Tasmina Perry 3-Book Collection: Daddy’s Girls, Gold Diggers, Original Sin. Tasmina Perry
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СКАЧАТЬ he teased, sensing she was a little cross. ‘If it’s all to her honourable’s approval, does that mean the pair of us are in business?’

      He flashed her a smile that would have been heart-meltingly sexy if it hadn’t been coming from such an arrogant face.

      Against her better judgement, Cate extended her hand and gave him something resembling a smile. She was angry all right, but something about tonight’s planning had made her prickle with excitement. If it was a choice between him or her magazine – well, she was just going to have to take her chances.

      She put out her hand. ‘Nick Douglas, I think you just might have a deal.’

       13

      Serena was so bored she could hardly keep her eyes open. Although she usually loved talking about herself, she was sick to death of repeating the same glib sound bites about her ‘work’ on To Catch a Thief. Since she’d got back from Mustique two weeks ago, there had been three draining days of interviews in London and hundreds of phone interviews with all sorts of Japanese and European publications. Boring questions from people who could hardly speak a word of English. Now she had another two days of press and television interviews in New York, and if she had to trot out one more tired, clichéd line about, ‘What attracted me to the movie’, she swore she’d commit hari-kari with the heel of her Jimmy Choo.

      ‘Final question, please,’ said Clara the publicist, popping her red-bobbed head into the Four Seasons Suite overlooking Central Park where Serena was enduring her final interview of the day.

      Thank Christ, thought Serena, forcing one final smile for the journalist from Time Out New York. She took a dainty sip of Badoit mineral water and crossed her legs, smoothing down the sharp crease of the Gucci slacks with her fingers. ‘Fire away.’

      The journalist shifted in his chair. Clara had warned him that all questions related to Serena and Tom Archer’s recent break-up were strictly off the agenda, but with minutes of the interview to go, he had to give it a shot.

      ‘So then,’ he began, pushing his Dictaphone a little further in front of Serena, ‘you and your sisters are big stars in England. Do you think you can be as successful in New York?’

      Serena tossed a sheaf of hair over her shoulder. This was the sort of question she enjoyed. ‘Well, of course I’m rather well known in London,’ she smiled, trying to sound modest. ‘And because of that my sisters have some degree of popularity …’

      Having warmed her up, the journalist decided to change tack.

      ‘You went on a cruise on Roman LeFey’s boat. Did you enjoy it?’

      Serena’s eyes instantly narrowed.

      ‘Yes, Roman is a very good friend of mine and we often travel together.’ She instantly knew where this was going and she wasn’t going to let this sallow hack get any sensational headline out of her.

      ‘Egypt is a beautiful country. I had a wonderful time,’ she said obliquely.

      ‘And I understand Roman introduced you to the billionaire hotelier Michael Sarkis?’

      Serena gave up, a cloud of disapproval evident on her face. ‘I’m here to talk about the movie,’ she snapped, so ferociously that even the thick-skinned writer drew back in shock.

      ‘Of course,’ he stammered, ‘I just thought one quote about …’

      Serena picked up the telephone beside her. ‘Clara, darling, we need you in here one moment.’

      Clara bustled back into the room, her clipboard held tightly against her chest and a fixed smile on her face. She was one of the best publicists in the business and could get rid of unwanted attention in an instant. Serena pointed at the journalist haughtily. ‘Personal questions, darling,’ she said, shivering with distaste.

      Clara beamed at the journalist and thrust a press pack into his hands. ‘I think that’s it for today. Any other information you might need should be in there. Goodbye!’

      The journalist looked at her, deflated, pushed the papers into his bag and scurried out of the door, leaving the two women alone in the grandeur of the suite. ‘How was that? Not too awful?’ asked Clara kindly, topping up Serena’s mineral water.

      Serena flopped back into the luscious feather down of the sofa, resting one stiletto boot heel on the coffee table, rubbing her toes through the leather.

      ‘I’m bloody exhausted,’ she pouted. ‘Journalists. They’re such a headache. Speaking of which, those lilies are making me feel sick,’ she said, flapping a hand at an enormous vase of trumpet flowers. ‘Can you move them and then get me some aspirin? I’ve got to leave this room before I get cabin fever.’

      Clara was both professional and experienced, and over the years had dealt with more divas than she cared to remember. She merely smiled sweetly and phoned the concierge. ‘Aspirin’s on the way,’ she replied, busily tidying up the coffee cups as Serena tutted from the sofa.

      ‘You do remember,’ added Clara gently, ‘that the cast and crew screening of To Catch a Thief begins at eight p.m.?’

      Serena flashed her a look of undisguised boredom. She had no intention of sitting in the dark with the third assistant director and the costume mistress. And besides, she had much bigger fish than To Catch a Thief to fry.

      ‘I’m afraid I won’t be able to make that, darling,’ she replied airily, lighting up a cigarette.

      ‘I have a very busy evening tonight and I want to be fresh for tomorrow. By the way,’ she continued casually, ‘can you make sure we have San Pellegrino instead of Badoit in the room tomorrow? Badoit is just a tad too salty.’

      Upstairs in the Four Seasons’ presidential suite, Serena took a shower then paced around the room nervously. She walked over to the suite’s dining area, that jutted out fifty-one floors above Madison Avenue, making you feel as if you were floating in space over the pulsating heart of Manhattan. Perching on the edge of the dining table, she looked out at the panorama of New York spread out in front of her. Central Park had become a thick black gulf in the growing dark while yellow taxis darted around it like hornets. She took another drag of her cigarette. New York. She looked at it twinkling in front of her like a golden opportunity made physical, and shivered. Never before had she felt quite so exhilarated, yet quite so apprehensive. In London she had been the queen of the social scene; it was safe and cosy. But here, in front of the Manhattan skyline, London just seemed insignificant.

      Serena didn’t want to be London’s hottest star; she wanted to be the world’s hottest star. And that was why she was about to meet Stephen Feldman in the Four Seasons’ bar. Feldman was chairman of Feldman Artist Management, one of the hottest, most ruthless and best-connected artist managers in America. Bicoastal, bisexual and brilliant, even a two-bit waitress was one Feldman strategy away from being a Hollywood superstar. And now he wanted to meet Serena Balcon. She glanced at her watch, then looked at herself reflected in the darkening window. She looked good, and if she played her cards right, New York – America – would soon be hers.

      

      ‘Two words. Grace Kelly,’ said Stephen Feldman in his camp New York drawl. ‘In fact, СКАЧАТЬ