Agent
to the Stars
John
Scalzi
Table of Contents and Other Stuff
"...a remarkably intelligent first-contact yarn,
this book is absurd, funny, and satirically perceptive." -- Booklist, 5/15/05
Own a signed, limited hardcover edition of this novel!
Details below, after the Table of Contents.
Introduction
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
Legal Notes: This work is copyrighted by John Scalzi.
The novel is freely given and may be freely distributed on a non-commercial
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novel Old Man's War.
Introduction
Hi there.
In the summer of 1997, I was 28 years old, and I
decided that after years of thinking about writing a novel, I was simply going
to go ahead and write one. There were two motivations for doing so. First, I
was simply curious if I could; I'd had up to that time a reasonably successful
life as a writer, but I'd never written anything longer than ten pages in my
life outside of a classroom setting. Two, my ten-year high school reunion was
coming up, and I wanted to be able to say I'd finished a novel just in case
anyone asked (they didn't, the bastards).
In sitting down to write the novel, I decided to make
it easy on myself. I decided first that I wasn't going to try to write
something near and dear to my heart, just a fun story. That way, if I screwed
it up (which was a real possibility), it wasn't like I was screwing up the One
Story That Mattered To Me. I decided also that the goal of writing the novel
was the actual writing of it -- not the selling of it, which is usually the
goal of a novelist. I didn't want to worry about whether it was good enough to
sell; I just wanted to have the experience of writing a story over the length
of a novel, and see what I thought about it. Not every writer is a novelist; I
wanted to see if I was.
Making these two decisions freed me from a lot of the
usual angst and pain that comes from writing a first novel. This was in all
respects a "practice" novel -- a setting for me to play with the form
to see what worked, and what didn't, and what I'd need to do to make the next
novel worth selling.
It worked. I picked a fun, humorous story -- aliens
from another world decide to get an agent -- and I just let it take me where it
wanted to go. I banged out the chapters on the weekends, using the weekdays to
let my mind figure out what to do next. The writing was fun, and for the most
part it was easy, and in three months, the whole thing was done (and just in
time for my high-school reunion).
Once the novel was finished, I decided, what the heck,
I might as well try to sell it. This was not particularly successful. The
agents I shopped it to liked the writing, but said humorous SF was hard place;
the publishers liked the writing but said humorous SF was hard to sell. I
wasn't terribly put out about this; this was a practice novel, after all. But
on the other hand I thought it was good enough to let other people see it.
So in early 1999, I decided to put it online as a
"shareware novel." The premise was simple: People could read it, and
if they liked it, they could send me a dollar, or whatever sum they liked (even
if that sum was zero). If they didn't like it, well, clearly, they wouldn't
have to send me anything. It was a no-risk proposition for the reader. I didn't
expect to see a dime from it, but as it turns out, over five years I made about
$4,000 (well, I think it was about that much. I stopped counting after a while.
I know I made enough to buy a laptop and lots of pizzas. More than enough).
Fast forward to today. My second novel, Old Man's War,
did indeed sell to a publisher, thanks in no small part to the experience
earned writing this novel. And between the writing of this novel and the
publication of that one, five other books slipped out of my brain, due in some
measure to my confidence that I could write book-length works, be they fiction
or non-fiction. In a sense, this novel is the midwife to every book since. For
this reason alone, it holds a special place in my heart. It doesn't hurt that
it's a fun story, too.
And now here it is for you to read. I'm no longer
soliciting a dollar if you enjoy the novel; the story has long since proved its
worth in that respect. I offer it freely to give new readers a sample of my
writing (perchance to tempt them to pick up one of the other books), and to say
"thanks" to those who picked up another of my books and were curious
enough about the author to find their way here. I hope you enjoy reading it as
much as I enjoyed writing it, and have enjoyed all the writing since.
John Scalzi
December 8, 2004
Chapter One
"Fourteen million and 15% of the gross? For
Michelle Beck? You're out of your fucking mind, Tom."
Headsets are a godsend; they allow you to speak on the
phone while leaving your hands free for the truly important things. My hands
were currently occupied with a blue rubber racquetball, which I was lightly
bouncing off the pane of my office window. Each quiet thock left a tiny imprint
on the glass. It looked like a litter of poodles had levitated six feet off the
ground and schmooged their noses against the window. Someone would eventually
have to wipe them all off.
"I've had my medication for today, Brad," I
said. "Believe me, 14 million and 15 points is a perfectly sane figure,
from my client's point of view."
"She's not worth anywhere near that much,"
Brad said. "A year ago she was paid $375,000, flat. I know. I wrote the
check."
"A year ago, Summertime Blues hadn't hit the
theaters, Brad. It's now $220 million dollars later. Not to mention your own
Murdered Earth -- $85 million for perhaps the worst film in recent history. And
that's before foreign, where no one will notice that there's no plot. I'd say
you got your one cheap taste. Now you've gotta pay."
"Murdered Earth wasn't that bad. And she wasn't
the star."
"I quote Variety," I said, catching the ball
left-handed for the briefest of seconds before hurling it back against the
glass, "'Murdered Earth is the sort of film you hope never makes it to
broadcast television, because nearby aliens might pick up its broadcast signal
and use it as an excuse to annihilate us all.' That was one of the nicer
comments. And if she wasn't the star, why did you plaster her all over the
posters and give her second billing?"
"What are you all about?" Brad said. "I
remember you practically doing me for that artwork and billing."
"So you're saying you'll do anything I say?
Great! Fourteen million and 15% of the gross. Gee, that was easy."
The door opened. I turned away from the window to face
my desk. Miranda Escalon, my administrative assistant, entered my office and
slipped me a note. Michelle just called, it read. Remember that you have to get
them to pay for her hairdresser and makeup artist.
"Look, Tom," Brad said. "You know we
want Michelle. But you're asking too much. Allen is getting $20 million and 20%
of the gross. If we give Michelle what she wants, that's $35 million and a
third of the gross right there. Where do you suggest we might make a
profit?"
$14 million, she can pay for her own damn hair, I
wrote on the pad. Miranda read it and raised her eyebrows. She left the room.
The odds of her actually giving that message to Michelle were unimaginably
remote. She's not paid to do everything I say -- she's paid to do everything I
should say. There's a difference.
"I have two points to make here," I said,
turning my attention back to Brad. "First: Allen Green isn't my client. If
he were, I'd be endlessly fascinated by the amount of money you're throwing to
him. But he is not. Therefore, I could not possibly give two shits about what
you're handing him. My responsibility is to my client and getting a fair deal
for her. Second: $20 million for Allen Green? You're an idiot."
"Allen Green is a major star."
"Allen Green was a major star," I said,
"When I was in high school. I'm about to go back for my 10th year reunion.
He's been out in the wilderness for a long time, Brad. Michelle, on the other
hand, is a major star. Right now. $300 million in her last two films. Fourteen
million is a bargain."
The door opened. Miranda popped her head in. She's
back, she mouthed.
"Tom," Brad began.
"Hold on a second, Brad. The woman herself is on
the other line." I cut him off before he could say anything.
"What?" I said to Miranda.
"Miss Thing says she has to talk to you right now
about something very important that can't wait."
"Tell her I'm already working on the
hairdresser."
"No, it's even more important than that,"
Miranda said. "From the sound of it, it may be the most important thing
ever in the history of mankind. Even more important than the invention of
liposuction."
"Don't be mocking liposuction, Miranda. It has
extended the career of many an actress, thus benefiting their agents, allowing
them to pay your salary. Liposuction is your friend."
"Line two," Miranda said. "Let me know
if fat-sucking is toppled."
I punched the button for line two. Ambient street
noise filled my earphones. Michelle was undoubtedly careening along Santa
Monica Boulevard.
"Michelle," I said. "I'm trying to make
you very rich. Whatever it is, make it quick."
"Ellen Merlow got Hard Memories." Michelle
said. "I thought I was in the running for that. I thought I had it."
"Don't feel too bad about it, Michelle," I
said. "Everyone was up for that one. If you didn't get it, that puts you
in there with Jessica Lange and Meryl Streep. You're in good company. Besides,
the pay wasn't that good."
I heard a short brake squeal, followed by a horn and
some muffled yelling. Michelle had cut someone off. "Tom, I need roles
like that, you know? I don't want to be doing Summertime Blues for the next ten
years. This role would have helped me stretch. I want to work on my
craft."
At the word craft, I mimed stabbing myself in the eye.
"Michelle, right now you're the biggest female star in Hollywood. Let's
work with that for a couple of movies, okay? Get a nice nest egg. Your craft
will still be there later."
"I'm right for this role, Tom."
"The role is a 40ish Jewish woman victimized in
the Warsaw ghetto and Treblinka, who then fights racism in the United
States," I said. "You're 25. And you're blonde." And you think
Treblinka is a shop on Melrose. I kept that last thought in my head. No point
confusing her.
"Jessica Lange is blonde."
"Jessica Lange also has two Oscars," I said.
"So does Ellen, for that matter. One in each acting category. And she's
also not 25, or blonde. Michelle, let it go. If you want to work on your craft,
we can get you into some live theater. That's craft. Craft up the wazoo.
They're doing Doll's House over at the Dorothy Chandler. You'll love it."
"Tom, I want that part."
"We'll talk about it later, Michelle. I've got to
get back to Brad. Gotta go. We'll talk soon."
"Remember to tell him about the hair--" I
clicked her off and switched Brad back on. "Sorry, Brad."
"I hope she was telling you not to blow this
offer by asking for too much," Brad said.
"Actually, she was telling me about another
project she's really passionate about," I said. "Hard Memories."
"Oh, come on," Brad said. "She's a
little young and blonde to be playing Yentl, isn't she? Anyway, Ellen Merlow
just got that part. Read it in the Times today."
"Since when does the Times get anything right?
Michelle's a little young for the part, yes, but that's what makeup is for.
She's a draw. Could get a whole other audience for serious drama."
Brad snorted. "She won't be getting fourteen
million for that," he said. "That's their entire budget."
"No, but she'll be working on her craft," I
said. I popped the ball up and down on my desk. "The Academy eats that
stuff up. It's a nomination, easy. Like Cher in Silkwood." Sometimes I
can't believe what comes out of my own mouth.
But it was working. I could hear Brad weighing the
options in his mind. The project at hand was the sequel to Murdered Earth --
called, in a burst of true creativity, Earth Resurrected. They had a problem:
they killed off the hero in the first film. Which as just as well, since Mark
Glavin, who played him, was a loser who was well on his way to replicating the
career arc of Mickey Rourke.
So when it came to the sequel, they had to build it
around Michelle, whose character managed to survive. The script had been
written, the casting completed, and the pre-production was rolling along under
a full head of steam. Stopping now to recast or rewrite was not an option. They
were over a barrel -- they knew it and I knew it. What we were arguing about
now was the size of the barrel.
Miranda's head popped through the door again. I glared
at her. She shook her head. Not her, she mouthed. Carl.
I set the ball down. When? I mouthed.
Three minutes, she mouthed.
"Brad, listen," I said. "I've got to
get -- I've just been told I have a meeting with Carl. He's going to want to
know where we stand on this. Hard Memories has about wrapped up its casting. We
have to tell them one thing or another. I have to tell Carl one thing or
another."
I could hear Brad counting in his head.
"Fuck," he said, finally. "Ten million and ten percent."
I glanced down at my watch "Brad, it's been a
pleasure talking to you. I hope that my client can work with you again some at
some point in the future. In the meantime, I wish you and the other Murdered
Earth producers the best of success. We're going to miss being a part of that
family."
"You bastard," Brad said. "Twelve five,
salary and percentage. That's it. Take it or don't."
"And you hire her hair and makeup people."
Brad sighed. "Fine. Why the hell not. Allen's
bringing his people. It'll be one big party. We'll all put on pancake together
and then get a weave."
"Well, then, we have a deal. Courier over the
contract and we'll start picking at it. And remember we still need to wrangle
about merchandising."
"You know, Tom," Brad said, "I remember
when you were a nice kid."
"I'm still a nice kid, Brad," I said.
"It's just now I've got clients that you need. Chat with you soon." I
hit the phone button and looked at my watch.
I just closed the biggest deal of the year to date,
earned one and a quarter million for my company and myself, and still had 90
seconds before the meeting with Carl. More than enough time to pee.
When you're good, you're good.
Chapter Two
I came out of the bathroom with 30 seconds left on the
ticker, and started walking briskly towards the conference room. Miranda was
trotting immediately behind.
"What's the meeting about?" I asked, nodding
to Drew Roberts as I passed his office.
"He didn't say," Miranda said.
"Do we know who else is in the meeting?"
"He didn't say," Miranda said.
The second-floor conference room sits adjacent to
Carl's office, which is at the smaller end of our agency's vaguely egg-shaped
building. The building itself has been written up in Architectural Digest,
which described it as a "Four-way collision between Frank Gehry, Le
Corbousier, Jay Ward and the salmonella bacteria." It's unfair to the
salmonella bacteria. My office is stacked on the larger arc of the egg on the first
floor, along with the offices of all the other junior agents. After today, a
second-floor, little-arc office was looking somewhat more probable in the
future. I was humming the theme to "The Jeffersons" as Miranda and I
got to the door of the conference room and walked through.
In the conference room sat Carl, an aquarium, and a
lot of empty chairs.
"Tom," said Carl. "Good of you to
come."
"Thanks, Carl," I said, "Good of you to
have the meeting." I then turned to the table to consider probably the most
important decision of the meeting: Where to sit.
If you sit too close to Carl, you will be pegged as an
obsequious, toadying suck-up. Which is not all that bad. But it will also mean
you run the risk of depriving a more senior agent his rightful position at the
table. Which is very bad. Promising agency careers had been brutally derailed
for such casual disregard of one's station.
On the other hand, if you sit too far away, it's a
signal that you want to hide, that you haven't been getting your clients the
good roles and the good money; thus you've become a drag on the agency. Agents
smell fear like sharks smell wounded sea otter pups. Soon your clients will be
poached from you. You'll then have nothing to do but stare at your office walls
and drink antifreeze until you go blind.
I sat about halfway down the table, slightly closer to
Carl than not. What the hell. I earned it.
"Why are you sitting so far away?" Carl
asked.
I blinked.
"I'm just saving space for the other folks in the
meeting," I said. Had he heard about the Michelle Beck deal already? How
does he do it? Has he tapped my phone? I goggled frantically at Miranda, who
was standing behind me, notepad at ready. She shot me a look that said, don't
ask me. I'm just here to take shorthand.
"That's very considerate of you, Tom," Carl
said. "But no one else is coming. In fact, if you don't mind, I'd prefer
it if Ms. Escalon wouldn't mind excusing us as well."
This would be the point where I casually dismissed my
assistant and turned suavely to Carl, ready for our executive pow-wow. What I
ended up doing was staring blankly. Fortunately, Miranda was on the ball.
"Gentlemen," she said, excusing herself. On her way out, she dug the
spike of her shoe into my pinky toe, and snapped me back to reality. I stood up,
looking for where to sit.
"Why don't you sit here," Carl said, and
pointed to a chair on the far side of the table, next to the aquarium.
"Great. Thanks," I said. I walked to the
other side of table and sat down. I stared at Carl. He stared back. He had a
little smile on his face.
There are legends in the world of agents. There's Lew
Wasserman, the agent of his day, who went over to the other side of the movie
business and thrived at Universal Pictures. There's Mike Ovitz, who went over
to the other side and exploded, humiliatingly, at Disney.
And then there's Carl Lupo, my boss, who went over to
the other side, took Century Pictures from a schlock-horror house to the
biggest studio in Hollywood in just under a decade and then, at the height of
his reign, came back over into agency. No one knows why. It scares the Hell out
of everyone.
"I'm sorry," I said.
"What?" Carl said. Then he almost
immediately laughed. "Relax, Tom. I just want to have a little chat. It's
been a while since we've talked."
The last time Carl and I had talked directly to each
other in a non-meeting setting was three years earlier. I had just graduated
from the mailroom to the agency floor, where I shared a pod with another
mailroom escapee. My client list was a former teen idol, then in his 30s and a
semi-regular at intervention sessions, and a cute but brainless 22-year old
UCLA cheerleader named Shelly Beckwith. Carl had dropped by, shook hands with
me and my podmate, and blathered pleasantries with us for exactly two minutes
and thirty seconds before moving on to the next pod to do the same thing.
Since then, the former teen idol strangled in his own
saliva, my podmate imploded from stress and left the agency to become a
Buddhist monk in Big Bear, Shelly Beckwith became Michelle Beck and got lucky
with two hits in a row, and I got an office. It's a strange world.
"How are things going with Michelle Beck's
negotiations?" Carl asked.
"They're done, actually," I said.
"We're getting twelve five, cash and percentages, and that's before
merchandising."
"That's good to hear," Carl said.
"Davis thought you'd hit a wall at about $8.5 million, you know. I told
him you'd top that by at least three and a half. You beat the point spread by a
half million dollars."
"Always happy to overachieve, Carl."
"Yes, well, Brad's no good at bargaining anyway.
I stuck him with Allen Green, of all people, for 20 million. How that film is
ever going to make a profit now is really beyond me."
I chose not to say anything at this point.
"Oh, well, not our problem, I suppose," Carl
said. "Tell me, Tom. Do you like science fiction?"
"Science fiction?" I said. "Sure. Star
Wars and Star Trek, mostly, same as everyone. As a kid I remember begging my
mother to let me stay up and watch 'Battlestar Galactica'. And there was a
period when I was 14 when I read just about every Robert Heinlein book I could
get my hands on. It's been a while since I've really read any, though. I
watched Murdered Earth once, at the premiere. I think that's killed the genre
for me for a while."
"Which do you like better, movies with evil
aliens, or movies with good aliens?"
"I don't know," I said. "I haven't
really ever given it much thought."
"Please do so now," Carl said. "Indulge
me, if you don't mind."
Carl could have said Please disembowel yourself and
sauté your intestines with mushrooms. Indulge me, if you don't mind and anyone
in the agency would have done it. It's disgusting what sycophancy can do.
"I guess if I had to make the choice, I'd go with
the evil aliens," I said. "They just make for better films. Put in a
bad alien and you get the Alien films, Independence Day, Predator, Stargate,
Starship Troopers. Good aliens get you *Batteries Not Included. No
contest."
"Well," Carl said, "There is E.T. And
Close Encounters."
"I'll give you E.T.," I said. "But I
don't buy Close Encounters. Those aliens were cute, sure, but that doesn't mean
they weren't evil. Once they got out of the solar system, Richard Dreyfus was
probably penned up like a veal. Anyway, no one really knows what's going on in
that movie. Spielberg must have been downing peyote frosties when he thought
that one up."
"The Star Trek movies have good aliens. So do the
Star Wars movies."
"The Star Trek movies have bad aliens too, like
the Klingons and those guys with the wires in their heads."
"The Borg," Carl said.
"Right," I said. "And in Star Wars, no
one was from Earth, so everyone, technically, was an alien."
"Interesting," Carl said. He was steepling
his fingers together. Apparently the revelation that everyone in Star Wars had
a passport from some other planet had transfixed him like a particularly
troublesome Zen koan.
"If you don't mind me asking, Carl," I said,
"Why are we talking about this? Are we putting together a package for a
science fiction movie? Other than Earth Resurrected, I mean."
"Not exactly," Carl said, unsteepling his
fingers, and placing them, flat out, on the desk. "I was having a
discussion with a friend of mine about this and I wanted to get another opinion
on it. Your opinion on the matter is like his, by the way. He's pretty much of
the opinion that people are more comfortable with aliens as a hostile 'other'
rather than a group that would have friendly intentions."
"Well, I don't think most people really think of
aliens one way or the other," I said. "I mean, we're talking about
movies, here. As much as I like the movies, it's not the same time thing."
"Really?" The fingersteeple was suddenly
back. "So if real aliens dropped from the sky, people might accept that
they'd be friendly?"
I was back to staring again. I remembered having a
conversation like this, once before in my life. The difference was that that
conversation was back in my deeply stoned college freshman days, in a room
strung with Christmas lights and tin foil, lying on a beanbag. The conversation
I was having now was with one of the few men on the planet who could have the
President of the United States return his call. Within ten minutes (They roomed
together at Yale). Having this conversation with Carl was profoundly
incongruous, right up there with listening to your grandfather talk about the
merits of the hottest new sports kayak.
"Maybe," I ventured. When in doubt,
equivocate.
"Hmmmm." Carl said. "So, Tom. Tell me
about your clients."
I have a little man in the back of my brain. He likes
to panic in situations like these. He was looking around nervously. I kicked
him back into his hole and started down the list.
First and foremost, obviously, was Michelle:
beautiful, in demand, and not nearly smart enough to realize the dumbest thing
she could at this point in her life is not take the money and run. I blamed
myself.
Next up was Elliot Young, hunky young star of the
ABC's "Pacific Rim". "Pacific Rim" was second in its
Wednesday 9 PM time slot and 63rd overall for the year. But thanks to Elliot's
tight, volleyball-player ass and ABC's willingness to have him drop his shorts
to solve crime at least once per episode, it was cleaning up in the 18-34
female viewers category. ABC was selling a lot of ad time to yeast infection
treatments and feminine products with "wings". Everyone was happy.
Elliot's looking to expand into film, but then, of course, who isn't.
Rashaad Creek, urban comic, originally from the mean
streets of Marin County, where they'll busta cap in your ass for serving red
wine with fish. Rashaad wasn't nearly as neurotic as most comedians, which
means on his own he's generally not as funny. Nevertheless, thanks to some nice
packaging work, we'd sold his pilot "Workin' Out!" to UPN. Rashaad's
budding career was watched over like a hawk by his overbearing manager, who
also happened to be his mother. We pause for a shudder here.
The unfortunately-named Tea Reader (pronounced tee-a),
singer-turned-actress that I inherited from my old podmate after his forebrain
sucked inward. Tea, from what I can figure, contributed a good half of his
stress -- notoriously difficult and given to tantrums far out of proportion to
her track record (Three singles from one album, peaking at #9, #13 and #24,
respectively, a second female lead in a Pauly Shore flick, and a series of ads
for Mentos). She was just this side (she insisted) of 30, which made her a
perfect candidate to host her own talk show or infomercial. Tea called about
once a week and threatened to get other representation. I wish.
Tony Baltz, a character actor who was nominated for a
Best Supporting Oscar a decade ago, and had since refused to consider anything
that's not a lead role. Which was a shame, as the romantic lead market for
50-something short, bald guys was pretty much already sewn up by Danny DeVito
and Dennis Franz. We managed to get him the occasional "Lifetime"
movie.
The rest of my clients were a collection of has-beens,
never-weres, near-misses and not-there-yets, the sorts of folks that fill out
the bottom half of every junior agent's dance card. Someone has to play the
second spear-carrier on the left, and someone has to represent them. Be that as
it may, going over the list with Carl, I realized that if it wasn't for the presence
of Michelle, my client roster was of the sort that makes for a lifetime of
junior agenthood. I decided not to bring it up.
"So, to recap," Carl said, after I had
finished, "One superstar, two average-to-mediocres, two marginals and a
bunch of filler."
I thought about trying to sweeten up that assessment,
but then realized there wasn't a point. I shrugged. "I suppose so, Carl.
It's no worse than any other junior agent's client list here."
"Oh, no, I wasn't criticizing," Carl said.
"You're a good agent, Tom. You look out for your people and you get them
work -- and, as today proves, you can get them what they're worth and then
some. You're a sharp kid. You're going to do well in this business."
"Thanks, Carl," I said.
"Sure," he said. He pushed back his chair a
bit and plopped his legs on the table. "Tom, how many of your clients do
you think you can afford to lose?"
"What?"
"How many can you lose?" Carl waved his
hand. "You know, farm out to other agents, drop entirely, whatever."
The little man in my head had escaped from his hole
and was running around frantically, as if on fire. "None!" I said.
"I mean, with all due respect, Carl, I can't lose any of them. It's not
fair to them, for one thing, but for another thing, I need them. Michelle's
doing well now, but believe me, that's not going to last forever. You can't ask
me to cut myself off at the knees."
I pushed back slightly from the table. "Jesus,
Carl," I said. "What's going on here? First the science fiction, now
with my clients -- None of this making much sense to me at the moment. I'm
getting a little nervous, here. If you've got some bad news for me, stop
twisting me and just get to it."
Carl stared at me for the fifteen longest seconds in
my life. Then he put his feet down, and moved his chair closer to me.
"You're right, Tom" he said. "I'm not
handling this very well. I apologize. Let me try this again." He closed
his eyes, took a breath, and looked straight at me. I thought my spine was
going to liquefy.
"Tom," he said, "I have a client. It's
a very important client, Tom, probably the most important client we as an
agency will ever have. At least I can't imagine any other client being more
important than this one. This client feels that he has a very serious image
problem, and I'd have to say that I agree with him there. He has a special
project that he wants to put together, something that needs the most delicate
handling imaginable.
"I need someone to help me get this project off
the ground, someone that I can trust. Someone who can handle the job for me
without my constant supervision, and who can keep his ego in check for the sake
of the project.
"I'm hoping you'll be that someone for me, Tom.
If you say no, it won't affect your role at the agency in the slightest -- you
can walk out of this office and this meeting that we've had simply won't have
happened. But if you do say yes, it means you're committed, whatever it takes,
for as long as it takes. Will you help me?"
The little man in my head was now pounding on the
backsides of my eyeballs. Say NO, the little man was saying. Say no and then
let's go to TGI Fridays and get really, really drunk.
"Sure," I said. The little man in my head
started weeping openly.
Carl reached over, covered my hand like it was his
computer mouse, and shook it vigorously. "I knew I could count on
you," he said. "Thanks. I think you're going to enjoy this."
"I hope so," I said. "I'm in for the
long haul. So who is the client? Is it Tony?" Antonio Marantz had been
caught fondling a sixteen-year-old extra on the set of the latest Morocco Joe
film. It was a bad situation made worse by the fact that the sixteen-year-old
that People's "Most Eligible Bachelor" was fooling around with
happened to be a boy, and the son of the director. After the director's fingers
were pried from Tony's throat, everything was hushed up. The director got a
million dollar raise. The boy got a Director's Guild "internship" on
the Admiral Cook biopic that was filming in Greenland for the next six months.
