Book Read Free

Starring Me

Page 1

by Krista McGee




  Starring Me

  Krista McGee

  © 2012 by Krista McGee

  All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, scanning, or other—except for brief quotations in critical reviews or articles, without the prior written permission of the publisher.

  Published in Nashville, Tennessee, by Thomas Nelson. Thomas Nelson is a registered trademark of Thomas Nelson, Inc.

  Published in association with literary agent Jenni Burke of D.C. Jacobson & Associates, an Author Management Company, www.DCJacobson.com.

  Thomas Nelson, Inc., titles may be purchased in bulk for educational, business, fund-raising, or sales promotional use. For information, please e-mail SpecialMarkets@ThomasNelson.com.

  Publisher’s Note: This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. All characters are fictional, and any similarity to people living or dead is purely coincidental.

  Scriptures taken from the King James Version of the Holy Bible, and from the Holy Bible, New International Version®, NIV®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide. www.zondervan.com

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  McGee, Krista, 1975–

  Starring me / by Krista McGee.

  p. cm.

  Summary: Will seventeen-year-old Kara have to give up her acting dream when she learns that her audition for a television variety show starring a big-time teen celebrity hinges on her relationship with God?

  ISBN 978-1-4016-8489-1 (pbk.)

  [1. Auditions—Fiction. 2. Acting—Fiction. 3. Television—Production and direction—Fiction. 4. Christian life—Fiction.] I. Title.

  PZ7.M4784628St 2012

  [Fic]—dc23

  2012006508

  Printed in the United States of America

  12 13 14 15 16 17 QG 6 5 4 3 2 1

  To my grandmother, Marie Brush,

  thank you for your constant love and support.

  And to my daughter, Emma Marie,

  the most amazing birthday present ever.

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Reading Group Guide

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Chapter 1

  I want my parents to pick my costar.” Chad Beacon, current pop sensation, sank back in the leather chair.

  Chad watched as the eight network executives sitting at the conference table stopped everything—stopped taking notes, stopped texting, stopped moving.

  “Excuse me?” Samuel Dillard, the head of the new teen network, leaned closer to the table, his eyes tiny slits.

  Dad folded his arms. “If our son is going to be spending several hours every day with a young woman, we want to decide who she’ll be. We want to make sure she shares our faith and our values.”

  Dillard placed his palms flat on the mahogany table. “Mr. Beacon. We appreciate that you want to be involved in your son’s career. We applaud that.”

  The others nodded their agreement before Dillard continued. “But this is a brand-new show on a brand-new network. We want Chad because he already has a fan base, but—”

  “Quite a large one,” Mom interrupted. “After winning America’s Next Star, Chad’s popularity has been growing. More than we know how to handle, to be honest.”

  “That’s for sure.” Chad thought back to his time on the popular TV show. Two years before, he had competed against hundreds of other young people to be chosen by millions of viewers as America’s Next Star.

  “You wouldn’t believe how many shirts I’ve had ripped off—not that I wanted that. I tried to stop them, but holding one side of my T-shirt while a Hulk-sized girl is on the other, well . . .” Chad looked at his parents, both sending him “Shut your big mouth” stares. “Not the time for this conversation, right. Sorry. Go on.”

  “Actually, this is exactly why we’re willing to discuss this show in the first place,” Dad said. “Chad is being pulled in directions we don’t want him pulled in. He’s just seventeen. We don’t want him to give up his childhood yet.”

  “But we do want him to be able to do what he loves.” Mom placed a hand on her husband’s arm.

  Dillard relaxed back in his seat. “Then we want the same thing. Chad is a talented young man—we’ve seen that. And I know his albums have sold well.”

  “Quite well,” Dad affirmed. “But he wants to explore his other gifts as well.”

  “That’s where we agree wholeheartedly. Those of us here at Teens Rock want him to be able to use all of his talents. Not just singing, but acting, comedy; we’re even willing to give him creative license when we begin writing the episodes.”

  “Now that’s what I’m talking about.” Chad spoke directly to Mr. Dillard. “Singing is fun, don’t get me wrong. But I don’t want to be just a singer.”

  “And we don’t want that either, Chad.” Mr. Dillard’s broad smile made him look like the Joker from Batman.

  “We appreciate that,” Mom said. “But Chad is still a teenage boy. The wrong kind of girl playing opposite him in this show could create more temptation than we want him to have to face.”

  “Perhaps.” Dillard shrugged. “But we are interested in putting together a show that will be successful. You’ll be around the set. You can help him if his costar is too . . . tempting.”

  “This is nonnegotiable.” Dad shook his head. “We choose his costar or Chad will not do the show.”

  “This network may be new”—Dillard’s voice echoed in the cavernous conference room—“but we’re financed by one of the largest networks in the country. We’ve already got producers and actors lined up at our door. Advertisers are battling each other for sponsorship privileges.”

