KIT REED
UNLIMITED
NOT EVERYBODY KNOWS IT yet, but sooner or later everybody needs our
services.
That is, everybody who matters. Sooner or later they come to us.
We are the best
at what we do. R [6 Star] Unlimited, a subsidiary of Velvet
Martinet Enterprises. My
company. But you know this, or you would not be here.
We take only A list clients and we
get top dollar. You can read this in the hang
of our cool suits -- laid-back ensembles in
pewter and silver, the walking
year's wages that we go out in when we do business. Think
relaxed cut, think
designer items several notches up the food chain from Armani. Top of the
line
RayBans. The boots alone! Every hair shining. It doesn't matter what you're
doing as
long as you look drop-dead gorgeous doing it.
Take the lobby here in R [6 Star] Unlimited.
Elegant. Gleaming. Testimony to our
success. Success pays the rent and I can tell you, we
have a one hundred percent
success rate.
See the malachite reception desk and the glistening
parquet of our outer lobby,
the silk Persian rugs with a corner flipped back so you can
count the
thousand-knots-per-inch until one of our assistants bothers to come and take
your
history. Get a load of our carpeted walls and the tinted one-way glass that
juts over
Wilshire Boulevard and Little Santa Monica. The glass for obvious
reasons, the carpeting to
muffle the screaming, something we never discuss at
these preliminary meetings. We are at
the apex here! Note the Brancusi fountain
and the malachite steps you mount to remind our
receptionist that you are still
waiting.
Once you have cleared the outer lobby, observe the
lush kidskin sofa in the
Gauguin room where you sit and stew, waiting for me to clear ten
minutes for
this interview.
Success? You bet. Our assistants alone! Quick and clever in
their chic black
dresses, the best they can manage on what we pay them. Phi Betes from the
Ivies,
these girls killed and died to get here and they're every one of them a size
six,
okay? And if the pay scale seems mean to you and fourteen-hour days
excessive, remember
that every one of them aims through craft and diligence to
become one of us.
The upper
echelon. Note that we are all women here. It's a policy decision. Tact
and efficiency.
Finesse.
Further signs: my office! Instead of a desk, we face each other over my bronze
coffee
table. Chinese, dug out of some tomb in the year onethousand, don't ask.
Then there's the
art: Naum Gabo, a treasure in plexi and monofilament. A tiny
Rothko. A Bacon, and if the
torn jaws gape as if the victim is being flayed
alive and screaming as we sit here-- well,
we'll get to that. A Pollock. A
Degas. Double-rubbed black lacquer on the walls and silver
floors; see our logo
inlaid in gold, which is why you are wearing complimentary terrycloth
booties
over your Guccis.
Yes I know you are a major player. If you were anything less, you
couldn't
afford me.
Now regard me. Velvet Martinet, the captain of our industry.
It's okay to
look. You have, after all, been cleared by Security. After
Accounting. We've accepted your
nonrefundable deposit, Krugerrands as per the
preliminary agreement. Naturally we had the
items in question authenticated and
the dollar amount pegged to the market value at the
close of that day's trading.
And your net worth and growth potential evaluated before our
receptionist could
even think about making an appointment for you. The balance? We know
you're good
for it.
Otherwise you would not be sitting here.
Meet my eyes! This is when I
look deep into you and see whether I trust you. I
am the last barrier. All that stands
between you and the service you so badly
want from us.
If I clamp your hands to the table
hard enough to scare you, tough. When I take
hold, there's no man strong enough to free
himself. Don't look away! Not if you
want this. I said, meet my eyes!
Do not be frightened
by what you see. It's what you're paying for. Hold still!
Quit hyperventilating. It'll be
over in a minute.
This is essential. The moment in which I make sure. Sure you won't panic,
sure
you are good for it. Sure you won't back down or attack me, sure you're not from
some
agency bent on breaking me.
More. Rapport. We must establish rapport before we can even
begin to talk about
your problem.
Now.
You can speak. Be assured that if we proceed your down
payment and today's
billable hours will be credited to your balance, which as you know
comes due
immediately upon signing.
