I watched her hobble out on stilt-skinny legs and tried to figure
out what, exactly, had made that interaction so weird. But the
mention of a scrub reminded me of my own appointment, so I finished
breakfast and hit the spa for my pre-sightseeing massage,
adding on a paraffin pedicure for good measure. This one I had
earned.
26
"I have to say, I think this one's my favorite," Will announced,
passing me a computer printout across the table. He didn't sound
particularly amused. He'd taken it upon himself to put together a
little collection of all the newspaper clippings that had mentioned
my name since I'd started at Kelly & Company and we were reviewing
them together, over brunch. The week before, I'd returned
from Turkey and what I'd thought was an incredibly successful
trip. No one had seemed the least bit clued in as to what had
really
happened with either Philip or Sammy. It was becoming obvious
that I'd relaxed too soon.
Abby was apparently omniscient. Somehow she must've gotten
in touch with John, the fat photographer, because she'd managed
to take a tiny, partial truth and weave it into a hideous lie. She'd
published this particular gem on Friday, and this time I thought
Kelly would have a heart attack:
Publicist Bette Robinson is generating some publicity of her own,
sources say, while running a press trip to Istanbul last month.
Mostly known for her relationship with Philip Weston, Robinson
was reported to be intimately involved with Rick Salomon—better
known as the guy who brought us the Paris Hilton sex tape—in
the same hotel where she also shared a room with Weston. Can
readers look forward to a remake of this famous sex tape, this
time featuring everyone's favorite party planner in place of everyone's
favorite partier? Stay tuned.
The photo accompanying the darling little write-up was the
one taken of me as I opened the door of Sammy's room, holding
my sandals in one hand and running the other through my ratty,
bed-head hair. My mouth hung open unattractively, and my
makeup was smeared under my eyes. I looked just as slutty as
Paris, minus her fab body and clothes. A figure had been blurred
out in the background; upon closer inspection, it was clearly a
male with a sheet tied around his waist, but identifying him beyond
that was impossible. It was Sammy, of course—the bastard
photographer had just spent five straight days with him and knew
that perfectly well, but he clearly hadn't bothered to provide that
information when he sold the picture to Abby. I imagined she'd
spent little time trying to figure out who the guy was before picking
someone particularly damaging at random and assigning him
the role of my illicit, late-night paramour.
For the first time since I'd begun working for her, I saw that
Kelly was not pleased with the coverage. She'd asked me, fairly, if
there was any truth to the claim, and then followed up with questions
about why Abby had it out for me. I assured her that I'd
never met the Hilton sex-tape guy and certainly hadn't had sex
with him—either on camera or off—and she seemed to believe me.
Oddly enough, it never occurred to her to ask who the guy was if
it wasn't Mr. Paris Hilton, so I hadn't needed to lie. After this brief
question-and-answer session, Kelly instructed me to settle any animosity
with Abby since this kind of publicity was no longer helpful.
She reminded me that we were a mere four weeks from the
Playboy
party, and there was to be no negative publicity, true or
not, surrounding my private life between now and then. I assured
her that I completely understood and vowed I'd put an end to it,
although as of yet, I had no realistic plan for doing so. I knew I
had to call Abby and confront her directly, but the thought of even
hearing her voice made me sick with dread.
Philip, of course, had kept his mouth shut; only I knew he was
relieved the photo was of my indiscretion—even if he did look like
a loser whose girlfriend openly cheated on him, or, as Will had
called him, a cuckold. At least it wasn't a shot of his little visit to
the other team. Philip and I had yet to even mention anything that
had happened that first night in Turkey. Not a word. Nada. Things
had resumed their normal pattern for the rest of the trip. Two days
of spa treatments and late-night debauchery. Eyeing but not touching
Sammy (Isabelle's Ambien didn't last long enough) and generally
making sure all the guests remained satisfied and out of
trouble. We finished out Turkey like we had started—pretending to
be together—although had anyone bothered to look closely, they
would've noticed that I didn't so much as nap in Philip's room.
In the week since we'd been home, Philip and I had seen each
other out, and neither of us denied it when people assumed we
were together. After the chaos of the photo, the "reconciliation"
gave me some wiggle room with Kelly. But I needed a low-drama
way out of this "relationship"—not just because of the tabloid pressure,
but because I really liked Sammy.
