As I
mentioned earlier, I’m going to post a new story every week or so about Ian
Grant’s journey to Indiana, where the events of The Notorious Ian Grant take place. The first one I posted some
time ago, and it records the moment he made that life-changing decision:
This one actually takes place a short time before that.
Ian, in keeping to his reputation, crashes a party—but not just anyone’s party.
It may be he’s there for more than living it up … but either way, he’s about to
meet his match in Tony Stark.
Title: Party Crasher
Author: ozma914
Summary: Tony Stark's parties often attract characters. Sometimes they're not invited ... and sometimes they don't even know why they came.
Rating: PG
Length: 1,900 words
Author: ozma914
Summary: Tony Stark's parties often attract characters. Sometimes they're not invited ... and sometimes they don't even know why they came.
Rating: PG
Length: 1,900 words
PARTY CRASHER
“Sir,
someone is climbing the cliff below the house.”
Over the
years – especially the last few – Tony Stark had seen so much that he often
thought he'd seen it all. Just as often, he was proven wrong. “Climbing—the
cliff? This cliff?” He gestured toward the overhang railing, which almost made
his martini spill. He stilled his hand just in time, preventing that tragedy.
The voice of
Jarvis, which should have sounded unemotional considering Jarvis was a
computer, held an edge of surprise. “Yes, sir. A small boat dropped off a male
subject, who is now working his way up the cliff face.”
“Huh.” There
was a time when Stark would have found that amusing. Well, he still did … but
these days he had to consider the possibility of a bad guy, in the
city-destroying sense of the word. “Any idea who it is? It's not Agent Coulson,
is it? He might wrinkle that suit.”
“Running facial
recognition software. He does happen to be wearing a dark suit.”
“Oh,
great—it is Coulson.”
Stark
glanced back into his home. Various starlets and captains of industry jockeyed
for the best place to be seen, or lined up for drinks, while the DJ set up his
equipment. He glimpsed Pepper Potts edging through the crowd, a foul look on
her face. He did tell her there'd be a party tonight. Didn't he?
“Sir, the
intruder is one Ian Grant. IMDB lists him as an actor and author ...”
“Never heard
of him.”
“He also had
one hit record, a novelty song called 'An Apple Byte Causes Mac Attack'.”
“Oh, yeah. I
hated that song.” With a few quick strides Stark stood at the railing, but he
couldn't look over far enough to see the cliff. “How's he doing?”
“Fair, with
the help of climbing gear. I've accessed police records: Mr. Grant is a
somewhat notorious party animal, with a history of complaints involving such
misdemeanors as drunk and disorderly, reckless driving, the occasional trespass
and, ahem, somewhat inappropriate public displays of affection. A few actual
arrests, one conviction for public intoxication. Your kind of fellow.”
“Hey!”
“Shall I
take the standard actions?”
Standard
actions? No one had ever climbed the cliff before. Why would this guy …?
Stark looked
back toward the house. Wet bar, loud music, women. Beyond that, guards at the
entrance to his driveway. Could it be? Would anyone be that crazy? He turned
toward the horizon, and saw the July sun had another couple of hours before
setting. “No. Let him come on up … I'm curious.”
“How
fortunate you're not a cat.”
Stark took a
remote earplug from his pocket and put it on, so he’d hear Jarvis’ updates over
the sound of the party. When he turned to go back inside, he found himself face
to face with a blond haired beauty whose looks were marred by a deep
frown. “Pepper! Hey, beautiful.”
“So. You're
having a party tonight?”
Oh, boy.
#
It took less
time than Stark thought before Jarvis called him back outside, just as Ian
Grant climbed over the railing. Ian picked an area by the side of the house,
where he wouldn't be faced with the underside of the home's overhang. It was
probably no coincidence that from there his entrance would be invisible to
anyone inside.
Ian took a
moment to smooth the wrinkles from his dark suit, dust off the suit and his
black sneakers, and smooth out his shaggy mane of dark brown hair.
Then he
turned, took one step, and found himself face to face with Tony Stark.
Tony held
out one of the two martinis he carried. “You must be thirsty.”
To his
credit, it took Ian only a moment to adjust. Then he took the martini with a
nod, and sipped. “Finest kind, as Hawkeye would say.”
Stark tilted
his head. “I don't think Hawkeye drinks.”
“Oh, sorry.
I meant Hawkeye Pierce, from 'M*A*S*H'.” Ian glanced past Stark toward the
increasingly noisy party.
“Yeah, that Hawkeye drinks. So … hi. I'm Tony Stark.”
“Ian Grant.
I had an invitation.”
“Was there
something wrong with the road?”
“I usually
dress casual ... It must have gotten lost in my other pants.”
“The ones
you left behind when you had to flee the Playboy mansion in a rush, or the ones
you flung into the crowd at that One Direction concert?” Jarvis was a font of
information.
“They
invited me onto the stage ...”
“I'm a
little curious as to why you felt my party was important enough to risk your
neck climbing a cliff.”
“Well, you
throw the best parties. Or so they say.” Ian sipped the martini again. He had a
steady hand, and clear eyes. “Also, since I don't drink and drive I had to get
a ride here, and the only one available was my friend's boat.”
“Good call.”
Clearly, Ian Grant got by on charm, looks, and luck. “And good climb. I'll have
someone pick up that climbing gear you left below the house.”
“Oh,
thanks.” Ian didn't appear the least bit perturbed about being caught, and
Stark had a feeling the young actor knew full well his story was a cobbled
together mess.
