Ay, there was the rub. Jane had to put up with all those other people because people begat stuff, and stuff, for Jane, was what brought people palatably to life. It made others interesting, warm, human. It was what people kept and what they discarded that guided Jane through the confusion of human emotions. But how could Jane go along on her anonymously merry way, scouting junk in alleys and yards, on rummage sale tables and auction house floors, if she was involved in some ego-wrenching nonsense in, for the love of Pete, Hollywood? What would ever make Jane leave her happy home, in the sensible midwestern time zone where you can catch the local news and Letterman and still be asleep by midnight, and head for loopy La-La Land?
Not Jeb Gleason. Not anyone who found her through Jeb Gleason, that was for sure.
Jane picked up The Long Goodbye and carried it with her to bed. She fell asleep with the book open next to her, content with her decision to call Bix in the morning and explain that she was not interested in any movie project.
Morning came slightly earlier than Jane had planned—announced by a ringing telephone.
“Wake up, babe, wake up. I’ve already booked our flight. We’re going out tonight. I’ll be there in a few hours to help you pack appropriately. Book a haircut and a pedicure. You’ll be wearing sandals. This is going to be a first-class trip.”
Right. Jane picked up her alarm clock and held it an inch in front of her face. 5:00 A.M. What was that she had asked herself when she decided that she would reject the movie proposal? What would make her leave her happy home? Wrong pronoun. Who would make her leave? Not Jeb Gleason, no.
Tim Lowry. Of course.
2
“Out of the question,” said Jane. “I’m going back to sleep so that I can forget that you called me at this hour.”
“You are so cute when you’re sleep-deprived. Expect me in two hours.”
One hour and twenty minutes later, Tim Lowry showed up at her door in Evanston wearing Ray.Bans and carrying a vintage Hartmann suitcase. He walked past Jane at the front door, through the house, up the stairs to the master bedroom, and opened her closet.
Shaking his head and clucking, he threw a few blouses and skirts on the bed. He held up a ridiculously expensive flowered chiffon dress that Jane had bought the summer before and looked at his friend, the top of the wire hanger forming a question mark in front of his face.
“I thought Miriam’s daughter’s wedding would be a good time to experiment with a new look,” she said, shrugging.
“How’d that work for you?”
“It didn’t. I wore my old black Lauren,” Jane said.
“As I suspected, Miss I-am-so-comfortable-in-my-rut-I-will-never-leave,” said Tim, tossing the dress onto a chair. Jane served up the excuses—the phoniness of Hollywood, the loss of privacy, her fear of flying—and as Tim swatted away everything, she waved in his face the flyer for the River Grove Rummage Sale that was coming up the next weekend.
“How about this, then? We can’t go off and miss the biggest rummage sale in the Midwest, can we?”
“Darling girl,” Tim said, “one word: Pasadena.”
When Jane didn’t respond, Tim practically began dancing around her bedroom.
“If we leave today, we’ll be staying over the weekend, and this is the first weekend of the month. Pasadena City College Flea Market,” said Tim, overenunciating each of the five words. “Not the Rose Bowl, but that’s too big anyway. Time for us to see some West Coast flea, don’t you think? Old film star photos, movie props, posters, good modern furniture, California pottery in its natural habitat…” Tim trailed off and took Jane’s hand in his. “Do you good to get out of the Midwest, honey.” Tim waved his hand around her bedroom, pointing to the pottery vases that lined the top of barrister bookcases under the window. “You’re suffering from too much McCoy. Not enough Bauer.”
Tim stopped for air and looked deep into Jane’s brown eyes.
“Charley and Nick are off working and you will be lonely here anyway, so why not give this a whirl? We don’t have to say yes. We don’t have to sign anything, “Tim said. “It’s not like you to turn down new territory for scavenging, honey.”
Jane took a deep breath and prepared to list all of her fears of traveling and public embarrassment, but none of that came out when she opened her mouth.
“Jeb Gleason,” she said.
Tim shook his head.
