The Necklace (The Kate Brady Series Book 3)
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About this ebook
The Necklace tells the stories of three women, each with a dangerous secret. There is 80-year-old mafia widow Kate Brady, determined that her secret will die with her - beautiful, blond and famous Andrea Pryor is being blackmailed for her secret - and 18-year-old Marianne Woodsman whose secret is hidden in her family’s Park Avenue penthouse. Marianne runs for her life from her dangerously dysfunctional family, through a homeless shelter and a brothel until her story intertwines with Kate’s and Andrea’s in a three-generational embrace.
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The Necklace (The Kate Brady Series Book 3) - Babette Hughes
Contents
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 3
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 5
CHAPTER 6
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 8
CHAPTER 9
CHAPTER 10
CHAPTER 11
CHAPTER 12
CHAPTER 13
CHAPTER 14
CHAPTER 15
CHAPTER 16
CHAPTER 17
CHAPTER 18
CHAPTER 19
CHAPTER 20
CHAPTER 21
CHAPTER 22
CHAPTER 23
CHAPTER 24
CHAPTER 25
CHAPTER 26
CHAPTER 27
CHAPTER 28
CHAPTER 29
CHAPTER 30
CHAPTER 31
CHAPTER 32
CHAPTER 33
CHAPTER 34
CHAPTER 35
CHAPTER 36
CHAPTER 37
CHAPTER 38
CHAPTER 39
CHAPTER 40
CHAPTER 41
CHAPTER 42
CHAPTER 43
CHAPTER 44
CHAPTER 45
CHAPTER 46
CHAPTER 47
About the Author
CHAPTER 1
KATE
I see her on the news all the time. Andrea Pryor. A name and face and legs and boobs from central casting. I don’t like her because she’s young and blond and has a great job. She makes fifteen million bucks a year. She reads the news in her power suits and tasty little earrings as if she knows what she’s talking about. She’s cool. She’s sincere. She has the world on a string. You can’t stop looking at her.
Her people called me. A Gary something. Then a woman whose name I forget. (I may forget names, but ask me about something that happened fifty years ago.) I started to get flattered. I admit it. It’s not as if at my age that many people want to talk to you—especially someone so famous—about your own life, yet.
To me, though, being that famous is like being in prison, her curious, staring audience like prison guards, her privacy stolen away by the camera and big bucks and other people’s envy and fantasies. I don’t have to deal with the way I’m regarded because I’m not regarded. When you get old, people look through you—you’re a cliché, unseen
I thought I would miss that look of interest in men, their silent whistles, their smiles. But I’ll tell you something odd. I like it. It’s as if I’m free, liberated from passion—theirs and mine—released from the world, unknown except to myself. I am a fly on the wall, observing the tiny dramas and gossamer illusions of others. My red hair has dimmed and my face has lost its juicy look, but it has gained character. Interest. Intelligence. My anonymity has a mean beauty.
So I said okay. I’ll talk to her. But no promises. See, I’m not one of those old ladies who live in the past. Being old ain’t no day in the park, but after what I’ve been through, its calm is a sweet relief.
* * *
Five weeks later Andrea Pryor’s assistant called saying Ms. Pryor would arrive on the following Wednesday at two o’clock. It had been so long since the first calls that I thought the big shot changed her mind. But she showed up on my doorstep in Cleveland from New York City forty-five minutes late on the appointed day. I had dressed up—a Dior in mauve silk, my good pearls, diamond stud earrings. My beautiful necklace. High heels to show off my good legs—my cane be damned. I put on makeup and did what I could with my hair that my expensive hairdresser had colored an impressive red I wasn’t sure about.
I went downstairs and made tea to serve in my silver set on the coffee table, and I filled the cream and sugar bowls. Then I arranged the brownies on a china plate that my housekeeper, Angie, had made that morning. It isn’t every day a famous TV person comes to your house. I began to feel excited and foolish.