The good news was that every daily and weekly that mattered
had dedicated massive spreads to the group's carefully orchestrated
debauchery, and a very happy Association of Nightclub Owners
was certain there would soon be an unprecedented number of
American partiers. Only New York Scoop had printed the ugly
photo of me. Kelly seemed okay once she heard Philip and I had
"made up." Sammy had been extremely apologetic, although Isabelle
kept such a tight leash on him that we'd had little contact
since the trip. The only people who seemed truly devastated were
my parents.
My mother was so hysterical when she called that I had to
hang up on her mid-conversation and have Will call her back to
explain that you can't believe everything you read, especially when
it comes to gossip columns. He managed to placate her slightly,
but it didn't change the rather unsettling fact that even if I hadn't
been sleeping with the Hilton sex-tape guy, my parents had still
seen a photo of me taken right after I had quite obviously slept
with someone. They didn't understand what I was doing professionally
or personally . . . or why. While there'd been absolutely
nothing good about the situation, the worst of it seemed to be
over, and the only one who still seemed obsessed with it was Will.
It was Sunday, exactly one week after we'd returned from
Turkey, and I was at my usual brunch with Will and Simon. I was
bemoaning the lack of fact and truth in the piece when Will interrupted
me.
"Bette, darling, stop using the word
truth
when referencing
gossip columns. It makes you sound naive."
"Well, what am I supposed to do? Just be totally fine with the
fact that that vengeful bitch can make up whatever she wants
about me and they'll print it? It's a miracle and a blessing that I still
have my job."
"Is that so?" He raised his eyebrows and sipped from his
Bloody Mary, his pinky extended.
"You're the one who practically mandated I take this job, if I
remember. Said I needed more friends, to go out, to have a life.
Well, I've done just that."
"This," he said, holding up the picture for emphasis, "was not
what I meant. And you know it. Now, darling, I'm happy to support
you in anything that makes you happy, but I don't think it's a
stretch of an observation to say that this is not it."
Well, that one silenced me momentarily.
"So what do you propose I do?" I asked. "You thought banking
was a bore, and now you're disapproving of the job
you
picked for
me because some girl I knew in a previous life has it in for me?
That seems unfair."
He sighed. "Yes, well, darling, get over yourself. You're a big
girl now, and I'm sure you'll find something a little more—how
shall I put it?—
discreet
than your current lifestyle. Planning parties
and going out, having a drink or two, a little romp with a cute boy
is one thing, and I'm fully supportive of that. But dating some
spoiled brat to please your boss, getting your name and face plastered
across every rag in this city, and—not least—forgetting your
old uncle's birthday because you were too busy acting as an international
babysitter for a group of B-list stars and socialites is not
quite what I had in mind when I recommended that you take this
job."
Will's birthday. January 2. I'd forgotten.
Will motioned for the waiter to bring him another Bloody Mary.
"Darling, excuse me for a moment. I'm going to take this mobile
phone outside and see where Simon is. It's unlike him to be this
late." He placed his napkin on his chair and crossed the cavernous
room in a few easy strides, looking every bit the distinguished gentleman.
When he returned, he was smiling and composed. "How is
your love life, my dear?" he asked, as if we'd not been talking
about Philip at all.
"Haven't I said it enough? I have no interest in Philip."
"Darling, I wasn't talking about Philip. Whatever happened to
that hulking boy with whom you drove to Poughkeepsie? I rather
liked him."
"Sammy? How could you have liked him? You only met him for
thirty seconds."
"Yes, but in those thirty seconds he showed he was perfectly
willing to lie on my behalf. Now, that's a quality person if there ever
was one. So tell me, is there no interest there at all?" He peered at me
with an intensity Will rarely displayed about anything.
I weighed whether or not to tell him the entire Istanbul story
and then buckled. At least one person in my life should know I
wasn't a complete tramp. "Urn, yeah, I guess you could say that," I
mumbled.
"Say what? That you are interested in him? Or you're not?" He
winked.
I took a deep breath. "He was the guy in the picture. You just
couldn't see him."
Will looked like he was trying to suppress a huge smile. "He
was in Turkey with you? How did you arrange that, my dear?"
"It's sort of a long story, but suffice it to say that I didn't know
he was going to be there."
Will raised an eyebrow. "Really? Well, I'm pleased to hear that.
I am sorry it had to end up in the gossip columns, but I'm glad the
two of you have, ah, cemented your relationship."
I listened to Will prattle on for a bit about how he always envisioned
me being with someone like Sammy—the strong, silent
type—and how it was about time I found myself a proper
boyfriend who understood what was really important. And oh, by
the way, how does he lean politically? I happily answered all of his
questions, content to talk about Sammy if I couldn't be with him.