Tony got a stern lecture about the effect that cavorting with underage boys
would have on the asking price of his next role. The crew got lesser but still
fairly rich favors. Everyone stayed bought; It didn't even make the gossip
column of Buzz. But you never know. These things spring leaks.
"No, it's not Tony," Carl said. "Our
client is here."
"In the building?"
"No," Carl said, tapping the aquarium that
was between us. "Here."
"I'm not following you, Carl," I said.
"You're talking about an aquarium."
"Look in the aquarium," Carl said.
For the first time since I entered the room, I took a
good look at the aquarium. It was rectangular and neither especially big or
small -- about the size of the usual aquarium you'd see in any home. The only
thing notable about it was the absence of fish, rocks, bubbling filters or
little plastic treasure chests. It was filled entirely with a liquid that was
clear but slightly cloudy, as if the aquarium water hadn't been changed in
about a month. I stood up, looked over the top of the aquarium, and got a closer
look. And smell. I looked over the aquarium at him.
"What is this, tuna Jell-O?"
"Not exactly," Carl said, and then addressed
the aquarium. "Joshua, please say hello to Tom."
The stuff in the aquarium vibrated.
"Hi, Tom," the aquarium gunk said.
"It's nice to meet you."
Chapter Three
"How do you do that?" I asked Carl.
"Do what?" Carl asked.
"Make it speak," I said. "That's a
really neat trick."
"I'm not making it speak, Tom." Carl said.
"No, I know that. I realize it's not a
ventriloquist thing," I said. "What I'm asking is, how does sound
come out of it at all. Jell-O doesn't strike me as the most efficient medium
for sound."
"I'm not really sure about the physics of it,
Tom," Carl said. "I'm an agent, not a scientist."
"This is very cool technology," I said,
touching the surface of the gunk. It was sticky, and resisted my fingertips a
little. "I mean, I'm not going to rush out and buy Jell-O speakers, but
it's still very cool. What is it? Something from a science fiction movie? Is
our client doing a film about gelatinous aliens or something?"
"Tom," Carl said. "It's not about a
movie. That," he pointed to the aquarium, "is our client."
I stopped playing around with the gunk and looked over
at Carl. "I'm not following you," I said.
"It's alive, Tom," Carl said.
The stuff wriggled slightly under my fingers. I pulled
them back so quickly I felt a seam on my suit jacket rip. An inside seam. Near
the shoulder. I had paid $400 for the jacket, and it let me down in the first
moment of crisis. I focused all my mental energy on considering that jacket
seam, because the only other thing to think about at the moment was that thing
in the tank. The jacket seam, that I could handle.
Finally, after a few minutes, the words came,
something that, I think, covered the enormity of the situation and what I was
experiencing in my head.
"Holy shit," I said.
"That's a new one on me," said the aquarium
gunk.
"It's just an expression," Carl said.
"Holy Christ on a pony," I said.
"So's that," Carl noted.
"Ah," said the gunk. "Listen, do you
mind if I get out of this box now? I've been it all day. The right angles are
killing me."
"Please," Carl said.
Thank you," said the gunk. A tendril formed off
the surface of the gunk and arched towards the conference table, touching down
close to the center of the table. The tendril wobbled slightly for a second,
then thickened tremendously as the gunk transferred itself out of the aquarium
through the tendril. When the transfer was over the tendril reabsorbed into the
main body, which now sat, globular, on the conference table.
"That's much better," the gunk said.
"Carl," I said. I was keeping my distance
from the gunk. "You'd really better catch me up on what's going on
here."
Carl had put his feet back on the table. They rested
not too far off from where the gunk was piled. That seemed a bad idea to me.
"Do you want the long or short version?" He asked.
"Give me the short version for now, if you don't
mind," I said.
"Fine," he said. "Tom, have a seat,
please. I promise Joshua won't leap on you and suck out your brains."
"I won't," the gunk that was apparently
called Joshua agreed. "I'm a good alien, not like those bad aliens that
make for such good movies. Please, Tom, sit down."
I didn't know which was more fundamentally disturbing:
that Jell-O was talking to me, that it had a sense of humor, or that it had
better manners than I did. My body sat down in my seat; the man in my brain
readied himself for a sprint to the door.
"Thank you," Carl said. "Here's the
short version: About four months ago, the Yherajk, of which my friend Joshua is
a member of, contacted me. The Yherajk have been watching us here on Earth for
a while, and they decided recently that after several years of observation, it
was time to make themselves known to humanity. But they have concerns."
"We look like snot," Joshua said. "And
we smell like dead fish."
Carl nodded in Joshua's direction. "The Yherajk
are worried that their physical appearance will present problems."
"We have seen The Blob, and it is us,"
Joshua intoned.
Another nod from Carl. "The Yherajk have decided
that before they can appear to humanity, some arrangements have to be made -- a
way has to be made for them not to appear so ugly from the outset."
"We need an agent to get us the role of the
friendly aliens," Joshua said.
"That's the short version," Carl said.
I sat there for a second, trying to process the
information. "Can I ask a question?" I said.
"Shoot," said Joshua.
I looked at Joshua and for a moment I was frozen. I
didn't know what part of it to address. It all looked the same. I dealt with it
by looking straight at its center. "Dumb question first: Why didn't you
just drop on the lawn of the White House? I mean, in the movies, that's pretty
much how it was done."
"We thought about it," Joshua said.
"Then we caught the Presidential debates. The people you folks elect are
sort of scary. And you Americans are the folks that do it the best on this
entire planet. Besides, your president only speaks for Americans. American
movies speak for your world. Who hasn't seen Wizard of Oz? Or Jaws? Or Star
Wars? We've seen them, and we're not even from this planet." Joshua
sprouted a tendril and tapped the table. "If you want to introduce
yourself to the planet, this is the place to start."
"Okay," I said. I looked over at Carl.
"The....Earjack --"
"Yherajk," Carl said, pronouncing it
yee-heer-aahg-k.
"It's not our real name," Joshua said,
"but you couldn't pronounce what we're actually called."
"Why not?" I asked.
"Well, for one thing, it's a smell," Joshua
said. "Would you like to smell it?"
I glanced at Carl. He shrugged. "Sure," I
said.
The room filled with a stench that resembled the
offspring of a rotted sneaker and Velveeta. I gagged involuntarily.
"God, that's horrible," I said, and
immediately regretted it. "I'm very sorry," I said. "That was
probably the first ever insult to an extraterrestrial. I apologize."
"No offense taken," Joshua said, mildly.
"You should come to a Yherajk get-together. It's like a convention of
farts."
"I believe there was a question at the beginning
of all this," Carl said.
"Right," I said, and looked back to Carl.
"How many people know about the Yherajk?"
"Including you and me?" Carl said.
"Yes," I said.
"Two," Carl said. "Well, and a couple
thousand Yherajk orbiting the planet. But among humans, it's just you and
me."
"Wow," I said.
"It's not that hard to believe," Joshua
said. "If you run out of here and say that you've just met an alien that
looks like gelatin and smells like a cat in heat, who's going to believe you?
All the really believable aliens have spines."
I ignored this. "Carl, why me?"
Carl tilted his head at me, and regarded me like a
favored child. Which, perhaps, I was. "What do you mean?" he asked.
"I mean, I'm flattered that you picked me to help
you to do...." I waved my hands around, "whatever it is that we're
going to be doing here. But I don't know why you picked me."
"Well, it's like I said," Carl said. "I
need someone who's smart and that I can trust."
"I appreciate that," I said. "But Carl,
you don't even know me. I've worked here for five years, and every other time
we've spoken, it was in meetings, about our clients and how we were going to
package them. And that wasn't that often."
"Do you feel neglected?" Carl asked. "I
wouldn't have pegged you for that."
"No, that's not it," I said. "It's
never bothered me. That's not what I mean. What I mean is that I don't know why
you feel you can trust me, or why you think I'm smart. You can, and I am, but I
wouldn't have thought I'd be an obvious choice. I'm surprised you even thought
of me."
Carl smirked, looked off for a second, as if
communicating to an unseen audience, and then turned back to me.
"Tom," he said, "give me some credit for knowing something about
the people who I employ."
I straightened up slightly. "I didn't mean to
offend you, Carl."
"You haven't," he said. "My point here
is simply that I've been aware of you and your work for this company. Your
works speaks quite a bit as to the person you are, and as for the rest of
it..." he shrugged. "Sometimes you take a chance."
"Thanks," I said.
"Also, to be blunt," Carl continued,
"you're just a junior agent here. You're flying under the radar. If any of
the senior agents suddenly divested himself of his clients and started sneaking
around, it would be noticed. There would be gossip. Infighting. Stories in
Variety and the Times. No one's going to notice or care if you do the same
thing."
It was my turn to smirk. "Well, my mother might
be concerned."
"Does she write for the Times?" Carl said.
"I don't think so," I said. "She lives
in Arizona."
"Well, then," Carl said. "That's fine
with me."
"I'm still confused as to why you need me,"
I said. "Certainly you don't need me to put something together."
"But I do," Carl said. "Because I
can't."
"Tom," Joshua said, "If it would throw
the company in turmoil if one of the senior agents here dropped what they're
doing to start working on a secret project, how much more suspicious is it
going to look if Carl did it?"
"I can't even take a vacation without someone
here attempting a palace coup," Carl said. "There's no way I'm going
to be able to stop running this place to look after this. No, someone else has
to deal with this thing. You've got the job."
"Carl, I don't even know what the job is," I
said.
"Make me beautiful," Joshua said. "I'm
ready for my closeup, Mr. DeMille."
"The Job," Carl said, implying the capital
"J" with his voice, "Is to find some way to prepare the planet
for the presence of the Yherajk. They're ready to show themselves to humanity,
Tom. You have to make humanity ready for them."
The words hung out there in the air for a minute, not
unlike, I suppose, the fragrance of a Yherajk conversation -- invisible, but
very hard to ignore.
"I'm just guessing here," Joshua said,
"But I'm thinking this is probably where you say 'Holy shit' again,
Tom."
Chapter Four
Miranda was being monopolized by Ben Fleck, another
junior agent, when I returned. She glanced at me pointedly as I walked by. The
glance had a double meaning. The first was whatthe Hell happened in there? The
second was Rescue me. Ben was a first class jerk who had been trying for 18
months to get into Miranda's pants; it would have constituted sexual harassment
except that Ben was so obviously inept at it.
"Miranda," I said, "Could you please
come to my office?"
"Hey," Ben said. "I'm discussing a
client with Miranda at the moment."
"That client is in your pants, Ben," I said.
"And he's never going to get the job. Miranda?" I held the door open
for her as she took her notepad and walked by me into my office.
"Thank you," she said, as I closed the door
behind us. "Though you shouldn't be so rough on Ben. He's sort of sweet,
in his own lecherous, oafish way."
"Nonsense," I said. "I'm not going to
let him get away with anything I'm not allowed to get away with."
"But Tom," Miranda said. "you're
neither lecherous nor oafish. "
"Thanks, Miranda," I said, and leaned
against my desk. "I'll put that on my gravestone. 'Here lies Thomas Stein.
He was neither lecherous nor oafish.'"
"Enough chitchat," Miranda said. "Do
you still have a job, or are you just putting on a brave face for your devoted
staff?"
"Miranda, did anyone pay attention to where we
were going when we went to the meeting?"
Miranda sat in the chair in front of my desk and
thought for a moment. "Not that I could tell. You nodded to Drew Roberts
as we walked past him, but don't think he noticed. You're a junior agent. You
don't rate a nod back."
"Good," I said. "Did anyone ask where I
was?"
"In the office? No. Michelle called again,"
Miranda crossed her eyes slightly at the word Michelle, indicating in her own
subtle way that she believed Michelle to be less intelligent than the average
protozoan, "but I just told her you were in a meeting. Other than that, my
attention was monopolized by Ben, who loathes you and would not ask about you
even if he could get a promotion out of it. Why?"
"If anyone asks, I was just out to get a bagel,
okay?"
"You're killing me," Miranda said. "I
don't normally threaten my bosses, but if you don't tell me what happened in
there, I may have to hurt you."
"I can't, Miranda. You know if I could tell
anyone, I could tell you." I gave her my best I'm-utterly-helpless look.
"I just can't. Just trust me for now, please, and just forget that meeting
ever took place?"
Miranda looked at me for a minute. "Okay,
Tom," she said, finally. "But if we're not going to talk about the
meeting that didn't take place, why did you call me in here?"
"I need you to get my files on everyone I
represent. Also, give me the names of the latest agents up from the mailroom,
and their client lists, if you can."
Miranda jotted on her notepad. "All right,"
she said. "Anything in particular I should look for in the new
agents?"
"I want someone who is so new that he still could
do his mail route with his eyes closed. Someone who doesn't know anything. Me,
about three years ago."
"Young and naive. Got it, Tom. Actually, I know
just the person."
"Great. Give me about an hour with my files and
then have them come for a visit."
"Fine. Anything else?"
"Yes. I'm going to need one of those watercooler
bottles. And a dolly."
Miranda looked up from her notepad. "A
watercooler bottle?"
"Yeah. One of those Arrowhead Water bottles. The
five gallon ones."
"And a dolly."
"If you can find one. They have them in the
mailroom, I think. You can have the new agent retrieve it."
I could see Miranda debating with herself whether or
not she wanted to ask what the water bottle was for. She finally decided
against it. What a pro. "Do you want the water bottle empty or full?"
"Doesn't matter," I said.
"It does to me," she said. "I have to
lug the damn thing to your office."
"Empty, please."
She stopped writing. "Okay," she said.
"You'll have your files in just a minute." She stood up and walked
over the two steps to where I was. I stopped leaning on the desk and stood up.
"Tom," she said, "You can trust me; I'll never speak of that
meeting in front of anyone. But whatever happened in that meeting, congratulations."
She reached over and tousled my hair. It was an old-fashioned and matronly move
from someone who was my assistant, and a year younger than I was. It made me
grin like an idiot.
*****
Miranda dropped the files on my desk. It was now time
to play everybody's favorite game: Ditch the clients.
"This thing is going to take up all of your time
from now on," Carl had warned, right after I had signed up for the ride.
"You're going to have to formulate a plan and execute it. You're going to
have to be an aide to Joshua, as well. Which reminds me: he needs to stay at
your place."
"What?" I said. Visions of slug slime
coating my upholstery leapt, unbidden, into my mind.
"Tom," Joshua said, "it's not exactly
an easy commute between here and the ship."
"We can work out the details later," Carl
said, getting back on track. "But what you need to do now, Tom, is go
through your client list and as quietly as possible, offload as many as you
can. Joshua is your full-time job now."
I stared at the files and had a weird tingling in my
head. On one hand, this was an agent's dream -- get rid of the truly annoying
clients! Cut the dead weight! Unload the ballast! Every agent who was not
running an agency had clients they'd rather be without -- and here I was being
told to eject them. On the other hand, as an agent, you're only as good as your
client list. Better bad clients than none at all. I was understanding
intellectually that my new "client" was an opportunity that comes
along -- well, that's never come along before, now that I thought of it.
Emotionally, however, it still felt like I was taking the ascending 747 that
was my agentorial career and aiming it into the Pacific, while all the
passengers, my clients, were screaming in the coach seats, their little
emergency plastic airmasks waving in the turbulence.
Enough thinking, I decided. I grabbed the first file.
Tony Baltz. Gone. He was on his way down anyway, since
he was too proud to take the roles that had made him famous in the first place.
Rashaad Creek. Keep. I could work through his mother,
who was doing most of the heavy lifting in that partnership, anyway. The
unsettling Oedipal overtones to Rashaad's situation had always disturbed me,
but now I could finally use them to my advantage.
Elliot Young. Keep. Elliot, bless his heart, was not
the brightest of studs. I could sit down with him one afternoon and convince
him that by buckling down on the series for a season, it would make the
transition to films much more profitable in the long run. Who, knows, it might
even be the truth.
Tea Reader. Gone. Thank the Lord almighty.
Michelle Beck. Keep. Of course. Michelle Beck was my
cover: when a client can rake in twelve million per film, an agent can't be
faulted for wanting to spend more time concentrating on that client. Also,
flying under the radar or not, dropping Michelle after today's paycheck would
be noticed by someone. Michelle and I were bound together for life, or until
she pulled a hissy fit and got new representation. If I didn't have her, I
would be, as my father liked to say, walking through a thick shag carpet of
shit. The ambivalence I felt about this fact was staggering in its depth.
The undercard folks were all toast. It didn't really
matter who agented them, anyway.
I was finishing up my client triage when Miranda
buzzed me. "Mr. Stein," she said. I could count the times she called
me Mr. Stein on one hand, without having to use my thumb or index finger.
"Amanda Hewson is here."
"Accompany her in, please, Ms. Escalon," I
called Miranda Ms. Escalon even less than she called me Mr. Stein.
Miranda walked in, followed by a gawky blonde who
looked like she wasn't old enough to see "R"-rated films without
accompaniment. Amanda Hewson had graduated from the mailroom just over a month
before. Her two clients were a former Mexican soap opera star who wanted to
make it big in Hollywood, but didn't want to learn the English language, and an
actor who administered first aid to her after she fainted on mile 4 of the LA
Marathon. She represented him, apparently, largely out of gratitude.
She was perfect.
"Amanda," I said, motioning to the chair in
front of my desk. "Please sit down." She did. I regarded her the same
way Carl regarded me earlier today. It's fair; the distance, careerwise, was
not dissimilar.
Amanda was looking around. "Nice office,"
she said.
My office is a dump.
"It is, isn't it?" I said. "Amanda, do
you know why I asked you here?"
"Not really," Amanda confessed. "Ms.
Escalon " -- Unseen by Amanda, Miranda crossed her eyes; she didn't appear
to cotton to all this formalness -- "said that it was important but didn't
say what it was."
I did some more regarding. It was making Amanda
nervous, she looked behind her briefly to see if I was actually looking at
something behind her, then turned back, tittered nervously. Her hands, restless
in her lap, spasmed lightly.
I looked at Miranda. "You think she's the
one?" I asked.
Now it was Miranda's turn to regard Amanda. I have to
admit, she did a much scarier regarding. Amanda looked about to wet her pants.
"I think so," Miranda said. "At least, she's much better than
the other possibles."
I had no idea what Miranda was talking about. Then
again, she didn't know what I was talking about either. We were making this up
as we went along.
"So, Amanda," I said. "Where'd you go
to school?"
"UCLA," she said. "In Westwood,"
she added. After she said that I could see the thought travel through her head:
Moron! We're in LA! He KNOWS where UCLA is! God! I'm an idiot! Panic can be
truly endearing when it's done right.
"Really," I said. "I'm a Bruin myself.
How's the high-speed life of an agent treating you these days?"
"Well, really well," she said, with obvious
fervor. "I mean, I'm just getting started, so it's a little rough. I think
it'll be a few more months before I really get my legs." She smiled
brightly. She was so new that she didn't realize that admitting weakness was a
mortal sin among agents. I wondered how she got past the screening process.
Beside me, I could feel waves of pity emanate from Miranda. Now I knew why she
had suggested Amanda -- she was trying to keep this clearly non-cynical young
woman from having the stuffing kicked out of her by her more vicious
compatriots.
"Well, I hope your legs are ready now,
Amanda," I said. "The officers of this corporation" -- I always
thought that phrase sounded dramatic, and I was right -- "have instructed
me to inaugurate a pilot mentor project for our newest agents, a sort of
helping hand to get them up to speed more quickly. Now, I have to emphasize
that this is just a pilot program, and highly experimental. In fact, it's a
secret --"
Amanda's eyes actually widened. If I were just ten
percent less jaded, I think I might have fallen in love.
" -- so you'll have to keep it that way. It's
officially unofficial. Understand?"
"Sure, Mr. Stein."
"Call me Tom," I said. "Amanda, what do
you think of Tea Reader?"
Her eyes got even wider. Make that five percent less
jaded.
Two hours and a Starbucks latte each later, the
Officially Unofficial Mentor Project was underway. Under my
"supervision," Amanda would take over the day-to-day representation
needs of Tea Reader, Tony Baltz, and my undercard clients. For the first month,
Amanda would make detailed weekly reports on "our" clients, which I
would read and comment on. That would decrease to twice monthly the second
month, and monthly thereafter. During this time, any money made from
representing these clients would be split between mentor and student. After six
months, pending mentor approval, Amanda could represent up to six of these
clients full-time, with all commissions and fees going to her from that point
forward. To myself, I figured that any clients she didn't want to keep after
six months I would drop in any event.
Amanda was happy because even with a reduced
commission rate, she stood to make far more money over the next six months than
she could have off her own clients, and would get an automatically expanded
client list at the end of it. Plus, of course, my invaluable mentoring
services. I was happy because I offloaded my clients. The only one who might
not be entirely happy with it was Miranda, because she knew that the reports I
was supposed to read and comment on were actually going to be read and
commented on by her. But she didn't say anything about it. I was going to have
to get her raise soon.
Amanda went of in a haze of blissfulness and promises
to "get right on it." She was like a Mouseketeer on "Let's
Represent Someone" day. I could almost see her skip to her pod. I hoped
her first experience with Tea Reader would not send her too much into shock.
"That was a dirty trick," Miranda said to
me.
"What do you mean?" I said. "Look at
her. What are her chances of getting a decent client list on her own?"
"Not to her," Miranda said. "To me. Now
I'm going to have to add babysitting to my list of things to do."
"She'll be fine," I said. "And anyway,
I thought you liked her."
"I do like her," Miranda said. "And she
will be fine. Eventually." She put her face closer to mine. "But in
the short term, I might as well be a crossing guard, for all the hand-holding
I'm going to do. Now. I'm off to get your waterbottle." She walked out of
the office.
I was going to have to get her a raise very soon.
*****
I knocked on the conference room door. It was
unoccupied. I entered the conference room with the water bottle and the dolly,
closed the door, locked it behind me.
"You have got to be kidding," Joshua said.
Joshua had returned back to the aquarium and had
stayed in the conference room after our meeting was done. My job had been to
find a unobtrusive way to get him from the conference room to my place. Carl
wouldn't tell me how he had gotten Joshua into the building unnoticed, and he
wasn't giving me any tips on how to get him out. Think of it as your first
challenge, he said. Were I palming off the first known extraterrestrial on a
subordinate to take care of, I think I'd be a little more concerned.
"We give you three hours to come up with
something, and this is the best you can do," Joshua said. "I'm not
scared yet, but I'm getting there."
"I'm sorry," I said. "I had to
improvise." I wheeled the bottle over and sat it next to the tank. I had
figured that a five-gallon water bottle would be big enough to fit Joshua in.
Now I wasn't so sure.
Neither was he. He extended a tendril out of the
aquarium and sent it down into the bottle and waved it around, as if to check
it for roominess. "How long will it take to get to your place?" he
said.
"Probably an hour, maybe more," I said.
"I live in La Canada. The 405 will be jammed up, but once we get over to
the 210, it should be pretty quick. Is it going to be a problem?"
"Not at all," Joshua said. "Who doesn't
enjoy being crammed into a five-gallon plastic bottle for an hour?"
"You don't have to stay in the bottle once we get
to the car," I said. "Once we're out of here, you can spread
out." This wrinkle in the plan was as new to me as it was to him. I had
assumed he'd stay in the bottle the whole trip. But my car upholstery was a small
price to pay for interplanetary peace. I'd just have to remember to get one of
those little pine tree air fresheners.
"Thanks, but no thanks," Joshua said.
"The conversation where you try to explain to a highway patrolman why you
have 40 pounds of gelatin in your passenger seat is one I think we'd both
rather avoid."
I laughed. "I'm sorry," I said. "I'm
sort of amazed you know what a highway patrolman is."
"Why?" Joshua said. "You've been
beaming 'CHiPs' into space for decades." He wiggled his tendril again, and
then sighed. He must have picked that up purely as a sonic affectation because
he had no lungs from which to exhale. "All right, here I go, " he
said, and started putting himself into the bottle.
He came dangerously close to filling up the bottle. In
the last few seconds, a thought popped into my skull: I'm going to need another
bottle. It didn't occur to me to question the logic of that thought. He was
gelatinous, he should be able to divide up. It became academic when he topped
out about three millimeters from the top of the mouth of the bottle.
"Comfortable?" I asked.
"Remind me to stuff you into a medium-sized
suitcase and ask you that same question," Joshua said. His voice was
diminished and tinny, no doubt due to the relatively tiny amount of surface
area he had to vibrate.
"Sorry," I said. "Listen, do you need
this open? I'm thinking it might be better if I put the top back on this
thing."
"Are you out of your mind?" Joshua said.
"Keep it open."
"Okay," I said. "I didn't know. I
suppose you need to breathe."
"It's not that," Joshua said. "I'm
claustrophobic."
"Really?"
"Look," Joshua said. "Just because I
come from a highly advanced alien species doesn't mean I can't be intensely
neurotic. Can we go now? I already feel like I want to scream."
I hiked the dolly up on its wheels, wheeled over to
the door, unlocked it, and headed out into the hallway. It was still early
enough in the day that the office was still busy. I was worried that someone
might ask me why I was wheeling a five-gallon water bottle around until I
remembered that I was on the second floor, the land of senior agents. A senior
agent would naturally assume it was my job to wheel water bottles around. I was
probably safe until I hit the lobby.
Which is in fact where I got noticed. As I passed the
receptionist's desk on the way to the parking lot, some guy at the desk turned
around. "Tom Stein?" he asked.
The Just Keep Moving command left my brain a tenth of
a second after the Look Around reflex kicked in. By then, of course, it was too
late; I had already stopped and looked back. "Yes?"
The man jogged the short distance over and extended
his hand. "Glad I caught you," he said, as we shook. "Your
assistant said you had already left."
"I had," I said. "I just had to stop
elsewhere and pick something up."
"I can see that," he said, glancing down at
the waterbottle. "I guess you've gone past office supplies."
"Who are you?" I asked.
"I'm sorry," he said. "Jim Van Doren. I
write for The Biz."
The Biz was a weekly bit of libel written in a snide,
knowing sort of tone that implied the folks who slapped together The Biz were
just coming from lunch with movie company heads, who couldn't wait to slip them
the latest gossip. Neither I nor anyone I knew knew anyone who had ever
actually spoken to anyone at the magazine. No one knew how the magazine got
written. No one knew anyone who actually would pay to read it.
Van Doren himself was about my age, blond and balding,
sort of pudgy. He looked like what happened to former USC frat boys about three
months after they realize that their college days were never, ever coming back.