“You met him when you came to see me at school. When I lived in that big pink stucco house on the hill? With those two blondes you called the Bobbsey Twins? Jeb was tall, thin, wore the big Panama hat?”
“Jeb Gleason, “said Tim.” Yeah. Right. A lanky Dennis Quaid type, right? So what’s the big deal? An old boyfriend. You’re a grown-up girl now, all married and motherly. What’s the problem?”
Jane shrugged. “I don’t know. I didn’t even know I was going to say that. It just hit me that if we go to L.A. and he’s a friend of this Bix woman, I’ll have to see him and it’s been so many years. He didn’t show up for my wedding. Remember? He called Marty’s during the reception and a waiter called me to the phone?”
“Sorry, hon, I was drinking tequila and acting out my own little drama with Bill,” said Tim. “I think that might have been our third-to-last breakup. The one before the one that finally took.”
“He didn’t say anything when I got on the phone. Just held it to the stereo so I could hear what he was listening to….”
“Which was?”
“I don’t remember. Really, I don’t. But it made me cry a little.”
Jane moved over to her dressing table and leaned into the mirror until her nose nearly touched the glass. “I thought it might be nice to stay twenty-one in someone’s eyes.”
Tim came over to stand behind Jane. Reaching over her shoulder, he placed his finger on the mirror, right beside her left eye. “See those fine lines there, baby? That’s from the smile Nick put on your face when he was born. When you look at him, even now, your whole face just gives in and gives it up for him.” Tim touched her lips reflected in the mirror. “And see, there’s just a hint of softness around the mouth here? That’s from whispering to Charley every night. And kissing. And being kissed. That’ll do it, too. I mean, if you kiss someone like you mean it. And I’ve seen you and Charley, honey. You both mean it.”
Tim moved his right hand from her reflection and pointed in the mirror to her throat. “Look at that neck. Still long and graceful, yes, but hmm…” He ran a finger down the side of the mirror along her neck. “Yes, maybe the skin here is a touch less taut. And why would that be? Because you’ve lived some of your life and you’ve laughed and cried and been busy singing your story to the world.
“Janie,” Tim said, straightening up and placing his hands on her shoulders. “You aren’t a pretty little twenty-one-year-old coed. You are a beautiful grown-up woman who has lived life deeply. If Jeb thought you were something back then, he will be blown away by the way you look now.”
Jane smiled and put her hand over Tim’s.
“You do have all your own teeth, right?” asked Tim.
“Okay, okay, I know. It’s silly.”
“And you wear the same size jeans?”
“Okay, I’m done talking about this. I’ll go because you want to go and we’ll find a flea market and take pictures of each other at the Chinese Theatre, but I am not signing away my rights for some ridiculous movie.”
“Agreed,” said Tim. “That would be a terrible idea.”
Jane went into the spare room to get out a suitcase and Tim quickly looked over the makeup table. He gathered up Jane’s pathetically small supply of paints and powders and slipped them into a worn makeup bag. “She’s going to need every one of these,” he said softly, shaking his head. “Should have been moisturizing,” he added, giving his own firm chin an appreciative pat.
By noon, Jane had finally managed to pack a suitcase whose contents met with Tim’s approval. He then drove her to a day spa in Chicago where he knew a friend
of a friend. Jane was manicured and pedicured and, in his best while-we’re-here-what-the-heck style, Tim convinced her to get her hair cut.
Jane had been letting it grow out from a very short experimental phase where she told people she was re-creating a kind of brunette Mia Farrow pixie. Her short hair directly coincided with her temporary separation from Charley, and Jane knew that her style choice had less to do with Mia’s character on the sixties television show Peyton Place than her own feelings of guilt. She had to become shorn and penitent. Charley had finally convinced her that although she could pull it off—he admitted she had fine cheekbones—he would love to run his fingers through her hair, her long hair, once more.
“I promised Charley,” she said, holding up her hand in a stop-sign position when the stylist approached with the scissors.