  “We’ve done our homework.” Dad placed his elbows on the table, hands clasped. “We know all about Teens Rock. We like the idea of it. But we also know you need a popular young teen star to help get this show off the ground.”

  “Look.” Dillard seemed like a deflated balloon. “We always do a thorough background check on the girls who audition.”

  Another executive turned toward the Beacons. “And we have a zero-tolerance policy for drugs and alcohol already in place.”

  “That’s wonderful,” Dad said. “But we want more than a young woman without a criminal background who isn’t addicted to drugs or alcohol.”

  “That’s not what she was implying.”

  “We’re not trying to be difficult, Mr. Dillard.” M
om looked at him and smiled. “But we take our responsibility as parents very seriously.”

  “That’s an understatement.” Chad winked at his mom.

  “Enough.” Dillard lifted his hand. “We understand your position. I think we need a few minutes to discuss it. Privately.”

  Samuel Dillard stood and walked to the large door, ushering Chad and his parents out of the room. They walked back to the lobby of the Teens Rock office.

  “So, what do you think they’ll decide?” Chad asked. The lobby was decorated to look like what he imagined the overpriced designers believed was the bedroom of an American teenager: splatter paint on the walls, retro furniture, and gumball machines sitting on a lime green shag rug.

  Dad eased himself into an oversized beanbag chair and groaned. “I hope they’ll decide to get real furniture in here. Beanbags and sixty-eight-year-old bones do not mix.”

  Mom held her husband’s hand as he helped her into another of the beanbag chairs.

  Chad looked at his parents. When Bill Beacon met and married Maria over forty years before, they became Christians and committed to raise a large family that loved their Savior. But that dream faded as years went by and Maria couldn’t conceive. Finally, when the couple thought their chances were gone, God gave them a son.

  “We have prayed over this decision,” Mom said. “If God wants you on that show, you know he’ll work it out.”

  Chad leaned against the wall beside them. “And what if he doesn’t?”

  “Sweetie.” Mom reached for his hand. “Do you want it if God doesn’t?”

  “But this show sounds so perfect. I mean, come on, a teen version of Saturday Night Live? Me and the mystery girl hosting, with teen stars joining the cast every week for different sketches? I’d get to sing, act, even write some of my own stuff. I can’t think of anything that would be more fun than that.”

  “You didn’t answer my question.”

  “Mom.” Chad groaned. “I want God to want this.”

  “I know.” Mom gave him a sympathetic smile. “And God knows your heart. Even better than you do. And if this doesn’t work out, that just means he has something even greater planned for you.”

  “So you don’t think it’s going to work out?”

  “I don’t know what’s going to happen.” Mom squeezed his hand before releasing it. “But if they come back and insist on their own choice for your costar, then we’ll have to walk away.”

  “I’m not a kid.” Chad ran a hand through his blond hair. “I was with tons of girls on America’s Next Star, and hardly any of them were Christians. I handled that all right.”

  “Yes.” Dad joined the conversation. “But we’ve discussed that before. That show was just for a couple months. And you were competing against them, not working with them every day.”

  “And you were only fifteen.” Mom leveled her hazel eyes at her son.

  “So I had fewer hormones at fifteen?”

  “You better watch the way you speak to your mother, Chad.” Dad frowned.

  “Sorry.” Chad closed his eyes. “I know you think this girl and I may end up dating.”

  “We didn’t say that,” Mom said.

  “But you think it, right?”

  “Well.” Mom looked to Dad. “It’s only natural that you might be attracted to one another.”

  “But even if you don’t date her,” Dad said, “she will influence you, and you her.”

  Having spent the last two years adjusting to fame—not being able to hang out at the mall with friends or even walk into a restaurant without being accosted—the thought of having a friend to be with every day and a place where he could be himself was exciting. Oh, God, I really want to do this show.

  Mom’s cell phone chimed Beethoven’s Fifth, interrupting their conversation.

  “Hello . . . Flora? Slow down . . . You ran over a squirrel? Okay . . . okay . . . No, it’s fine . . . No, I don’t think you should call 911 . . . No, do not try to pick it up.” Mom stifled a laugh. “Flora, it happens to all of us. It’s fine, really . . . His tail is twitching?”

  Dad grabbed the phone from his wife’s hand. “Get back in the car and run over it again . . . Of course you can. It’s going to die anyway. Flora, it’s no big deal. It’s a squirrel . . . No, I can’t come over there. We’re at a meeting downtown.” Dad rolled his eyes. “You’re where? . . . No, I don’t know anyone in Winter Park. What are you doing there? Are you sitting on the side of the road? . . . You’re in the middle of the road? . . . Get back in your car . . . Flora, get in the car. If you keep standing there, you’re going to get run over yourself. It’ll be fine.”