"Van Doren," I said. "No relation to
Charles, I assume."
"The guy from Quiz Show? I wish," Van Doren
said. "His dad won a Pulitzer Prize, you know. Wouldn't mind getting one
of those myself."
"You'd probably have to work for a magazine that
didn't devote six pages to an illustrated article about porno pictures on the
Internet," I said. "You remember, the one where big star's heads were
cut and pasted on to pictures of women having sex with dogs and glass bottles?
The one that just about every movie studio in the city sued you over."
"I didn't have anything to do with that
story," he said.
"That's good," I said. "Michelle Beck
is my client. She was rather unamused by the picture that had her taking it up
the back door from George Clooney while eating out Gwenyth Paltrow. As her
agent, I'd be required to break your nose on her behalf. Of course, I'd take my
ten percent, too." I started walking towards the lobby door.
Van Doren, who was not taking the hint, followed.
"Actually, Tom, I knew you were Michelle Beck's agent. It's sort of why I
came here. Heard that you got her twelve and a half for Earth Resurrected.
That's not bad."
I opened the lobby door with one hand and propped it
open with my foot as I maneuvered the dolly through the entry way. "The
agency hasn't made any announcement about that to the press, much less The
Biz," I said. "Where did you hear about it?"
Van Doren grabbed the door and held it for me. "I
got it from Brad Turnow's office," he said. "They faxed out an
announcement to the press, and I got the figure from his receptionist when I
called to follow up."
I made a mental note to have Brad fire his
receptionist. "I can't comment about my client's affairs," I said,
"If you're looking for something, I'm not going to give it to you."
"I'm not here to do anything on Michelle
Beck," Van Doren said. "I'm hoping to do a story on you."
"On me?" I said. "Really, Van Doren.
I'm not that interesting. And there are no pictures of me on the Net having sex
with anyone."
"Look, we know we lost a lot of goodwill on that
story," Van Doren said. This statement was on the same level as the
captain of the Titanic saying, I guess we've taken on a little water.
"We're trying to get away from that sort of thing now. Do some real
journalism. The story I'm doing, for example, is 'The Ten Hottest Young Agents
in Hollywood.'"
"You getting ten agents to talk to you?" I
wheeled over to my car, a Honda Prelude.
"I've got six so far," he said.
"including one of your guys here -- Ben Fleck. You know him?"
"I do," I said. "I wouldn't call him
one of the ten hottest young agents in Hollywood."
Van Doren grimaced. "Yeah, I know," he said.
"Frankly, none of the really good young agents want to talk. That's why
I'm really hoping to do something on you. I mean, twelve and a half million!
I'd say that makes you the hottest agent in Hollywood at the moment, period.
You're the money guy, in all senses of the term. This is cover story material,
Tom. You need help getting that in the trunk?" he gestured to the water
bottle.
I just did not want this guy here.
"No thanks," I said. "It's going up
front."
"Well, here," he said, stepping around to
the dolly. "I'll hold this while you get the door open."
What could I do? I gave him the dolly and went to open
the passenger side door. As I opened the door, I realized I was on the wrong
side of it; Van Doren would have to put the bottle in. I felt a mild stirring
of panic.
Van Doren realized this as well. "I'll get
it," he said, and walked around to pick it up. "I don't suppose you
have a cap for this -- if you hit a bump, you're going to get it all over your
interior."
"Nope," I said.
Van Doren shrugged. "Your car." He reached
down and picked up the bottle, wobbled it slightly, provoking a spike of fear
to my mild stirring of panic, turned and maneuvered it onto the passenger seat.
As he stood up, his face was red and blotchy. "Out of shape," he
said. "Tom, don't take this wrong, but that water smells a little off.
You're not planning to drink it, I hope."
"No," I said. "It's from a sulfur
spring one of our agents just got back from. You heat it up and soak in it.
Good for the skin. But stinky."
"No kidding," Van Doren said. He leaned
against the door, effectively blocking my ability to shut it. "So, Tom,
how about it? I think you'd make a great profile. In fact, if everything goes
well, I might be able to persuade my editors to drop the other nine hottest
young agents out of the story. A cover story, Tom."
On a normal day of my life, I would have wanted to be
on the cover of The Biz about as much as I wanted to run my tongue over a
cheese grater. Today, with an alien in my passenger seat and no clue as to my
future in the agency, I wanted to be on the cover of The Biz even less than
that.
"Thanks, but I'm going to pass," I said.
"I'm not much one for the limelight. I save that for my clients."
"Do you hear yourself?" Van Doren said.
"You talk in perfect pull quote nuggets. Come on."
I decided to lie. "I'm late for dinner with my
parents," I said, nodding to the door.
He reluctantly backed away. "And concerned about
family, too. You're screaming to be made famous, Tom."
I smiled, thought about saying something, thought
better of it "I don't think so, Van Doren. Make Ben famous instead."
I closed the door and walked over to the driver side.
"Think about it, Tom," Van Doren said, as I
got in the car. "I'll be around when you want to talk."
Is that a promise or a threat? I wondered. I waved,
started the Prelude, and got the hell out of there.
*****
I got a ticket from the California Highway Patrol, for
speeding on the 210.
"That cop was not at all what I expected,"
Joshua said. "Neither Ponch nor John had breasts. I'm going to have to
revise my expectations."
No kidding.
Chapter Five
"All right," I said. "Question and
answer time."
"Gasp," Joshua said. "Torture me all
you want. But I'll never tell you the location of the rebel base."
Joshua and I were sitting at my dining room table.
More accurately, I was sitting at the table; Joshua was sitting on it. Between
us was a Pizza Hut carton and the remnants of a large pepperoni pizza. Joshua
had eaten four slices. They lay, haphazardly, near the center of his being. I
could see the slices slowly disintegrating in an osmotic haze. It was vaguely
disturbing.
"You going to eat that last piece?" Joshua
said.
"No," I said, turning the carton towards
him. "Please."
"Great," Joshua said. A pseudopod extended,
folded around the crust edge, and withdrew back into his body. The slice was
surrounded and joined its brethren. "Thanks. I haven't had anything all
day. Carl thought it might be upsetting to you to see food rotting away in the
middle of something that looked like dried glue."
"He was right," I said.
"That's why he's the boss," Joshua said.
"Okay. Here's the rules for the question and answer period: you ask a
question, then I ask a question."
"You have questions?" I asked.
"Of course I have questions," Joshua said.
"From my point of view, you're the alien."
"All right."
"No lying and no evading," Joshua said.
"I think we can be pretty safe with each others' secrets, because, really,
who are we going to tell? Fair enough?"
"Fair enough," I said.
"Good," Joshua said. "You go first."
"What are you?" Might as well get the big
one out first.
"A fine question. I'm a highly advanced and
organized colony of single-celled organisms that work together on a
macro-cellular level."
"What does that mean?" I asked.
"Wait your turn," Joshua said. "How did
you get this place? These are nice digs."
He was right. They were nice digs. Far better than I
could have afforded on my own (until today, that is) -- a four bedroom ranch on
three quarters of an acre, overlooking the valley and abutting Angeles National
Forest in the back. Occasionally I woke up and went out back to find a deer in
the yard or a coyote digging through the trash. That passes for nature here in
LA. It was just above the smog layer, too. Such are the advantages of having
prosperous parents. My mother left it to me after my father died and she
retired to Scottsdale, to be closer to her mother's nursing home.
The only thing that could be held against it was that
it was in the wrong valley -- San Gabriel, where the "real" people
(read: not in the movie business) lived. Every once in a while one of the other
agents would mock me about that. I would smile sweetly and ask them what the
rent was on their one-bedroom condo in Van Nuys.
"I've lived here all my life," I said.
"My mom gave me the house when she moved. What does 'highly advanced and
organized colony of single-celled organisms' mean?"
"It means that each of the cells in my body is a
self-contained, unspecialized organism," Joshua said. "How did you
decide to become an agent?"
"My dad was an agent -- a literary agent," I
said. "When I was a kid, he'd bring his clients over for dinner. They were
weird but fun people. I thought it was cool that my dad knew such weird people,
so I decided I wanted to be an agent. I must have been about five. I had no
idea what an agent really did. If you're actually a bunch of smaller creatures,
how do you get them all to move and act the way you want them to?"
"I don't know," Joshua said. "Do you
know how you make your heart beat?"
"Sure," I said. "My brain sends a
message to my heart to keep beating."
"Right," Joshua said. "But you don't
know the exact process."
"No," I said.
"Neither do I," Joshua said. "Do you
have Nintendo?"
"What? No," I said. "I had an Atari
when I was younger, but that was a long time ago. Do you have any organs, like
a heart or a brain?"
"Not exactly," Joshua said. "The cells
take turns performing functions, based on need. Right now, for example, the
cells on my surface are collecting sensory information. Other cells not
otherwise occupied are performing cognitive functions. The cells around the
pizza are digesting it. Like I said, I don't think about doing these things,
they just get done. What about cable?"
"Basic plus HBO and Spice Channel."
"Naughty boy."
"I wanted Showtime. They screwed it up. I never
got around to fixing it."
"I believe you," Joshua said. "Really I
do."
"Are you male or female?" I asked.
"I'm neither," Joshua said. "My cells
reproduce asexually. Spice Channel will do nothing for me. Do you have a
computer with an Internet connection?"
"I have a Mac and America Online," I said.
"Why are you asking about these things?"
"I don't know if you've noticed, but I'm a
gelatinous cube," Joshua said. "It's not like I'm going to be getting
out of the house much. The neighbors would talk. So I want to make sure I'm
going to be able to keep myself amused. Got any pets?"
"I had a cat, but he ran away about two years
ago. I say 'ran away,' but I think he was hit by a car or eaten by coyotes. The
Escobedos next door have a retriever, Ralph, that will occasionally get out of
the yard and come over for a visit. I don't think you need to worry about
Ralph, though. He's 15 years old. He might be able to gum you, but that's about
it. Anyway, he never comes in the house. So, if your species reproduces
asexually, the means you're a clone of some other Yherajk, right?"
"Eeeeeeeh....." Joshua sounded suspiciously
like he was trying to evade the question. "Not exactly," he said,
finally. "Our cells are asexual but we have a way of creating
new....'souls' is probably the best word for it. I'd have a really difficult
time explaining it to you."
"Why?"
"You're out of turn."
"You're evading."
"Oh. Well, in that case, let's say it's a sort of
societal taboo. Asking me to talk about it would be sort of like me asking you
to describe in graphic detail the sexual encounter between your parents that
resulted in your conception."
"It was during their honeymoon in Cancun," I
said.
"What position did they use? How many thrusts did
it take? Did your mom bark in pleasure?"
I reddened. "I think I see what you're
saying."
"I thought you might," Joshua said.
"Speaking of which -- any brothers or sisters?"
"No," I said. "Mom had complications
during the pregnancy and nearly died. They thought about adopting for a while
but they decided against it. Can you die?"
"Sure," Joshua said. "More ways than
you can, too. Individual cells in this collection die all the time, like cells
in your body die. The whole collection can die, too -- I'd say we're probably
less prone to random death than your species is, but it happens. The soul can
also die, even if the collection survives. You in a relationship?"
"No. I had a girlfriend at the agency for a
while, but she took a job in New York about six months ago. It wasn't very
serious, anyway -- more of a tension release thing. How long do you live?"
"Three score and ten, just like you," Joshua
said. "More or less. It's actually a very complicated question. Do you
like your job?"
"Most of the time," I said. "I don't
know. I think I'm good at it. And I don't know what else I'd do if I wasn't
doing this. What's your spaceship like?"
"Crowded. Smelly. Poorly lit. What do you when
you're not working?"
"I'm pretty much always working. When I'm not, I
read a lot. Got that from being the son of a literary agent. When my mother
moved out, I made my old room into a library. Other than that, I don't do too
much. I'm sort of pathetic. How do you know so much about us?"
"What do you mean?" Joshua said.
"Your English is as good as mine. You know about
stuff like Nintendo and cable television. You make references to 50s horror
films. You seem to know more about us than most of us do."
"No offense, but it's not that hard being smarter
than most of you folks," Joshua said. "Your planet's been
broadcasting a bunch of stuff for the better part of the last century. We've
been paying attention to a lot of it. You can actually learn English from
watching situation comedies several thousand times."
"I don't know how to feel about that," I
said.
"There are some gaps," Joshua allowed.
"Until I actually got down here, we were under the impression 'groovy' was
still current. It's all those 'Brady Bunch' reruns. For the longest time it
never really occurred to us that they weren't live broadcasts. We thought that
the repetition had some ritual significance. Like they were religious texts or
something."
"I'd think the fact that the Brady Bunch never
aged might have been a tip-off."
"Don't take this wrong," Joshua said,
"But you all pretty much look the same to us. Anyway, we figured it out
eventually. My turn."
*****
The question and answer session went on for another
couple of hours, with me asking larger, cosmic questions, and Joshua asking
smaller, personal questions. I learned that the Yherajk spaceship was a
hollowed-out asteroid that traveled at slower-than-light speeds, and that it had
taken them decades to travel from their home planet to here. Joshua learned
that my favorite color was green. I learned that Yherajk-to-Yherajk
communication most often took the form of complex pheromone
"ideographs" launched into the air or passed on through touch: the
"speaker" was identified with an identifier molecule -- his own
personal smell. Joshua learned that I preferred eurotrash dance music to
American guitar rock and roll.
At the end of it, I knew more about the Yherajk than
any other person on the planet, and Joshua knew more about me than any other
person on the planet. I ended up thinking that Joshua had somehow gotten the
better end of that bargain; there was only one other person who knew about
Joshua, after all. But presumably a lot of other people knew about me.
Only one question remained unanswered: how Joshua got
his name. He refused to tell me.
"That's not fair," I said. "You said no
lying or evading."
"This is the exception that proves the
rule," Joshua said. "Besides, it's not my story to tell. You need to
ask Carl how it came about. Now," he executed a maneuver that looked very
much like a stretch after a long bout of sitting, "Where is that computer
of yours? I want to sign in. I want to see how much junk e-mail I have."
I led him to my home office, where my computer was; he
slithered onto the seat, glopped himself onto the keyboard, and shot out a
tendril to the mouse. I was mildly worried that parts of him might get stuck in
my keyboard. But when he moved from the table on the way to the office, he
didn't leave any slime trails. Chalk one up for my upholstery. I figured my
keyboard would be okay. I left him to clack away on AOL and headed out to the
back porch.
My backyard was sloped up into the mountainside and
heavily wooded in the back. It was on slightly higher ground than the adjoining
houses' backyards -- something I appreciated greatly when I was 13 and Trish
Escobedo next door would lay out next to her pool. I settled into my usual
chair, which looked out onto the Escobedo backyard -- Trish was now married and
hadn't lived there for nearly 12 years, but old habits died hard. On the way
out, I had pulled a beer from the fridge; I twisted off the top and sat back to
look up at the stars.
I was thinking about Joshua and the Yherajk. Joshua
was an immediate problem -- very smart, very amusing, very liquid, and, I was
beginning to suspect, very prone to boredom. I was giving him a week before he
went off his rocker in the house. I was going to have to figure some way of
getting him out of the house on an occasional basis; I didn't know what a bored
Yherajk was like but I didn't aim to find out. Priority one: field trips for
Joshua.
The Yherajk were a less immediate but infinitely more
complicated problem -- alien globs who want to befriend a humanity that, if
asked, would probably prefer to be befriended by something with an
endoskeleton. The only thing that possibly could have been worse were if the
Yherajk looked like giant bugs: that would have turned the half of humanity
already afraid of spiders and roaches into insane gibbering messes. Maybe that
was the way to go: "The Yherajk -- At Least They're Not Insects." I
glanced back up at the stars and wondered idly if one of them was the Yherajk
asteroid ship.
I heard a scratching at the side gate. I went over to
unlatch it; Ralph, the World's Oldest Retriever, was on the other side, huffing
slightly. His tail was wagging feebly and he was looking up at me with a tired
doggie grin as if to say, I got out again. Not bad for an old fart.
I liked Ralph. The youngest Escabedo kid, Richie, had
graduated from college and moved out about two years ago, and I suspected since
then Ralph didn't get that much notice; Esteban, who owned a mainframe software
company, didn't have the time, and anyone could tell that Mary just wasn't a
dog person. He was fed but ignored.
Richie used to drop by every now and then with Ralph;
he was only a few years younger than I was, and for a while had been thinking
about becoming an agent before he got nervous and went pre-law instead. After
Richie moved out, Ralph would keep dropping by. I think I reminded him of times
when someone was around to pay attention to him. I didn't mind. Ralph didn't
want anything other than to be around somebody else. He's like a lot of old folks
that way. Eventually Estaban or Mary would realize he was gone and would come
over to get him. Ralph would look at me sadly and follow the one or the other
home. A week later he'd get bored and the cycle would repeat.
I headed back to the patio. Ralph shuffled along at my
feet and sat next to me when I got to my chair. I knuckled him on the head
gently , and returned my thoughts to the Yherajk situation.
For some reason, a memory of my childhood popped into
my head: my father, Daniel Stein, sitting at the dining room table with
Krysztof Kordus, a Polish poet who had been sent to a concentration camp during
the World War II after he, a Catholic, had been caught trying to smuggle Jews
out of Poland. Late in life he had emigrated to America, and he hoped that he
would be able to publish his poems in English.
I eventually read the poems when I was in college.
They were terrible and beautiful: terrible in their themes of holocaust and
death, beautiful because they somehow managed to find moments of hope in the
shadow of that terrifying destruction. I remember feeling the need to go out
into the sun after reading them, crying because for the first time I was made
to understand what happened.
I had had relatives who had died in the Holocaust:
great aunts and uncles on my mother's side. My own grandmother had been in a
work camp when the war ended. But she would never talk about it while I was
growing up, and then she had a stroke that took away her ability to speak. It
wasn't until Krysztof's poems that the story was brought home to me.
The night Krysztof and my father sat at our dining
room table, however, Krysztof had received yet another rejection letter for his
book. He sat raging at my father, for not being able to sell the book, and at
the publishers, for not buying the book.
"You have to understand," My dad said to
Krysztof, "Hardly anyone buys books of poetry anymore."
"I understand shit," Krysztof said, thumping
the table. "This is what I do. These poems are as good as any you will
find in the bookstore. Better. You must be able to convince someone to buy
these, Daniel. That is what you do."
"Krysztof," my father said, "The bottom
line is that no one is going to publish these poems right now. If you were Elie
Wiesel, you could sell these poems. But you're nobody here. No one knows you.
No publisher is going to throw money away publishing poems that no one's going
to read."
That set Krysztof off for another ten minutes on the
stupidity of my father, the publishing world, and the American people in
general, for not recognizing genius when it sat arrayed before them. Dad sat
there calmly, waiting for Krysztof to take a breath.
When he did, my dad jumped in. "You're not
listening to what I'm saying, Krysztof," he said. "I know these poems
are masterworks. That's not in dispute. The problem is not the poems, it's you.
No one knows who you are."
"Who cares about me," Krysztof said.
"The poems, they speak for themselves."
"You're a great man, Krysztof," my father
said. "But you know diddly about the American public." And then my
father told Krysztof a plan that would thereafter be known as The Trojan Horse.
The plan was simple. In order to sell Krysztof's
poems, people had to know who Krysztof was first. Dad accomplished this by
convincing Krysztof, after much arguing and protestations of humiliation, to
take a lullaby that he had written decades earlier to amuse his daughter, and
publish it as a children's book. The book, The Dreamers and the Sleepers, sold
millions, much to Krysztof's horror and my father's delight.
During the publicity tour for the book, Krysztof's
Holocaust story was splashed across the features pages of every large and
mid-sized daily in the country. From that, my father was able to wrangle a
made-for-television movie on Krysztof's story out of CBS. It was the most
widely-watched television show that month. Krysztof was embarrassed (he was
played by Lee Majors) but also both rich and famous.
"There," my dad said. "Now we can sell
your book of poems." And he did.
I needed a Trojan Horse. There had to be some back
door way to slip the Yherajk through, like my dad did with Krysztof. But I had
no idea what it was. It's one thing to sell a book of poems. It's another thing
entirely to introduce a planet to the thing they've hoped for and feared for
the last century.
The doorbell rang. Ralph looked at me sadly. I patted
his flank gently, and then we went to answer the door.
Chapter Six
I glanced through the window into my office.
"Tell me that's not Tea Reader I see in there," I said.
"All right," Miranda said. "That's not
Tea Reader you see in there."
"Thank you for conforming to my reality," I
said.
"Not at all," Miranda said. "It's an
honor and a privilege."
I grabbed my door knob, took a deep breath, and went
into my office.
If nothing else, Tea Reader was heart-stoppingly
beautiful; half Hawaiian, half Hungarian, five feet ten inches, and naturally
possessed of the sort of proportions that most women insist exist only on
foot-high plastic dolls. Her record company publicist once drunkenly confided
in me that his company estimated at least 45% of Tea's record sales were to
boys aged thirteen through fifteen, who bought them for the CD insert that
featured Tea rising from the waters of the Pacific, clad in a thin t-shirt and a
thong bikini bottom, both a particularly transparent shade of tan.
I drunkenly confided to him that, when I had inherited
her from my former podmate, I held the poorly masked hope that she might be one
of those actresses who occasionally slept with their agents. Then I got to know
her. I learned to be glad that she was not.
"Hello, Tea," I said.
"Hello, Tom, you miserable fuckhead," Tea
said.
"Always a pleasure to see you, too, Tea," I
said. I walked to my desk and set down. "Now," I said. "How can
I help you?"
"You can explain to me why I suddenly seem to be
represented by Little Miss Hysterical over here." Tea motioned to the far
chair in the corner, where Amanda Hewson sat, crying. At the mention of her
existence, Amanda let out an audible sob and lifted her feet, in an attempt to
curl into a fetal position while still sitting. The chair was getting in the
way.
"Amanda is a full agent here at the
company," I said. "And she's quite good."
"Bullshit," Tea said. Amanda gave another
sob. Tea rolled her eyes dramatically and shouted over her shoulder at Amanda.
"Could you please shut the fuck up?" She said. "I'm trying to
talk my real agent over here, and it's hard enough without you crying a fucking
river."
Amanda exploded from her seat like a flock of birds flushed
out of the underbrush, and attempted to flee the room. She grabbed at the door,
pulled it, and whacked herself on the side of the face. I winced; that was
going to leave a mark. Amanda wailed and sprinted towards her pod. Tea watched
the scene and then turned back to me. She had the expression of the cat who ate
the canary and then threw it up in her owner's favorite shoes.
"Where were we?" she said.
"That wasn't very nice," I said, mildly.
"I'll tell you what's not very fucking nice,
Tom," Tea said. "It's not nice to get back from Honolulu, where I've
been visiting my family, and having a message from Mandy, telling me how
excited she is to be working with me." From her sinister stretch, Tea
straightened up, preternaturally perky. Her voice became a dead-on ringer for
Amanda's Girl Scout-like tone. "'I have your album! I love to listen to it
while I'm exercising!'" Tea slouched again. "Great. Add that to the
half that are whacking off to my picture on the cover, sister."
"It's actually only forty five percent," I
said.
Tea's eyes narrowed. "What?"
"Forty five percent whacking off," I said.
"Your record company's own estimate. Tea, Amanda's working with me. She's
my assistant."
"I thought Miss Bitch back there was your
assistant," Tea said, jerking a thumb towards Miranda's desk. "She
almost didn't let me in to your office today. I was getting ready to smack
her."
Before getting her act together and working her way
through college, Miranda spent a reasonable portion of her teen years
gang-banging in East LA. One night, at a company party, Miranda showed me her
collection of scars, inflicted by razors in a number of cat fights. The other
girls got it worse, she said. I didn't suspect Tea realized how close to death
she had gotten this morning.
"Miranda is my administrative assistant," I
said. "Amanda is working with me with some of my clients."
"Well, I don't want to work with her," Tea
said.
"Why not?"
"Hello? Tom? Did you not see Miss Mandy in here
today? What a fucking crybaby."
"How did she get that way, Tea?" I asked.
"Beats me," Tea said. "We were just
sitting here, waiting for you, and I was just telling her that there was no
fucking way on the planet she was going to be my agent."
"How long were you in here before I got
here?"
Tea shrugged. "A half hour, forty five
minutes."
"I see," I said. "And you don't think
being shat on for three-quarters of an hour is a good reason to get
upset."
"Hey," Tea sat up again and jabbed a finger
at me, "You're the one that put her in that situation. Don't get angry at
me because I went off on her a little."
"Forty five minutes is not a little, Tea," I
said.
"What the fuck does that mean? I'm the one
getting screwed here." She slumped back, sullen.
I was getting a headache. "Tea, what do you want
from me?" I asked.
"I want you to do your fucking job," Tea
said. "I'm not giving you ten percent so you can palm me off on Mandy, the
Teenage Agent. I can think of about ten agents in town who'd get on their hands
and knees to represent me. You're not doing me any favors, Tom."
"Really," I said. "Ten agents."
"At least."
"Fine," I said. "Name one."
"What?"
"Name one," I said. "Give me the name
of one of those agents."
"Hell, no," Tea said. "Why should I
tell you who your competition is? Stay nervous." Tea said.
"Nervous? Hell, Tea, I want to call them
up," I said. "If they're so gung-ho to have you, I'll let you go. I
don't want you to be unhappy. So let's do this thing. Let's get it over with.
Unless you're running off at the mouth."
That got her. "Alan Finley at ACR," she
said.
I buzzed Miranda. She came to the door. "Yes,
Tom?"
"Miranda, would you call Alan Finley over at
Associated Client Representation, and put him on the speaker when you get
him?"
"Sure, Tom."
"Thanks," I said. "Oh, one other thing.
After you get Alan, would you mind bringing me Tea's file?"
"Not at all," Miranda said. "Do you
want the whole file?"
"Just the clippings, please, Miranda."
Miranda smiled slightly and glanced at Tea.
"Delighted to, Tom. Tea," she said. Tea fairly snarled at Miranda as
she closed the door.
"Fucking bitch," Tea said. "Did you see
that look she gave me?"
"I must have missed it," I said.
Miranda's voice clicked in over the speaker phone.
"Alan Finley at ACR, Tom," she said, and left the line.
A male voice piped up. "Tom? You there?"
