Kane

Kane by Steve Gannon Page A

Book: Kane by Steve Gannon Read Free Book Online
Authors: Steve Gannon
Ads: Link
to talk.”
    “What about the kids?”
    I shrugged.  “They can talk, too.”
    “You know what I mean,” said Catheryn with a fleeting smile.
    “Don’t worry, Christy’s staying at the house till you get back.  I ordered pizza, rented a movie, and made Allison promise not to kill Nate.”
    “I planned on packing tonight for the trip.  I have only one more day left before I leave.”
    “One more day before you leave?” I said, raising a questioning eyebrow.  “Kate, I’m not that dumb.”
    “I beg your pardon?”
    “Yesterday you said it was two days until you leave; the day before that it was three .  What kind of scam are you trying to pull?”
    Catheryn chuckled.  “I should’ve known I couldn’t sneak one by on you.”
    “Right.  And don’t forget it.”  Then, more seriously, “Please, Kate?”
    At last she relented.  “All right, Dan.  Dinner at Patina.  I swear, you never cease to amaze me.”
    “Unpredictability’s part of my charm,” I said with a grin.  “Drives women wild, inspiring female desire wherever I go.”
    Catheryn smiled back.  “Dan, over the years I’ve seen you inspire a whole spectrum of female reactions.  Funny, I don’t recall desire being one of them.”
    “That, my dear,” I said, assaying a passable Rhett Butler imitation, “is because you haven’t been looking.”

5
     
    F ollowing rehearsal, all of the Philharmonic’s larger instruments were being crated for shipment to Rome in time for the first engagement of the tour.  While I waited in the performers’ lounge, Catheryn packed her cello in a specially designed trunk backstage, then freshened up in the dressing room downstairs.  When she finally rejoined me, her long auburn hair down, mascara lightly reapplied, a trace of gloss on her lips, I let out a low whistle.  “Damn, Kate.  You sure clean up good.”
    “Careful,” laughed Catheryn.  “That kind of sweet-talking is liable to go to my head.”
    “Plenty more where that came from, sugar.”
    “That’s what I’m afraid of.”
    Bidding goodnight to the guard at the registration desk, we exited onto Grand Avenue.  Across the street, lights still burned in both the Administration Building and the Los Angeles County Courthouse, the latter a venue where, over the course of my years on the Force, I’d spent more frustrating hours than I cared to remember.  To the north, over the roofs of the Ahmanson Theater and its smaller cousin, the Mark Taper Forum, I noticed the spotlights of Dodger Stadium were on, bathing the ridge above Chavez Ravine in a ghostly glow.  RV show, maybe a rock concert, I thought as we walked a half-block south to the Walt Disney Concert Hall.
    “Breathtaking, isn’t it?” Catheryn remarked as she noticed me gazing up at the landmark structure’s stainless steel curves and soaring walls of gleaming metal that, to my eye, looked like sails unfurling above a hull-shaped foundation.
    “Yeah, it is,” I agreed, thinking that the new entertainment center was a fitting addition to its three sister performing-arts venues to the north.
    Moments later we arrived at Patina, which occupied a street-level corner section of the huge, 3.6 acre Disney Hall complex.  As we entered the restaurant, I noticed that an evening-gowned and dinner-jacketed crowd had already begun filling Patina’s interior.  I escorted Catheryn past an inviting bar to a nearby reception desk.  After checking the reservation book, the maitre d’ showed us to an intimate table near the back.  As we crossed the room, Catheryn nodded to a young woman playing a harp beside the entrance to an outdoor patio.  Apparently recognizing Catheryn, the woman smiled warmly in return.
    I stood to one side as the maitre d’ seated Catheryn.  Around us, in an atmosphere of muted pastels understated elegance, a number of walls displayed works curated by the LA Museum of Contemporary Art across the street.  After conferring briefly with the sommelier

Similar Books

Homecoming

Denise Grover Swank

Worth the Challenge

Karen Erickson

B. Alexander Howerton

The Wyrding Stone

Courting Trouble

Jenny Schwartz