The foyer was bigger than Jake’s apartment. Marble floor. Broad staircase. Big windows with brocaded drapes shutting out the August heat. The sounds of the cocktail party were coming from a half-open door across the way, between two large paintings of soft green landscapes.
Jake felt mildly puzzled. Lev had told him to be there by four
P.M.
It was still a few minutes before four, yet the party seemed to be in full swing already.
“This way, sir,” said the butler in a quiet voice, not much above a whisper.
He led Jake across the foyer and pulled the half-open door all the way. The room beyond was crammed with people talking, laughing, drinking. Somewhere in the crowd someone was playing a piano. The men were mostly in suits, although Jake noticed some blue jeans and denim jackets among them. The women were young, fashionably dressed, glowing with jewelry and the self-assurance of wealth.
Feeling slightly shabby in his old gray slacks and navy blazer, Jake stepped into the crowd. At least I’m wearing a tie, he said to himself. A dark-suited waiter appeared at his side.
“What can I get for you, sir?”
Thinking about the drive back across town, Jake asked, “Do you have any ginger beer?”
“Of course.” The waiter disappeared into the chattering crowd.
A young woman smiled at him. “You’re Dr. Ross, aren’t you?”
Surprised to be recognized, Jake replied, “Jake Ross, yes.”
“I’m Amy Wexler. One of Mr. Tomlinson’s volunteers.”
She was pretty, with a lively smile and fresh, sparkling eyes. Like a cheerleader, Jake thought. Slim figure, strong cheekbones, beautiful honey blond hair cascading to her shoulders. Floor-length skirt of swirling blues and greens, soft blue sweater over a white blouse. Bracelets clattered on her wrist as she extended her hand to Jake.
Are those real gold? he wondered as he took her hand.
“Mr. Tomlinson wants to talk with you in private, so don’t leave before the two of you have had a chance to chat, okay?”
Jake nodded, wondering what he should say, what he could say. The waiter reappeared with a tall glass of ginger beer on a silver tray and Amy Wexler melted back into the crowd. Jake looked around for a familiar face, knowing that there couldn’t be anybody he knew in this bunch. These people come from money, he knew. They wouldn’t be caught dead in my neighborhood.
“Some party, isn’t it?”
Jake turned to see a man in a suede jacket and jeans grinning at him. Instead of a tie he wore at his throat a bolo with a jet-black chunk of onyx set in intricately worked silver.
“I’m Bob Rogers,” the man said, extending his hand.
Jake shook hands with him. “Jake Ross.”
Rogers was about ten years older than him, Jake judged. His face was seamed, as if he’d spent a good deal of his life out in the open. He had a lean, leathery look to him, emphasized by the suede jacket and bolo. Crinkly pale blue eyes and wispy sandy hair. He held a tapered pilsner glass in one hand, nearly empty.
“You think all these people will support Tomlinson if he runs?” Rogers asked.
Jake hesitated a moment. Then he replied, “If he runs, I guess they will. They must be his friends.”
His grin widening a bit, Rogers said, “If Tomlinson decides to run for the Senate, he’ll ask them to open their checkbooks. Then we’ll see how many of them are really his friends.”
Jake grinned back. “Yeah, I guess it’s easy to be a friend when the guy’s handing out free drinks.”
Rogers pointed toward the big French doors on one side of the room. “Looks a little less crowded over there.”
Jake edged through the crowd alongside Rogers. Through the tall glass doors Jake could see green hedges baking in the afternoon sunshine and a corner of a swimming pool.
“Bet that’s an Olympic-sized pool,” Rogers said. “Nothing halfway about the Tomlinsons.”
“You know them?” Jake asked.
“I’ve met him and his father a couple of times. At university functions. They’re big donors.”
“Are you at the university?”
“Electrical engineering department.”
Feeling relieved, Jake said, “Astronomy.”
“No kidding?”
“Do you know—”
Jake felt a tap on his shoulder. Turning, he saw Amy Wexler standing beside him.
“I’m sorry to interrupt,” she said, beaming that cheerleader’s smile at him. “Mr. Tomlinson would like to see you now, Dr. Ross. In the library.”
Jake gave Rogers a rueful look. Rogers hoisted his nearly empty glass of beer and said, “I’ll see you later, Jake.”
“Right.” And he let Amy Wexler lead him through the oblivious crowd toward the library and his private chat with B. Franklin Tomlinson.