Time to lay your problem on the table. Don't worry. The
room's been swept and
secured. Our people have been over it twice since I met with the last
client.
It's safe for you to say it out loud. It's even okay for you to call me Velvet.
Oh
yes, and for client protection, our cameras are recording this transaction.
Um, Ah. The
client sits with his head between his knees. This is so hard! The
humiliation. The desire,
fib. Ah! Before we start, could I ask you a couple of
questions?
Meanwhile, elsewhere: In
deepest Brentwood just north of Sunset,
producer/developer Whitney Ryder is waked by a
phone bleating. He swims in his
empty bed, groping for the damn thing. Got to stop that
noise! It is late
afternoon. Daphne's been gone since Sunday -- no biggie -- and he's
snorted and
popped a few things in the interim, not because he's bummed, exactly, just to
ride the wave until he hears from Bobby that the big deal is completed.
It is not exactly
nice to be awake right now. The larger circumstances of
Ryder's life have begun sliding
into place like massive stones on rollers moving
in to seal some pharaoh's tomb.
Pawing
through yellow satin sheets, he hits a lump. "Gotcha!" He snaps like a
seal catching a fish
and pops talk with his thumb, shouting, "Ryder!"
"It's me," Bobby says. "You don't have to
yell."
It's Bobby. "I was asleep!"
"While Rome is fucking burning," Bobby says. Bobby
finished U.C.L.A. before he
moved up from the mail room to become Ryder's assistant. He's
right in there
with the classical allusions. It's one of the reasons Ryder keeps him
around.
"We've lost the deal." "Fill me in."
"Drove my Chew to the levee but the levee was
dry." Never one to say a thing
just once, Bobby says, "I called our money but our money
isn't returning our
calls."
"They -- what?"
"I'm telling you, somebody got to them."
"Our
money?" Betrayed, Ryder howls, "Somebody got to our money?"
"Somebody got to our money."
Bobby rides on. "They backed off and Maxamar
waltzed in and scooped up the property."
"Maxamar!
Bastard, bastard!" Ryder growls. "Getchell!"
"You don't know it was Getchell," Bobby says.
"My best friend! It's gotta be." Yes there is a rat loose in the infrastructure.
Gnawing at
his vitals. Ryder snaps, "Who the hell else could it be?"
"He wished you success," Bobby
says like a good assistant.
"Yeah, right," Ryder says bitterly. "Right before he walked."
He's pissed at
Getchell; best buds since fourth grade in Ocala, coming up together under
the
Florida sun, two little kids with big ambitions. Move west, make it big in L.A.
Together.
Three days before the key meeting, his sandbox pally Duane Getchell
takes his marbles and
walks. "Eight bucks gets you 160 K it was Getchell."
"He sent flowers."
"Flowers," Ryder
snorts. "Horseshoe or funeral wreath?" Dead is just as dead. He
feels creditors gnawing
away to that old grade-school refrain, "Oh heck, oh
heck, it's up to my neck..."
Bobby
strikes a note halfway between hard and gentle. "Look at it this way, he's
not the only one
out there..." who hates you.
"Whoever it is..." Ryder is wired by this time, wide-jawed and
furious, wacked
out on adrenaline and crosshatching the bedroom like a retriever bagging
flies.
"The bastard is going to pay."
"Who?"
Ryder says through clenched teeth, "Whoever's
behind Maxamar."
"Don't be so sure."
"And pay bigtime -- what did you say?"
Bobby mumbles
something Ryder can't quite grasp.
"What did you say?"
"...sure it's a bastard," Bobby
mutters, frff, "um...Daphne."
"Daphne would never do a thing like that to me. I think she
still loves me."
Ryder shakes the flip-phone angrily. "I told you, quit mum bling."
Bobby
mumbles, marginally louder. "Egil Hoover."
"My broker?"
"Well," Bobby mumbles, "Daphne is
still married to him."
"Oh, Egil. Egil's a bastard, but he isn't vindictive."
"That's what
you think," Bobby says.
"Then think harder!"
Bobby is trying to find a way to break bad
news. Out of his fuzzy silence comes
the worst. "Could be our money screwing us."
