The Fat Innkeeper (A Hotel Detective Mystery Book 2) Page 7
“And,” she added, “Melvin deleted a line that’s been in our contracts since time immemorial.”
The nose recoiled slightly. “Objection,” he said. (This was probably as close to a trial as Melvin had ever been.) “I was told that as a matter of course there was a line of inquiry that each sales agent had to perform. Those questions, I was assured, were to be answered in full prior to the signing of the contract. In this instance . . . ”
“They weren’t,” said Janet, mercifully abbreviating Melvin’s courtroom speech.
Janet handed Am the contract, and the group prospectus. He flipped through the pages, searched for what had caused the distress, but didn’t see anything out of the ordinary. The Swap Meat was the name of the group. They had booked seventy-two guest rooms for three nights. They were utilizing two meeting rooms, the Neptune room and the Sea Horse Hall, with several meals and functions scheduled. The individuals were to pay on their own, but first-night deposits had been tendered for all the guest rooms. The only unusual request Am could see was that The Swap Meat had requested as many interconnecting rooms as possible.
He handed the papers back to Janet. “What’s the problem?”
“Apparently,” she said, “we’re hosting a swingers’ convention.”
“Swingers?”
“I don’t mean chimps,” she said. “We’re talking about mate swapping. Multiple sexual partners.”
“How . . . ?” Am asked, searching out eyes while stretching the question. He must have lingered too long on Kate, who started to blubber once again.
“Kate assumed they were a gathering of swap meet organizers,” said Melvin, nose slightly up. “It wasn’t a case of them misleading. It was just that the right questions were not asked.”
By repeating that line often enough, Melvin undoubtedly hoped to construct a lead lining for his ass. For the last five years he had been the Hotel’s final word on the law, even if he wasn’t exactly on the track to a Supreme Court nomination. His legal matriculation had come from a downtown San Diego law-degree mill. Somehow he had passed the state bar. In a weak moment, Melvin had once admitted it had taken him “several attempts.”
Am made the mistake of turning back to Kate, heard her sobs start to redouble, and then settled for Janet. “It was one of Kate’s first sales,” said Kim. “We went over the importance of getting the money in advance, of making out a rooming list, and having the contract signed. I remember complimenting her on the booking. We booked them at full price.”
In most hotels there is a rack rate, and then a tiered tariff structure. Travelers often avail themselves of the corporate rate, or commercial rate, or group rate, or any of a dozen other enticing names that signify a special rate. Some hotels resemble flea markets more than inns, where the negotiating of a room rate compares (sometimes unfavorably) to dealing with the vendors along Avenida Revolución in Tijuana. Am had heard of one hotelier that had sought professional help for a persistent nightmare. In the man’s dream his guests were gathered at the hotel lounge, where the subject of room rates surfaced, and comparisons were made. The wide disparity of the rates proved not only a revelation to the guests, but a cause for anger. Everyone thought they had the “special special,” just as everyone thinks he knows where the pea is in a shell game. Fueled by righteous indignation, the guests began to riot. After breaking glasses and ravaging the bar, the lynch mob converged on the lobby. The hotelier apparently always awakened just as his office was being stormed.
“Why wasn’t a history done on this group?” asked Am.
Before a hotel accepts business, it wants to make sure potential clients are solvent. Hotels also like to be reassured that their property will still be standing by the time the group leaves (though Am was willing to bet that most hotels would take a chance on booking Attila and his Huns, given a sizable cash deposit). As a matter of course, sales departments do a background check on those properties where groups have stayed before, attempting to determine if there were any problems associated with their stay. Many headaches are averted through such calls.
“We did a history on them,” said Janet. “They last stayed at the Briar Inn. Their controller would only say that there was no damage, and that they paid their bill in full upon departure.”
“Where’s the Briar Inn?” asked Am. “In Sodom and Gomorrah?”
No one answered, unless Kate’s wailing qualified as such.
Am turned to counsel. “So where’s our loophole for terminating this gathering?” he asked.