When I opened my door to the exalted lady and her entourage, they entered in single file, the lady anchor in the lead. I have a neat little house. Small lawn, back porch, lilac trees that perfumed the air every Spring I thought could be my last. I noticed her taking in my Oriental rugs, paintings, walls of books. (Books are my refuge and religion.)
There were two men in business suits following Andrea Pryor at a respectful distance, along with a guy in jeans and a young woman trying to look sexy in a short skirt so far up her thigh that, in my day and when I was her age, I would have been arrested for street walking. She’s managed the unbelievable—to make sex boring. All I’ll say on the subject of sex is that it was more exciting in the olden days when it was hidden. A woman and a man discovering each other slowly, slowly, like a strip tease.
Andrea Pryor doesn’t look so hot in person. Her eyes are small and she has those little bumps under her skin. She doesn’t look so young close up, either, as if her youthful shine comes from the tube’s glass. She has terrific teeth, though, lined up in two tidy rows, and the taut skinny shape of a woman who works out. Looking at her, I thought I would not like to have her for an enemy. I know the signs from my life with Ben.
Andrea Pryor,
she said, holding out her hand, as if I didn’t know.
I took it and said, Welcome.
Might as well be polite.
She introduced the entourage. Tom something, whom I learned later was Tom Wentworth, Vice President of The United Broadcasting System. Thin-mouthed. Hard-eyed. I’ve known killers with that look.
And my HBO producer,
she said, nodding toward the other man, Gerald Robinsky.
Tall, dark-suited, and shined up from his manicure to his gleaming Guccis. His temples were graying nicely, and the piney scent of aftershave wafted out from his pores. Jeans and Short Skirt—don’t ask me their names—were gofers with the titles of assistants.
How do you do,
I said. Please sit down.
Like subjects in the presence of the queen, the four remained standing until Andrea was seated, as if they knew that even if you were white and went to Princeton you could be broadsided by a blond with ratings and stiletto heels. You could see it in their weak smiles and the fear in their eyes. You could smell it. I know that look and smell from the old days. Like the bootleggers, they understood power and they sucked up. Power is power—whether it is come by with a bootlegger’s gun or TV ratings. In the old days, when Ben worked the Stork Club Speakeasy, people would kiss his ring—his ass if they could.
Jeans and Short Skirt didn’t get it. Not that they were too noble to suck up; they were too young and untouched and unaware of how vulnerable they were to life’s broadsides. They sat down on the couch and looked eagerly around as if they expected Bonnie and Clyde to rise from their graves into my living room. Andrea’s short skirt was hiked even farther up her thigh now.
After Andrea Pryor arranged herself in one of the wing chairs at the fireplace and crossed her long legs, the Suits finally sat down.
I imagined her indulged, glamorous life. The New York-Los Angeles commute; the four-figure designer clothes; the private jet; the celebrity-packed rolodex; the fawning maître d and the best tables in the best restaurants; the limos; the apartment on Central Park West; the personal trainer; the charity balls; the invitations to dinner parties from the fifteen-minuters and the enduringly elite; the backstage dressing rooms on opening night as celebrities gathered to congratulate and air-kiss the star and each other. But living in Ben Gold’s world had taught me something of the envy and fear and hatred that lurks beneath the famous and their kisses. You live with Ben Gold, you learn.
Thank you, Mrs. Gold, for seeing me—us,
Andria Pryor said, smiling with her pretty teeth. She glanced at the books on my shelves, did a double take, and stood up. Say, isn’t your maiden name Brady?
she asked with narrowed eyes.
You’ve done your homework,
I said.
"You’re the Kate Brady? Who wrote all those crime books?" she said, waving her hand at them.
Guilty,
I said, now enjoying myself.
I love those books! I’ve read them all—every single one. You’re as good as Elmore Leonard. Maybe better. No one makes crime and suspense so—so—literate.
I was beginning to like her. Thank you,
I said, in my modest meet-the-author voice.
Do you keep a journal?
I did.
When can I get a copy?
After I’m dead.
She looked at me. After you’re dead? Why?
Because it’s personal.
Must be a journal with big secrets,
she said. I could swear her eyes shone with something like greed, her face changing to a reasonable imitation of the first woman president of the United States.
