. âThe loss of one person will have absolutely no bearing on the success of any event. Everyone at the firm is up-to-speed on every event. Thatâs how we do things at L.A. Affairs.â
I had no idea how they did things at
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