Star Crossed: A Hollywood Romance

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Star Crossed: A Hollywood Romance Page 10

by Reiss, CD


  “This is Ken Braque, Laine. How are you?”

  “Fine, thank you.”

  “I own the public relations firm of—”

  “I know who you are,” I said.

  “I represent Michael Greydon.”

  What was this? Did Michael know about Ken calling me? Did he arrange it? I shouldn’t have picked up. I was driving, for Chrissakes.

  “I’m aware. And I saw the pictures.”

  “Good. I think I can help you,” he said. “I wanted to discuss how you intend to speak to the press about last night.”

  “However I want.” I felt bitchy and tight. Though I knew he could do more for me if I played ball, all I could imagine was him talking to Michael about how I needed to be managed. Was this a baby-sitting call to see if I was going to cause trouble? “I’m a big girl.”

  “Of course,” he said, as if he’d never, ever try to tell me what to say despite the fact that spin control was his job. “And I’d never expect you to tell anything but the truth. But in representing my client, I do have to help the people he’s involved with and try to get a line on how they’re going to talk about him. It’s my job.”

  “So you can craft a response.”

  “You can put it that way.”

  I wasn’t taking him seriously, and I should have. But I was annoyed. I didn’t want anyone to know how I felt or what that kiss had meant to me. I didn’t want anyone between Michael and me, even though a world existed between us already. I was weak, thoughtless, and the fact that Ken had talked straight rather than blown smoke up my ass put me off guard.

  “Did Michael tell you to call me?” I asked.

  “No, he did not. But nonetheless, I think I can help you. You’ve been getting calls from reporters, I assume?”

  “Maybe.”

  “I can help you with a response,” he said.

  “I don’t want my response crafted. I don’t want to make any response at all.” I felt as if I was making decisions without thinking things through. I pulled over, parking in the red.

  “I can help you with that as well,” he said. “Look, I know this can be overwhelming, especially for someone with one foot in the business and one foot out. I’m not trying to sell you anything—”

  “I can pay you,” I said. I didn’t want to hire him necessarily. I didn’t want to not hire him either. I just didn’t want him to think I couldn’t pay him if I wanted to.

  “Why don’t you come around, and we can discuss it?”

  “Fine.”

  “Until then, if anyone asks, I’ll say you’re not responding,” he said.

  “All right.”

  He transferred me to his assistant, and I made arrangements with her for two afternoons hence, which seemed late to me. The whole thing could blow over or explode in that time.

  I was suddenly terrified. This was bigger than I was, and I wasn’t thinking. Everything I said would be put through the amplifier of the media. I didn’t know what I’d say next, and that was a problem. I needed to step back and think, for once, before I shot my mouth off.

  I got three more calls from unknown numbers in the next three minutes. As unused as I was to taking any kind of levelheaded action, I did the only sensible thing. I didn’t answer any.

  18

  michael

  “Were you drinking?” my father asked, popping a yellow ball with his racquet so it would bounce up into his hand. His question seemed almost self-directed. He wasn’t drinking, and it was making him tense.

  “I don’t need a drink to kiss a woman.”

  “You’re going to botch this.” He thwacked a ball to me. I caught it and put it in my pocket. “Your friend Britt already delayed production long enough to screw everything. Steven says we almost lost bond.”

  He thwacked me another, and I almost missed it. My father was a belligerent prick when cornered, and with everything about Bullets Over Sunset being held together by PR departments and sneaky scheduling, he was a thrashing mess. I’d stopped listening to his negativity and growling aggression a long time ago and learned to see the man under it.

  “Lucky genius frontloaded the schedule,” he said. “You know why? Britt. He knew something would happen with Britt. So, smart guy, but not so smart. Because now you’re becoming a risk.”

  “Since when will kissing stop production?” I said. “You’re talking crazy. The studio buys a bond note to insure a film against catastrophe. An actor dying, or falling off schedule too far, not the lead kissing a paparazzi.”