"Just
because our money isn't returning our calls, that doesn't mean we're being
screwed by our
money."
Bobby mumbles a little louder.
Some days Ryder hates Bobby. He growls, "I said,
what? What did you say?"
Oh, desperate man, Bobby just keeps mumbling, but loud enough so
Ryder either
will or won't be able to catch what he is pitching.
"Fuck that shit," Ryder
shouts, even though he's not exactly sure what Bobby's
telling him. By this time Ryder has
shouldered the phone in and out of the
shower without getting it wet; he's combed his hair
and he's shaving with his
sweet little electric. In another minute he'll have to unglue his
ear from Bobby
long enough to wriggle into the Gap T-shirt and the Armani. Once he is
armored,
he has to go forth and slay multitudes. Reaching for his Calvin briefs, he
starts
with the day's instructions. Pickups. Folders to be pulled for the next
meeting. Calls to
be arranged so there may even be a next meeting.
Bobby says into the brief silence that
falls as his boss ducks into the T-shirt,
"Anything else?"
Ryder ticks off ten items for
Bobby's phone list -- the small private investors
they have to squeeze just to keep going
until their money kicks in -- and right
before he pops Bobby out of existence and clicks
the phone shut he says, "Find
out who's screwing us. Get on it!"
Which leaves Whitney Ryder
alone and silent on a peak in Brentwood. In full
armor, he stands in the darkened room with
the round bed slippery with satin
sheets and redolent of Daphne. And broods. The big
project up in flames, Daphne
gone. Ryder has thirty clays to pay up on the house or get out
and ten days to
cover certain key investments. Stones rolling in to seal the pharaoh's
tomb.
It is so fucking inevitable.
Doom creeping up, followed by ruin. And all he can fix on
is finding out who
gave the first stone a kick and started it moving.
Surprised by grief,
Ryder belches words: what Bobby was trying to tell him that
he didn't want to catch but
knows he's going to have to deal with. Our money, he
thinks.
We don't even know who our
money is.
Questions. Questions! What gives you the right to ask questions?
I just thought
maybe the deposit. Urn. Ah. Entitled me to a further explanation.
Miserable, the client
shifts in the deep sofa. This is so hard! Putting it in
words. The rage. The humiliation. I
mean, before I tell you my problem.
The need.
Woman like me, you think I don't know where
you're coming from? Honey, this is
Velvet. You're sitting here, and you think I don't
already know your problem?
Your problem. Your problem. I know more than you do about your
little problem.
Where it comes from and who did it to you. What you're feeling. Who to get
for
this. How. I probably even know exactly what you want done to him. The perp that
ruined
your life. The exquisite torture you want prepared for him.
And count on it, we here at R
[6 Star] Unlimited know precisely how to make our
solution beautiful and specific. A work
of art that you will treasure forever,
preserved in memory. Tapes if you want, transcripts.
Stills. Laminated front
page of the L.A. Times with an account of it. The whole magilla.
Which is, of
course, what you are really paying for.
As described in the preliminary, this
job's complex, but doable. You can count
on our discretion.
But you have reservations, and
since you're on our A list, I'll indulge you. Let
you in on the A. B. and C. of a few of
our major successes. Rest assured, when
we do your job, nobody but the target knows who hit
him. And, of course, our
client, which is why you are paying top dollar. When our targets
fall, believe
me the world hears about it, but only our clients know how exquisitely it
came
about or that your victim -- yes, let's just come out and say it g your victim
-- knows
the why. And who to thank for this beautiful feat of ruination.
Take the studio chief, you
know his name. His exec gets hell from the guy
because he's quit the studio for something
better. Exec quits, right; chief
gives him his blessing, right, but all around the poor
exec, new partners bail
and sure deals start collapsing. Right, the chief is out to get
him. So the exec
calls us.
You know what happened, it was in all the papers. Bingo-bango,
studio's top
bankable stars, things start happening to them. Car wreck, to say nothing of
the
fire. Forget reconstructive surgery, there goes half the chief's stable, and on
the
first day of principal photography. His biggest star goes schizzy, our
work--now that you
know, you've got to admit that one was especially creative.
