Parks's tanned lean face, navy-blue eyes and tousled curling hair had already made him a favorite with the female fans, while his friendly, laidback charm had won over the men. He was talented, easy to look at and personable. In short, Lee concluded, he was a natural. The fact that he was intelligent was at times as much a disadvantage as an advantage. 'Parks, you're hot.' Lee said it with a sigh that they both knew was calculated. 'You're also thirty three. How much longer are you going to play ball?'

Parks answered with a glare. Lee knew of his vow to retire at thirty-five. 'What does that have to do with it?'

'There are a lot of ball players, exceptional ball players, who slip into oblivion when they walk off the diamond for the last time. You have to think of the future.'

'I have thought of the future,' Parks reminded him. ' Maui -fishing, sleeping in the sun, ogling women.'

That would last about six weeks, Lee calculated, but he wisely kept silent.

'Lee.' Parks flopped into a Chinese-red chair and stretched out his legs. 'I don't need the money. So why am I going to be working this winter instead of lying on the beach?'

'Because it's going to be good for you,' Lee began. 'It's good for the game. The campaign will enhance the image of baseball. And,' he added with one of his puckish smiles, 'because you signed a contract.' 'I'm going to get in some extra batting practice,' Parks muttered as he rose. When he reached the door, he turned back with a suspiciously friendly smile.

'One thing. If I make a fool of myself, I'm going to break the legs on your Tang horse.'

Brooke screeched through the electronically controlled gates then swerved up the rhododendron-lined drive that led to Claire's mansion. Privately, Brooke considered it a beautiful anachronism. It was huge, white, multileveled and pillared. Brooke liked to imagine two black-helmeted guards, rifles on shoulders, flanking the carved double doors. The estate had originally belonged to a silent movie idol who had supposedly decked out the rooms in pastel silks and satins. Fifteen years before, Claire had purchased it from a perfume baron and had proceeded to redecorate it with her own passion for Oriental art.

Brooke stomped on the brake of her Datsun, screaming to a halt in front of the white marble steps. She drove at two speeds: stop and go. Stepping out of the car, she breathed in the exotic garden scents of vanilla and jasmine before striding up the stairs in the loose-limbed gait that came from a combination of long legs and preoccupation. In a crowd, her walk would cause men's heads to turn but Brooke neither noticed nor cared.

She knocked briskly on the door, then impatiendy turned the handle. Finding it unlocked, she walked into the spacious mint-green hall and shouted. 'Claire! Are you ready? I'm starving.' A neat little woman in a tailored gray uniform came through a doorway to the left 'Hello, Billings.' Brooke smiled at her and tossed her braid over her shoulder. 'Where's Claire? I haven't the energy to search through this labyrinth for her.'

'She's dressing, Ms. Gordon.' The housekeeper spoke in modulated British tones, responding to Brooke's smile with a nod. 'She'll be down shortly. Would you care for a drink?'

'Just some Perrier, it's muggy out.' Brooke followed the housekeeper into the drawing room then slumped down on a divan. 'Did she tell you where we're going?'

'To a baseball game, miss?' Billing set ice in a glass and added sparkling water. 'Some lime?' 'Just a squirt. Come on, Billings.' Brooke's smoky contralto became conspiratorial. 'What do you think?'

Billings meticulously squeezed lime into the bubbly water. She'd been housekeeper for Lord and Lady Westbrook in Devon before being prized away by Claire Thorton. On accepting the position, she had vowed never to become Americanized. Edna Billings had her standards. But she'd never quite been able to resist responding to Brooke. A naughty young girl, she'd thought a decade before, and the opinion remained unchanged. Perhaps that was why Billings was so fond of her.

'I much prefer cricket,' she said blandly. 'A more civilized game.' She handed Brooke the glass. 'Can you see Claire sitting in the bleachers?' Brooke demanded. 'Surrounded by screaming, sweaty fans, watching a bunch of grown men swing at a little ball and run around in circles?''

'If I'm not mistaken,' Billings said slowly, 'there's a bit more to it than that.'