  “Public relations.” He poked the racquet at me. He’d had the only red clay court in Los Angeles installed right in his backyard. It was the most difficult surface in the world to play on, and he liked it that way. “You date a paparazzi, you look bad, and the movie looks bad. The studio can call in the bond guys. You do not want that, and I can’t afford it. This is my comeback.”

  Gareth had played cowboys, soldiers, and cops his entire career. Those personas became steeped in alcohol, fermenting until they became the embodiment of who he was. Playing the staid don of Bullets Over Sunset was a stretch, but he was doing it. He would get his Oscar, and he knew it.

  “What was this with you breaking a display case window?” he asked.

  “I paid for it.”

  “You’ve never paid for anything. And here’s what I’m saying—don’t start paying when you’re on my movie.” He got on his side of the net. “I’m tired of saying it over and over—you don’t get free time. You don’t get discretion. You need to wake up, kid.” He held up a finger like a weapon.

  I might have grown up a golden boy, but when he held up his finger like that, I was seven again.

  “I never wanted this for you, but since you chose it, you live it,” he said. “You do not show them you can’t handle a role, or they’ll make sure you’re right. Trust me on that.”

  “You need to step behind the line.” I tossed up the ball.

  “No, I don’t,” he said as I served.

  Of course he didn’t have to get behind the line. I faulted the center line.

  “You’ve never faced consequences,” he shouted as I set up my second serve. “Well, keep it up, mister, and you will.”

  The second serve was supposed to be a gentle way to put the ball in play. It should be your one hundred percent, no-doubt, do-over, least-risky shot, because you didn’t get a third chance. But I didn’t feel like using my second serve. I felt like a wound coil. I pulled my arm back, and just as I released the tension, I realized he was baiting me so I’d screw up. I served hard to the outside, right where my father was standing.

  “Hey!” Gareth shouted when the ball brushed the line and headed for his gut. He got the racquet in front of him just in time to avoid bending over in pain.

  I felt a crippling shaft of pain from my elbow to my wrist, and I dropped my racquet. I wasn’t supposed to hit so hard, and I hadn’t since college. I tried not to scream, and I tried not to even flinch, because that was a sign of not just weakness but incompetence.

  “Michael, honey?” My mother’s voice came from behind the fence, miles away, across the pool and patio, the rose garden and the barbecue pit.

  As if she could sense my pain from the changed vibrations in the air, she traversed the patio in her sensible suit and pearls, just back from a lunch or shopping. As she shaded her face from the sun, the bulge of her lips and the shine of her skin became more apparent. Her eyes perked at the corners, and the skin of her chin was taut around the bone.

  “Get your heels off the clay!” Gareth shouted.

  “Oh, take it easy, Gareth.” She put her hand on my back.

  I straightened. “I’m okay.” The pain throbbed, but it would go away. I was done with tennis for the day though.

  “He’s fine,” Gareth said.

  She rolled her eyes and turned back to me. “I saw those pictures, darling. She’s very pretty.” She smiled, raising a brow as much as the collagen would allow. “Everyone’s talking about it.”
/>   “Everyone needs a hobby.”

  “They have one,” Gareth cut in, popping the last ball into the tube. “It’s you. You’re their hobby.”

  I stood up. “I know. And you told me so. I’m wrong, careless, and impulsive. Right?”

  He patted my back. “But you have a good heart and a mean forehand. Now, is there any lunch? I’m starving.”

  “Callie put out sandwiches.”

  “I need a special soda,” he said, using his code word for gin and Perrier.

  “Gareth,” I said, stopping in my tracks. “No.”

  “I need a drink.” He cut the air horizontally with his hand, meaning discussion over. “This delay’s eating me alive. And I’m getting a transplant anyway.”

  “No, Gareth,” Brooke said.

  “I don’t need this liver anymore.”

  “You’re joking to piss Brooke off,” I said. “But you’re going to piss me off. A lot.”

  “I’m not joking.”

  “You take one drink, and you’re on your own. Do you hear me?”