Yeah, you could say that.
Andrea Pryor looked at her watch. Let’s get down to business. Do you know HBO?
What did she think? That I’ve been living in the Home for Old People in the sky? Yes,
I said. I know HBO.
We’re here to discuss a documentary for HBO.
So I was told. What about?
But I knew. Of course I knew.
About your life with Ben Gold,
Andrea said.
Ben Gold has been dead for years. I have nothing to say about Ben Gold.
"Mrs. Gold, with all due respect, I don’t believe you heard me. It’s you we’re interested in. The theme of the documentary is the affect the Mafia has on wives and children."
Ben wasn’t Mafia. You had to be Italian to be in the Mafia.
But that’s exactly what we’re interested in—the families of Jewish mobsters like Ben Gold. Most of our information is about the Italian Mafia,
Andrea Pryor said. Besides, in all the books and movies and TV programs about the mob, the wives have been pretty much ignored. But they’re real women,
she said, as earnestly as a car salesman. Why do they marry killers? Do they stay or leave? Are they accomplices or victims? Ashamed or proud? Are they afraid of their husbands? Or of their sins in the afterlife?
She spoke quickly, her voice sincere, famous.
Okay, you want Jews?
I said. Go look up Meyer Lansky’s wife. Or Ben Siegel’s. Sholem Bernstein was a member of Murder Incorporated.
We did. You’re the only one still alive.
Still alive. Andrea Pryor didn’t have to remind me. All I had to do was look at the four of them with their hard bodies and unfinished faces—and the cane leaning against my chair. But I knew something they didn’t get. That one day they’d be old, too. They should live so long. And look as good.
Ben and the Jewish mob worked with the Mafia, didn’t they?
she asked.
It’s none of your goddamn business, I thought, but I said yes and politely offered tea. The three of them looked at Andrea like third graders for permission. Andrea ignored them.
Then it’s Ben Gold’s story you want, not mine,
I said. I didn’t feel like serving tea anyway.
"No, what we want is your story as it relates to Ben Gold and the way he affected your life. As I said, we want to know about you." She leaned forward. As I’ve been trying to say, people are fascinated with mobsters, and a documentary about the wives and children of these violent men hasn’t been done.
What do you know about making a documentary? You’re no Ken Burns. You’re a news anchor,
I said. When you get to be my age you can say anything you want.
Her color rose a little. She stared at me for a long moment. Then she flicked off my remark like the 800-pound gorilla she was. I’ve always wanted to produce a documentary,
she said steadily, and I’ve reached the point in my career with the contacts, resources, and financing available. HBO is committed,
she went on, nodding to the HBO guy on the sofa, who smiled at her. Which I find very exciting. But I have to tell you. The deal’s based on your complete candor. No holds barred. Names. Events. Details.
You should live so long, I thought.
Did you know Pretty Boy Floyd?
Short Skirt asked me.
He was before my time.
Lucky Luciano?
I knew him.
What did he look like?
Oh, his face was all pock marked and he had sort of a drooping eye—
Andrea Pryor cleared her throat loudly and glared at Short Skirt. So, Mrs. Gold,
she said, turning to me with a smile, what do you say?
I was getting flattered. At her interest in me. At my—let’s face it— loneliness. So what’s the deal?
I asked.
She didn’t miss a beat. "Fifty thousand dollars for the exclusive rights to your story. Expenses when you come to New York for interviews with me. Scale for your time being interviewed and as a consultant on the set." She nodded at Short Skirt who produced a contract from a briefcase and handed it to me. The kid in jeans was jiggling his leg and lighting a cigarette.
Put that out!
Andrea hissed.
He looked around wildly.
I handed him my empty coffee cup from breakfast. He stubbed out his cigarette and held onto the mug as if it could save him. There was something in his grip, in his erect spine and tight mouth that revealed his driving ambition—the kind of raw, hot ambition that gives no peace. He had it. Political candidates and Hollywood people have it. Also CEOs. So do gangsters. I should know.