B. FRANKLIN TOMLINSON
The man radiated wealth. That was Jake’s first impression of Tomlinson, as Amy Wexler ushered him into the library. She shut the heavy oak door behind Jake, cutting off the noise of the cocktail party and leaving the two men alone. B. Franklin Tomlinson stood at the far end of the richly carpeted room, smiling warmly at Jake.
Tomlinson was tall, with broad shoulders and a squarish, ruggedly handsome face, deeply tanned. The jacket of his three-piece suit was thrown carelessly over the back of the chair he was standing next to; his vest was buttoned over his flat midsection. Thick, wavy golden blond hair with just a hint of gray streaking through it that made him look distinguished, Jake thought. Sparkling sapphire blue eyes. And that smile could melt platinum.
For a moment Jake wasn’t certain of what he should do, what he should say. The library was hushed, only the two of them in it. Bookshelves lined three of the walls, up to the ceiling. Every inch of the shelving was filled with books, all so neatly stacked and new-looking that Jake figured they’d never been opened. The fourth wall bore the room’s only window and a half-dozen framed photographs of Tomlinson and others aboard sailing boats.
His smile unwavering, Tomlinson extended his hand toward Jake. “I’m Frank Tomlinson,” he said, as if that explained everything.
Jake swiftly crossed the thick carpeting and shook Tomlinson’s hand. “Jake Ross,” he said.
“Yes, I know.” Tomlinson’s grip was firm and steady. With his free hand he gestured to a pair of bottle green leather chairs in the corner by the window. “Let’s sit down, shall we?”
“Are you really going to run against Senator Leeds?” Jake asked as they sat facing each other.
“Somebody ought to,” Tomlinson said lightly. “Chris has been in the Senate for more than twenty years. Time for a change, don’t you think?”
With a nod, Jake said, “But beating an incumbent isn’t easy.”
Tomlinson chuckled softly. “I don’t go after easy tasks, Dr. Ross.”
“Jake.”
“Jake,” Tomlinson echoed. “My father always told me that the tough jobs are the ones worth tackling. That’s where the fun is.”
Unable to think of a response, Jake took a sip of his ginger beer. Then he noticed that Tomlinson wasn’t drinking anything.
“Dr. Cardwell spoke very highly of you,” Tomlinson said, leaning back easily in his chair.
“You know Lev?”
“My father put up the money to build the planetarium. He also personally picked Dr. Cardwell to run it. I’ve known Lev since he first came here. I was just a kid.”
Feeling a little confused, Jake said, “But the planetarium isn’t named after your father.”
Tomlinson made a wry smile. “Despite his usual demeanor, my father is basically a modest man. He asked that the planetarium be named after an astronomer he respected, Bart J. Bok.”
“Oh.” Jake gulped at his drink again.
“Do you want another?” Tomlinson asked.
“No, I’m okay with this, thanks.”
“What are you drinking?”
“Ginger beer. It’s nonalcoholic.”
“In Australia they take it with brandy. Brandy and dry, the Aussies call it.”
Jake almost asked Tomlinson if he’d been to Australia, but stopped himself in time to save the embarrassment. Of course he’s been to Australia, Jake told himself. He’s probably sailed yachts there. Or raced cars in the Outback.
“Dr. Cardwell says I should have a science advisor on my team,” Tomlinson said. “And he says you’re the man for the job.”
“He told me the same thing.”
“So what do you think?”
“Well, Mr. Tomlinson—”
“Frank.”
“Um, okay, Frank … I don’t know much about politics, and even less about how a political campaign is run.”
Tomlinson actually laughed. “That’s no problem, Jake. I’m surrounded by campaign managers, aides, volunteers. They all tell me they know exactly how to get me elected.”
“Uh-huh.”
“What I need is somebody who knows about science. What I need is an issue, a new idea, something that will show that I’m different from Leeds. Different and better.”
“A new issue.”
“Sure! Like Jack Kennedy and going to the Moon. Something exciting. Something to get people stirred up.”
“I see.”
Tomlinson leaned forward in the chair, toward Jake. In a voice that suddenly was deadly serious, he asked, “Think you can find me a new idea that I can campaign on?”
And Jake wanted to do it. He looked into Tomlinson’s sapphire blue eyes and saw that they were unwavering, deadly earnest. He realized that he wanted to help this man succeed.
“I can try,” he said.
Tomlinson’s smile returned. “That’s all I can ask of you, Jake. Try your best.”
“I will.”
“Good. You come up with an electable issue and I’ll name you as my science advisor.”
“How quickly will you need it?”