  “Don’t you dare, young man—”

  “On your own, Gareth,” I said. “Everything I’m doing for you stops. Everything. You can rot. Actually, have a goddamn drink. I’ll be glad to get rid of you.”

  I turned my back on him. I got in the car a few minutes later and sat in the driveway, staring out the window. I hadn’t eaten lunch with them. I couldn’t watch him drink again. Without a movie to hold over his head, I was powerless.

  How fast can I drive an Aston Martin? Should I get a faster one? My skin itched and tingled. I wanted to get out of my body and not just feel a thrill but be it. To exist only as a levitating mass of risk and unsurety.

  The blue bag from Merv’s photo that my assistant had brought me was still on the passenger seat floor.

  I couldn’t risk my body. I had to keep that together, but everything else was fair game. Something, anything. A change. A shift toward meaning. I wanted to touch something with the blood of life coursing through it.

  I was going to chase Laine.

  19

  laine

  Tom could take ten minutes or ten hours to get me a twenty on some action. I had to get out. I had to move. At the same time, I knew moving would get me into more trouble than pacing the loft with the TV on. I wasn’t looking for problems, but I was looking for something, and that was always trouble.

  I got in the car and headed south.

  I’d denied Michael Greydon had an effect on me when I was fifteen. He’d held my hand. We hadn’t even kissed. What should he mean to me? He’d come up to the bleachers at four thirty every day, bouncing his ball with his racquet on each step, forearms taut and tanned. He was wealthy, secure, an example of the clean life I thought was closed to me.

  He’d sat next to me, same as always, his presence sending shivers over my skin. The twenty-five-year-old me laid my hand on the arm rest of my Audi, remembering the position of my hand and the way his fingers trailed down my hand and grabbed mine. Thank God I was sitting, because my breath stopped. My heart didn’t do much better.

  I’d known he liked me when he took my hand in those bleachers, and I swore that I would be such a good girl for him. I would be nice and sweet, and from that moment on, I swore my life would change. I’d gotten out. I wasn’t a throwaway anymore.

  “I won’t be here tomorrow,” he’d said. “I got that part I was telling you about. That movie. It’s shooting in Maine.”

  I don’t know what happened after that. He said something about the logistics of finishing his senior year, but I didn’t care about that because he was squeezing my hand. All I heard was that he wasn’t coming back. I don’t know how I replied, except that I was happy for him and I thought he’d be very successful. I remember being pleased that I’d kept it together, because we were just secret friends. He didn’t owe me anything.

  He let me go, kissing me on the cheek. “Thank you. I really enjoyed hanging out with you.”

  “Me too,” was all I could choke out. “Good luck with everything. And don’t forget to take a break once in a while.”

  He kissed my cheek again. Not a quick peck but a sweet, tender brush of his lips, long enough to let me feel his breath and take a quick gasp of his cinnamon scent. I didn’t believe he was really leaving until he turned a corner into the locker room and waved before disappearing.

  I waited, but he didn’t come back.

  A driver took me home at five every day. His name was Jamal, and he always brought me sweet rolls. That day, I didn’t get into Jamal’s Bentley. I skirted around it and got on the bus. I went to my last foster home in East Hollywood.

  Jake had been my last foster family’s biological son. He was six years older and sold little packets of sticky brown paste and salt-white powder. His friends called him Jake the Pillow Snake, after the Dr. Seuss character. He was home when I arrived. His room above the garage stank of pot, burning chemicals, and dirty sheets.

  That smell… I knew of nothing like it, and as I remembered it, driving across town on the 10, my eyes filled up.

  Jake was skinny and hairy. When I lived there, he’d tried to stick his hand up my shirt, and he laughed when I screamed and pushed him away. When I got there the day Michael told me he was leaving, he’d acted as if he didn’t want me. I felt so low, so unwelcome that his disinterest hurt me.

  It didn’t last long. When Jake pulled my shirt up, I looked away, but didn’t punch him. Slowly, as if braced for a reaction, he pushed his hand under my bra and grabbed a nipple.

  “You lose your virginity to some rich guy?” he said, pulling the nipple long.