"Ho, Alan," I said. "How are things
over there at ACR these days?"
"The land of milk and honey, Tom. We're giving
away Bentleys as party favors. You want one?"
Two weeks ago, an ACR internal memo made its way to
Variety; in it, ACR's CEO Norm Jackson offered a Rolls Royce to the agent who
stole the most A-list clients from other agencies in the next three months.
Jackson first declared it a forgery, and then tried to chalk it up as an inside
joke. Nobody bit. Long-time clients were offended that they, by implication,
were not A-listers, and started jumping ship. Clients in the process of being
wooed by ACR stopped returning calls. Variety suggested that the second-place
winner get Norm Jackson's job.
"I'll pass for now, Alan, but I hope you remember
me during the holidays," I said. "Listen, Alan. Got a question for
you."
"Shoot."
"I have a client who has recently become, shall
we say, dissatisfied with the quality of representation she's receiving here.
She's thinking of going over there."
"Well, aren't you just the helpful one,
Tom," Alan said. "Is it Michelle Beck? You can send her right along.
I'll get that Rolls after all."
I laughed. He laughed. Tea glared at the speakerphone.
"Sorry, Alan. The client is Tea Reader. You know
her."
"Sure. I bought her CD. For the picture on the
inside, mostly."
Tea looked like she was about to say something, but I
put my finger to my lips. "Right," I said. "So are you
interested? Want to take her on?"
"Jesus, Tom, you're actually serious?"
"Sure am, Alan. Serious as a heart attack."
"She wouldn't happen to be there at the moment,
would she?"
"Nope," I said. That, at the very least,
would keep Tea quiet for a few minutes. "Just you and me. You want
her?"
"Fuck, no, Tom," Alan said. "I hear
she's a harpy."
Tea looked like she'd been slapped.
"I hear she drove her last agent insane. You knew
him, right?"
"Yeah," I said. "We were
podmates."
"That's right. Cracked up like Northridge in a
quake is what I heard. Became a moonie or a Scientologist or something wacko
like that."
"Buddhist, actually."
"Close enough," Alan said. "No offense,
Tom. I have enough clients who make me want to get religion, so I could be assured
that there was a Hell for them to be sent to. I could look at Tea for hours.
Wouldn't want to be in the same room as her, though. Certainly wouldn't want to
represent her. How do you manage it, anyway?"
"Just a saint, I suppose," I said.
"Well, look, Alan, you know anyone over there who might want to have
her?"
"Not off the top of my head. I think everybody's
perfectly happy to let you represent her for as long as you want, pal. I'll
remember you in my prayers, if it will make you feel any better."
"It does, it does," I said. "Thanks,
Alan."
"Sure, Tom. Be sure to let me know when Michelle
gets bored with you. Her, I'd put up with." He hung up.
"Well," I said. "That was certainly
instructive."
"Fuck you," Tea said, and stared off out a
side window. Miranda came in, dropped a file on my desk, and left.
"What is that?" Tea asked.
"This is your clipping file," I said.
"Our clipping service scours the trades and the magazines for a reference
to any of our clients and sends them on to us. So we always know what people
are thinking about the people we represent."
I separated the clips into two piles. One was very
small. The other was not. I pointed to the smaller pile. "Do you know what
this is?" I asked.
Tea looked over, shrugged. "No."
"These are your positive notices," I said.
"They're mostly about the fact that you're built like Barbie, although
there's one here that says you were the best thing about that Pauly Shore flick
you were in, with the further admission that that is a textbook example of
damning with faint praise."
I thumped the other, much larger pile with an open
palm. "This," I said, "is your pile of negative notices. We have
an office pool here, you know. We've got bets on how thick this pile is going
to get by the end of the year. Right now, it's a modest three inches. But it's
early yet."
Tea looked bored. "Is this going somewhere?"
I gave up. "Tea, I've been trying to find some
way to put this delicately. Let me make it simple: Nobody in town likes you. No
one. You're monstrously difficult. People don't like working with you. People
don't like being seen with you. People don't even like being in the same room
with you. Even the thirteen year old boys who fantasize about you know enough
not to like you as a person. In the grand pantheon of contemporary bitches of
Hollywood, it's you, Shannon Doherty and Sean Young."
"I'm not anything like them," Tea said.
"I still have a career."
"You sure do," I said. "And you have me
to thank for it. Any other agent would have written you off long ago. You're
good looking, but that's not exactly a rare thing around these parts. I have to
fight to get you work. And every time I do get you work, I hear back about how
everybody on that crew would rather chew glass than work with you again.
Everyone. They have craft service workers who won't cater a set you're on. My
best estimate is that you have about another 18 months before we run out of
people who'll work with you. After that you'll have to find some nice, 80-year
oil tycoon you can marry and screw into a coma."
Tea was dumbstruck. It couldn't last. It didn't.
"Gee, Tom. Thanks for the vote of confidence."
"The vote of confidence isn't for you, Tea. I'm
giving you two choices here. The first choice is to sit here, shut up and do
what I tell you. We may have an outside chance of saving your career if you do.
The other is not to sit here, shut up, and do what I tell you. In which case,
I'm dropping you and you can get the hell out of my office. It really doesn't
matter to me which you do. Actually, I'm lying. I'd prefer it if you left. But
it's up to you. What's it going to be?"
Tea sat there with a gaze of pure, unadulterated hate.
It was unnervingly arousing. I ignored it and went on.
"All right, then. The first thing you're going to
do is apologize to Amanda."
"Fuck, no," Tea said.
"Fuck, yes," I said, "or we have no
deal. I realize you didn't notice this while you were dismantling her, but
Amanda may have been the only person in the entire Los Angeles metropolitan
area who actually genuinely liked you. There are 17 million people in the LA
basin, Tea. You need her."
"The hell I do," Tea said.
"Tea," I said. "Two words. 'Boinking
Grandpa.'"
"Fuck," Tea said. "All right."
"Thank you," I said. "The second thing
you're going to do is trust me. Amanda isn't much to look at at the moment, but
she's going to devote more of her brain to you than she does to herself. Work
with her. Try to be nice. In the comfort of your own home, you can stab
life-sized dolls dressed up to look like her, for all I care. But give her something
to work with. Understand?"
"Fine," Tea said. She was hating this.
"Great," I said. "Off you go,
then."
"What, you want me to apologize now?" She
was genuinely shocked.
"No time like the present, Tea. She's in the
building, you're in the building. It's more convenient that way."
Tea got up, gave me one last glare, and exited the
office, slamming the door on the way out. I sat there for a good fifteen
seconds, and let out a tremendous whoop, and began spinning my desk chair
around.
Miranda came into the office. She had something in her
hand. "Tea left looking like she was going to implode, Tom. You must have
done a number on her."
"Oh my God," I said, stopping the spin cycle.
I felt pleasantly dizzy. "I've been wanting to do that for years. You have
no idea how good that felt. "
"Sure I do," Miranda said. "You left
the speakerphone on."
She extended her hand to me. In it was a tape
cassette.
"What's this?" I asked.
"A momento of your special Tea time,"
Miranda said. "Sorry. I just couldn't resist."
*****
Michelle speared a sliver of chicken from her salad.
"I'm thinking of dyeing my hair," she said, and popped the chicken in
her mouth.
"Blue hair only looks good on Marge Simpson,
Michelle," I said.
She wiggled her hand at me. "Ha ha, funny guy.
No, I'm going to dye it brown. You know, for the part."
"What part are we talking about, if I may
ask?" I said.
"Hard Memories," Michelle said.
Now I knew why I was sitting inside the Mondo Chicken
in Tarzana. Michelle and I had met there years ago, when she was a waitress
named Shelly, looking for an agent, and I was newly-minted agent looking to get
laid. She turned out to be the more determined one; I never did have sex with
Michelle, but she got me as an agent. She took it as a lucky omen (the getting
the agent part, not the part about not having sex with me); since then, any
time Michelle had a special occasion to mark or an announcement to make to me,
she did it at Mondo Chicken.
So far it had included six movie decisions, one double
funeral when her parents died in a car accident, three engagements (and
subsequent breakups), two religious epiphanies and one pet euthanization. There
were a lot of memories between us, packed into one moderately overpriced eatery
in the Valley. The fact that Michelle decided to tell me about wanting Hard
Memories here was a very bad sign. It meant that she was determined, and that
there was going to be little I could do to change her mind.
But, of course, I had to try. "Hard Memories is
already taken, Michelle," I said. "Ellen Merlow's been signed for the
part."
"Not yet," she said. "I called. It's
only an oral agreement. I think I can make them change their minds."
"By dyeing your hair?"
"For a start," Michelle said. "I mean,
it would at least signal that I'm serious. And if I look more like the part,
maybe they can see me in the role. Brown hair would change my entire
look." She stabbed at her salad again.
I set down my own fork and massaged the bridge of my
nose. "Michelle," I said. "if you had brown hair, you still
wouldn't look a 40-year-old Eastern European Jew. You'd look like a 25-year-old
Californian Aryan with hair dyed brown. Look at yourself, Michelle. You're
blonde. Naturally. You have Newman Blue eyes. And you have a body shape that
wasn't even invented until the 1980s."
"I can plump out," she said.
"You throw up in panic when you have
dessert," I said.
"I stopped doing that a long time ago, and you
know that," Michelle said. "That was a cheap shot."
"You're right," I said. "I'm
sorry."
Michelle relaxed. "I'll even have dessert
today," she said. "I think they have non-fat yogurt here."
"It's not just how you look, Michelle," I
said. "Don't take this the wrong way, but you're just not ready for that
part. It's a part that's meant for someone much older."
Michelle pointed her fork at me. "Summertime
Blues was meant for someone older, remember? When we first got the script, it
called for a 30-year-old woman to seduce those two teenage brothers. When I got
the part, it got kicked back to a 22-year-old. That's what re-writes are for,
you said."
"Summertime Blues was a comedy about two kids
losing their cherry," I said. "Hard Memories is about anti-Semitism
and six million people dying. I think you could agree there's a slight
difference in tone there."
"Well, of course," Michelle said. "But
I don't see what that has to do with the main character."
I sighed. "Let me try a different tack, "I
said. "Why do you want this role so badly?"
Michelle looked puzzled. "What do you mean?"
"I mean, what is it about the role that makes you
so passionate about it? What is it about this role that's getting you so worked
up?"
"It's a great role, Tom," she said.
"It's so dramatic and filled with feeling. I want to do something like
that. You know, something with emotional baggage. I think it's time Hollywood
started taking me seriously."
"Okay," I said. "Now, how much do you
know about the Holocaust?"
"I know a lot," Michelle said. "How can
you not know about the Holocaust? It was terrible, everyone knows that. I saw
Schindler's List when it came out. I cried."
"All right, crying at Schindler's List is a good
start," I said. "Anything else?"
"I've been thinking of going to that museum here
about hatred," she said. "I forget what it's called at the moment.
Simon something. The Norton Simon?"
"Simon Wiesenthal," I said. "The Norton
Simon is an art museum."
"I knew it was one of the two," she said.
"Did you ever read that book of poems I gave
you?"
"The ones by that Christmas guy?"
"Krysztof," I said.
"I started them, but I had to stop,"
Michelle said. "I had to put my dog to sleep around that time, and reading
those poems just made me depressed. I just kept thinking about my dog and
crying."
"Right," I said. "Look, Michelle, I
think it's great that you want to do dramatic roles. I think you'll be great in
them. I just don't think that this is right one. Hard Memories isn't just going
to take technique, it's going to take knowledge. I know you think you know
about the Holocaust and about this woman's life, but I don't think you do. If
you were to take this role without knowing anything about it, it's going to
come back to haunt you. Melanie Griffith once did a movie called Shining
Through and on the press junket she said 'There were six million Jews killed in
the Holocaust. That's a lot of people!' It didn't help her film any."
"Six million is a lot of people," Michelle
said. "I don't see why people would be so upset that she said that."
"I know, Michelle," I said. "That's why
I think you should skip this role."
Michelle glared at me angrily and appeared to be
winding up to a tirade when her eyes slipped into her skull, leaving only the
whites visible. Her mouth dropped open slightly. She dropped her fork onto the
table. I stared, panicked -- I had made her so angry I caused her to stroke
out. I was in the process of yanking out my cellular phone to dial 911 when she
snapped back.
"That's better," she said.
"Jesus Christ, Michelle," I said. "What
was that all about?"
"I've been going to a hypno-therapist," she
said, "to help me handle my stress. He placed an auto-suggestion into my
subconscious so that every time I get angry or stressed, I sort of float away
for a couple of seconds. It's really helping me deal with my issues."
"Let's hope you don't have any issues while
you're on the 405," I said.
"Well, I usually stress out in traffic jams, so
it's not a problem," Michelle said. "I'm not moving anyway. Listen,
you just made me very angry back there."
"I know that now," I said.
"You're supposed to be my agent, you know,"
she said, "and that means helping me get the roles I want."
"Yes, but I'm also your friend," I said,
"and that means looking out for you. And also, as your agent, I have to
look out for the longevity of your career. If Hard Memories flopped, it
wouldn't stop you from making movies, but it would make folks think twice about
hiring you for another drama. And then you would be stuck doing Summertime
Blues and Murdered Earth sequels. Very profitable in the short run, but not
what I think you want to do all your life."
"I don't even want to do this Murdered Earth
sequel," Michelle said, sullenly. "Any way I can get out of it?"
"Afraid not," I said. "We've gone
beyond the oral agreement stage. Besides, you've got twelve million plus back
end. You're unbelievably rich now. Enjoy it."
Michelle poked at her food. "The only reason I
got the first film was because Brad wanted to screw me."
"There was more to it than that, Michelle,"
I said, and that much was true -- at the time, she had also been cheap to hire.
"But look at it this way: now you get to screw him. To the tune of 12
mil."
Michelle shrugged and looked down at her plate.
"All I'm saying is sometime soon I'd like to get to do something where the
reason I got it wasn't because someone wanted to get in my pants."
I remembered why I had started representing Michelle.
I felt unbelievably filthy.
"You ready to go?" I said.
She looked up at me. "What?"
"Let's go," I said. I pulled out my wallet
and set down a couple of twenties.
"I haven't ordered dessert yet," Michelle
said.
"I believe that you would have eaten it," I
said. "Now I want you to come with me. I have an idea."
Across the strip mall from the Mondo Chicken was a
Crown SuperStore. We went in.
"What are we doing?" Michelle asked.
"Getting research materials," I said, and
sat her down in on one of the store's benches while I went shopping. I picked
up Hannah Arendt, Primo Levi, Elie Wisel and Simon Wiesenthal. I grabbed
Hitler's Willing Executioners, Denying the Holocaust,Shoah and Why Did the
Heavens Not Darken? I went to the graphic novel area and fished through
costumed superheroes until I found Maus. On the way through the fiction I
spotted Sophie's Choice. I grabbed it. Couldn't hurt.
I had no illusions -- These books were enough to
confuse graduate students, let alone Michelle, who was, at the very best, a
middleweight in the intelligence arena. I couldn't even imagine what she was
going to make of the concept of "The Banality of Evil". But we had
eaten at Mondo Chicken, and that meant something. She'd kill herself slogging
through all these. And who knows. It could take. Stranger things have happened.
Twenty minutes later, we stood at the checkstand while
the overawed cashier rang up our purchases.
"You want me to read all of these?" Michelle
asked.
"Try," I said. "Start with Maus or
Sophie's Choice. Convince me that you're serious by reading some of these and
I'll do everything I can to get you that part. Fair enough?"
Michelle squealed like the cheerleader she was and
gave me a bearhug and a smack on the cheek. The cashier nearly fainted with
envy.
Chapter Seven
"When I said I wanted to get out of the house,
this wasn't what I was thinking of," Joshua said.
Joshua, Ralph and I were at the edge of the Big Dalton
Canyon reservoir, a tiny, out-of-the-way clot of water in the foothills. It was
a weekday, so no one was likely to be around during the day. I had a fishing
rod. I didn't know if the reservoir had been stocked with fish, but I figured
today was a good a day as any to find out.
"What were you thinking of, Joshua?" I
asked.
"I don't know," he said. He had a pseudopod
half-in, half-out of the water, as if testing how cold the water was. "I
was thinking maybe a drive-in movie."
"There's a drive-in over in Azusa," I said.
"I don't know if they still show movies, though. I think it's all a flea
market now."
Joshua finally slid all the way into the water, and
floated on the top like an oil slick. "Well, let's try it, anyway. Get a
big tub of popcorn, too. Get really sick on the artificial butter
flavoring."
I zinged the fishing line into the reservoir. "As
if you know anything about artificial butter flavoring."
"Hey," Joshua said. "I'm open to the
experience. I've never vomited. It could be fun. So can we go?"
"Sure," I said. "We'll have to go after
it's already dark, though. I don't want anyone to see you."
"If I understand it correctly, people don't
actually go to drive-in movies to watch the movies," Joshua said. "If
they're not watching the movies, what's the chance they're going be to watching
us?"
Ralph, who had been pacing the edge of the water,
barked towards Joshua. Joshua quivered for a second, then shot an arc of water
at Ralph, who took it broadside on the flank. He reared up slightly, barked
again, and then charged into the water after Joshua. They splashed around with
each other for several minutes. It was the happiest I'd seen Ralph be in years.
Ralph and Joshua became friends earlier in the week.
The day I had taken a sledgehammer to Tea, I had come home and opened the front
door to find Joshua and Ralph having a tug-of-war with one of my dress shirts
in the front corridor. Ralph was winning due to the fact that he had both teeth
and paws; Joshua, lacking much in the way of traction on the waxed hardwood
floor, was skidding around like a large gelatin fruit cup. Ralph was about to
take off out the door, Joshua in tow. I shut the door quickly.
"What are you doing with my shirt?" I had
said.
"I'm sorry," Joshua had said. "It
wasn't your favorite, was it? We were just playing."
"How did Ralph get in?" I had asked.
"I went out back, and then he showed up and
followed me in," Joshua had said. "Can we keep him?"
Ralph, winded, barked once and collapsed happily on
the wood.
I sent Ralph home later that night but he came back
almost immediately, and went looking for Joshua. It was kind of a cute scene: a
dog and his gelatinous boy. When Esteban came to get him again, I told him I
wouldn't mind looking after Ralph for a few days. Esteban went away, looking
palpably relieved. I hadn't seen him since. I had the vague suspicion I had
just assumed ownership of a dog.
Personally I would have assumed that the sight of a
mobile lump of goo would have blown Ralph's little doggie mind, but watching
him goof with Joshua in the water, it was clear he was handling it pretty well,
better than most humans would. I mentioned that to Joshua.
"That's because Ralph and I speak the same
language," Joshua said, oozing back towards the shore with Ralph.
"What do you mean?" I said. "I'm not
hearing any barking coming out of you."
"I'm talking about smells," he said.
"Ralph's wired for that sort of information, you know. He's a retriever.
It took me about an hour to figure out what smells he pays attention to. Now
we've got a pretty good working vocabulary."
"So you can actually talk to Ralph?" I said.
"Of course not," Joshua said. "He's a
dog, Tom."
"But you just said you had a working vocabulary
with him."
"Sure, but so do you. I've heard you talk to him.
He understands a few of those words. Doesn't mean you're talking nuclear physics.
But I do speak better to him than you do. He understands smells better than
words. And since that's the way I usually talk anyway, it's easier for me to
speak to him than it is to you -- isn't that right, Ralph?"
Ralph, back on shore, barked.
"What's that you say, Ralph? Little Timmy's
fallen down a well and needs help?"
Ralph barked again.
"Good boy!" Joshua said. "Hand him a
snack, Tom."
"Right away, oh globulous one," I said. I
rummaged through the cooler next to me and fished out one of the sandwiches I
had made, and gave Ralph a piece of the ham inside. Ralph accepted it gravely
and then lay down next to me.
Joshua slid over and held up a tentacle. "Hey,
look," he said. "I found me a frog." Inside the tentacle a
terrified amphibian kicked, slowly, through the gunk that was Joshua.
"Jesus, Joshua," I said. "You're
killing that thing. Give it some air."
Joshua created an air pocket and slid it up the
tendril to the frog, who now sat inside it. It hopped a couple of times, trying
to escape, before settling down and sitting there placidly. Joshua showed the
frog to Ralph, who sniffed at the proffered tendril politely before laying his
head down for a nap.
"We have these where I come from," Joshua
said.
"Frogs?" I said.
"Well, obviously not frogs, exactly," Joshua
said. "More legs, for one thing. And much, much larger. But the same
concept -- amphibian, not very smart, all that. We used 'em sort of like you
used horses and other big animals. Beasts of burden."
"Hi-ho, Silver."
"I get that," Joshua said.
"I'm not surprised," I said.
"I wasn't trying to kill it when I was
surrounding it, you know," Joshua said. "I was just trying to check
something. I was seeing if I could control it like we control the frogs back
home."
"I don't get that," I said. "What do
you mean?"
"Back home, we get into their brains,"
Joshua said. "We extend a very thin tendril into their skulls, connect
into their nervous system, and use them for what we need."
I pictured Joshua slopped on the head of a horse,
filling the animals ears with himself. It was a disturbing image, to say the
least. "That's terrible," I said.
"Why?"
"It's just creepy," I said. "Invading
someone's brain to have them do your bidding." I did an involuntary
shudder. "It's like a mental rape or something."
"Tom, they're big frogs," Joshua said.
"It's certainly not any worse than whipping some dumb animal to get it to
do what you want to do. Anyway, it's not like we take over the brains of
anything that can think. That's a --" He stopped for a second and waved
the tendril, as if to imply trying to think of a word; the frog shifted
uncomfortably within . "--sin. A really big sin. Like murder or incest
would be for you."
"What a relief," I said. "Because, you
know, people never murder each other or commit incest around here," I
said.
"Don't blame me for the shortcomings of your own
species," Joshua said. "Here, look. While we were talking, I got into
this guy's head. Now watch." He dropped the tendril to the ground and slid
it back into himself. The frog sat there, not doing much.
"Where's the tendril?" I said.
"The operative phrase here is 'very thin,'
Tom," Joshua said. "You're not going to see it. Here we go."
The frog sat there some more. After a couple of
seconds it nudged itself forward. Then it sat there some more.
"There," Joshua said.
"That's it?" I said.
"Let's see you do that, smartass," Joshua
said.
"Do what?" I said. "The frog moved. Big
deal. The frog would have moved anyway."
The frog lifted up on its hind legs and did a hoppy
little samba. Its front legs moved in time.
"All right," I said. "That, I don't see
very often."
"Thank you," Joshua said. The frog made an
awkward bow and then tipped over. They're not exactly designed to be on two
legs. It sat for a few minutes, then aimed itself towards the water and hopped
away.
"You still controlling it?" I asked. I was
imagining microscopic tendrils spieling out of Joshua like the fishing line in
my rod.
"No, I let it go," Joshua said. "I
wasn't doing a very good job. Your wiring is different here on Earth than it is
back home. Even getting it to hop around was a bit of trouble. I'm sure if I
worked at it, I could figure it out. But it's hard to do on the fly."
"You'll have to teach me to do that," I
said.
"You'll have to become a blob first," Joshua
said.
I patted my stomach. "Give me time," I said.
"On another, not-entirely-unrelated note, I hope you weren't expecting
fish for dinner. They don't seem to be biting."
"I don't think you're going to find any,"
Joshua said. "I'm pretty sure there aren't any fish here."
"So am I," I said. "But you never
know."
"Well, when I was in the frog's head, I didn't
feel any fish memories," Joshua said. "If there were any fish here,
the frog would have been likely to have some record of it. At least, I don't
think I felt any fish memories. Like I said, the wiring is a different."
I sat looking at Joshua for a couple of minutes. Then
I started reeling in the line. "You know," I said, "I hate the
way you do that."
"Do what?"
"Just casually drop stuff like that in the
conversation," I said. "'Oh, look. Here's a frog! Watch me make it
dance like Danny Kaye! Incidentally, did you know I could read its mind, too?'
It really bugs me."
"I'm sorry," Joshua said. "I'm not
trying hide anything. You could have asked me about it earlier -- when we were
having that little Q&A."
"I didn't know to ask," I said. "Look,
Joshua, I'm not really upset, but you have to understand. I need to know all
about you. In the space of five minutes, you've shown me that your species has
the ability to get into someone's head and read their thoughts --"
"Something, not someone," Joshua said.
"That's a distinction that's going to make a lot
of difference to the 90% of humanity that doesn't know the difference between
astrology and astronomy," I said. "This is a power that bothers me
immensely, and I understand exactly what you're saying. How the Hell am I going
to find a way to make the rest of the world get it?"
"If it bothers you, I just won't do it,"
Joshua said.
"You're missing the point, Joshua," I said.
"It doesn't matter if you choose not do it. It's the fact that you can do
it. It's alien and it's scary. It's something that we're going to have to work
with. And that's my point. You know more about us than we know about you. If
you know you can do something that humans can't, you really have to let me
know. Don't wait for me to ask about it. And don't just bring it up in
conversation. We can't have any surprises. I can't."
"You were lying just a second ago," Joshua
said. "You are upset."
I started to refute that, but I stopped myself and
gave Joshua a little grim grin. "I'm sorry, Joshua," I said.
"You're right. I am upset. I've been thinking about this thing for over a
week now. But I have no idea what to do. And it really bothers me."
"A week's not that much time," Joshua said.
"No, it's not. But by this point I should have at
least some idea of a plan," I said. "Even a bad idea would be better
than nothing. But I'm drawing blanks. I think I'm having performance
anxiety."
"If it will make you feel better, I'll still
respect you in the morning," Joshua said.
I grinned more widely. "That's the problem, you
know," I said. "When I was a kid, I remember seeing this 1950s
science fiction movie on channel nine. Three guys went to the moon and
discovered it was populated by women. One of the Gabor sisters was the ruler.
Here was humanity's first contact with life on another planet, and they all
looked like fabulous dames. And of course the guys from Earth were having no
problems with it at all. It would be much simpler if you looked like
that."
"I don't know if I'd want to look like a Gabor
sister," Joshua said. "Although it could have interesting
ramifications. 'People of the Earth! Surrender now, or we will slap your
policemen!'"
"Maybe not a Gabor sister," I said.
"But not a blob, either. If you looked like Ralph," I motioned to the
sleeping dog, "Then we'd be set. Everyone loves dogs."