And untraceable. His three
stars that bail to undergo sex change operations and
five years of deep therapy, to say
nothing of the mudslides that took out the
hundred million's worth of stuff they'd built
for Kostner's Iliad plus Odyssey:
Aeneid Days, your complete Troy plus Crete plus various
trinkets like the
genuine life-sized sandstone face of Abu Cymbal on the back lot annex:
director
says: accept no substitutes, spare no expense," you can imagine. You think it's
easy to take out Troy with a mudslide in the dry season?
So that was one.
And that fat
presidential wannabe -- white hair, bestseller, holier than us
until, sprong, he goes bats
on TV and in one speech alienates and loses the
votes of the entire moral majority. That
was our work. Can't give you any more
details because we are pledged to protect the
identity of our clients, but you
begin to get the scope of our operation?
Not to mention the
recent demise of a head of state who shall remain nameless
for reasons which I can't share
with you even though your own peculiar situation
here guarantees your perpetual silence in
this sensitive matter.
And you will note that this isn't a punishment-fits-the-crime
situation, it is
bigger than that. And subtler.
We take large steps.
So. The thing. What you
want from us?
You will get from us. It's guaranteed.
That's kind of what I'm afraid of. This
isn't a big thing, it's a little thing.
At least I think it is.
BIG THING? Little thing?
Rest assured, we tailor our services to fit the client.
I myself originated the program, I
and my friend Serena. You think we started
big? No way. We started small. All the best
things in this town start small,
that's the beauty of L.A., you can come in on the rails
and ride out in a white
stretch with built-in swimming pool.
We weren't always what you see
before you. Plush Velvet Martinet Enterprises.
Not by a long stretch. Just two nice girls
fresh from Fall River, move west to
make it in the biz; Serena's an actress, and I...I
thought I was writing the
script that would kill the world, mega-budget, mega-stars, pickup
in ten
figures. But for the time being we were only clerks in Bullocks' at the Beverly
Center.
Serena made buyer, on her way to the top as a manager, and I was selling
fucking bras while
I worked on my idea -the one I developed with this cute guy I
actually thought was really
in love with me.
Then things happened. Little things. Like a clerk in Serena's department
gets
jumped to department chief, and doesn't she feel shitty. So we deal with the
problem.
After the accident, Serena's promoted to section manager. Then a friend
has a knockdown
dragout with a customer and you know how things are, word gets
around, and she comes to us.
Serena and I deal with the problem, but by that
time we are both bored of Bullock's and we
set up a small office on Third
Street, right next to the bridal shop? You know the comer.
And one thing leads
to another. Woman standing by the parking meter outside Celine's,
fighting with
a suit in wraparound Raybans until the guy's car pulls up, the suit gets in
the
back and zooms off and his girl is left standing there crying. Serena sidles out
and
next thing she knows, bingo-bango, she's in our office. As it turns out
she's a Mafia
princess. We were brilliant.
Because let me tell you, okay, the guy in the suit is a lying,
two-timing
bastard, and if there's one thing we here at R ...... Unlimited know, it's how
to deal with slimy, scum-sucking, two-timing bottom feeders that lie and take
your...
But we
were talking about you.
Meanwhile, elsewhere: Whitney Ryder has flipped his plastic onto
the waiter's
tray at Spago. He and his foreign business contacts have just finished dinner
--
the early seating. It's so early that nobody who is anybody has even thought of
arriving,
but for the first time in the decade he's been eating here, Ryder has
failed to get a
window seat. Their table is behind the stairs and entirely too
close to the kitchen.
Instead of admiring twilight exhaust fumes above Sunset,
his Danish guests are gaping like
gummy fish in a Jell-O aquarium.
It is testimony to Ryder's precarious position that the
only contacts he has
left right now are from countries so far away that the news of his
imminent
demise has not reached them. Annoyingly, the waiter returns and after a murmured
exchange leaves with Ryder's other plastic. Across from Ryder, his Danish
investors sit,
regarding him with unblinking eyes that seem to crack and dry as
they wait and go on
waiting. Would they please, just please excuse themselves
and go upstairs to the bathroom?