Tomlinson cocked his head slightly, calculating. “It’s August now. The election’s next November. That gives us fifteen months.”
“Fifteen months,” Jake echoed.
Raising a warning finger, Tomlinson said, “But we’ll need that issue long before then, of course. I’ve got to decide whether I’ll file for the race by the end of the year. I’ll need a good issue from you before then.”
“In four months?”
“Sooner, Jake. In a few weeks, if you can.”
“I’ll do it,” Jake promised.
“Good! Wonderful!” Tomlinson got to his feet and Jake hauled himself up to stand beside him. He realized that he was actually an inch or so taller than Tomlinson.
“I’ll have something for you in a couple of weeks,” Jake promised.
Tomlinson took Jake’s hand in both of his own. “I’ll look forward to it.” He led Jake toward the door of the library. “In the meantime, enjoy the party.”
“Thanks.”
As he reached for the doorknob, Tomlinson said, with a sly grin, “You’ll enjoy politics, Jake. Great way to meet women.”
AMY WEXLER
The party was still going strong, dozens of people talking, laughing, drinking. Jake watched as a pair of older men, both portly, both in dark business suits, came up to Tomlinson.
“Where’s your jacket, Frankie?” one of them demanded; he was bald, florid-faced. He had to raise his voice to be heard over the din of the others.
“I left it in the library,” said Tomlinson, with a good-natured smile.
The bald man shook his head disapprovingly. “If you’re going to be a United States senator—”
Raising a warning hand, Tomlinson said, “I haven’t made up my mind about that yet.”
The other old man smiled knowingly. “Yes you have, you just don’t want to admit it in public yet.”
“Now, really, Mr. McPherson…”
Jake felt a tug on his sleeve. Turning, he saw Amy Wexler standing beside him. She leaned toward him and said into his ear, “How did it go?”
“Okay, I guess.”
“You’re going to join the staff?”
“I don’t know. Mr. Tomlinson wants a good idea to campaign on.”
Her sculpted face looked somewhere between curious and skeptical. “A good idea?”
Jake nodded. The party seemed noisier than ever, and he didn’t like shouting to make himself heard.
Amy seemed to understand. Taking his arm in her grip, she tugged him toward the French doors. As he meekly followed her Jake glimpsed Bob Rogers in the crowd, talking earnestly with a stubby little guy who looked vaguely familiar: maybe a news anchor from one of the local TV stations, Jake thought.
Amy led Jake through the French doors and out onto the patio. It was still blazing August hot outside, but mercifully quiet. She walked to a white-painted bench placed in the deep shade of a thickly leafed box elder tree. Brushing dead leaves off the wooden bench, she sat down. Dumbly, Jake sat beside her.
“That’s better,” Amy said.
He agreed. “It’s pretty noisy in there, isn’t it?”
“It gets noisier as they drink more liquor.”
“I remember reading a paper once,” Jake said, “that calculated the noise of a cocktail party, based on the number of people and the number of drinks served.”
“A scientific paper?”
“Yeah. It was published in
New Scientist,
I think.”
She smoothed her long blue-and-green skirt with one hand. It made Jake think of the sea: not that he had ever seen an ocean firsthand, but he pictured a softly billowing sea, far from land, alone on a sailboat with a beautiful long-legged woman. Then a memory of Louise flared in his mind and he felt guilty.
“What’s the matter?” Amy asked.
He looked away from her. “Does it show?”
“Something’s bothering you, that’s obvious.” She seemed genuinely concerned.
“It’s … personal.”
“Oh. I see.”
Feeling even more miserable, Jake said, “I’m sorry. I shouldn’t be such a sap.”
“Let’s talk about Franklin’s campaign.”
“He said he hasn’t made up his mind to run yet.”
She gave him a sly smile. “Don’t believe that line. It’s just his way of getting people to urge him to run. He wants them committed. He wants them to back him all the way to Washington.”
“You think so?”
“I know so,” Amy said. “He’s been a lot more honest with his key volunteers than with his potential backers.”
“You’re one of his key volunteers.”
“Yes, I am. And you can be, too. He needs a good science advisor. Senator Leeds is a nincompoop about science.”
Jake laughed. “Not only about science. How he’s managed to stay in the Senate for all these years…” He shook his head.
“He gets himself reelected,” Amy said, quite seriously. “He has an organization that runs very smoothly. He gets support from the unions, from the construction industry, and from gaming. Even the car dealers back him, for god’s sake! Franklin’s going to need a better organization.”