“He will approve, sweetie,” said Tim, and nodded at Buzz, the stylist. “Just a cleanup, right?”
“Absolutely.”
Jane had to admit, when she was all done, staring at herself in the mirror, Tim might have been right. Her fine brown hair, stretching to almost shoulder-skimming, had looked tired, accentuated her drawn face. Now, with soft layers, slightly spiky on the ends, her whole face lightened. Her brown eyes were bigger, her smile brighter. Jane’s hands were smooth and her nails, red ovals, elongated her fingers. She kept staring at herself, waving her hands next to her head, smiling. Inside Charley’s argyle socks, which she preferred to her own, Jane wiggled her deliciously painted apple-red toes. Although she had begun the ordeal feeling like the Cowardly Lion being groomed for Oz, she wasn’t at all displeased with the result. And her new look did confer courage.
“Hello, Bix, good to meet you,” Jane said, practicing. “And Jeb, how wonderful to see you again.”
“Smile with your eyes, babe, and take the voice register down a notch. You can’t miss with throaty,” said Tim, taking her wallet and removing her credit card and handing it to the severe-looking blonde dressed entirely in black at the front desk.
The girl in black, whose red-shellacked lips barely moved, asked something which Jane heard as, “Could I ask what she thinks she’s doing?”
“Naturally,” said Tim, taking the bill and writing something with a flourish.
“Oh,” said Jane, the translation of Lacquer Lips’s remark hitting her. “Would you like to add a gratuity?”
“Yes,” said Tim, taking Jane’s arm and guiding her through the door that the receptionist had run out from behind the counter to open for them, “and you liked adding a big fat one.”
By six o’clock, Jane and Tim were buckling themselves into first-class recliners and sipping Grey Goose with bleu-cheese-stuffed olives.
“How did you manage first class?” asked Jane. “Bix Pix Flix didn’t spring for this.”
“How do you know that?” asked Tim, holding up two fingers to the flight attendant to signal that they were ready for more. “They might be dying to sign us and want to wine and dine us royally.”
“I know to you I’m a poor antique-picking partner who needs you to make all important decisions in my life, but you forget that I’m also a detective. I have my ways of finding out about people and their companies,” said Jane, removing an olive from a toothpick and popping it into her mouth.
“You got some kind of spy network thing going now?” said Tim, digging into his briefcase.
“I Googled Wren Bixby. And the company. And her partner, Lou. They had one minor success about six years ago when they got the rights to that hot novel that stayed on the bestseller list for a million weeks. They didn’t get to make the picture, but they made money when they sold the option. A few other interesting-sounding projects in the works and no outstanding red flags—I mean, they didn’t get their start in porno or anything—but there was nothing that suggested that they had money to fly people out to L.A. first class.”
“So you think I upgraded with my Visa miles? Nope. You might be a good little Googler, but I went a step further. I have a whole L.A. network of out-of-work soap actors who are friends of friends of friends and I called around. Bix Pix Flix has a development deal with a major studio. My source told me that if a producer wants life rights, a producer should cough up some royal treatment. Sooo…” Tim said, in his best bedtime storytelling voice, “when Bix called me to coax you into a yes, I told her that I thought you and I deserved a nice trip together. First class was understood. Look, I know you’re a homebody at heart, but with Charley doing all this globe-trotting and now Nick going along with him, I thought you might need a little reminder of what the world looks like outside of Chicago and the suburbs and Kankakee, and besides…”
The rest of the flight was boarding and Jane heard a dog barking. Could one of those passengers have a small dog in one of their carriers? She smiled, thinking of Rita in a giant duffel bag beside her. No way her dog would stand for becoming a travel accessory. Rita was happy at home, with her buddy and second-best friend, Officer Miles, acting as dog-sitter.
“Janie,” said Tim, snapping his fingers in front of her face, “that’s you barking.”
Reaching into her bag, Jane found her cell phone, apparently set on Singing dog instead of ring. Since Nick was gone, Jane glared at Tim, who shrugged.