  Dad pulled the phone away from his ear as Flora let out a scream that sounded like a bad opera singer’s high C. “Someone just ran over it? Well then, all’s well that ends well . . . I thought you said anytime is a good time for Shakespeare? . . . Yes, go get a smoothie. That’s a great idea. Bye.”

  Chad looked at his father and laughed. “So Flora ran over a squirrel in Winter Park?”

  “That she did.” Dad leaned back in the beanbag chair.

  “And why did she go out to Winter Park?” Chad asked.

  “Because a store there sells organic wheatgrass.”

  “Of course.”

  If the dictionary had pictures, Flora Lopez’s head shot would be right beside the word eccentric. With ever-changing hair and retro-hippy fashions, the funky fifty-year-old was a walking contradiction. She was a mature Christian with an unparalleled work ethic. She didn’t even need a planner. Flora’s photographic memory kept the entire Beacon family on time and on schedule. Her quirks kept them in stitches.

  “Twenty years with us, and that woman can still surprise me.” Dad shook his head.

  Chad laughed. “That’s why we love her.”

  “Mr. and Mrs. Beacon, Chad.” Samuel Dillard stepped into the lobby. He looked like he had just eaten an entire lemon—peel and all. “You may come back in.”

  Chad held a hand out, first to his mother, then to his father, as they fought their way out of the beanbag chairs. Mr. Dillard walked away.

  “He didn’t look happy,” Chad whispered to his mother.

  “That may bode well for us.” Mom smiled.

  The threesome walked into the conference room, and Mr. Dillard returned to his seat at the head of the table.

  No one is looking at us. Every spoonful of Chad’s corn chowder from lunch inched its way up his esophagus. Why aren’t they looking at us?

  “Chad,” Mr. Dillard said, making a one-syllable name impossibly long. “Before we tell you our decision, we want to know what you really want. Not what your parents want.”

  Chad looked from Mr. Dillard to the other executives. “Excuse me?”

  “You’ll be eighteen in, what, six months?”

  “November 25th, sir. That’s six months, twenty-one days.” Chad looked at his watch. “And seven hours. But who’s counting?”

  Chad’s laughter echoed in the room. No one else joined in.

  “We’re counting.” Mr. Dillard pressed his wide lips together. “When you’re eighteen, you will no longer be bound by the restrictions of your parents. You will be an adult. We are willing to wait until then to begin the show. We can start taping after the New Year and have a summer start date. How does that sound?”

  Chad looked from the network executives to his parents. “It sounds like you don’t like what my parents had to say. Which I understand. I feel the same way sometimes.”

  “I’m sure you do.” Mr. Dillard’s Joker smile made another appearance.

  “I may be fairly new to the business, but I do know that, no matter what, someone is going to be around telling me what to do. Parents, agents, producers, sponsors.” Chad watched Dillard’s smile melt. “And everybody says they want what’s best for me. But only my parents have the track record to prove it.”

  Samuel Dillard cleared his throat. “Chad, I certainly respect your parents. And I believe they believe they have your bes
t interests at heart, but—”

  “You believe we believe we have Chad’s best interests at heart? What is that supposed to mean?” Dad leaned forward in his seat.

  “It means that we believe you think being overprotective is what’s best for him.”

  “Overprotective?” Mom frowned at Mr. Dillard. “He’s just spent the last two years on television and in recording studios, mingling with all sorts of people.”

  “With you right by his side.” Mr. Dillard folded his arms. “You homeschool him, right? You don’t let him out of your sight, don’t let him make his own decisions? ”

  Chad had heard enough. He stood. “I’ll make my own decision right now. I’m out of here. You think you can belittle my parents—and me—and I’d still want to work with you? ”

  The female executive next to Chad put her hand on his arm. “We’re on your side, Chad. We want you to grow as an artist. We want to give you wings. You are a good son. I applaud your loyalty. But you’ve got to do what’s right for you now.”

  Chad glared at the group of executives. “And you think what’s right for me is waiting so you can pick my costar instead of my parents? So you can have the final say in what’s going on? How is that what’s right for me?”

  Mr. Dillard motioned for Chad to sit. He glanced around the room. An unspoken message was sent from the other seven executives to Mr. Dillard. That man sat up, his hands emphasizing his words. “Fine. You win.”

  The disappointment Chad had felt at Dillard’s behavior was replaced with excitement. He was really going to get to do this.

  “But the costar has to be talented. This is a sketch comedy show, and this young woman will be one of the two main stars. She has to be able to play different roles, speak in different accents. Sing. She needs to have had some experience. I’m not going to allow you to bring some little choir girl in here. We’re investing too much in this show for that.”

  “I never said we wanted a choir girl,” Dad said. “But we do want a Christian girl.”

  Mr. Dillard sighed. “All right, how about this? We have our casting agency hold auditions and narrow the pool down to ten. We’re not concerned with what religion those ten are, just that they’re talented enough to star in this show.”

 

‹ Prev