"We know about this problem," Joshua said.
"That's one of the reasons we came to you."
"I know. That's what I'm saying. By now I should
have some idea of how to get away from this or work around it. But I'm having a
hard time. I know I probably shouldn't tell that to you, but there it is.
You've got me stumped at the moment."
"You'll figure it out," Joshua said.
"Maybe while you're doing that, I'll take some lessons on dog behavior. As
a backup. There are worse things than being a dog. Right, Ralph?"
Ralph cracked an eye open at the sound of his name.
From beside the cooler, my cellular phone rang. I
sighed and picked it up. "Miranda, I'm busy with a client right now,"
I said. Miranda was the only person that had the number to this particular
cellular phone (I had three), so I didn't worry about who it would be on the
other side.
"Tom," Miranda sounded upset. "You
remember Jim Van Doren?"
"Yeah," I said. During the last week Van
Doren had been calling every couple of hours trying to get an interview with
me. I eventually told Miranda to tell him whatever it was, I was not available
for comment. "What about him?"
"Where are you?" Miranda said. "Are you
in LA?"
"I'm in Glendora," I said. "It's about
45 minutes out."
"This week's edition of The Biz just came
out," Miranda said. "You need to get back into LA and pick it up.
You're on the cover. And you're not going to be happy with the story."
"Why?" I asked. "What's it about?"
"Here's what it says on the cover," Miranda
said. "'Tom Stein is the hottest young agent in Hollywood. So why is he
acting so damned weird?'"
Chapter Eight
Secretive Agent
Tom Stein is the hottest young agent in Hollywood. So
why is he acting so damned weird?
By James Van Doren
At first glance, Tom Stein doesn't seem like your
typical Hollywood millionaire. Maybe it's because he's lugging a five gallon
bottle into his car. The bottle is filled, he says, with sulfurous waters from
an out-of-the-way desert spa the agents at Lupo Associates go to whenever
they're feeling a little stressed-out. The fact that Stein is hauling this into
his car tells you two things: first, he's stressed out. Second, he doesn't have
time to feel stressed out right now.
And who can blame him? Last week, Stein pulled the
biggest coup of his young agentorial career, when he managed to pull a $12.5
million paycheck out of the hat for client Michelle Beck, for her return to the
Murdered Earth series. There have been larger paychecks for an actress, but not
many, and certainly not so soon: Michelle's most recent paycheck for a
supporting role in the just-wrapped Scorpion's Tail, was a mere $650,000 -- a
twentieth of her next. Or, to put it another way, Stein's 10% is worth almost
twice as much as his client's previous highest salary.
Stein's success is another example of hard-nosed
Hollywood capitalism -- but the question becomes: at what price? For shortly
after Stein's magic trick with Michelle Beck, friends and colleagues started
noticing the normally affable Stein has become more closed and secretive. And
his clients are discovering the oddest behavior of all: without warning, Stein
has dropped them onto a subordinate agent, whose inexperience and (some allege)
incompetence could send their careers into cinematic limbo. What have they done
to deserve this, they ask? And what secret is gnawing away at Tom Stein? Is his
red-hot career over just as it begun?
The story itself would have been funny, if it had been
written about anyone else. Van Doren, in the absence of reality, spun out a
fascinating tale of stress and paranoia that speculated that I was suffering
from everything from conflicted sexuality to drug use to a "late-blooming
Oedipal conflict," with my agent father -- my making my first million
apparently being a way to "claim my father's crown" in my chosen
field, according to the psychologist Van Doren managed to dig up.
The Biz being the pariah magazine it is, the quotes
about me from colleagues and friends were unusually skimpy -- the attributed
quotes coming largely from high school acquaintances and college dorm-floor
residents who generally described me as "friendly" and "driven,"
-- nothing to get worked up about, since they were true, and blandly
non-specific; these folks could have been describing a ski rescue dog with the
same words, with equal results.
The unattributed quoters, of which there two, were not
that hard to figure out. The first, the "Lupo Associates Insider",
was obviously Ben Fleck. Ben, no doubt relishing a chance to take a whack at
me, described me as a "shark with Brylcreme" who was "insanely
secretive, to the point of forbidding his assistants to even talk with other
agents." The latter I found amusing, the former, inscrutable -- I don't
put anything in my hair, much less Brylcreme. I suspected Ben didn't actually
know what Brylcreme was. I had Miranda send him a tube with my compliments.
The second was a "strongarmed client" who
described Amanda as a "shrieking virgin" and myself as a
"fucking overlord of ego," and then went from there. It was pretty
clear that Van Doren got more than he expected from Tea Reader, since by the
end of it, even he noted that it seemed this particular client "was on her
own personal vendetta against the universe, and Tom Stein happens to be the
closest moving object."
Be that as it may, Van Doren took Tea's grudge against
Amanda and ran with it, taking a bat to the poor girl. Van Doren dug up the
Mexican soap star, who complained, through an interpreter, that Amanda had
found her no work in the big Hollywood productions. The actor who revived her
at the marathon described how they met, which made Amanda appear both sickly,
for passing out in the first place, and then flaky, for representing the first
passing jogger who happened to administer mouth-to-mouth.
Ben Fleck then reappeared in his Lupo Associates
insider guise to make dismissive comments about the practice of bringing up
agents from the mailroom (Ben got his job through nepotism: his step-father was
a senior agent before keeling over, corned beef in hand, at Canter's Deli), and
mentioned, darkly, that I had come up from the mailroom myself. Obviously we
mail-room types were looking out for each other, like frat brothers or
Templars.
Amanda read the story and burst into my office,
flinging The Biz onto my desk and then collapsing into the chair, moody.
"I want to die," she said.
"Amanda, no one reads The Biz," I said.
"And those that do generally know enough to realize that it's full of
shit."
"My mom reads The Biz," Amanda said.
"Well, all right, almost everyone knows it's full
of shit," I said. "Don't worry about it. Next week they'll find some
more naked pictures of celebrities and they'll forget all about it. Don't be so
upset."
"I'm not upset, I'm pissed off," Amanda
said, whispering the words pissed off like she was worried about being
punished. I wondered again how she ever managed to become an agent. "I
know who talked to The Biz. I know who that unnamed source is. It's that bitch
Tea." She stumbled over bitch, and then she gave me a bitter smile.
"You know, I just got her a part in that new Chevy Chase film, too. A good
part. Guess it doesn't matter."
"I'm sorry, Amanda," I said. "I
shouldn't have unleashed Tea on you unawares. I should have let you know she's
a high riding bitch. It's my fault."
"No, it's all right," Amanda said.
"It's okay. Because I know something Tea doesn't know."
"What's that?"
"That she got a part in a Chevy Chase
movie."
"Amanda," I said, genuinely surprised.
"You star. And here I was beginning to worry about you."
Amanda smiled like a five year old who had gotten her
first taste of being naughty and realized it was something she would enjoy
doing. A lot.
Amanda ended up getting the best of it; the worst of
her problems were over with Tea right then. My problems with my clients had
just begun. For the next week, I was in Agent Hell.
*****
"Mind the light," Barbara Creek said.
The light she was referring to was a huge klieg light,
which lay on the set of her son's sitcom, Workin' Out! The light casing was
heavily dented and the lens was shattered and strewn like jagged jewels across
the floor, nestled up to the weights and exercise equipment that made up the
health club locale set .
"I'm guessing that light's not supposed to be on
the set," I said.
"Of course it's not," Barbara said, and then
raised her voice so everyone on the set could hear her. "It's on the set
because some damned fool UNION light hanger doesn't know how to do HIS DAMN
JOB! And he wouldn't HAVE a JOB unless HIS DAMN JOB was protected by his DAMN
UNION!" Barbara's voice, a commanding boom in normal conversation,
reverberated through the set like the aftershock of a particularly nasty quake.
From the corners and the rafters, members of the crew glared down at her.
Something was telling me this was not going to be a frictionless set.
"Shouldn't someone come and pick this up?" I
asked.
"Hell, no," Barbara said. "It's staying
where it is until the Union president gets here. I want him to see what sort of
job his IDIOT UNION BROOM PUSHERS" -- once again Barbara pitched her voice
to the cheap seats -- "have been doing around here. No one here is going
to do a DAMN THING until he gets here."
That much was true. There were forty people on the
set, mostly crew, ambling around aimlessly. The cast seemed to be missing, with
the exception of Chuck White, who played Rashaad Creek's best friend on the
show. Chuck was working out on one of the set decorations.
"How long have you been waiting?" I asked.
"Six long, unproductive hours," Barbara
said. "And I'm going to keep waiting, and everyone here is going to keep
waiting, until the Union president gets here. Anyone who leaves before he gets
here is fired, UNION OR NOT."
Directly behind Barbara, one of the cameramen gave her
the finger.
"But I didn't ask you here to talk about the
lights, Tom," Barbara said, strolling over to the audience seats. "I
want to talk to you about the future of Rashaad's representation."
I followed Barbara. "Has there been a problem,
Barbara?" I asked.
Barbara took a seat on a bleacher. "Not as such,
Tom -- here, sit down a minute," she patted the seat next to her,
"but I have to tell you, I'm hearing some very disturbing things."
I took a seat. "This wouldn't have anything to do
with that article in The Biz," I said.
"It might," Barbara said. "You know,
that reporter Van Doren gave Rashaad and me a call. Asked us if we've been
noticing if you've been acting strangely lately. And then he told us that you
had dropped so many of your clients. As you might imagine, we found this very
disturbing. I found it very disturbing."
"Barbara," I said, "you really have
nothing to worry about. Yes, I transitioned a number of my less-important
clients, but I certainly have no intention of doing that with Rashaad. He's on
his way up, and I intend to keep him going there."
"Tom," Barbara said, "are you on
drugs?"
"Excuse me?"
"Are you on drugs," she repeated. "That
reporter mentioned something about a health spa and sulfur treatments. To my
ear, that sounds like detox. You know how I feel about those drugs. I won't
have them anywhere near my boy. You know I had everyone here on the set take a
urine test before they could work here. If they had the slightest hint of
anything in their system, they're gone."
After Workin' Out! was greenlighted, Rashaad threw a
little party for himself and 30 of his most geographically immediate friends at
the Four Seasons hotel in Beverly Hills. One of Rashaad's "pals"
arrived with more cocaine than was in the final scene of Scarface. But then,
Rashaad wasn't the one having to pee in a cup.
"I'm clean, Barbara," I said. "The last
time I smoked anything illegal was my junior year in college. You don't have to
worry about it."
"Then what is wrong, Tom? I --" she stopped
as someone approached us. It was the assistant producer of the show. "What
do you want, Jay?" she asked.
"Barbara, we really have to get a move on.
Another forty-five minutes and we have to start paying overtime. And we still
haven't shot half of the episode. We're going to be here all night if we don't
start now."
"Then we'll be here all night," she said.
"Nothing's happening until that damned Union man gets his lazy ass over
from Burbank."
"Barbara, we have to get this show in the can.
We're already two days behind schedule."
"I don't give a damn about the schedule,"
Barbara said, building up a head of steam. "What I give a DAMN about is
that my son's show is being held hostage by MORONS WHO CAN'T SCREW IN A LIGHT
BULB. And if these boys think they're getting overtime, they are seriously
mistaken, Jay. It's their fault we had to stop. If anything, at this point,
they ought to pay me."
Jay the assistant producer threw up his hands.
"You're the boss, Barbara."
"That's RIGHT," Barbara said, looking
around. "I AM the BOSS. You'd all do VERY VERY WELL to remember who's
signing your DAMN PAYCHECKS. Now leave me alone, Jay, I've got to talk
business."
Jay split. Barbara turned back to me. "Do you see
what I have to put up with around here? Now I know why Roseanne was so hard on
her crew. You have to be. These folks are nothing but a bunch of lazy assed
slackers. Do you know, that light almost killed me. Another two feet and it
would have landed right on my head."
I strongly began to suspect it wasn't an accident.
"Now, enough about this," she said.
"What's your problem, Tom? Something's up with you, and it has us worried.
How can you be my son's agent if you're falling apart over there?"
"I'm not falling apart, Barbara," I said.
"The Biz piece had nothing to it. Everything is fine. Really."
"Is it?" Barbara said. "I wonder. I've
been thinking about where my son is at, and I truly wonder if this is where he
should be at this juncture of his career."
"Well, hell, Barbara," I said, "He's
got his own show on a national network. I say that's pretty good for a 23-year
old."
"At 23, Eddie Murphy had made 48 Hours, Trading
Places and Beverly Hills Cop," Barbara said. "and his show was on a
real network."
"Not everyone can have Eddie Murphy's
career," I said.
"See, this is what I'm worried about,"
Barbara said. "I think Rashaad can have Eddie's career. You think he
can't."
"I didn't say that," I said. "But now
that you mention it, I don't want Rashaad to have Eddie Murphy's career. It
includes Harlem Nights and A Vampire in Brooklyn, too, you know."
"But this is all academic, isn't it?"
Barbara said. "Because the fact is, Rashaad's not even in film at all. All
he has for himself is one little show on one little network."
I started to reply, but there was a rap on the
railing. We both turned to see Rashaad, in a hooded sweatshirt, surrounded by
his lackeys. Someone had apparently forgotten to tell Rashaad that gangsta went
out when Notorious BIG got perforated in Los Angeles.
"Say, yo, ma," Rashaad said. "the boys
and I are going to get something to eat. You want we should, you know, bring
you something or something?"
Rashaad finished in the top fifth of his private
boarding school, with a verbal SAT of 650. He majored in English at University
of California, Berkeley, before dropping out in his second year to become a
standup comedian. Back then, his name was Paul.
"Rashaad, honey, where are your manners,"
Barbara said. "Say hello to Tom."
"Hey, yo, Tom," Rashaad said. "What's
the word?"
"The word is 'abrogate,' Rashaad." This was
an inside joke between us, my reminder to him that I remembered his GPA. He'd
ask me what the word is, and I'd give him the most obscure one I could think of
at the moment. Then he'd give me the definition back in street talk.
Except this time he looked surprised and shot his
mother a quick look. Barbara gave him an almost imperceptible slightest shake
of her head. He turned back to me. "Good to see you, Tom. I'll catch you
later." He and his stooges slunk out, followed enviously by the eyes of
the trapped crew. I watched him until he slipped out of the studio.
"So, Barbara," I said. "Who did you get
to replace me?"
"What?" Barbara said.
"After you decided that you were going to can
me," I said. "You must have had someone in mind to get your son's
career into high gear. I can't imagine you'd fire me without having someone
else already lined up."
"I didn't say you were fired, Tom," Barbara said.
"'Abrogate -- to annul, or repeal,'" I said.
"Your son knows what it means, of course. That's why he looked so
surprised when I used it. It's sort of funny, because I didn't use it to mean
anything -- it was just the first word that came into my head. But his reaction
says to me that you didn't really call me over here to express your concerns
about your son's career. You had me come over here to fire me. Right?"
"I'm looking out for the best interests of my
son," Barbara said. "I don't know what it is you're going through at
the moment, Tom, but you need to work out those issues, and my son can't wait
for you to do that."
"Really?" I said. "Did you actually ask
Rashaad if he wanted to drop me? Or did you just tell him after the fact? For
that matter, did you ask him if he wanted to wait for the Union boss, or if he
wanted to just get someone to sweep up with a broom? It is his show, after
all."
Barbara bristled. "I'm the producer. And I'm his
manager. These things are my job -- to look after this show and to look after
him. I don't make any apologies for that, Tom, not to you or to anybody."
"One day, you might have to make an apology to
him, Barbara. But I bet you didn't think about it that way."
Barbara glared at me but said nothing.
"So," I said, "who did you get to
replace me?"
"David Nolan at ACR."
"He's not bad," I said.
"I know that, Tom." Barbara said. She got up
and walked back towards the set. She began yelling at the assistant producer
before she even got off the bleachers.
I sat there for a few moments, watching her go. One of
the crew came over.
"Hi," he said. "You wouldn't have been
talking to her about when we could leave, right?"
"Nope, sorry," I said. "I just came to
get fired."
"Wow," he said. "Some guys have all the
luck." He started off.
"Hey," I said. The guy turned. "Next
time, don't miss."
He grinned, gave me a salute, and went backstage.
*****
The next day, on the way to the Pacific Rim set, I got
a phone call on my cellular. It was Joshua.
"Ralph and I are going on a hike," he said.
"Ralph smells something interesting out back of your house, and I'm
worried about him if he goes alone. He's pretty old."
"Joshua," I said, "Think about what
you're saying, here. If Ralph has a little doggie stroke, it's not like you're
going to be able to rush to the nearest street and flag down a passing
motorist. Why don't you guys wait until I get home? Then we can all go
together."
"Because I'm bored, and so is Ralph, and you're
no fun anymore," Joshua said. "Ever since that article came out. It's
like living with a cardboard cutout of a formerly interesting person. Remember
the good old days, when we'd have fun? It was just three days ago. Boy, those
were times. Let me tell you."
"I'm sorry, Joshua," I said. "But I
need these guys."
"Tom, I respect and admire you greatly, but I
think you may have your priorities slightly out of order," Joshua said.
"You're representing an entire alien culture. I think you shouldn't sweat
the occasional television actor."
I pulled into the set and waved at the security guard,
who let me through. "Thanks for the tip, Joshua. But I'm already here.
Might as well go for the save."
"All right, fine," Joshua said, "We'll
try to be back before you get home, then."
"Joshua, don't go. It'll only be a couple of
hours. Really."
"La la la la la la la," Joshua said.
"I'm not listening. Bye."
"At least take a phone," I yelled, but he
had already hung up. Which was just as well. I didn't know how he would carry a
phone, anyway. Probably the battery would leak into his insides. I parked, got
out, headed towards the set.
Pacific Rim was nominally supposed to take place in
Venice Beach, but the majority of it was filmed in Culver City. One day a week,
the cast and crew decamped to Venice Beach for location shots. Today was one of
those days. It made for an interesting set, if only because the vast majority
of extras were in bikinis and Rollerblades. On one end of the set, a
blocked-off section of the Venice boardwalk, an assistant director was blocking
a shot with a pair of buxom Rollerbladers -- apparently Rollerblading was
harder than it looked. On the other end, Elliot Young had his script out and
was conferring with the director, Don Bolling. Their conversation became more
intelligible, as it were, the closer I got.
"I don't understand what I'm doing here,"
Elliot was pointing to a page in the script. "See, look. I'm running after
the girl, screaming, 'Helen! Helen!', right? But Helen's dead. She was killed
in the aquarium scene on page 5. Isn't that a continuity problem?"
"Elliot," Don said, "I know that Helen
gets killed on page 5. The reason you're running after this woman, screaming
Helen's name, is because you think she's her. And, as it happens, it's not
Helen, but it is her identical twin sister. Which you would know, if you ever bothered
to read the script before we shot it."
"But don't you think that's confusing?"
Elliot said. "You know, this identical twin sister thing."
Don let out an audible sigh. "Yes, I do. That's
the point, Elliot. It's called a plot twist."
"Well, that's just it," Elliot said.
"It's a plot twist, but now I'm having a hard time following the plot at
all. I want people to be able to follow what I'm doing on the show when I'm
doing it."
"All right, Elliot," Don said, "what do
you suggest?"
"Well, it's obvious," Elliot said.
"When he chases the other woman, the other woman shouldn't look like
Helen. It clears up the confusion."
"If we do that," Don said, "then it
doesn't make any sense that you're running down the street, calling her Helen.
She would just be another woman."
"They could still be sisters," Elliot said.
Don looked pained. "What?" he said.
"Sisters. They could still be sisters. Sisters
look a lot alike. They're related. They could even still be twins, just not the
kind that look alike. What are those called?"
"Fraternal," I said. They both looked at me.
I waved, cutely.
"Yeah, fraternal," Elliot said, turning back
to Don. "Personally, I think that makes a lot more sense."
"Tom," Don said, "Please help me out
here."
"I don't even know what's going on," I said.
"Except that it involves sisters."
"In this episode, a marine biologist named Helen
that Elliot's dating witnesses a mob hit and gets killed," Don said.
"She's thrown in with the electric eels,"
Elliot said.
"....Right," Don said. "So Elliot's despondent,
and then several days later, he sees another woman who looks just like Helen.
So of course he's confused," -- Don whipped the word at Elliot, who took
no notice -- "since he knows she's supposed to be dead. It turns out to be
her twin sister."
"Who is of course also seen by the mob killers,
so he has to protect her from them, and during the process he falls in love
with her as well," I said.
"How about that, Elliot," Don said to his
star. "Your agent figured out what was going on, and he didn't even have
to read the script. My count shows him two up on you."
"You don't find that confusing at all?"
Elliot asked me.
"It is confusing," I admitted. "But
it's a good kind of confusing. It's the sort of confusing that viewers actually
like, especially as I assume it gets explained at some point during the action.
I'm right about that, Don?"
"It happens not far past the place where you
stopped reading the script, Elliot," Don said.
"Well, there it is, then," I said. "It
works out well for everyone."
From the other end of the set there was a wail
followed by a crash. One of the buxom Rollerbladers had careened out of control
and impacted against a Steadicam operator. The resulting collision managed
somehow to dislodge her bikini top. The Rollerblader appeared momentarily
flummoxed, deciding whether to cover her nipples or to grab at the rapidly
swelling knob on her forehead, where her skull connected with that of the
cameraman. Her right arm switched between both locations, dealing with neither
very effectively. In the wash of pain and embarrassment, she seemed to have
forgotten that she had a whole other arm that she could deploy.
The Steadicam operator lie sprawled on the pavement,
out cold. None of the predominately male crew was paying even the slightest bit
of attention to him.
"Oh, look," Don said. "An actual
legitimate crisis." He turned to Elliot. "When I get back, I would really
like to shoot this scene. Please try to have all your philosophical problems
with it resolved by then." He sauntered toward the scene of the accident,
angling towards the girl rather than the cameraman.
"Exciting day," I said, to Elliot.
He was gnawing on a thumb, still looking at the
script. "Are you sure that this isn't going to be a problem with this? I'm
still sort of lost."
"It'll be fine, Elliot. Stop worrying about it.
And stop gnawing on your thumbnail. You're going to make your manicurist miserable.
Look, you said you wanted to talk. Here I am."
"Yeah, okay," Elliot said. He seemed
distracted as we went back to his trailer.
As we entered his trailer, I was greeted by a
life-size cutout of Elliot in his "beach volleyball" costume and
shades, grinning toothily and holding a bottle of cologne. I had a brief
flashback to my earlier conversation with Joshua. "Who's the handsome
guy?" I said.
"Oh, that," Elliot said. He bent down to get
a bottle of water out of his refrigerator. "The production company thinks
we ought to branch out into other markets. So we're making a Pacific Rim
cologne."
"Well, if Baywatch can do it, so can you," I
said.
"Ours is different than the Baywatch cologne.
It's made with real human pheromones."
"You're kidding," I said.
"No, man, really." Elliot reached up into an
overhead compartment, grabbed a sample-sized cologne bottle, and handed it to
me. "They're actually my pheromones, too."
I unscrewed the top and took a whiff. It smelled like
I expected Joshua would smell like if he was left out in the sun too long.
"Powerful," I said. "How did they get your pheromones, if you
don't mind me asking?"
"They put me on a treadmill and then collected my
sweat," Elliot said.
"Sounds delightful," I said.
Elliot shrugged. "It wasn't so bad. They let me
watch videos while I exercised. Listen, I think we should see other
people."
"What?" I said.
"I think we should see other people," Elliot
said.
"Elliot, we're not going steady," I said,
putting the top on the cologne and placing it on the near table. "Shucks,
we've never even dated."
"You know what I mean," he said. "I've
been thinking a lot about my future recently, and I sort of want to explore my
options. See what else is out there. Tom, you know there's a lot of wild rumors
going around about you at the moment."
"Great," I said, flopping into a chair.
"The one week everyone reads The Biz is the week I'm on the cover."
"The Biz?" Elliot said.
"Yes, Elliot," I said. "You remember,
the place where you read all those wild rumors."
"I didn't read anything about it," Elliot
said. "I heard about most of it from Ben."
I sat up. "Who?"
"Ben," Elliot said.
"Ben Fleck?" I asked.
"Yeah," Elliot said. "You know
him?"
"I can't believe this," I said. "I've
been cherry-picked by Ben Fleck."
"He said that you've cracked up lately,"
Elliot said. "That you've been handing all your clients to other agents
because of the stress. So I figured, if you're doing that anyway, might as well
at least stay in the same company, where they know me."
"Elliot," I said. "I'm not cracking up.
I'm fine. And I still want to be your agent. Look where you are now, Elliot.
You're doing pretty well for yourself. Which means that I did pretty well for
you. You don't just chuck that away because Ben Fleck calls you up and tells
you I'm cracking up. You don't even know Ben, Elliot. He's an incompetent
agent. Trust me on this one."
"Yeah," Elliot shrugged again. "Well,
he says that he can get me into film, that I'm ready for the big film
roles."
"Of course he would say that, Elliot. He knows
that's what you want. That's what everybody wants."
"Well, what do you think? You think I'm ready for
film roles?"
"Sure, some," I said, conveniently ignoring
my previous plan to keep him strictly on television for the next season.
"But you still need to build your base. You remember what happened to
David Caruso when he jumped too soon. He had two flops and then he was
squashed."
"Uh-huh," Elliot said. "Look, Tom. I
know you don't think I'm a rocket scientist, but I'm not totally dumb. I'm 32
years old. I'm only making $50,000 an episode. I've got another four seasons on
my contract. Where does that leave me?"
"With five million dollars?" I said.
"I can make that off of one movie, man,"
Elliot said. "32 is prime time in the movie business. I've got to strike
now. Ben's ready to back me up on this, and I think I ought to take him up on
that. You're right, it is what I want. I'm sorry, Tom."
There was a knock on the door. "We're ready,
Elliot," Don said, through the door. "Put down that MENSA test and
get on the set."
"Elliot," I said. "Think about this,
all right? Don't decide anything right now."
"I got to go," Elliot said. "No hard
feelings, Tom? It's just business."
It was my turn to shrug. I could see where this was
going. "Sure, Elliot. No problem."
"Great," he said, and opened the door.
"You know, you can keep that bottle of cologne."
"Thanks," I said. He smiled, closed the door
behind him. I picked up the bottle of cologne and stared at it for a minute
before I threw it against the far wall of the trailer. It shattered quite
nicely.