Melvin avoided any eye contact. Even his nose movement was minimal. “Legally,” he said, “we are setting ourselves up for the losing end of a lawsuit if we try to breach the contract, especially at this late date.”
“Don’t we have some kind of morals clause in our contract?”
“Hotels are hardly the bastions of morality,” said Melvin.
“They’re setting up the Neptune Room now,” Janet said. “They’re making it into an . . . orgy room.”
“What?”
“I saw them getting it ready. That’s when I discovered what was going on. I went there to meet with the two group leaders, Mr. and Mrs. Lanier. They were busy putting mats down on the floor, which I thought was a little unusual. Then I noticed the sounds coming from the four large-screen televisions. Adult films were playing on all of the monitors. The Laniers were oblivious, treated all the screaming and groaning like it was elevator music, but you should have seen all that was going on.”
For a moment, Am was afraid that Janet was going to go into details, but she caught herself, shook her head, and tried to regain her thoughts.
“You know,” asked Janet, “how they say you can’t see the forest for the trees? Well, I was so taken aback it took me a while to see everything in front of me. Then I noticed that the north side of the room had four tables full of sexual paraphernalia. Some of the props are rather pronounced.”
Am couldn’t help it. He groaned.
“I was too shocked to talk. And being propositioned, twice, in my very short time there, didn’t help me get my voice back.
“The offers came from both Mr. and Mrs. Lanier,” she said, with not a little emphasis.
Am didn’t have a “tsk tsk” left in him. His mouth was dry and his armpits were wet. The idea of the Neptune Room being used for an orgy wasn’t a pleasant one. Royalty had been feted in the room. The worst thing Am had ever heard happening in the Neptune Room was the food fight between the eastern and western account representatives of a major pharmaceutical company. It was said that the east had won, but only because they commandeered the dessert trays first.
The Neptune Room was part of the so-called Seven Seas, seven meeting rooms of nautical names located on the north side of the Hotel. Of all the Seven Sea banquet rooms, the Neptune Room was probably the least secluded. It had huge bay windows on both its west and east sides, and a lot of walk-by traffic. By keeping the curtains closed, the Hotel could try and control the sights, but how were they going to control the sounds? The sexcapades wouldn’t go unnoticed. Explaining to guests would be bad enough, but what about the press? Given the questionable nature of Dr. Kingsbury’s death, Am expected the Hotel would soon be awash with reporters. Damn if it didn’t already have one nosing around. Am remembered the firm set of Marisa’s jaw. She was on the hunt for something. A sex scandal would probably work for her as well as a murder. The banner headlines were easy to imagine. VENERABLE HOSTELRY HOSTS ORGY! HISTORIC HOTEL A BAWDY HOUSE! There were production and copy people who went to bed at night dreaming of such a story. Odd how the sweet dreams of some are the midnight sweats of others.
Am offered a long and painful sigh. You expect crazy things to go on at a hotel. In some ways, hotels even condone them. One hotel had gone so far as to advertise, “Have Your Next Affair Here.” The copy was written around a display showing an ornate function, but the double entendre left room for thought, if nothing else.
Halfway into his ulcer, Am remembered that he wasn
’t Hotel management any longer. No one could tell him it was in his job description to stop an orgy.
“Why’d you call me?” asked Am. “Shouldn’t you be talking with Mr. Fujimoto? Or Mr. Matsuda? Or Mr. Takei? Or the shogun himself, Mr. Yamada?”
“We’re afraid to,” admitted Janet. “Can you see us trying to explain group sex to the Japanese?”
“They might be easier than the Southern Baptists,” said Am. That flock, he remembered, was also meeting in the Seven Seas, in a room just a stone’s throw away from the swingers. He hoped that geographic distance would stay only figurative.
“I thought of calling you before anyone else, Am,” said Janet. “You used to come up with all those clever outs. Everyone always admired how you pulled rabbits out of hats. You had names for your solutions . . . ”
“Procrustean solutions,” said Am. After Procrustes, the innkeeper who made his guests fit his beds, whether by stretching them or hacking them.