  “No. Ow.”

  “Such a pretty girl. Always were.”

  “You shouldn’t,” I whispered, but couldn’t articulate what I was talking about or why. Self-hate had whittled me down to base, non-verbal emotions.

  “Why’d you come then?”

  I just shook my head, still looking at the floor.

  Maybe I had a doubt at that point about what I was doing there, and maybe I could have left. But to go where? Backward? Or was this backward? Inside my fears about Jake, a little bit of me wanted to just be wanted by someone, and that part of me wore down the bravado. Finally, after years of denying I cared if anyone gave a shit about me, I surrendered to that little kernel of need I’d ignored for so long.

  “What do you want?” he asked, pulling up the other side of my bra.

  “I don’t know” I’d said.

  “Sure you do,” he said, letting my nipple go.

  He unbuckled his jeans. He didn’t have any underwear on. He took out his dick, and it was hard.

  “You ever suck a cock?”

  Words like that were what I was asking for, weren’t they? “No.”

  He laughed. “Shit, I don’t know what to do first.” He swung his finger lazily at me. “Get the pants off. I got work to do.”

  He watched me, and I stood there, naked and looking at the holes in the carpet, while he stroked his dick and thought about what to do with me. I’d hoped, in those moments, that he’d give me some sort of reprieve, as if it was no longer my choice to just put my clothes back on and go home. But that didn’t happen. Not at all. Because I had no home to go to, as far as I was concerned.

  He gently and sweetly asked me to kneel, then he put his dick in my mouth. I didn’t know what to do. I gagged and choked. I felt incompetent and worthless. Then he put me on my back, pulled my knees way up, and took my virginity like a shoplifter. At least I felt as if I’d somehow gotten that right.

  He’d hurt me that day, and he didn’t care. Neither did I. He said I could stay as long as I gave him my body whenever he wanted. Fewer hours than a real job for a roof over my head. Because he liked me. That’s what he said. He liked me. I told myself that at least I was wanted for something. I had a place, for what it was worth. I had a place, and it was my choice.

  I’d shown up at the Hatches’ three days later, haughty, proud, and screwed to
the gills by my former foster brother and a few of his friends. I didn’t know what I wanted out of the rich couple, but I was an outsider. It didn’t matter. After that, I left for days, showed up for school when I felt like it. They fought about me. Maybe a stronger marriage would have withstood the battles, but they were already shaky.

  I ended up in another home soon after. I had no recollection of it, because I was hanging out with Jake, riding motorcycles, drinking, and thinking the fact that he wouldn’t give me drugs meant he loved me.

  And it had all started with Michael Greydon’s fingers in mine. He did have an effect on me. That son of a bitch. He let me hope. He let me think I’d be something I wasn’t. It took me years to get away from Jake the Pillow Snake and Foo Foo the Snoo, with their constant needs and rough hands. It took Tom shoving in my face a stack of pictures that Jake and company had taken with Tom’s camera to wake me up. The camera didn’t lie. You could retouch a picture and Photoshop it to death, but a piece of trash was a piece of trash.

  I knew I could get out. I was just afraid that I had nothing to get out for. I wasn’t afraid that I’d be slapped back but that I would still be an outsider.

  But I had to try. I had to commit to being better. I ran away to Westlake with Tom. Irving found me, and I finally took his guidance about more than exposure and focal length. I needed to make money, and to make money, I needed to stop playing at being a photographer. I needed to make it a career. I needed to stop screwing around, because screwing around meant I wasn’t chasing the picture. I needed to invest money in relationships, which meant going to clubs and being nice to the waitstaff. I needed to let my bitten nails grow out and dress like an adult. I needed to make the city my only lover.

  I closed my legs and got on my feet. It was the hardest thing I’d ever done.

  And now Michael Greydon was having an effect on me again. A different one. I wasn’t about to get on my back for all comers. I wouldn’t be used by strange men as a repository in the hopes that one of them would love me. But I felt that same need to crawl back into the arms of someone who would accept any part of me.

 

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