The waiter returns from the register,
embarrassed. He grimaces at Ryder. There is a long
silence. A looong silence.
Finally one of the Danes reaches across the table, slipping
something into
Ryder's hand. Five crisp hundreds. It is humiliating!
It is both logical and
terrible that when he goes to the ATM for valet parking
money the LCD tells Ryder that in
both savings and checking departments, he is
functionally a dead man.
WE'VE BEEN SITTING
HERE for a long time. A very long time. Do you realize that
you've exceeded your deposit in
billable hours and we haven't broached the
matter of your problem?
No, we haven't. I'd like
to tell you everything, but I'm just not quite
comfortable.
Oh, don't get all shy on me.
We're supposed to be doing business here, and every
minute we sit here not laying our cards
on the table is costing you another
hundred. That's six K an hour, which at the rate we're
going is going to be a
lot of K if you decide not to go through with the operation. In for
a penny, in
for the whole deal, so you might as well cut to the chase and let it all hang
out for me so we can get started.
You're lucky I cleared my calendar tonight. Otherwise I'd
be on my way out the
door right now for drinks with my colleagues at the Peninsula before
dinner at a
place so exclusive that even you have never heard of it. Snuff show at the
interval,
living party favors, yes it is hot --this week, at least. If I were
you I'd get on with
this, because every minute we sit here not laying open the
spine of this critter is costing
you, so I'll tell you a couple of things and
then you'd better get ready to tell me a
couple of things.
I know how it feels to get stuck sitting on an embarrassing problem.
Slide this
way, slide that, you're still stuck on a ridge and the damn thing is cutting
into
you. And don't by any stretch think you're the first person to walk in here
with an
embarrassing problem.
Or the only person sitting here who's ever had one. I could tell you
things...
Okay, okay, I could tell you. Serena? Right, she isn't on the masthead, you
noticed,
so that's one story. There we were in our little shop on Third, me and
my first partner; we
could barely pay the rent but we were beginning to, you
know, get a leg up on the business?
A world of people out there, and most of
them are hurting. Serena and I did pretty well
nickel-and-diming, but no way was
I going to spend the rest of my life nickel-and-diming.
Remember I was
developing this script with my boyfriend, he was going to get us a meeting
and
if we could only get a meeting we could sell it on the basis of the pitch alone,
or
that's what he told me.
But I forgot to mention the best job that ever came out of R ......
Unlimited.
We're all too young to remember The Godfather, but it's on TV a lot and there is
this scene in The Godfather? Guy crosses the Don. Wakes up with blood in the
bed, reaches
down by his feet and there is this severed head, his prize
racehorse! And they slipped it
in there so quiet and smooth that he slept
through the night without even knowing that they
put this thing in his bed or
even feeling it.
Compared to those guys, we here on Wilshire at
Little Santa Monica work like ice
cream on velvet. If Saddam Hussein has that funny walk
and keeps his elbows
tight to his sides today, if every time he sees a rose or hears
somebody humming
a certain tune his breath stops, it's because of a little job we did. No
no, I
can't name the client. I can't even give you the details. I can only tell you if
Velvet
Martin Enterprises tops the pops in the Fortune Five Hundred, we have
earned it.
Serena? I
told you! Gone. Left the company. Right, Serena.
I'm sorry, I can't tell you that. What I
can tell you, I can only say that by
the time I was done with her, Serena wasn't going to
be poaching on anybody
else's boyfriend, not then, not ever, and she knew what had happened
to her and
where it was coming from and there's not one damn thing she can do about it,
shit,
the bitch can't even prove it. My boyfriend. And if I...
Sit down! Am I scaring you? Man;
that's what you're paying for! You better
believe you're lucky to be sitting here. You'd
better thank your damn stars that
you're knee to knee with a professional with enough guts
and fire to scare the
crap out of you. And that you can afford it.
All right, all right, I
know? But would you please lighten up a little?
Meanwhile, elsewhere: It's odd. Now that
he's alone in the house again, now that
he's downloading the contents of his bulging
Filofax on the Bedemeier table, now
that he's moving scraps of paper from pile to pile,
Whitney Ryder is, not
depressed exactly, but thoughtful. On the road to enlightenment. At
the moment
his train of thought is stalled at a stop midway between suspicion and
certainty.
