"Erskine Prescott, the
producer?"
She
asked that so cute-like, as if I had been living under a rock.
Maybe I had, but I had certainly seen news photos of the reclusive
impresario, the last of the great studio moguls, zipping about in his snazzy
electric wheelchair, the one that looks like a miniature Ferrari, and sipping
cocktails from a no-spill plastic cup encrusted with diamonds.
He was one of Tinsel Town's eccentric legends. It seemed everything
he touched turned into gold, to include, as I now could see, the platinum
perm of his beloved.
"Now what makes you think Erskine ran off with someone, Mrs.
Prescott?" |
 |
 |
"Because she's gone too."
"Run that by me again."
"Nellie Dillard, his secretary, that little mouse. "She sauntered
back my way, pulled two snapshots from her purse, and placed them right
next to the glassine.
Setting Erskine aside for the moment, I took in the full length features
of the secretary, which weren't what I would call mouse-like, but certainly
in the rodent family.
"She looks as if she's about to enter a nunnery," I observed.
"She was. Until I hired her to be Erskine's flunky. Damn that
day." |
"But what," I asked, driving down the highway of diamonds
about her neck, "what makes you think your husband ran off with Miss
Dillard? And run off certainly seems to be the wrong verb."
"Well, you're the peeper, aren't you?" she said, like that
wasn't such a good thing to be. "I did everything for that man, catered
to his every whim, saw to his every pleasure, morning, noon, and night." |