“Yes,” she said. “You always had the magic touch.”
Flattery was getting her somewhere. Am did pride himself on being the Houdini of the hotel world, pulling off miraculous escape after miraculous escape.
“What do you think about all of this, Melvin?” Am asked.
“I’m game for trying to handle it on our own,” he said. “I’ve been reading up on Japan. Did you know the United States has more than half a million lawyers, while Japan has less than ten thousand? Maybe I’m paranoid, but I get the feeling our new ownership doesn’t think a Hotel counsel is necessary.”
Especially a Hotel counsel that screws up on contracts.
“None of us want the Hotel to suffer,” said Janet.
Translation, thought Am: None of us want to lose our jobs.
“We want the buck stopped here,” said Melvin, with bobbing nose.
“No,” said Am. “You want the fuck stopped there.”
Kate started crying again, making Am feel guilty enough to commit himself to help. “How many of their room block,” he asked, with obvious reluctance, “have already checked in?”
“About half,” said Janet. “The rest are arriving today. Most are coming in on a chartered bus from Las Vegas.”
Where else? thought Am. He considered, then rejected, the idea of instructing the clerks to tell the remainder of the group that there were no rooms at the inn. Enough of the swingers were already in-house to make that strategy ineffective.
“They’ve got some welcoming dinner, don’t they?”
“Yes,” said Janet. “At seven tonight in the Sea Horse Hall.”
“What’s the entree?”
“Chicken divan.”
“Salmonella poisoning,” Am said. “If we can arrange that, it should put all of them out of commission.”
“Am!” said Melvin, horrified.
“It’s either that,” Am said, “or saltpeter.”
“Be sensible,” said the lawyer.
“All right. We’ll advertise the orgy on our reader board, and put the concierges in charge of selling tickets to other guests.”
“S-samonella sowns gootome,” sniffled Kate.
“Maybe we could reason with them,” said Melvin.
“Sure,” Am said. “Thank you for traveling from around the country, but now that you are here, we request that you call your group sex off. Just read your Gideon Bibles, and enjoy the view.”
“I can’t be a part of a Lucrezia Borgia solution,” said Melvin.
“I wasn’t really serious,” said Am. He was almost convinced of that. For a few moments he thought. Or was that prayed? Saint Julian is the patron saint of the hotel business. Am had suggested on more than a few occasions that the Hotel should provide Julian a shrine. Or did the entire Hotel already qualify as that?
“Did you get this group their connecting rooms?”
Janet nodded. “We have them on the second and third floors, with blocks of connecting rooms.”
“Good,” Am said. “That means we can quarantine them, station personnel around their room blocks to make sure things don’t get out of hand. The last thing we want is a French farce being played out throughout the Hotel.
“Not that we can afford to give them the impression that they’re not welcome. That would make them dig in their heels, and quote their constitutional rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of libido. Ostensibly, we’ll be rolling out the bordello red carpet, and act like they’re the most welcome group we have ever had.
“Reality won’t be as pleasant as our lip service. Housekeeping will have to fix their rooms up special. All the maids should have stogies and instructions to light up as they prepare their rooms. We’ll want to leave behind the guest rooms from hell. Dirty linen, and towels from the rag bags. One functioning lightbulb per room, and a twenty-five watter at that. Old socks, or worse, in strategic places. The picture of neglect should yell out from every corner of every one of their rooms.
“You’ll also need to coordinate with the front desk. Don’t connect any phone calls to the rooms. Take messages, and make sure they’re delivered hours later. Ring the rooms, at least those phones that are still left operational, and then apologize for having connected to the wrong room. Have the clerks be as inefficient as possible. Tell them I know how expert they can be at that.”
Am thought a moment. He had twenty years of guest complaints to work from. “Coordinate with room service. If the food arrives, make sure it’s late and the order is all wrong. Room service should come without cutlery. You’ll need to expand the conspiracy to all departments that might be called upon to go up to those rooms. We want everyone to appear happy to help, to show the same kind of eagerness two-year-olds bring to fingerpainting, and we want them to leave the same kind of mess. Any cure is to be worse than the disease.”