His hands crosshatch the buried wood surface. Whole fucking desk stops being his
as of the
first. Without having to be told he's finished, Ryder knows he is
finished in this town.
Still he can't stop moving piles of things to other
piles. Sorting. Discarding. This, from
Getchell. Nothing, or nothing much.
This from Egil Hoover, forget it.
This, from his money,
but he still doesn't know who in hell his money is, much
less where were they when his
operation went into overcall. All he's got is this
phone number printed on a featureless
card, that's all, and forget about trying
it, they've stopped returning his calls.
When all
is said and done, he is left with three items. This, from Maxamar.
Note: find out tmw. who
bought Maxamar. And, crumpled almost to extinction, a
note scrawled on the back of a
grocery receipt. Bobby's hand. And on the back of
a Visa receipt, Ryder company plastic,
this other note. Daphne. Daphne's
illegible smudge crosshatched with the handwriting he
knows by heart, Daphne
and...
They've cleaned him out.
Son of a bitch! Cleaned him out and
scared off his money and now he knows that
the two of them are sitting there, wherever
there is, sitting there laughing at
him, the fucking, fucking...
"I gave you the keys to the
store. I took you fucking shopping at fucking Armani
and now..." He stands up and howls.
"Bobby!"
Everything in him solidifies: Whitney Ryder goes cold and hard. He is resolved.
Son of a bitch.
Fixed on what he will do to them.
Ms. Martinet, you've been extremely
patient. You've told me everything except
how you do what you do. But you haven't given me
a clue as to how you do it.
You...
That's the beauty of our operation. Until you state your
problem, that remains
to be seen. Our madness always fits the method. Sorry, I don't mean
to make
light of this.
But I was telling you about me. Remember, this is my business and I
am the
master of my business. Serena, you know about, but the boyfriend, the man I was
writing
the picture with t okay, you saw it. My baby, my picture! Big budget,
major studio, bigtime
gross exceeding the net and my name nowhere on it, not in
the credits, not in the ads, me
nowhere near the bank when the fucker that stole
my fucking script waltzed in and took the
front money and the pickup plus
points, believe it! My boyfriend! And me on the outside,
like fucking Lazarus.
He and Serena pulled my beautiful, make-me-famous property out from
under me and
sold it like a Persian rug and I... What?
Oh, I took care of Serena.
Him? You
don't want to know. Suffice it to say that I've been biding my time.
Wait. My light's
blinking. Call I'm expecting.
Oh, Stephanie. Yes. Put him through to my assistant. Get him
here and when you
get him here... Make him wait.
But I was telling you about me. I bide my
time. I am the master of this game and
all related operations, and you will note that in
spite of my own concerns you
have my complete attention.
Nothing that happens here happens
accidentally. The boyfriend. My scheme -- now
you will see precisely how good I am at what
I do.
He'll be here -- wait a minute, the display on this Itchy and Scratchy watch is
hard
to read -- in about three minutes.
Oh, Stephanie. He is? Fine. He can wait until I'm
finished with this client.
Then he can wait a little longer. When you think he's about to
walk, you can
buzz him in.
So he's coming in here, he'll be walking in that door some time
after I finish
taking your particulars and we have the complimentary champagne to seal our
arrangement. He'll come in that door well after I open this one and you leave by
the
Privileged exit. Right, as a preferred customer, you get primo treatment.
Oh, him?. Listen,
if he's here tonight it's in spite of the fact that he's got
zero deposit and no hope of a
downpayment. Ail he's got is the hunger. But I
assure you, I will see him.
Pissed, he's
going to be, desperate and begging for our services; hooked on his
own story and so choked
up that he'll sob it out before he even focuses on me.
Panting for revenge, you dig? Hung
up on the unanswered question.
Not the why, okay. The who. Who was his money, that drew him
out on that limb
and then pulled it out from under him. And me?
I'm going to look him in the
eye and in the second that falls between eye
contact and resignation, he will see
everything.
He goes, You. And I go:
If you have to ask, you can't afford me.