Wait …
Grant? Stark studied the other man more closely. Yes, there was a resemblance:
The same square jaw, the same flinty, fearless gaze. “You're Charles Grant's
son.”
For the
first time since arriving, uncertainty flashed across Ian's face. “Well, I'm
one of his sons …”
“You wrote
that tell-all book about your old man.” Stark felt his face redden, and wasn't
sure why. He hadn't gotten along with his own father, after all. On the other
hand, he never sold their dirty laundry for $16.95 at Barnes and Noble.
“Yeah.” Ian
cast his gaze down into his half-empty drink. “My other two books were better.
And more … balanced.”
“That was …
were you drunk?”
“No.” Now
Ian looked back up at Tony. “Well, not most of the time—it took me six months
to churn that thing out. Usually I was just mad.”
Howard Stark
would have been a little older than Charles Grant, if he'd survived. Stark
shook his head. “Look, I've got daddy issues too, but you did a real hatchet
job on him. He must have been an awful father.”
“Heh.” Ian
drained the Martini, then carefully set the glass on the railing. “No. Well,
not always. Mostly he wasn't anything, but that's how it goes in show biz.” He
rested his arms on the rail, and gazed out toward the ocean.
“And you've
been drunk ever since.” As if Tony Stark could lecture anyone on drinking. Tony
also leaned against the railing, in time to see Ian's challenging expression.
“And you
haven't been?”
Stark
stiffened.
“I didn't climb
up come here for the party. Not just the party.”
I should
have seen that coming. Nobody scales hundreds of feet up a cliff wall just for
a free wet bar. “If you think we’ll bond over how awful our fathers were—“
“No, not
that. I've considered changing my name a thousand times. To make it on my own,
to avoid being connected … and lately, to keep from embarrassing them, which I
didn't used to care about. But it's too late for that, now.”
Them?
“Mr.
Stark--”
“Call me
Tony. All the trespassers do.”
“Tony,
you're a drunk.”
“Call me Mr.
Stark.”
“But you've
got all this.” Ian waved his arm, to take in the house, the workshop beneath,
the helicopter pad, swimming pool, crowds of admirers swilling Stark's booze.
“This didn't all come from Howard Stark's millions. He sure didn't fund that
costume you fly around in. Is it just because you're a genius that you run
around with generals and senators and Pepper Potts—really hot, by the way—or is
it luck, or are you a member of the Illuminati?”
Stark looked
down. His martini glass was still half full. He set it on the rail too, then
stepped back and crossed his arms. “What do you live in?”
“A hotel
room, at the moment. I got kicked out of my apartment after the cow incident.”
Stark felt
his eyebrows go up.
“Well, I
couldn't let it stay outside. A cow alone at night, in L.A.? Wouldn't last an
hour.”
“Right. Let
me ask you something: Do you enjoy what you're doing?”
“Enjoy?” Ian
looked confused, but Stark suspected it was an act.
“Yeah.
B-movies, cheap books, picking up women at clubs?”
“That last
part's not so bad.” Ian held a hand up as Stark started to protest. “I like the
work, and even the celebrity stuff. But I don't like this feeling that I'm not
going anywhere with it, or accomplishing anything. I'm not a bad entertainer;
I'm not a great entertainer; I'm average.” He leaned against the railing, his
eyes clouded as if he'd just come to a realization.
It would
have been so much more fun to trade zingers all night, but that could get
exhausting even for Stark. “Grant, if I accomplish anything, it's because I
love what I do. Invent stuff, tinker—even be super heroic-ish. Usually I don't
drink until the work is done … and then it's to celebrate, not to dull the
pain.” Well, not anymore. But why undermine the lesson by muddying his
point?
“You think
I'm dulling the pain.” Ian didn't look as if he was arguing.
“I can't
answer that. I'm just an inventor who got talent and luck.”
“Yeah, well
...” After a moment Ian blew out a long breath. “You know, I'm not in the party
mood, after all. I think I'm off my game tonight.” He glanced toward the end of
the railing, where he'd climbed onto the deck.
Yeah, you
already said you didn't come for the party. “I don't think you need to go
down that way. Unless it's some kind of college initiation.”
“Oh, I got
kicked out of college.”
“Do tell.”
“Couldn't
let those poor strippers wander around in the cold all night, could I?”
“Talk about
wildlife.” Stark jerked his thumb toward the house. “I'll arrange a ride home
for you. Just wait here.”
“Sure.
Thanks.” Ian turned back toward the railing. He looked, oddly, less happy and
more relaxed than when he first came up. As if he’d made a decision.
As he worked
his way through the party, Stark heard Jarvis on the earbud. “Sir, your
somewhat manic grin tells me you might be planning something that will require
a later cleanup.”
“Maybe.” He
headed downstairs. “Tell Pepper I'm taking a quick ride in the suit, and I'll
get everyone cleared out when I get back.”
“A ride in
the suit, sir?”
“Yep.”
Stark's smile got even wider. “Ian Grant seems to want to spread his wings and
try new things. Well, I'm going to give him a ride home he'll never forget.”
Hah! This is good stuff, Mark!
ReplyDeleteGood one, Mark! I rather like JARVIS' summation of his police record and "your kind of fellow."
ReplyDeleteThat's what gave me the idea for the story -- Ian *did* seem to be Stark's kind of fellow, for the most part!
DeleteDifferent. After all the effort and let a good party go to waste?
ReplyDeleteOh, I'm sure the party didn't go to waste! :-) But I was trying to show that Ian was in a transition period, from party boy to being more serious. This might have been the most his emotions had every been mixed.
Delete