*****
Ben's administrative assistant, Monica, beamed at me
prettily as I strode up.
"Hi, Monica," I said. "Ben wouldn't
happen to be in at the moment, would he?"
"He is, but he's with a prospective client."
"Really," I said. "Anyone I know?"
"Do you know any Playmates on a personal
basis?" Monica asked.
"Afraid not," I said.
"Then you don't know her," Monica said.
"I'll learn to get past the disappointment,"
I said.
"That's the spirit," Monica said. "You
want me to tell him you dropped by?"
"That's all right," I said. "This will
just take a minute." I stepped past her desk and walked into Ben's office.
Ben was sitting at his desk with the aforementioned
Playmate in the guest chair. He smiled expansively at me. "Tom," he
said. "What a surprise. Have you met Leigh? She's a Playmate."
"Not yet," Leigh piped, "Not until
November."
"Something for us boys to look forward too,
then," Ben said.
"Hello, Leigh," I said, shaking her hand.
"It's pleasure to meet you. Excuse me for just one second, please." I
turned, leaned over the desk, and sucker-punched Ben in the nose. I turned back
to Leigh, who sat, stunned, watching as Ben yodeled in pain at his desk,
holding his bleeding nose in his splayed fingers. I sat on the edge of Ben's
desk and smiled winningly.
"So," I said. "Found an agent?"
Leigh ran screaming from the room. I turned back to
Ben. He had fingers jammed into his nostrils to staunch the bleeding.
"You fucker," he said. "You broke my
fucking nose!"
"You cherry-picked Elliot Young from me, Ben. I
don't appreciate that very much. I also don't appreciate what you said about me
in The Biz. Those were hurtful words. I was bothered. Since you don't have any
clients I want, and I'm not planning to talk to the press, I had to do
something to even up our ledgers. I think we're about even now, don't
you?"
"You're totally fucking insane," Ben said.
"Enjoy your last day as an agent, you asshole."
"Ben, let me make this clear to you," I
said. "If you ever stick your nose in my business again, I'm going to work
you over with a sledgehammer. I don't mean that figuratively. I literally mean
that I will walk into this office, lock the door behind me, pull out a
sledgehammer and work on you until your bones resemble gravel. Are we
clear?"
"You're out of your fucking mind, Tom," Ben
said.
"Ben, are we clear?"
"Yes," Ben glared at me through the
beginnings of bruises. "Yes, we're fucking clear, already. Get out of my
fucking office, Tom. Just get out."
I walked to the door. A crowd was waiting on the other
side. I stared at them.
"Congratulate Ben," I said. "He's the
proud father of a bouncing baby nosebleed."
Ben started screaming for Monica. I walked the short
distance to my office.
Miranda followed me in. "Are you okay?" she
asked.
"No," I said, "I am in so much pain. I
think I broke a finger."
Miranda slipped her notepad under her arm. "Let
me see," she said. She reached over. I gave her my hand. She palpitated my
middle finger.
"Ouch," I said.
"It's not broken," Miranda said. "it's
not even sprained. But you clearly don't know how to throw a punch."
"I'll do better next time," I said.
Miranda pinched down hard on my finger. I screamed.
"Don't you ever do something like that
again," she said, "or I'll kill you myself. I like my job, and I'm
not going to have you risk it just because you're my boss. Got it?"
"Yes!" I said. "Let go." She did.
"Now," she said, pulling her notepad back
out. "Messages. Jim Van Doren called."
"The hell you say," I said.
"No lie," she said. "he says he's
working on another story and wanted to see if you wanted to comment this
time."
"I can't comment," I said. "I already
promised you I wouldn't punch anyone else."
"That's my boss," Miranda said. "Amanda
called. She says she wanted you to know she made Tea 'grovel like the she-dog
she is' for the part in the Chevy Chase film. Says that she and Tea have come
to an understanding and that she doesn't expect too many more problems."
"And here you thought you were going to have to
do a lot of hand holding," I said.
"No kidding," Miranda said. "I think we
created a monster. Carl called. He wants to know if you're available for lunch
tomorrow."
"This is a question?" I asked.
"That's what I thought you might say,"
Miranda said, "So I told him you'd be free at 12:30. Meet him at his
office."
"Got it," I said.
"Last message," Miranda said. "Someone
I've never heard of, but says he knows you. Didn't leave his last name."
"Joshua?"
"That's him," Miranda said. "Sort of
cryptic message. Said you'd understand."
"What is it?"
"He said, 'Something happened. I'll be
late.'"
Chapter Nine
Carl leaned on the railing of the Santa Monica Pier,
happily munching on a corn dog. I had a corn dog of my own, but I was somewhat
more somber. I was figuring out how I was going to tell my boss that the alien
he had entrusted to my care had mysteriously disappeared into the Angeles
National Forest.
The good news was that Joshua did take one of the cellular
phones with him; it was from that phone that he had called my office and left
the message. The bad news was that after leaving the message he wasn't
answering the phone. As soon as I got his message, I began calling his phone at
five minute intervals until I got home. There was no answer.
When I got home, I changed into sweats, a T-shirt and
my long-neglected hiking boots, and hauled my carcass out of the backyard.
Between a fifteen-year-old dog and pile of goo, I figured the chances were slim
that the two of them had gotten very far. I picked the direction that I figured
they might go in and went thataway.
When I was thirteen, I knew every tree, every slope,
every large rock in the woods out back of my house. Every once in a while, I'd
drop a book, several candy bars and a couple of Cokes in a backpack, leave a
note for the parents and head into the hills. I'd come back several hours later
in pitch darkness, unconcerned that I might get lost or misdirected. This was
Los Angeles, after all; just point yourself in the direction of the lights, and
ten minutes later you're on one suburban street or another. More to the point,
however, was the fact that I knew my way around -- it was as unthinkable for me
to get lost in those woods as it was for me to get lost in my own back yard.
In the fifteen years between my thirteen-year-old self
and my current one, someone went into the woods and switched the trees and
rocks around. Five minutes in, I was utterly lost.
Three hours later, scratched, bruised, and limping from
where I jammed my foot into a rabbit hole, twisting my ankle, I resurfaced from
the Angeles National Forest miles from where I had entered. I would have been
completely disoriented if I hadn't had the luck to emerge from the brush two
hundred yards from my high school; as it was it took me nearly another hour to
get home because of my ankle.
Later, as I soaked in the tub, I formulated a plan:
when Joshua came home, I would discover if it were possible to strangle
protoplasm. It was a good plan, and I congratulated myself for coming up with
it on my own.
Joshua, however, stayed one step ahead. He simply
didn't reappear.
At 2 am, I gave up and headed to bed. The rational
portion of my mind figured that a creature that had crossed trillions of miles
of hard vacuum would be able to keep himself alive for a night in the suburban
woods above Los Angeles. The crazy little man in my head, however, was
convinced that Joshua had already been eaten by the coyotes. I briefly
considered trying to get my cellular company to triangulate the phone's
position, but I suspected that the phone had to be receiving for that. There
was the other small matter of Joshua being an extraterrestrial; it would be
hard to explain to search teams what my phone was doing immersed in a puddle of
sentient mucus. The best I could do was leave the patio door unlocked and hope
Joshua and Ralph made it home.
I got to sleep at six. Neither Joshua or Ralph had
made an appearance. When I finally left the house at 11 for my lunch with Carl,
the two of them were still missing.
The one space alien on the entire planet, and I had
managed to lose him. I was fired for sure.
"God," Carl said, holding his half-eaten
corn dog in front of him. "I love corn dogs. Who would have thought that
hog snouts could taste so good if you just rolled them into a tube, shot them
up with nitrates and breaded them in corn paste? But there it is. How old are
you, Tom?"
"I'm 28," I said.
"When I was your age, Tom, I'd come out here with
Susan, my first wife, and we'd get a couple of corn dogs and then we'd walk to
the end of the pier and watch the sunset. This was in the late 70s, when the
smog was so bad breathing the air constituted a health hazard."
"I remember those days," I said. "I got
out of a lot of P.E. classes that way. We had to stay inside and watch
filmstrips. I learned all about the California missions that way."
"I don't really miss all the smog, mind
you," Carl said, staring off. "But they made for some beautiful
sunsets. The late 70s were a horrible period in the history of the universe,
Tom -- you had stagflation, the American hostages in Iran, and some terrible,
terrible apparel. And smog. But the sunsets weren't so bad. It doesn't make up
for anything, but it goes to show not everything can be bad all at once."
"I didn't know you had been married more than
once," I said. "I had thought Elise was your first wife." Carl's
wife Elise was the scariest person you'd ever want to meet -- a terrifyingly
intelligent trial lawyer who also had a doctorate in psychology. She was
thinking of running for Los Angeles District Attorney. From there it would be a
short hop to mayor. Between the two of them, Carl and Elise would be running southern
California within the decade.
Carl glanced over. "Elise is my second wife. We
were married in '88. Susan died in '81. Car accident; some drunk idiot came up
the wrong way on an onramp and plowed right into her car. They both died
instantly. Pregnant at the time, you know."
"I'm terribly sorry," I said. "I didn't
mean to bring up any painful memories."
Carl waved it off. "No reason you should know. I
never talk about it and no one ever talks about it around me. One of the
advantages of being the sort of boss that scares the Hell out of the
subordinates. Susan was a wonderful woman -- but so is Elise. I've been very
lucky."
"Yes, sir." We ate our corn dogs in silence.
"Come on," Carl said, after he had finished
his dog. "I haven't walked on the beach for weeks. We can chat while we
walk." We walked off the pier, stopped off at Carl's car to drop off our
shoes and socks, and then walked into the sand towards the surf.
"So," he said, when we walked to the water.
"How is Joshua doing?"
I swallowed and saw my career flash before my eyes.
"He's missing at the moment, Carl," I said.
"Missing? Explain."
"He and Ralph -- my neighbor's dog -- went out
for a walk in the woods yesterday, while I was off seeing Elliot Young. When I
got back into the office, Miranda had a message from him, saying that something
had happened, and that he'd be late. That's the last I've heard of him. I went
looking for him last night, but I didn't find him. I stayed up until six this
morning, and he hadn't returned."
"Where would he go?" Carl said. "He's
not exactly inconspicuous."
"The Angeles National Forest starts more or less
in my backyard," I said. "They went into the woods."
If I were Carl, this would have been the point where I
would have fired me. Instead, Carl changed the subject. "I hear you
flattened Ben Fleck's nose yesterday."
"I did," I admitted. "He pinched Elliot
Young off of me. He's also the 'Lupo Associates insider' in that damned story
in The Biz. Punching him seemed the only alternative to breaking his neck.
Although I'm feeling guilty about it now. I think I may have broken his
nose."
"It's not broken," Carl said. "We had
some x-rays done at Cedars Sinai. It's merely 'severely bruised.'"
"Well, that's good," I said. "I mean,
relatively speaking."
"It is," Carl agreed. "Be that as it
may, Tom, I would prefer in the future that you find some less dramatic way to
resolve your issues with Ben. Ben may have been asking for it, but that sort of
thing isn't very good for company morale. Also, all things considered, it's
drawing unwanted attention to you at the moment."
Carl was referring to the blurb in the Times'
"Company Town" column -- one of the office spectators had leaked to
the paper, and the paper did the legwork and found out that Ben had snaked one
of my clients. It also mentioned the article in The Biz as a contributing
factor, giving the article credence in the process. For even more fun, the
Times had called my office this morning as well, looking for a comment on The
Biz and its editorial practices. It felt like the media had pried up a
floorboard looking for a bug, and that bug was me. I just wanted to fade back
into the darkness.
I laughed. Carl look at me oddly. "What's so
funny?" he asked.
"I'm sorry," I said. "I was just
thinking about it. This week I was ditched by two of my clients, was labeled
insane by a magazine, assaulted a colleague and let an alien walk off into the
woods, where he's probably been eaten by a coyote. I'm trying to imagine how
this week can get any worse. I don't think it can."
"We could have an earthquake," Carl said.
"An earthquake would be wonderful," I said.
"It would give everyone else something to think about. A nice big one, 7
or 8 on the Richter scale. Major structural damage. That'd work."
Carl stood there a moment, seemingly preoccupied. I
followed his line of sight down to his toes. He was busily squelching sand
through them. After a few seconds of this, he stepped out of his footprints and
let the tide wash into them, partially erasing them. Then he put his feet back
into them.
"Tom," Carl said, "Don't worry too much
about Joshua at the moment. He'll be fine. The Yherajk are pretty much
indestructible by our standards, and I doubt that the coyotes or whatever are
going to get a bite out of him. Joshua can make a skunk seem like a bed of
roses. He and ...Ralph?" -- He looked for confirmation; I nodded --
"are probably just roughing it or something. You didn't tell me that he
had made friends with a dog."
"They get along great," I said.
"They're the solution to each other's boredom. I think Joshua likes Ralph
better than he likes me."
"Well, that's good news, at the very least.
Anyway, I expect Joshua will be back soon enough. Try to relax a bit."
I snorted just a little. "Now if I could just get
The Biz off my back, I'd be set."
"Some of that's been taken care of," Carl
said. "The Times is doing a story on The Biz, you know."
"They called me this morning," I admitted.
"I've been sort of dreading calling them back."
"I've already talked to them," Carl said.
"Gave them a nice long chat about how The Biz took our company's
innovative mentoring policy and made it look like you were having a nervous
breakdown. I said that if you were having a nervous breakdown, then I and
several of the senior agents were also having them, since we've also started
mentoring some of our newer agents."
"Thanks," I said. "You didn't have to
do that."
"Actually, I did," Carl said. "It keeps
the bad press to a minimum. I'm not blaming you about it -- this Van Doren
character was already working on something, and you just happened to be in the
wrong place at the wrong time with him. Anyway, the mentoring idea is not a bad
one; we've been a sink-or-swim agency long enough. It might do some good to do
things the other way for a while."
"I'm surprised you found out about it," I
said.
"I asked Miranda," Carl said. "She
seems to think highly of it and you."
"I think highly of her as well," I said.
"Actually, I'm hoping to get her a raise."
"Give her a ten percent hike," Carl said,
"but tell her to keep quiet about it. We've been cracking down on raises
recently. But I figure she deserves it, or will by the time this whole thing is
through. Which reminds me, since you thought of the mentoring program, you've
won our Annual Innovation in Agenting Award. Congratulations."
"That's great," I said. "I've never
heard of this award before."
"It's the first annual," Carl said.
"Don't get too excited. I've already told the Times you've donated the
cash award to the City of Hope."
"That was very nice of me," I said.
"It was," Carl agreed. "The point of
all this is that now, rather than being looked upon as someone who is cracking
up, which is interesting and creates press, you look like someone whose eye is
on the ball and whose heart is in the right place, which is boring and no one
gives a damn about. The Biz, properly, looks like a rag filled with poor
reporting. And Ben Fleck looks to have gotten his. Everything works out."
"Wow," I said. "I thought I was fired
for sure."
"Well, I'll be honest with you, Tom," Carl
said. "It's not exactly the way I wanted it. We've cleared most of these
distractions away this time. Now do me the favor of not requiring me to pull
another Deus Ex Machina. I don't really like it, and it brings more attention
to us than I want. Fair enough?"
I sensed the extreme irritation that lay directly
under Carl's placid statement. He may not have been blaming me for anything
that had happened, but that didn't mean that it didn't reflect on me. I was now
going to have to work twice as hard to keep from pissing him off in the future.
I figured, sooner or later, given the way things had gone so far, I was doomed.
"Fair enough," I said.
"Good," Carl said. He clapped his hands
together. "You like ice cream? There's this place nearby that has the best
soft-serve ice cream in L.A. Let's go get some."
The ice cream was as good as Carl promised; first it
spiraled out of an ice cream maker, then it was dipped into chocolate that
formed a hard candy shell. We sat outside the shop and watched rollerskaters
and gulls go by.
"You know what I'd really like to know," I
said.
Carl was wiping off his chin from where some chocolate
had smudged it. "I'm sure you'll tell me," he said.
"I will indeed," I said. "I'd like to
know how you met up with our smelly little space friends in the first place.
And I'd like to know how Joshua got his name."
"Lunchtime is almost over," Carl said.
"I don't know that I have time to go into it right now."
"Oh, come on," I said, risking a little
familiarity. "You're one of the most powerful men on this half of the
continent. If you have a meeting, they'll wait."
Carl bit into his ice cream. "I guess that's
true. All right, then. Here it is."
Chapter Ten
You think of the human race meeting the first
alien species, and you think of Close Encounters or The Day The Earth Stood
Still: big production numbers involving scientists, government officials and a
lot of background music. The fact of the matter is the first human contact with
aliens happened on the phone. It's a letdown if you're into grand scale
entrances, but in retrospect, I find it comforting, and, now that I think of
it, indicative of the Yherajk: they were dying to meet us, but they're polite
enough to make sure they're wanted.
At the time, though, I thought it was a crank call. Of
course; who thinks aliens are going to use the phone?
The phone call came at about a quarter past eleven.
I'd just gotten back from the premiere of Call of the Damned; I skipped the
after-party because I didn't want to have to tell anyone what I had really
thought of the movie. Elise was in Richmond, Virginia, on her book tour -- I
remember her leaving a message and telling me she was thinking we should get a
horse farm out there for when we retire. I mean, really -- what the hell am I
going to do with horses? But she's a horsy type. Never got over it as a girl.
I was sitting in my lounger with my second beer,
listening to Fritz Coleman talk about one of those annual meteor showers.
Persieds or Leonids. Can never remember which is which. Fritz was going on
about it when the phone rang. I picked it up.
"Hello," I said.
"Hi," the voice on the other end said.
"My name is Gwedif. I'm a representative of an alien race that is right
now orbiting high above your planet. We have an interesting proposition, and
we'd like to discuss it with you."
I glanced over to the LED readout on the phone, which
displays caller ID information. There wasn't any. "This doesn't involve
Amway products, does it?" I asked.
"Certainly not," Gwedif said. "no
salesmen will come to your door."
Thanks to the beer, I was just mellow enough not to do
what I usually do with crank calls, which is hang up. And anyway, this one was
sort of interesting; usually when I get random calls, it's some wannabe actor
who's looking for representation. I was bored and Fritz had given way to
commercials, so I kept going.
"A representative of an alien race," I said.
"Like one of those Heaven's Gate folks? You following a comet or
something?"
"No," Gwedif said. "I'm one of the
aliens myself. And we passed by Hale-Bopp on the way in. No spaceships that we
could see. Those people didn't know what they were talking about."
"Actually one of the aliens," I said.
"That's new. Tell me, does this bit work with other folks? I mean, I'm
loving it, personally."
"I don't know," Gwedif said. "We
haven't called anyone else. Mr. Lupo, we know it sounds unbelievable, but we
figured this was the best way to go -- cut the ooh-ah Spielberg stuff and get
right to the point. Why be coy? We know you like to get right to business. We
saw that PBS documentary."
You remember that thing, Tom -- they had a film crew
from KCET follow me around for a week about a year ago, when I was putting the
Call of the Damned package together over there at TriStar. They actually ran it
in a theater before they ran it on TV, so it'd be eligible for Oscar
consideration. I'm pretty sure they can write off any votes from the TriStar
suits; the documentary makes it look like I rolled them. Well, maybe I did.
Anyway, the 'aliens' saw it, and thus, the upfront
phone call. And now they wanted to arrange a meeting. By this time I had
drained the second beer and had gone to the fridge for a third. So I figured,
what the hell.
"Sure, Gwed -- you don't mind if I call you Gwed,
do you?" I said
"Not a bit," he said.
"Why don't you come on over to the office
sometime next week and we'll set up a meeting. Just call the front desk and ask
for Marcella, my assistant."
"Hmmmm, that'd be sort of difficult," he
said. "We were kind of hoping we might have a chat tonight. There's a
meteor shower going on."
I didn't really understand that last part, but I
figured it was par for the course when you're talking to 'aliens'. "All
right," I said. "Let's chat tonight."
"Great," Gwedif said. "I'll be down in
about fifteen minutes."
"Swell," I said. "You going to need
anything? A snack? A beer?"
"No, I'm fine," he said, "though I'd
appreciate it if you'd turn on your pool light."
"Well, of course," I said. "Everyone
knows to turn on their pool light when aliens drop by."
"See you soon," Gwedif said and hung up.
I hauled myself out of the lounger, clicked off the TV
and went to the sliding glass door that leads to the pool area. The pool's
light switch is right by the door, so I clicked it on as I headed out the door.
You've never been to our place, Tom, but we have a huge pool -- Olympic-sized.
Elise was a swimmer at UCSD and still uses it to stay in shape. I wade around
in the shallow end of the pool, myself -- I float better than I swim.
I plopped down into a patio chair and sucked on my
beer and thought about what I had just done. I never invite strangers over to
the house, even sane ones, and now I had just invited someone who said he was a
representative of an alien species over for a chat. The more I thought about
it, of course, the more stupid it seemed. About ten minutes of this, I had
become convinced that I had just set myself up for some sort of ritual
Hollywood murder, the kind where the newscasters start off their stories by
saying "The victim appeared to know his assailant -- there was no struggle
of any kind," and then pan to walls, which are sponge-painted with blood.
I stood up to go back into the house and phone the police, when I noticed a
meteor streaking across the sky.
This in itself was no big deal. There was meteor
shower going on, after all, and my house is high up enough in the hills that
the light pollution isn't so bad; I'd been seeing little meteor streaks the
entire time I was sitting there. But most of them were small, far off, and
lightning quick; this one was large, close, and dropping its way through the
sky directly towards my house. It looked like it was moving slow, but as I
stared at it, I realized that it was going to impact in about five seconds.
Even if I hadn't been paralyzed, staring at it, I doubted I could have made it
into the house. It looked like I wouldn't have to worry about being murdered by
psychopaths, after all -- I was going to be struck down by a meteor instead. At
this point, some absurdly rational chunk of my consciousness piped in with a
thought: Do you realize the odds on getting hit by a meteor?
About two seconds to impact, the meteor shattered with
a tremendous sonic boom, the tiny pieces of the rock vaporizing in the
atmosphere like a sudden fireworks display. I stared dumbly at the point of the
explosion, blinking away the afterimages, when I heard a far-off whistling
sound, getting closer. I saw it a fraction of a second before it hit my pool --
a chunk of meteor that had to be the size of a barrel, whirling end over end.
The explosion of the meteor must have acted like a brake on its momentum,
because if something that size had hit my backyard at the speed the meteor had
been going, neither I nor any of my neighbors would have been around to tell
the tale.
As it was, it hit the pool like a bus, and I was hit
by a tidal wave of suddenly hot pool water. Steam fumed from where it dropped,
in the deep end. I regained enough of my senses to wonder how much the pool
damage was going to cost me, and if meteor strikes were covered by my home
insurance. I doubted they were. Several pool lights had been extinguished by
the impact; I went back to the door and turned it off, so as not to have
electrified water, and then turned on the main patio lights to get a closer
look at the damage.
Miraculously, the pool seemed in good shape, if you
didn't count the broken pool lights. The pool water was still bubbling where
the meteor had gone in, but even so, I could see enough through the water to
see that the concrete appeared to be uncracked. The meteor chunk had come in at
just the right angle into the pool; the mass of the water, rather than the mass
of the concrete, absorbed the impact. The water level of the pool was a good
foot lower than it had been pre-impact, however.
If my neighbors heard anything, they gave no
indication -- or the very least, I never heard them if they had. The walls
around the backyard are twelve feet high; I had had them built around 1991,
when my next door neighbor was a heavy metal drummer. I had gotten sick of
listening to his parties and watching him and his women having cocaine-fueled
orgies in the hot tub, and it was easier to build the wall than to get him to
move. As it turns out, I needn't have bothered; about a week after the walls
were up, his wife filed for divorce and he had to sell the house as part of the
settlement. George Post lives there now. Plastic surgeon. Nice neighbor. Quiet.
After the water settled down for a few moments, I
heard a small crack, and looked into the pool in time to see a thick liquid
oozing out of the meteorite remains and floating to the top of the water. The
stuff was mostly clear but oily-looking. Space phlegm. After a couple of
minutes of accumulating, the phlegm did something surprising: it started moving
toward the side of the pool. When it got to the edge, a tentacle shot out onto
the patio concrete and the rest of the phlegm hauled up through it. When it was
totally out, it launched up another tentacle that waved around for a second,
then stopped and shot back down into the rest of the phlegm. It began to slide
over towards me.
I can't even begin to tell you what was going through
my mind at that moment, Tom. You know those dreams where something horrifying
is coming at you, and you're running as fast as you can, but you're moving in
slow motion? It was like that feeling: disassociated horror and utter
immobility. My brain had stopped working. I couldn't move. I couldn't think.
I'm pretty sure I stopped breathing. All I could do was watch this thing work
around the patio to where I was standing. For the third and final time that
night, I was utterly convinced I was going to die.
The thing stopped short two feet in front of me and
collected itself into a compact Jell-O mold shape. A bowling ball-sized
protuberance emerged from the top and launched itself up to eye level,
supported by a stalk of goop. And then it talked.
"Carl? It's Gwedif. We talked on the phone. Ready
to take a meeting?"
Tom, I did something I've never done before. I fainted
straight away.
I was down for just a couple of seconds; I woke up to
find Gwedif looming over me. I caught a whiff of him: he smelled like an old
tennis shoe.
"I'm guessing that wasn't planned," he said.
I rolled away from him as quickly as I could and
reached for the nearest dangerous object. My beer bottle had broken, so I
grabbed it and held it in my hand, jagged end out.
"Eek," Gwedif said.
"Stay away," I said.
"Away put your weapon," he said. "I
mean you no harm."
The line floated in my head for a second before I
attached it with what it was from: it was a line of Yoda's in The Empire
Strikes Back. It knocked me off kilter just enough that I relaxed just a
little. I lowered the beer bottle.
"Thank you," Gwedif said. "Now, Carl,
I'm going to move toward you, very slowly. Don't be frightened. All
right?"
I nodded. Slowly as promised, Gwedif moved over to
reaching distance.
"You okay so far?" Gwedif asked. I nodded
again. "All right, then. Hold out your hand."