'Sure, RBIs and ERAs and putouts and shutouts.' Brooke heaved a long breath. 'What the hell is a squeeze play?'

'I'm sure I have no idea.'

'Doesn't matter.' Brooke shrugged and gulped down some Perrier. 'Claire has it in her head that watching this guy in action will give me some inspiration.' She ran a fingertip down a shocking-orange ginger jar. 'What I really need is a meal.'

'You can get a hot dog and some beer in the park,' Claire announced from the doorway.

Glancing up, Brooke gave a hoot of laughter. Claire was immaculately dressed in buff-colored linen slacks and tailored print blouse with low alligator pumps. 'You're going to a ball game,' Brooke reminded her, 'not a museum. And I hate beer.'

'A pity.' Opening her alligator bag, Claire checked the contents before snapping it shut again. 'Let's be on our way, then, we don't want to miss anything. Good night, Billings.'

Gulping down the rest of her drink, Brooke bolted to her feet and raced after Claire. 'Let's stop to eat on the way,' she suggested. 'It's not like missing the first act of the opera, and I had to skip lunch.' She tried her forlorn orphan's look. 'You know how cranky I get if I miss a meal.'

'We're going to have to start putting you in front of the camera, Brooke; you're getting better all the time.' With a slight frown at the low-slung Datsun, Claire maneuvered herself inside. She also knew Brooke's obsession with regular meals sprang from her lean adolescence. 'Two hot dogs,' she suggested, wisely buckling her seat belt. 'It takes forty-five minutes to get to the stadium.' Claire fluffed her silverfrosted brunette hair. 'That means you should get us there in about twenty-five.'

Brooke swore and rammed the car into first. In just over thirty minutes, she was hunting for a parking space outside of Kings Stadium, '…and the kid got it perfect on the first take,' Brooke continued blithely, swerving around cars with a bullfighter's determination. 'The two adult actors messed up, and the table collapsed so that it took fourteen takes, but the kid had it cold every time.' She gave a loud war whoop as she spotted an empty space, swung into it, barely nosing out another car, then stopped with a jawsnapping jerk. 'I want you to take a look at the film before it's edited.'

'What have you got in mind?' With some difficulty, Claire climbed out of the door, squeezing herself between the Datsun and the car parked inches beside it.

'You're casting for that TV movie, Family in Decline.' Brooke slammed her door then leaned over the hood. 'I don't think you're going to want to look any further for the part of Buddy. The kid's good, really, really good.'

'I'll take a look.'

Together, they followed the crowd swarming toward the stadium. There was a scent of heated asphalt, heavy air and damp humanity- Los Angeles in August. Above them the sky was darkening so that the stadium lights sent up a white misty glow. Inside, they walked past the stands that hawked pennants and pictures and programs. Brooke could smell popcorn and grilled meat, the tang of beer. Her stomach responded accordingly.

'Do you know where you're going?' she demanded. 'I always know where I'm going,' Claire replied, turning into an aisle that sloped downward.

They emerged to find the stadium bright as daylight and crammed with bodies. There was the continual buzz of thousands of voices over piped-in, soft-rock music. Walking vendors carried trays of food and drink strapped over their shoulders. Excitement. Brooke could feel the electricity of it coming in waves. Instantly, her own apathy vanished to be replaced by an avid curiosity. People were her obsession, and here they were, thousands of them, packed together in a circle around a field of green grass and brown dirt.

Something other than hunger began to stir in her. 'Look at them all, Claire,' she murmured. 'Is it always like this? I wonder.'

'The Kings are having a winning season. They're leading their division by three games, have two potential twenty-game-winning pitchers and a third baseman who's batting three seventy-eight for the year.'

She sent Brooke a lifted-brow look. ' 'I told you to do your homework.''

'Mm-hmm.' But Brooke was too caught up in the people. Who were they? Where did they come from? Where did they go after the game was over?

There were two old men, perched on chairs, their hands between their knees as they argued over the game that hadn't yet started. Oh, for a cameraman, Brooke thought, spotting a five-year-old in a Kings fielder's cap gazing up at the two gnarled fans. She followed Claire down the steps slowly, letting her eyes record everything.

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