“Who do you think taught Nick how to do it?”
Jane, trying to quiet the barking as quickly as possible since it was clearly not a first-class cellular ring, flipped up the phone.
“Yeah?”
Jane sighed. The electronic barking was stilled for the time being, but her mother growled louder into the phone.
“Yeah? What’s this about you going to California with that damn Tim?”
“I’m on the plane, Mom, I have to turn off my cell phone,” said Jane.
The flight attendant, bringing them their second round, shook her head. “No worries, we’re fifteen minutes from takeoff, so—”
Jane shook her head furiously at the woman.
“They’re telling me now to turn it off, so I’ll just call you when I—”
“You listen to me, young lady. Charley and Nick need you at home and you don’t need to be flying off on some wild goose chase to Hollywood. Your dad told me what you said, that somebody’s doing a movie or something, and I’m telling you, it’s a scam. I saw this on a TV show. They’ll ask you to invest some money, and pretty soon you’ll have a condominium you can’t pay for in the middle of a swamp.”
Jane looked at Tim. He took the phone and immediately began his static imitation.”…chchchchchch…all electronic devices…chchchchchc…turned off now…chchchchc.” Tim turned Jane’s phone off.
“As I was saying, you deserve a peaceful paid-for vacation in a warm and sunny place where the flea markets are ripe for picking,” said Tim. “I’m going to iPod, but I brought you a little present to keep you busy.”
Jane read the title of the slim hardcover book. Hollywood Diary: A Life Coach’s Guide to Making It in L.A., by Belinda St. Germaine.
“Hey, this is the author of Overstuffed, that decluttering book I was reading, remember? What ever happened to that, I wonder, I didn’t get to finish…?”
Tim gave Jane the universal symbol that he wasn’t interested in what she was saying by pointing to his headphones.
Jane sipped her Grey Goose, wiggled her well-polished toes encased in first-class slippers, and opened the book. Tim had said she deserved a vacation, and maybe she did. She had tried to call Detective Oh, her partner, Bruce—she really had to learn to call him Bruce—but had to leave another message on his machine. She told him she was taking a vacation, so she should just begin vacating right now. But if Tim really wanted her to relax, why was he giving her a guide to making deals in L.A.? Ah well, who said you couldn’t have a vacation and be successful? Charley came home from his digs relaxed and tan and thrilled over whatever discovery the crew had made. Maybe she could have it all this trip. Sun, fun, and Pasadena flea. No Nellie, no dead bodies, no foot-in-mouth interviews. Jane smelled her first
-class steak au poivre heating up and smiled. Maybe a movie deal wasn’t such a bad idea. Maybe this was the beginning of a whole new adventure for Jane Wheel, PPI—picker and private investigator. She wriggled down into her roomy seat, overwhelmed with a sense of well-being, and finished her Grey Goose, known for its property of conferring a false sense of well-being on lightweight drinkers such as Jane. Maybe after L.A., her card, when she got around to having it printed, would have to be changed from “Jane Wheel, PPI—picker, private investigator,” to “Jane Wheel VIPPI, very important picker, private investigator.”
3
First Hollywood Commandment? Don’t take that teenager dressed in torn jeans loitering in the hall for granted. He or she is the future head of the studio. And those distressed blue jeans? They cost more than your car.
—FROM Hollywood Diary BY BELINDA ST. GERMAINE
Tim had made all the arrangements with Bix Pix Flix. That was why, Jane told herself, she allowed herself to drink on the plane. Tim was in charge. When they landed, he guided Jane through LAX smoothly, and at the baggage area pointed at a short round man in a dark suit.
“Danny DeVito?” Jane asked. She had been trying to spot celebrities since she got off the plane.
“Read his little sign, honey.”
“wheel,” Jane said, looking over her shoulder. “Coincidence?”
Tim sighed and guided her to their driver, who had already retrieved their luggage.
Seated in back of the limousine, Jane shook her head at Tim’s offer of a drink.
Hollywood Stuff Page 2