Kate, Janet and Melvin were madly scribbling down notes. Am found himself taking a deep breath. It wasn’t easy, he decided, organizing chaos. It went against his every instinct. He felt like a watchmaker smashing a watch.
“And I,” he said, “will be conspiring with engineering about how best to put their two meeting rooms out of commission.”
It wasn’t uncommon for all fourteen of the Hotel meeting rooms to be used on the same day. Accidents and acts of God had happened before when all of them had functions scheduled. Am had faced up to the consequences of broken pipes, gas leaks, fires, storms, vandalism, and earthquake damage, had been forced to find alternate space for the meetings by utilizing restaurant space, converting connecting suites into meeting space, and on one occasion raising a big top. He had done whatever was possible to keep the show going.
“Janet and Kate, you’ll need to make it appear that every other meeting room is being used. Put some bogus names on the reader board, then have them set up and arrange for staff to sit in them. Tell the Swap Meat how sorry you are, but say that you have no alternative meeting space. Act helpless and apologetic. Tell them these things happen. And keep saying, ‘Have a nice day.’
“Oh,” he said, remembering. “No toilet paper in any of the rooms. None at all. Explain there’s a temporary shortage.”
Kate’s eyes were actually dry. There was a glimmer of a smile on her face. And Janet looked hopeful. Melvin appeared the happiest of all. There was a Rudolph glow to his nose. What was being proposed wasn’t illegal, but it was unethical, terrain he was quite familiar with.
“How soon,” asked Janet, “before the accidents occur in their meeting rooms?”
“About as quick,” said Am, “as you can say, ‘Coitus interruptus.’”
Chapter Thirteen
Cotton Gibbons had a lot of rules in his life, one of them being that he never talked with management unless absolutely necessary. The maintenance man (he thought the term “engineer” much too highfalutin, and would be damned before he followed the suggested personnel—no, human-resources—guidelines, which suggested maids be called housekeepers, dishwashers be referred to as stewards, and front-desk clerks be called guest service agen
ts) didn’t trust anyone who wore a tie, figuring that a tool belt was the only proper adornment to any wardrobe. It wasn’t that Cotton was a friend to the masses; truth to tell, he was generally surly to all. But he had decided, after ten years of avoiding talking with Am, that they should now be friends. It was not a friendship which Am actively cultivated. Cotton’s sudden congeniality was promoted by what he perceived as Am’s “raw deal.” The line between offering sympathy and voicing self-pity can sometimes be a thin one, and it was a line that Cotton often crossed over. Am’s demotion fit well into Cotton’s perception of the universe, where the non-tool-users in ties tried to screw over the oppressed. That the new chieftains were Japanese was probably the greatest thing that could have ever happened to Cotton. They were the culmination of his finger pointing, the visible demons to his grasping theories. There was a new bumper sticker on Cotton’s three-quarter-ton Chevy pickup: TELL JAPAN TO STOP THE WHALE KILLING. It was not a bumper sticker in keeping with the others plastered to the vehicle, most of which had been supplied by the NRA and John Birch Society, nor was the conservation message easily squared with Cotton’s rifle rack. “I was going to get a bumper sticker that said, ‘Buy American,’” he confessed to Am, “but I didn’t think that would piss them off enough.”
Them was the ownership, and anyone vaguely resembling the ownership. There were many Asians on the Hotel staff, including Filipinos, Chinese, Koreans, Thai, Vietnamese, and Cambodians, countries that historically have little love for Japan. That didn’t make a difference to Cotton. To him, they were all the same. Am tried to explain that most Asian cultures were very different, and that he might as well try lumping Americans with Bulgarians as Koreans with Japanese.
“They’re all the same,” Cotton had repeated.
Am remembered a joke, one he hoped had a didactic theme. “Two men at a bar,” he said. “Mr. Chang and Mr. Steinberg, the one Asian, the other Jewish.