I did. Slowly, he pulled a tentacle out of his body
and wrapped it around my hand. I was surprised not to find it slimy; in fact,
it was firm and warm. My brain looked for a concept to related it with and come
up with one -- those Stretch Johnson dolls. You know, the one where you pulled
on the arms and they stretched out for a yard. It was something like that.
My hand wrapped in his tentacle, Gwedif did the
unexpected. He shook it.
"Hi, Carl," he said. "Nice to meet
you."
I looked at Gwedif, dumbfounded, for about 20 seconds.
Then I started to laugh.
*****
What can you say about the experience of meeting an
entirely new, wholly alien, intelligent species of life? Well, of course, Tom,
you know what it was like; you 've done it, too. But I think by now you may
have noticed that I plowed you right through that first meeting with Joshua,
and I did it for a reason. I wanted to give your conscious brain something
relatively familiar to work on, while your subconscious was grinding its gears
on the existence of an alien. I don't know if it was fair to do it that way; it
might have been a sort of coitus interruptus for appreciating the wonder of the
moment. What? Well, it's good to know it doesn't bother you, then.
Personally, it took me a good hour before I finally
calmed my brain down enough that Gwedif and I could start having a real
conversation. During the interim he answered my semi-coherent questions,
allowed me to touch him, literally sticking my hands into him on one occasion,
and otherwise talking me down back into a rational state of mind. I was like a
kid with a new toy. You're looking at me like it's hard to believe, Tom. And it
is, I suppose; you folks at work only see me in control, and that's also for a
reason.
But there's no way that I could contain my enthusiasm
and excitement! Only one person on the planet gets to be the first person these
aliens would meet, and it was me. I didn't yet understand why, or for what
purpose, but at that moment I didn't care. The answer to one of the biggest
questions humanity had ever asked -- are we alone in the universe? -- was
sitting, globular and stinky, in the living room of my house. It
was....indescribable. A boon of monumental proportions. About half an hour in,
as the implications sank in, I wept with joy.
We talked all through the night, of course; I too
excited to sleep and Gwedif, apparently, doesn't need it. When 9 o'clock rolled
around, I called Marcella and told her I was taking a sick day. Marcella was concerned;
she wanted to send a specialist over. I told her not to worry, that I could
take care of myself. Then I went to sleep, but woke up two hours later, too
excited to stay in bed. I found Gwedif outside, by the pool.
"I'm just admiring my work," he said.
"I don't know if you can appreciate it, but this" -- he produced a
tentacle and motioned at the pool -- "took some doing. You try to shoot a
pod into a swimming pool from 50,000 miles out. And not have it do major
damage. And have it look like a natural meteor on the way down."
"It was a nice touch," I said.
"It was, wasn't it?" Gwedif agreed. "A
pain in the ass, you should pardon the expression, as I obviously don't have an
ass to have a pain in. But we have to do it that way if we want to land near a city.
You can fool some of the Air Force all of the time, and all of the Air Force
some of the time, but you can't fool all of the Air Force all of the time.
Better this way than shot down by a Stealth fighter. Of course, there is the
problem of getting back. That thing" -- he pointed to the detritus at the
bottom of the pool -- "isn't moving anywhere it's not hauled."
"So how are you getting back?" I asked.
"Well, we've scheduled a rendezvous near Baker
for later tonight. There's nothing out there in the desert, so we don't have to
worry about rubberneckers. Even so, we'll probably light up the radar something
fierce. It's going to have to be quick in, quick out. I was hoping I could get
you to drop me off."
"Of course" I said.
"And also that you'd come with me," Gwedif
said.
"What?"
"Come on, Carl," Gwedif said. "You
can't possibly think I came this far just for a quick hello. We have serious
stuff to talk about, and it will go much, much faster if you come to the
ship."
Even though I had known Gwedif for a very short time,
I could tell that he was holding back on something. He wanted to have me come
to the ship, all right, but I had a feeling it was for more than just a chat. I
had the immediate brain flash to the alien abduction cliché, strapped down to the
table while a blob of Jell-O readied the rectal probe. But that wouldn't have
made any sense. You don't act all friendly with someone just to get them for
lab experiments. They would have just grabbed me.
And anyway, I wanted to go. Are you kidding? Who wouldn't?
That morning, I phoned for a taxi and went to a used
car lot in Burbank to get a cheap, non-descript car. I paid $2,000 and got a
twenty year-old Datsun pickup. I then went to a pick-a-part place and pulled
the license plates off of a wreck. Finally, I pried the Vehicle Identification
Number off the dashboard. I didn't know if Gwedif was right about the radar
being lit up when they came to pick us up, but I didn't want my own car there
if anyone came to investigate.
At about eight o' clock we set off down the 10,
towards the 15, out to Baker in the middle of nowhere. Gwedif spread himself
out under the bottom of the truck seat and popped a tendril over the back to
see and talk. The truck wasn't worth nearly what I had paid for it; it almost
died twice on the way out, and once I did an emergency stop into a gas station
to add water to the radiator.
About five miles to Baker, Gwedif had me exit the 15
and take a frontage road for a few miles until we came to an unmarked road
heading south. We drove along that for another four or five miles, until
literally the only lights I could see were my headlights and the lights of the
stars above me.
"All right," Gwedif said, finally.
"This is the place."
I stopped the pickup and looked around.
"I don't see anything," I said.
"They're on their way," Gwedif said.
"Give them another three seconds."
The ground shook. Thirty yards to the left of us, a
black, featureless cube 20 feet to a side had dropped unceremoniously from the
sky. The ground cracked where it landed.
"Hmmm...a little early," Gwedif said.
I peered over to the cube, which, disregarding the
fact it had just fallen from the heavens, was severely lacking in grandeur.
"Doesn't look like much," I said.
"Of course it doesn't," Gwedif said,
transferring from behind the seat. "We'll save all the pretty lights for
when we want to have our formal introduction. For now, we just want to get up
and out without attracting attention. Ready?"
I started to open the door.
"Where are you going?" Gwedif asked.
"I thought we were leaving," I said.
"We are," Gwedif said. "Drive into it.
We can't very likely leave this car in the middle of nowhere. Someone might
find it. That's why I had them send an economy-sized box."
"I wish I'd known," I said. "I would
have brought the Mercedes."
"I wish you had," Gwedif said. "Air
conditioning is a good thing."
I turned the wheel and drove gingerly towards the
black cube. When the bumper nudged against the cube's surface, I lightly tapped
on the gas pedal. There was a slight resistance, and then almost a tearing as
the cube's surface enveloped the pickup.
Then we were inside the cube. The inside was dimly it,
from luminescence coming off the walls. The space was utterly nondescript, the
only architectural feature being a platform ten feet up that I couldn't see
onto, since we were underneath it.
"When do we leave?" I asked.
Gwedif stretched out a tendril to touch the nearest
wall. "We already have," he said.
"Really?" I said. "I wish this thing
had windows. I'd like to see where we're going."
"Okay," Gwedif said. The cube disappeared. I
screamed. The cube reappeared, transparent but visibly tinted.
"Sorry," Gwedif said. "Shouldn't have
made it completely clear. Didn't mean to freak you out."
I gathered my wits, rolled down the window, and stared
down at the planet, which was tinted purple by the shaded cube.
"How far up are we?" I asked.
"About 500 miles," Gwedif said. "We
have to go slow for the first few miles, but once we're up about 10 miles,
nobody's looking anymore and we can really pick up speed."
"Can I leave the truck? I mean, will the floor
support me?"
"Sure," Gwedif said. "It's supporting
the truck, after all."
I opened the door and very carefully placed a foot on
the cube floor and added weight to it. It felt slightly spongy, like a
wrestling mat or a taut trampoline, but it indeed held my weight. I stepped
fully outside, leaving the truck door open, and walked away from the pickup. I
looked up, and I was able to see through the platform; on the other side of it
were two other blobs, also with tendrils extending into the walls -- the pilot
and co-pilot, I assumed.
After a few minutes of walking around, I had Gwedif
make the cube totally transparent. For the briefest of seconds, I felt a surge
of panic again, but it was immediately replaced by the most astounding sense of
exhilaration -- a God's eye view of the planet, unencumbered by spacesuit or
visor. I asked Gwedif if there was artificial gravity in the cube and he said
that there was; I asked him if we could cut it off so I could float, but he
demurred. He said he'd prefer not to have the pickup floating around aimlessly.
They did decrease the gravity to match the spaceship that we were going to;
suddenly I was 40 pounds lighter. After a few more minutes I asked them to
retint the cube -- my forebrain had accepted I was safe, but the reptile
regions were having trouble with it.
The flight was a little under a half-hour long; we
slowed appreciably as we approached the spaceship although I of course didn't
feel the deceleration. But I saw it -- one moment I was staring at the
blackness of space, and the next a huge rock came hurtling at me, not unlike
the meteor had the night before. I cringed involuntarily, but suddenly it appeared
to stop, hovering what seemed a few miles away.
"There it is," Gwedif said. "Home sweet
home."
It was impossible for me to judge how big this
asteroid-turned-spaceship was. As we got closer, I guessed that it must be
close to a mile in diameter, a guess that was confirmed by Gwedif to be in the
right ballpark. The asteroid appeared to have no non-natural features, but as
we approached, I saw featureless black streaks dotting the surface. We were
heading towards one.
"Does the ship have a name?" I asked.
"Yes," Gwedif said. "Give me a second
to translate it." He was quiet for a moment, then, "It's called the
Ionar. It's the name of our first sentient ancestor, like an Adam or Eve for
you. It also means 'explorer' or 'teacher' in a loose sense of those words, in
that Ionar, realizing he was the first of his kind, learned as much as he could
about the world so that his" -- another pause here -- "children could
know as much as possible. His exploration is our culture's first and greatest
memory epic. We thought that his name would be a good one for this ship.
Provident. That reminds me, we should plug your nose before we go out into the
ship."
"Excuse me?" I said.
"We communicate with smells," Gwedif said,
"When I said I had to translate, I meant that I had to translate the
smells that we associate with a concept into an auditory analogue. But only a
few of us know this translation as yet -- and obviously the rest of us will be
speaking our 'mother tongue.' But I don't think that you'll find our
conversation very appealing to your senses."
"I wouldn't want to be rude," I said.
"Well, here," Gwedif said. "Here's how
we say Ionar." A smell erupted from Gwedif like fart from a dog. "And
here's how I say my name." The fart this time came from a larger dog than
the first. My eyes watered.
"Now, keep in mind that there's a couple thousand
of us in this ship," Gwedif said.
"I see your point," I said.
"I thought you might. I'll make arrangements.
Look, we're about to dock."
Our cube was coming to rest on the edge of one of the
black surfaces, about 100 yards long and half as wide. Underneath the surface
of the cube, the black surface thinned out and cleared away, leaving what
seemed to be an airtight seal around the outside of the cube. The cube dropped
slowly through the seal. As we cleared the skin, I could see that we were
dropping into a cavernous hangar about 100 feet deep. The hangar was dimly lit,
and as far as I could see there weren't any other cubes or anything else that
might resemble a ship.
I thought about asking Gwedif about it, but then there
was gentle thump and we landed. Almost instantly the cube began to melt; a
circular hole started in the center and became wider, with the residue sliding
down the walls of the cube, which were themselves sliding away. The Yherajk on
the piloting platform slid down the walls a fraction of a second before the
walls dripped away like wax; the platform itself sucked into the wall and
disappeared. The mass of the cube lay in huge mounds on the floor of the
hangar; then were suddenly absorbed, leaving me, the three Yherajk, and the
pickup. The whole process took less than a minute.
"Interesting," I said.
"Yup," said Gwedif. "We grow 'em when
we need 'em. Making a cube, though, takes slightly longer than breaking one
down."
From a near wall a door appeared and a Yherajk stepped
out and approached us. It was carrying what looked like cotton wads in a
tentacle. It came up to Gwedif, touched him briefly, and presented the cotton
wads to me.
I took them. "Do I eat these?"
"I don't think you'd want to," Gwedif said.
"Stuff them in your nose instead."
I did and immediately felt the 'cotton' expand,
totally blocking my nasal passages. I suppressed the urge to sneeze.
The Yherajk who presented me with the wads exited, as
did the pilots, after briefly touching Gwedif.
"Now," Gwedif said, after we were alone.
"Oewij, who came with the nose plugs, tells me that the ship-wide meeting
has been arranged at our communion hall, and that our presence is requested
immediately. However, I feel that it is only fair and courteous to allow you
some time to collect yourself or even sleep if you so desire. I know you've
haven't had much rest since we've met. Or, if you'd like, I can arrange for the
tour of the ship. It's up to you, really."
"I'm not tired," I said. "I'd love a
tour of the ship, though. May I have a tour after the meeting?"
"Of course," Gwedif said.
"Well, then," I said. "Let's go have a
meeting."
*****
Gwedif and I entered the Ionar through the same door
that the other Yherajk disappeared into. I had to duck to get through the door
and then had to hunch down as we walked down several corridors; the ceiling was
about an inch shorter than I was tall. I suppose that this would make sense:
the Yherajk are not exactly tall. These corridors must have seemed roomy to
them.
Gwedif sensed my discomfort. "Sorry about
this," he said. "I should have gotten us a transport so that you
could sit. But I thought you might want to experience a little of the ship on
the way to the communion room."
"It's all right," I said, looking around.
The corridors appeared carved out of the rock of the asteroid, and didn't have
ornamentation of any sort, like the hangar we had just been in. I mentioned
this to Gwedif.
"You're right," he said. "The Yherajk
have never been much for visuals. While we see quite well by your standards,
it's not our primary sense to the world, like it is to you. But the walls here
have scent guides, which function in the same manner. And this isn't to say we
have no artistic impulses. Later on, when we tour the ship, I'll take you to
our art gallery. We have some tivis there which are really quite nice."
"What are 'tivis'?" I asked.
Gwedif stopped for a second, suddenly enough that I
braked myself, reflexively straightening up and bumping my head in the process.
"I'm trying to think if there's a human analogue, and I'm not coming up
with one," Gwedif said. "I guess the closest words in English to what
they are would be 'Smell Paintings,' but that's not quite right, either. Oh,
well," he started off again, "you'll get it when you see them -- or
more accurately, smell them." I hurried off after him.
A few more corridors, and then we stopped outside a
door. "Here we are," Gwedif said. "Now, Carl, nearly every
Yherajk who is on the ship is in here now. I want to know if you're
prepared."
"I think I can wrap my mind around it," I
said.
"I'm not talking about that," Gwedif said.
"I just wanted to make sure your nose plugs are secure. It's pretty stinky
in there."
"I feel like my nose is filled with cement,"
I said.
"Okay. Let's go in, then." He extended a
tendril to the door. At his touch, it opened inward.
Two things struck me immediately as we stepped
through. The first was that the Yherajk tradition of visual monotony continued
unabated -- the room consisted of an unadorned dome over a large circular floor
that sloped downward to where a small central dais jutted up modestly, itself
unadorned. On the floor, large clumps of Yherajk assembled here and there, pretty
much like humans do before a meeting gets down to business.
The second thing was that even through my nose plugs,
the smell of the room slammed into me like a rocket in the chest. It was as if
someone had fermented an entire horse stable. It was unbelievably strong. I
leaned back against the wall.
"You all right?" Gwedif asked.
"I think I'm getting a buzz from the smell,"
I said. "And not in a good way."
"It's because everyone's talking at the moment.
It'll get better when we start the meeting and everyone shuts up," he
said. "For now, just take deep breaths."
In the middle distance, a Yherajk broke from the clump
and approached us. It briefly touched Gwedif -- I was beginning to think this
was their way of greeting or saluting each other -- and then extended a tendril
at me. I looked at Gwedif.
"Carl, this is Uake," Gwedif said.
"Uake is the Ionar's ientcio -- our leader in both ship's operations and
social interactions. A captain and a priest. He welcomes you and hopes that you
have had an interesting visit so far. He'd like to shake your hand."
I extended my hand, let Uake's tentacle envelop it,
and shook. "Thank you, ientcio. It has been a very interesting visit, and
I thank you for allowing me the honor to make the visit to begin with." I
directed my comments directly to Uake, assuming Gwedif would translate, without
prompting.
He did. "I've passed the message on and added my
own comment that we should start the meeting soon, before you pass out from the
fumes. To you, Uake says that the honor is ours, that you would visit. To me,
he says that if we will accompany him to the dais, we will begin the meeting
and get the rabble under control. Shall we?"
Uake, Gwedif and I walked through the crowd to the
dais. As we arrived, three Yherajk also arrived, carrying a block of something,
and set it on the dais.
"I thought you might like to have something to
sit on," Gwedif said. "We don't have any chairs, but this should work
just as well." I thanked him and took my seat. Uake took up a position on
the far side of the dais from me, and Gwedif sat between us.
Some signal scent must have gone up, because the
Yherajk on the floor broke up their clumps and encircled the dais, forming
concentric rings. The room became noticeably less smelly; everyone must have
shut up.
"The ientcio is about to begin his speech,"
Gwedif said. "He has asked me once again to translate for him so that you
will understand what is being said. The translation will not be exact, I'm
afraid -- Uake will be using a lot of High Speech, which we use to quickly pass
along large amounts of information. But I'll be able to give you the gist of
it. If you have any questions, let me know -- our talking isn't going to
disturb the speech." He fell silent for a few minutes and then started
speaking again, starting and stopping as Uake made his statements.
"The ientcio welcomes all to the meeting, with
the hope that this moment of our journey finds them all well and at peace with
themselves. He asks us all to look back on that moment, over seventy years ago
now -- your years -- when the first faint signals of intelligence from this
world were picked up by our scientific arrays, and the confusion, turmoil, joy and
fear that those signals, first sound, then picture, brought to our race.
"He asks us also to remember the day when this
ship began its journey to this place, our people's emissary to a people so
strange and unlike ourselves. The ship was to serve two purposes: to learn
about those people, to find if they could be communicated with; and if they
could, then to make contact, with the hope of joining our two peoples in
friendship and comity.
"The ientcio now recounts the difficulties of the
journey -- its length, both in distance and time, a number of accidents that
diminished the number of the crew and caused damage to the ship, and the mutiny
attempt that resulted in the soul death of Echwar, our first ientcio, and the
loss of a tenth of the crew. This recounting is made to remind us even in this
moment of happiness that we must not lose sight of all that this journey has
required of us.
"Now, the ientcio says, our journey comes to the
cusp, in which we learn if our efforts form a memory epic for all Yherajk, to
be told to the days when our race is old and the stars red with age, or if they
disappear into darkness. We have made contact with one of the humans, one who
we believe will be wise, and whose actions will determine our path. It is
difficult to assign our fates to the will of one who is not one of us, but that
is the way of such encounters as these -- though we prepare for the moment, the
moment itself is not a thing we can control."
Tom, I was dumbfounded by what I was hearing. These
creatures had traveled across the stars, over unimaginable distances. And if
what I was hearing was correct, the success or failure of their trip was being
placed into my hands. It was a burden that I didn't want or even frankly that I
understood. I asked Gwedif if what I was comprehending correctly what was being
said.
"Oh, yes," Gwedif said. "your actions
in this meeting will determine what happens to us and to our journey. It's
something that we've known for a long time, and something that is
characteristic of the Yherajk -- the surrender of control in the hope that the
moment germinates into something greater. This is that moment."
"Wait a minute," I said, becoming angry.
"I didn't come up here to play God for you. You're asking me to do
something I don't know that I can do. I don't even know what it is that you
want me to do, much less if I can do it. I feel like I've been tricked."
Gwedif sprouted a tentacle and placed it on my hand.
"Carl," he said, "you're not being asked to play God. Your part
is about to be explained. If you refuse it, then we go back home, and our
people plan a new way to try to contact your people. That's all. We're not
going to launch our ship into the sun if we fail -- the drama you hear is part
of the formal nature of High Speech. You've been around me enough to know we
don't usually talk like that. But we do need your perspective on this. You know
your people like we could never know them. We need to see through you whether
we can make contact with humans here and now. Do you understand a little better
now?"
I nodded.
"All right," Gwedif said. "The ientcio
is speaking to you now. He formally welcomes you to the Ionar, wishes you
happiness at this moment in your journey, and presents to you the host of the
ship, the crew of the Ionar, and hopes that you will acknowledge them
thusly."
"How do I do that?" I asked.
"Got me," Gwedif said. "No human's ever
done it before. Try waving, and I'll wing the speechifying."
I stood and waved. Two thousand Yherajk sprouted
tentacles and waved back.
"I have said that you acknowledge the host of the
ship and wish them happiness at this moment of the journey," Gwedif said.
"It's more or less the correct response and doesn't commit you to anything
further. Was that all right?"
"Yes," I said, sitting back down.
"Good," Gwedif said. "Uake is now
speaking to you about the journey, and what we have learned of your people
through your radio and television transmissions. What he's saying is completely
untranslatable due to the complexity of the High Speech structures he is using,
but the upshot of it is that while your transmissions point to a rich and
fascinating culture, we also have found them contradictory and confusing at the
same time. There is no structure to your planet's transmissions into
space."
"Well, it's television, you know," I said.
"It's meant to be understood by humans and not intended for anyone else.
You're just getting the leakage. I do believe that we have a scientific program
that is beaming messages for alien cultures into outer space, but that's the only
thing that's intended for non-human audiences."
"The ientcio wishes to inform you that we have
indeed received those messages from SETI and have found them....amusing is
probably the best word. Television is much more interesting."
It was a good thing Carl Sagan wasn't alive to hear
those words. Gwedif continued. "The ientcio says that we have found that
we have been able to learn something of you from television and radio. Some of
us, and I am obviously being referred to here, have learned English, and have
begun to piece together something of a world and cultural history of your
planet.
"But we have become aware that we have been quite
unable to make a clear distinction between what is factual and what is
fictional -- what represents your true culture and what constitutes your
imaginings. We understand the distinction, for example, between your news
reports and your entertainment programs. But we lack the context to tell which
is the exaggeration of the other. This is a source of frustration for us -- to
the Yherajk, you can at times seem to be a culture of pathological liars,
unable yourselves to tell the difference between truth and falsity. You can see
how that can make us nervous to initiate contact. We need someone to help us create
a context, so we can separate the truth from the lies and make an accurate
reckoning of the status of your planet.
"This is of specific interest to us as it relates
to your planet's tendencies towards the idea of alien contact. The SETI program
implies that your planet is actively seeking contact with other peoples, but
your entertainments show you to be hostile to the idea, full of the fear that
the peoples you encounter will try to subjugate your planet. Moreover, when you
do show aliens as friendly or benevolent, they tend to be humanoid in
appearance. When they are hostile or violent, they tend to appear like us.
Obviously, this is very worrying."
"I think you are underestimating the influence of
special effects budgets on that particular question," I said.
"The ientcio agrees that this might be the case
-- again it comes to a question of context and knowledge of the culture. He
hopes that now you may understand our predicament.
"You are one of the most powerful men in the
industry that creates the programs that are beamed off of your planet, and have
become so because of your character and intelligence. You are in a unique
position to help us understand the distinctions between what is real and what
is fanciful, between the things that your planet hopes for and the things that
your planet fears. It is his hope, and he wishes to stress, the hope of every
Yherajk on this ship, that you would be able to help us in our efforts to
understand your people, to give us a grounding in the reality of humanity that
only a human can."
I blinked. "Is that it? You want advice?"
"For starters," Gwedif said.
"Well, of course I'll help you with that any way
I can," I said. "But I don't know how much help that will be. You
understand that even humans don't understand humanity most of the time. I could
tell you everything I know, but it would only be my opinion. And it would take
years to get it all down at that."
"The ientcio understands that you are just one
man among billions. Nevertheless, of those billions, you are one whose skills
and mind lend themselves most favorably to our needs. As for taking years to
know what you know --" Gwedif stopped for a moment, seemed to collect
himself.
"As for taking years," he continued,
"We have another way."
*****
Tom, did Joshua ever tell you how the Yherajk
reproduce? No? Well, I'm not too surprised about that; it's an immensely
personal event. On the cell level, all Yherajk are the same -- massive colonies
of asexually reproducing, single-celled organisms. But their experiences are different
and unique to each Yherajk. Think of them as a race of identical twins, sharing
the same genetic information but obviously separate people, divided by their
individual experiences.
When humans learned about genetics, they began arguing
whether people are the way they are due to genetics or environment; what our
genes are versus our experiences. With the Yherajk, this isn't even a debate --
since they're all the same genetically, who they are is all about experiences.
Personality is all.
Yherajk personalities are remarkable things. For
example, once they are formed, they can be transferred. Their personalities
don't have to stay in a particular body. That personality and set of
experiences can go from one body to another -- if, for example, that body were
dying of disease or something else of that nature. Yherajk do a much simplified
version of this when they transmit information; a single Yherajk can go off and
have a set of experiences, and when it comes back, it connects with an entire
group and 'downloads' its memories to the whole group. Then all the Yherajk
there know what that one knew.
But it requires physical contact and takes a great
deal of time. The Yherajk High Speech, which is an even more simplified version
of this, performs the same function by encoding a concept as an aromatic
molecule, which is then set aloft and automatically decoded by the Yherajk who
come in contact with it. It'd be like having an entire memory created in your
head simply by someone saying a word. Fascinating stuff, Tom.
In Yherajk reproduction, the personalities do
something else entirely -- they meld with another personality. The Yherajk join
together into one mass, and, rather than simply transferring information or
even a 'soul' from one body to another, the individual souls interact over the
entire mass of their combined body. Some portions of one personality end up
being dominant, and other portions from the other personality end up being
dominant.
After those personality traits are figured out, the
mass splits into two parts. One of those parts splits again and becomes the
original Yherajk that had melded, with their own personality traits and memory
intact, but physically smaller than they were before. The other part is an
entirely new personality: it has the memories and intellect of its parents, but
it comes with a brand new 'soul,' if you will, made of the new, melded
personality, and it's ready to go -- there's no childhood, per se, with the
Yherajk.
This melding isn't easy -- it requires the Yherajk in
question to surrender their will and allow another entity, another soul, to
mingle freely with its own. This other soul surrenders to you and you to it --
complete communion. But with the ultimate risk: a Yherajk's defenses are down
-- the other Yherajk, if it has been insincere in the joining, can attack the
other's personality and destroy it, replacing it totally with its own. This is
a "soul death," and causing it to happen is the worst crime a Yherajk
can commit against another Yherajk. A large part of the reluctance of the
Yherajk to speak about their reproduction comes from its potential to change in
an instant from an act of perfect union to one of the ultimate rape.
