18

P eter ran into Stone’s office, breathless. “I think I got in!” he shouted. “Miss Covington was just great, and she made the headmaster, Mr. Golden, come up to her apartment to meet me!”

Stone helped him off with his coat and steered him to the sofa. “Sit down and take a few deep breaths,” he said, and got the boy a bottle of water from the fridge.

Peter gave him a blow-by-blow account of his meeting. “I’m going to the school tomorrow morning. They said you and Mom could come, too!”

“I’m available,” Stone said, “and I’m sure your mother is, too.”

That evening they attended The Lion King, which Stone liked much better than he thought he would, and they dined at Sardi’s. Stone explained the history of the restaurant, and they played at recognizing the faces in the caricatures hung in rows on the walls. Peter did better than Stone.


Later, as they climbed into bed, Stone pulled Arrington close to him. “I love you,” he said.

“I love you, too.”

“Good. Will you marry me?”

She pushed him back and looked at him. “Stone, are you just trying to make an honest woman of me?”

“Among other things. In addition to all the other good reasons for getting married, I don’t think Peter ought to have to explain our relationship to people.”

“What about this separate living in New York and Virginia?”

“That’s still to be negotiated, after we’ve settled the basic question.”

“Yes, I’ll marry you,” she said, “gladly and with enthusiasm.” They kissed for a long time.

Finally, Stone broke free. “Wait right here,” he said, getting up.

“Did you think I was going somewhere?”

Stone padded across the bedroom to his dressing room, where he pushed back some suits and opened his safe. He felt around at the rear of the steel box until he found it, then he locked the safe, went back to Arrington, and handed her the box.

She looked at him, mystified, then opened it, revealing the ring inside, along with a matching diamond wedding ring.

“It’s not as big as your old one,” Stone said, “but it’s more, ah, tasteful.”

“It’s gorgeous,” she said. “When did you buy this?”

“Before our planned trip to the islands,” he replied. “I had planned to give it to you when we were in St. Marks, but we didn’t quite make it there, at least, not together. It’s been in my safe ever since.”

Arrington slipped it on. “It’s perfect. What is it, six carats?”

“Five and a bit, nearly flawless.”

“You couldn’t afford this in those days.”

“I managed. Now it seems like a good investment; it would cost five times as much now.”

She sat up in bed next to him, naked, looking nymph-like, looking at her ring on her finger. “We have some things to work out.”

“Yes, we do. Before we start, remember that I have a career in New York, more than ever.”

“I am cognizant of that,” she said. “But you have to remember that I’m building a new house, and that it’s almost finished. I have work to do there, and I’ll want to spend a lot of time there. I admit, I’m enjoying New York more than I did when I last lived here, and I love your house, too.”

“You have a fast airplane,” he said. “You can come and go as you wish. I hope you’ll miss me, though.”

She sighed. “I’m sure I will. And I think we should go ahead with the hotel project in Los Angeles.”

“All right.” Arrington’s house in Bel-Air rested on eighteen acres, and Stone had put together a plan to develop it as a hotel. “Do you think you’ll have to spend a lot of time there?”

“No, I don’t. I’ll make the architects and landscapers come to New York or Virginia with their plans, and I’ll try not to go until my house there is finished.” Part of the deal was that the developers would build her a house on the hotel grounds.

“Sounds good.”

“You and Woodman amp; Weld have done a superb job of putting my affairs in order. That’s why I think I can go ahead with the project.”

“On behalf of Woodman amp; Weld, I thank you. You have a lot to thank Mike Freeman for, too. He’s put together a great group of investors and brought in the hotel management group, too.”

“I’ll write him a note on my best stationery,” she said.

“Order some new stationery tomorrow,” Stone said.

“That brings up another problem, a very big one,” she said.

“Stationery?”

“Yes. I cannot be Arrington Barrington.”

Stone burst out laughing. “This could wreck the whole thing, couldn’t it?”

“It certainly could.”

“I have a solution.”

“I hope so. Tell me.”

“Your maiden name is Carter; call yourself Arrington Carter Barrington. You could even hyphenate it, if you’re feeling posh.”

“Arrington Carter Barrington. That makes all the difference, doesn’t it?”

“All you needed was a little air between the two names.”

“Lots of people use names like that these days,” she said, repeating it.

“They do, don’t they?”

“When do you want to get married?”

“Well, for purposes of our visit to our son’s new school tomorrow, I think we should style ourselves Mr. and Mrs.”

“Good idea.”

“After we see the school, we can run down to City Hall and pick up a license, then we can speak the vows at our leisure.”

“Listen, Stone, we have to be very careful, very private about this. I don’t want to see stories in the newspapers about us. That might make things difficult for Peter, if he has to start explaining his new name to people.”

“We’ll do it as secretly as possible, and let people find out as it comes up.”

“You’ll want Dino for best man, won’t you?”

“Yes. Whom do you want for maid of honor?”

“I don’t know; I’ll have to think about it. I don’t have a lot of girlfriends.”

“No rush.”

She stretched out in his arms again. “Arrington Carter-Barrington,” she said. “With a hyphen. Will you be Stone Carter-Barrington?”

“Ah, no.”

“Oh, all right.” She kissed him for a long time, then nature took its course.

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