“It’s on me,” Mrs. Amberson said. “Get what you like, Marlene. You, too, O’Hara.”
The menu was surprisingly heavy, bound in very thick pieces of leather. The food on it was fairly normal—just some sandwiches and snacks—all stupidly expensive, as she had figured. This was odd…being taken out to a place like this for lunch, by a guest, no less. She was supposed to be doing things for Mrs. Amberson, not the other way around. She quickly picked the cheapest thing and said water was fine. Marlene had no such compunctions. She ordered a plate of the house special miniburgers and a nonalcoholic pina colada with extra cherries.
“A girl who knows what she wants,” Mrs. Amberson said.
“Can I go make a call while it’s coming?” she asked.
Oh, yes. The fifteen-year-old rule did not apply to Marlene. She’d had her cell phone for years. The excuse was that she needed it to call home when she was in the hospital, which was a pretty good excuse, but still.
“Go right ahead,” Mrs. Amberson said. “I have some things to discuss with your sister.”
Marlene skulked over to an empty sofa on the other side of the room, far from them.
“I’m sorry,” Scarlett said. “She’s just a little…”
“You are an interesting bunch,” Mrs. Amberson cut in. “And you don’t have to apologize. I hope you don’t mind that we’re meeting at another hotel. No offense to yours, but this one has a pedigree and a fabulous bar.”
“You said this was your first time in New York in a while?” Scarlett asked, out of a sense of obligation.
Mrs. Amberson smiled wryly. She reached for her cigarette case, then seemed to remember that she wasn’t permitted to smoke inside. She dropped it back into her purse with disappointment.
“I used to live here,” she said, “some time ago. Back during the glam and the disco and the punk. But I was mostly a Broadway girl.”
“Broadway?” Scarlett repeated. “You should talk to my brother. He’s an actor. He’s trying to get on Broadway.”
“Sweetheart,” Mrs. Amberson said, “a quarter of the people in this town are trying to get on Broadway, another quarter have been.”
It wasn’t really clear what Scarlett was supposed to take from that remark—if it was meant to be reassuring, or insulting, or purely informational. Mrs. Amberson had a very disconcerting habit of making everything sound semi-insulting.
“School’s out, right? So, what do you do? Do you have some kind of…camp or something?”
“No,” Scarlett said. “Just work.”
“Work?” she laughed. “Your family owns a hotel. And you’re wearing a Dior dress, I might point out.”
“The dress is my sister’s,” Scarlett said, unable to hide her annoyance. “It was a gift. We are the opposite of rich.”
As soon as she said it, Scarlett bit her lip. Maybe it wasn’t the best idea to advertise to the new guest that they weren’t exactly the most successful family in the city. But Mrs. Amberson looked intrigued. She sat back and stirred her Bloody Mary until her celery cracked in half where she had chomped into it.
“Let me guess,” she said. “Does the dress have anything to do with the owner of that car I saw you getting into this morning?”
“It’s from my sister’s boyfriend,” Scarlett said. “That was his car.”
“Ah.” She stirred the Bloody Mary for a moment, looking very pleased with herself. “The opposite of rich is the best thing to be, anyway. There’s nothing like working for what you want. It’s the only way.”
This seemed odd coming from a woman who was clearly of the rich persuasion. But maybe she had worked for it. Mrs. Amberson drummed her nails on her lap for a moment and gazed at Scarlett.
“So,” she said, “what do you do with your time?”
That was a good question, one for which Scarlett didn’t really have an answer. So she went with her most recent idea.
“I write.”
“Write?” Mrs. Amberson said. “Very ambitious. I like it. And you’re certainly in the right place. Why, this hotel…do you know what it’s famous for?”
“The Algonquin Round Table,” Scarlett said. “The group of writers who used to meet here.”
To be fair, hotel lore was somewhat of a specialty in the Martin family, but Scarlett would have known that anyway.
“A reader,” she said, impressed. “And who said the book is dead?”
Then she seemed to lose interest in the whole matter with a massive yawn. She fished around in her purse for a pen and a notebook, and spent a few minutes scrawling. Then she fished around some more, producing some strange multicolored bills.
“Baht, baht, baht…here we are.”
Dollars followed. She pushed them toward Scarlett.
“Here’s money for the check, and for that tea, when you get the chance. Keep the rest—I’ll be sending you out on errands, I’m sure. That will cover them for a while. I’m going to yoga. See you later.”