But it's rare -- far more rare than murder is with us.
Most of the time, it is a joyous experience -- and apparently better for them
than sex is for us.
The interesting thing is that while nearly all
reproductions occur between two Yherajk, there is no theoretical barrier on
having the melding occur between three, four or even more. It's vastly more
complicated, and it takes longer for the personality traits to suss out, but it
can be done. Gwedif told me that one of the great memory epics of the Yherajk
involved a exploring colony, under siege from attackers, who all melded
together in the desperate hope of birthing a hero who could save them from
destruction. The colony numbered 400. It worked -- of course. Otherwise it
wouldn't be an epic. For millennia, partially out of respect for the epic, that
had been the record.
The ientcio of the Ionar was planning to break that
record. He proposed 2000 -- the entire crew of the Ionar. And one human as
well.
*****
"I'm not following you," I said to Gwedif,
after he translated the ientcio's proposal.
"The ientcio implores you to meld with us,"
Gwedif said. "Pool your knowledge with ours and help us birth a new
Yherajk -- one that has an intimate understanding of humanity, who can help us
learn, quickly, easily, whether our two people can be joined in friendship. It
would be a great gift -- and you would be remembered not only as our first
human friend, but also a parent, the most important parent, of the greatest
Yherajk in our race's long history. As he will be -- one that two thousand of
us have surrendered our wills to create. It is a powerful event."
I looked out into the mass of Yherajk, and got the
distinct impression that two thousand of them were waiting for me to say
something. Anything. Tom, I got stage fright. But there was nowhere to go.
I stalled for time. "I don't know if you noticed
this," I said, "But I'm not a Yherajk. I don't meld very well."
"With your permission, the ientcio says,"
Gwedif said, "I will act as your conduit."
"What does that mean?" I asked.
Gwedif paused for a moment. "Aw, hell," he
said at last. "Uake has just sent some High Speech crap that I'm not even
going to try to translate. Carl, what it means is that I'd stick tendrils into
your brain, read your memories, and transmit them to the rest of the crew.
Bluntly speaking, I'll be rooting around your skull, looking for the good
stuff."
"It sounds painful," I said.
"It won't be, I promise," Gwedif said.
"But you're going to feel stuffed-up like you wouldn't believe. Carl,
don't misunderstand, I'll be effectively downloading your brain to the group. In
the melding union, there are no secrets -- and the offspring of this melding
will know what you know. We know we're asking a lot of you, more than has been
asked of any of us. If you don't want to do this, then don't."
"What will happen if I say no?" I asked.
"Nothing," Gwedif said. "We would never
try to compel you to a melding."
I looked out at the crew. "And every one of you
is willing to do this?"
"We are."
"What if one of you tries to take over the rest?
Isn't that possible? What would happen to me?"
"You'll be connecting to the group through
me," Gwedif said. "If one of us tried to overtake the entire crew,
I'd disconnect before he could overtake you. I'd probably have time." That
qualifier disturbed me, but Gwedif went on. "But I'd say it's highly unlikely
that someone will do that. For one thing, it'd wipe out the entire crew;
whoever did it would never get back home. For another thing -- Carl, this is
epic stuff. If this works, this is going down in our history as one of the
defining moments of our people. We'll be famous forever. Believe me, none of us
wants to be the one that screws that up."
"Will I be able to read all your crew's
thoughts?" I asked.
"No," Gwedif said. "I'm going to be
translating your thoughts -- I won't have time to translate the other way.
You'll experience all our thoughts, they just won't make a lick of sense. It
will be the weirdest trip you'll ever take, my friend."
"Well," I said, "When you put it that
way, how can I refuse?"
"Then you'll do it?" Gwedif asked.
"If you will be my conduit, Gwedif, I'll be
honored. Translate that exactly to your ientcio," I said.
Gwedif apparently did -- the room became filled with
the odor of distilled dumpster juice. I asked Gwedif what was going on.
"The crew is applauding, Carl," Gwedif said.
"They're relieved and happy. They didn't just spend half of their lives
traveling here for nothing. I lied a little to you, Carl -- if you hadn't
accepted, it would have been a crushing disappointment for us all. But I didn't
want to burden you with that sort of guilt. Sorry to be sneaky."
"That's all right, " I said. "I don't
mind. It'll help me to recognize your thoughts during the melding -- I'll look
for the sneaky ones."
"I won't be able to meld myself," Gwedif
said. "I have to manage your thoughts. That requires me to remain fully
alert during the whole thing. In fact, of all the crew, I'll be the only one
that won't be melding."
I was dismayed. "I'm very sorry, Gwedif," I
said. "If I had known, I'd have asked for someone else to act as the
conduit. I don't want you not be part of it."
"My friend," Gwedif said. "Please. I am
honored that you have chosen me as your conduit, more than you know. In doing
so, you have allowed me to be the only one truly conscious during the melding
-- the only one who will see the event as it happens. When this story becomes
our memory epic, the eyes that it will be seen through are mine."
Gwedif sprouted a tendril and waved it at the crew.
"This crew will be in the memory epic. But I will write it -- and thus I
will live forever through it, the Homer of this, my people's greatest Odyssey.
You have given me a great gift, Carl, and for it, I cannot thank you enough,
you, my friend, my great and true friend."
"Well," I said. "You're welcome,
then."
"Great," Gwedif said. He sprouted another
tendril, and wiggled both of them at me. "Now, you have to take out those
plugs -- I've got to stick these up your nose."
"You're kidding," I said.
"Not at all," he said. "This might
sting a little."
*****
I won't try to describe the melding, Tom, except to
say -- try to remember the most vivid, wild, erotic dream you have ever had.
Now try to imagine it entirely as a clutch of smells, colliding, sliding,
fading into each other. Now imagine it going on for a lifetime. That's what it
felt like.
I woke up, still on the dais, with three Yherajk
around me. I asked for Gwedif. The one to my right waved a tentacle.
"Did it work?" I asked.
"It did," Gwedif said, and motioned to the
Yherajk near my feet. "Carl, please meet the progeny of 2000 Yherajk --
and one human."
"Hello," I said to the Yherajk.
"Hi, pop," he said.
"The ientcio" -- Gwedif indicated the final
Yherajk -- "wishes to thank you once again for your great help and
understanding, and assures you that you will undoubtedly become one of the
great heroes of our race, something which I can tell you is already taken care
of."
"Thank him, and thank you," I said to
Gwedif.
"No problem," Gwedif said. "The ientcio
also wishes you to know that the honor of naming this newborn Yherajk belongs
to you, as the Initiating Parent."
"Thanks, but it was Uake's idea," I said.
"I can't claim credit."
"Sure," Gwedif said, "but your
acceptance of the proposal in this case has been agreed by all the parents to
be the initiating act. So it's back to you. However, the ientcio, anticipating
your reluctance, does indeed have a name picked out, which will be given to the
newborn if you agree."
"What is it?" I asked.
"We wanted a name that reflected the importance
of this Yherajk to us, and hopefully his eventual importance to your own
people, one that was immediately recognizable. What do you think of
'Jesus'?"
I laughed unintentionally.
"See," The Yherajk Who Would Be Jesus said.
"I told them it wasn't going to fly. But what do I know? I'm a
newborn." The sarcasm in his statement was unmistakable.
"It would be a very bad idea," I said.
"About half the folks on the planet would get very touchy about it."
"Nuts," Gwedif said. "Can you give us
something else?"
I could. 'Jesus,' is the Latinized version of
'Joshua,' -- a name that's still in use, of course, and without the same
religious overtones. It was also the name of my father, and, incidentally, of
the baby that Sarah was carrying when she died -- we found out it was a boy the
month before. Elise and I aren't planning to have children, Tom. So this
Yherajk, which was only the smallest fraction of me, and only of my thoughts at
that, was nevertheless the only 'child' I was likely to have. The name 'Joshua'
had long been with me, and I was happy to finally give it a new home. Joshua
was happy with it, too. Of course he would be -- he would know what it means to
me.
After I had named Joshua, Uake excused himself to
attend to ship's duties. As we shook 'hands', I managed a glance at my watch.
It was 11:30 in the morning.
"Uh-oh," I said. "I have to go."
"You haven't had a tour of the ship," Gwedif
said.
"Don't bother," Joshua said. "These
people just do not know how to decorate."
"I'd love to, but I'm late," I said. "I
already missed a day yesterday. By now my assistant Marcella has called my
house looking for me. If I don't show up at the office today, she's going to
file a missing person's report."
"Well, there's a problem," Gwedif said.
"It's daytime now. We can't really risk being seen doing a drop."
"So don't do a drop," Joshua said.
"Make it a one way trip."
"We could do that," Gwedif said. "But
there's a problem with that, too."
"What's that?" I asked.
"It depends," Joshua said. "How well
can you control your sphincter muscles?"
Gwedif explained it as we headed to the hangar. They
could build an unmanned cube the size of the pickup, launch it, and have it
land near where we had departed. But, as with the 'meteor' and the black cube,
it would have to arrive full-speed to avoid being picked up on radar for any
length of time. Another thing: the cube would have to be transparent.
"Why?" I asked.
"Black cubes in the daytime sky are
suspicious," Gwedif said. "Red Datsun pickups in the daytime sky are
merely unbelievable. Even if someone saw it, no one would know what to think of
it. And that's not a bad thing."
"Good thing you haven't had anything to eat in a
while," Joshua said.
A few minutes later, as I prepared to get behind the
wheel of my pickup, I said my good-byes to Gwedif and Joshua. I asked Gwedif
when or if I would see him again.
"Probably not for a while," Gwedif said.
"When we send someone again, it will be Joshua. But even he will stay here
for a few months, to benefit us with your knowledge -- now his -- as to how to
approach humanity. We probably won't see each other until the day our race
makes its debut. But I look forward to that day, Carl. I will be happy when it
arrives. We'll finally take that stroll through the tivis gallery."
"I can't wait," I said, and then turned to
Joshua. "I look forward to seeing you again, then."
"Thanks, pop," Joshua said. "It'll be
soon. Get a better car by then."
Chapter Eleven
Carl looked at his watch. "Damn," he said.
"I've missed my 4:00."
"The Call of the Damned premiere was four months
ago, Carl," I said. "What have they been doing between now and
then?"
"Grilling Joshua, I'd imagine," Carl said.
"Remember, he's got my memories -- it's better than having me there,
really, since I don't know that I'd be up for a daily brain-sucking. It's with
Joshua that the Yherajk came up with the idea of using us to be their
agents."
"I don't get that," I said. "If they
have all your knowledge, I don't see why they would need you or me to do
anything for them."
"Well, they are still gelatinous cubes,"
Carl said, "which does limit their ability to blend. But I think there's
something else to it. I think they have a plan already, but they wanted to see
what I, and now you, would come up with. For them, It's not simply a matter of
the most efficient way of doing something, otherwise Joshua would be addressing
the UN right now. But there's that notion the Yherajk have of surrendering to
the crucial moment, burned right down into their reproductive strategies. I
think that once again, they're surrendering the moment to us -- they're saying,
here, we trust you to take this, the most important moment in the history of
both our races, and make it work."
"That's a lot of trust," I said.
"Yes, well, frankly it's also annoying,"
Carl said. "I'm not saying that we should refuse the responsibility, not
at all. But we're carrying the entire load -- if it gets messed up, the failure
is entirely on our shoulders. All the pressure is on us. On you, actually, Tom,
since I foisted it on you. Have you, since we started this, really thought on
what we're doing here?"
"I've tried to avoid doing that," I said.
"It just makes me sort of dizzy. I try to concentrate on the smaller
things, like hoping that Joshua will turn up sometime today."
"That's probably the right attitude to have,"
Carl said. "Now, I think about it quite a bit. It's monumental and
exhilarating -- and I wish it were already done with."
"It's going to work out fine, Carl. Don't worry
about it," I said. I was taken aback by Carl's comment -- it didn't sound
like the Carl Lupo we all knew and feared.
Carl must have realized it, because he sudden gave a
wolflike grin, true to his name. "I can tell you these things, Tom,
because we're both in on the biggest secret anyone's ever had -- no one else
would believe me. Or you. Who else are we going to tell these things to?"
"That's funny," I said. "Joshua once
said the very same thing."
"Like father, like son," Carl said, and
stood up. "Now, come on, Tom. We have to head back. I can't keep Rupert
Murdoch waiting much longer. He gets testy when he's stood up."
*****
"Three and a half hours for lunch?" Miranda
said, as she followed me into the office. "Even by Hollywood standards,
that's a little extravagant. Your boss would kill you, if it weren't for the
fact you had lunch with him."
"Sorry, mom," I said. "I'll do all of
my homework before I go out tonight."
"Don't get fresh," Miranda said, "or
you'll get no dessert. Would you like to hear your messages, or do you want to
give me more lip?"
"Oh, I'd like messages, pretty please," I
said, sitting.
"That's better," Miranda said. "You
have six, count them, six messages from Jim Van Doren. In one two hour-period
before your lunch. I think that qualifies as stalking by California law."
"I should be so lucky," I said. "What
does he want?"
"Didn't say. Didn't sound particularly happy,
however. I suspect if he hasn't been raked over the coals by his editors at The
Biz, he may be in the process of being torched right now. Carl called me this
morning to get some information on the mentor program of yours. He mentioned
that he was planning to rip Van Doren and The Biz new assholes in the Times.
Not promising for either of them, if you ask me."
"God," I said. "That's just going to
make them both more annoying. Anyone else?"
"Michelle called. She's apparently having some
sort of difficulty with the Earth Resurrected folks. She said something about a
latex mask. It didn't make much sense to me. She also said that Ellen Merlow is
definitely out of Hard Memories, and that she now felt she was up to the role,
because she read 'Iceman in Jerusalem'." Miranda looked up at me,
confused. "She can't possibly mean Eichmann in Jerusalem."
"Give her a break, Miranda," I said.
"She got two-thirds of the title."
Miranda snorted. "Yeah, well, and I bet she's
averaging that for the rest of the words, too. Anyway, she'll be calling back
later. Last message, from your mysterious friend Joshua. He says he's fine now,
and not to call, he's busy at the moment but he'll be there when you get there,
whatever that means. Dealing with shady characters again, Tom?"
"You have no idea," I said. Why wasn't I
supposed to call? Despite Joshua's reassurance, I was worried. I fought the
urge to grab the phone right off. I decided to think about another entirely
futile task instead. "Miranda, could you get Roland Lanois on the horn for
me?"
"Absolutely. Who is he?"
"Miranda," I said, pretending shock.
"You're so low class. He's the director and producer of the Academy
Award-nominated motion picture The Green Fields, and also of the upcoming Hard
Memories. His production company is on the Paramount lot, I believe."
"What?" Miranda said. "Tom, you can't
be serious. You're not really going to try to get Michelle that part."
"Why not?" I said. "It's not totally
outside the realm of possibility that she could get the role, you know."
Miranda rolled her eyes and looked up, with upturned
palms. "Take me now, Jesus. I don't want to live here no more."
"Oh, stop it, and get Roland for me."
"Tom, the gods of common decency implore me to
stop you from making this call."
"There's a ten percent raise in it for you if you
get Roland on the phone for me, right now."
Miranda blinked. "Really?"
"Got it approved by Carl at lunch. So you have a
choice. Common decency or a raise. Your call."
"Well, I've done my part for humanity for
today," Miranda said. "Time to cash in."
"That's what I love about you, Miranda," I
said. "Your firm bedrock of moral values."
Miranda did a little step as she exited the office. I
smiled. Then I grabbed the phone and made a quick call to Joshua's cel phone.
No answer.
*****
Roland was in a meeting but his assistant said that
he'd be happy to chat if I wouldn't mind dropping by the offices in an hour.
"Roland hates talking business over the phone," the assistant said.
"He says he likes to have people within stabbing distance." It was
already past 4:30; if I was going to make it to the Paramount lot in an hour,
I'd have to leave at that moment. I left instructions with Miranda to call me
immediately if Joshua called, and then headed out.
About halfway there, on Melrose, I realized that I was
actually being tailed. A white Escort three cars behind me remained three cars
behind me constantly; whenever one of the cars between us changed lanes, the
Escort would swerve dangerously into another lane, let another car pass, and
then swerve dangerously back into the lane, properly spaced. The constant
honking that these maneuvers caused were what brought the car to my attention
in the first place. In a way it was a relief -- if it had been the Government
or Mafia hit men, they wouldn't have been so inept.
I was coming up at a light; I purposely slowed down to
miss the yellow -- the first time that I could recall ever doing that -- and
when the light turned red I took the car out of gear, set the parking brake,
popped the trunk, switched on my hazard lights and got out of the car. I
reached into the trunk just as the driver behind me, in a rusted-out Monte
Carlo, started yelling at me in Spanish. He stopped when he realized I pulled
out an aluminum softball bat, left over from last season.
The guy in the white Escort didn't even see me coming;
as I walked down the road, he was furtively talking into a cellular phone. The
guy's white, pudgy features became recognizable as I got closer. It was Van
Doren, of course.
I stopped at the driver-side window, flipped the bat
around so I was holding the thick end, and rapped hard on the window with the
handle end. Van Doren jumped at the noise and looked around, confused. It took
him about five seconds to realize exactly who it was banging at his door. He
spent another three seconds trying to figure out how to make a break for it
before he realized he was boxed in. Finally, he smiled sheepishly and rolled
down the window.
"Tom," he said, "isn't this a small
world."
"Get out of your car, Jim," I said.
Van Doren's eyes made a beeline for the bat.
"Why?"
"As long as you're following me, you're a danger
to other motorists," I said. "I can't have anyone's death but yours
on my conscience."
"I think I'll stay in my car," Van Doren
said.
"Jim," I said, "If you don't get out of
the car in exactly three seconds, I'm going to take this bat to your
windshield."
"You wouldn't dare," Van Doren said.
"You've got a whole street full of witnesses."
"This is LA, Jim," I said. "No one's
going to whip out a camcorder unless I'm wearing a badge. One. Two."
Van Doren hastily opened his door and undid his seat
belt.
"All right," I said, once he had gotten out
of his car. "Let's go. We'll take my car."
"What about my car?" Van Doren said. "I
can't just leave it here."
"Sure you can," I said. "The police
will come by any minute now to pick it up."
"Please," Van Doren said. "I can't.
It's a company car."
"Should've thought of that earlier. Come on, Jim.
Less talk. More walk. The light's changed already." I nudged him with my
bat. He went. We got in my car and made it through the tail end of the next
yellow, thus restoring my traffic karmic balance.
Van Doren watched as his Escort faded in the distance.
"I want you know, this qualifies as kidnapping," he said.
"What are you talking about," I said.
"There I was, at a light, minding my own business, when you open my
passenger side door and plop yourself into my car. You started asking me
harassing questions. A real pain in the ass. But, of course, you've done this
before. You left six messages at office just today, in fact. I'm driving you
around just to humor you. After all, you are acting erratic. If anyone's in
danger here, Jim, it's me."
"You're forgetting the witnesses again," Van
Doren said.
"Oh, come on," I said, getting into a left
turn lane. "Anyone who was there has now gotten out from behind your car
and driven off into the sunset. The only thing anyone's going to see is a
deserted car in the middle of a major traffic artery. If I were you, Jim, I'd
start making up a cover story right about now. Normally, I'd suggest saying you
were carjacked, but no one's going to believe that. You were driving an
Escort."
Van Doren stared at me for a few seconds, then buckled
himself in, almost as an afterthought. "I think I was right," he said.
"You are completely off your rocker."
I sighed and turned north. "No, Jim, but I am
tired of you. Your story about me was a tissue of lies from start to finish. It
caused two of my most important clients to bolt. There's not a single thing in
it that's true, and you caused my career a lot of damage. I could probably sue
you and The Biz for libel and get away with it."
"You'd have a hard time proving malice," Jim
said.
"I don't think so," I said. "After all,
you did come looking to profile me, and then, after I refused, this thing came
out. Given the amount of utter bullshit that floats to the surface of your
magazine each week, I think a good lawyer could probably convince a jury you
were gunning for me. Bet our lawyers are better than your lawyers."
"Why are you threatening me?"
"Simple. I want you to leave me alone. I haven't
ever done anything to you, or anything other than try to be the best agent for
my clients. I don't use crack cocaine. I don't have sex with little boys. I
don't cut up animals for fun. There's no story, Jim. Just leave me alone."
"Well, there's one problem here, Tom," Van
Doren said. "I don't believe you. Maybe you're not losing it, though I
doubt that at the moment. But you are up to something, and something
weird." He held up a hand and started ticking off points. "First, my
boss got a phone call from the Times this morning about your 'mentor program.'
They say Carl Lupo said that this program has been in place for a while. But I
know for a fact that this isn't the case -- my guy inside your company told me
so."
"This wouldn't be the same 'inside guy' who used
your story to snake one of my clients, would it?"
"I don't know anything about that," Jim
said. "Though I have heard you broke another agent's nose the other
day."
"It's not broken," I said. "Merely
bruised."
"Second," Van Doren continued, "you had
lunch with Carl Lupo today for over three hours. Three hours, Tom. The last
time Carl Lupo did lunch for three hours, he joined Century Pictures as their
president. Something is definitely up between the two of you."
"You watched us for three hours, having
lunch?" I said. "Jim, you need to get a life."
Van Doren cracked a smile. "This may be so. Or
maybe I have a life, chasing the biggest story in Hollywood, one that will
actually get me away from writing lousy little pieces about agents that no one
really cares about. You could just make it easy for me and tell me what it is,
and then I'll leave you alone."
"Fine," I said. "Carl and I are laying
the groundwork for an encounter between humans and space aliens. He even went
up to their ship. I've got one of them boarding with me at home. His best
friend is a dog."
"Uh-huh," Van Doren said. "I'm buying
that one. A spaceship. Was Elvis there with Jim Morrison and Tupac
Shakur?"
"Of course not," I said. "That's just
plain silly."
"Right. I don't mind if you don't tell me,
Tom," Van Doren said. "Just don't expect me not to follow it up.
Something's going on and I'm going to find it out. I work for a shitty
magazine, but I'm not a shitty journalist. I'm actually good at what I do,
whatever you might think."
"If you're so good, how come you did such a bad
job of tailing me just now?"
"Oh, that," Van Doren said, smiling again
"I'm just a really bad driver."
I pulled over. Van Doren looked around. "Where
are we?"
"The place where you get out of my car," I
said.
"You're just going to leave me here?" he
asked.
"Well, you didn't think I'd actually take you
where I was going, did you?" I said.
"Man," Van Doren said. "You're just
plain evil." He got out of the car, then turned around and held onto the
door for a minute. "By the way, Tom. There are no sulfur spas around here.
And your father is dead and your mother lives in Arizona, which would have made
having dinner with them difficult in one case and impossible in the other. If
there's no story here, why did you start lying to me from the beginning?"
I didn't answer. He closed the door, put his hands in
his pockets, and walked away.
*****
Roland Lanois poked his head out of his office.
"Sorry, Tom," he said, "I ran a little late on that last one and
I had to finish up some paperwork."
"No problem," I said. "I was running
late myself. I had to drop someone off."
"Well, then," Roland said, opening his
office door. "We're both forgiven. Come into the sanctum, Tom."
Roland Lanois, Montreal born, Eton and
Oxford-educated, was cultured, sophisticated, witty, had great taste and an
industry-wide reputation for being the most polite producer in the business.
Most people who met him assumed he was gay. In fact, he cut a swath through his
leading ladies like a harvester through a wheat field. Hollywood folks just
aren't used to heterosexual men having any sort of culture.
"Can I get you anything, Tom?" Roland said.
"A drink? I was just sent a very nice 18-year old Glenlivet from Ellen
Merlow's people. I'd be honored if you'd help me break it in."
"Thanks," I said, settling on Roland's
couch. "Neat, please. With a touch of water, if you would."
"Ah," Roland said, cracking open the bottle.
"A man of refinement. I have some Evian that should do the job. Ideally,
of course, you'd have a bit of the water that the scotch is made from, but we
must make do. Anyway, most people in this town put ice in their scotch. Savage,
really." Roland poured the scotch.
"Why did Ellen's people send you the
scotch?" I asked.
"Oh, come now, Tom," Roland said, glancing
over with a slight smile. "You wouldn't be here if you didn't already know
that Ellen's dropped out of Hard Memories. It appears she's going to be taking
on a more regular -- and lucrative -- gig on television." Roland said
television like it hurt his teeth to form the word.
"I hope you know I am sorry to hear about that.
She would have been great for the role."
"Yes, indeed," Roland has gotten out the Evian
and was delicately administering a drop to both our glasses, "she was
perfect. Brilliant actress of course, the right age, and she appeals to the
core audience we were going for. But she's going through that divorce of hers,
and it doesn't look like her pre-nuptial is going to withstand scrutiny. She's
worried about whether her post-nuptial worth is going to allow her to maintain
her lifestyle choices. A working horse farm apparently takes more money than
you or I would suspect."
Roland handed me the scotch and took a seat in the
other side of the couch. "And as you know, we're not working with a very
large budget for Hard Memories. So she's jumping ship to play a suburban mother
whose butler is an alien. $250,000 an episode. NBC has committed to a 44-episode
buy. She keeps her horse farm, and I'm left with my project's arse hanging in
the wind. Cheers." Roland reached over to clink his glass. We sipped.
"Damn, that's good scotch," I said.
"Yes, quite good," Roland said. "Which
is why it was sent along to soften the blow. Oddly enough, it came along with a
Hickory Farm sausage assortment. Strange, isn't it? I suspect they have a new
assistant over there who's not quite used to how these things work. At least it
didn't come with one of those fruit baskets with a balloon and a stuffed
animal. I think I might have killed myself."
"Balloons aren't that bad," I said.
"No, it would be the stuffed animal that would
send me over the edge," Roland said. "Now, Tom. You didn't come over
to commiserate with me over my project, though you have been very gracious to
do so to this point. What's on your mind?"
"Well, I'll get right to it," I said.
"I have a client who is very interested in pursuing the role Ellen
Merlow's vacated in Hard Memories. Michelle Beck."
"Oh, yes, right," Roland said. "She's
been calling here nearly every day, following up on it. Become quite good
friends with my assistant Rajiv, in fact, up to the point where the poor lad is
practically falling over himself to tell her all the things that are supposed
to be production secrets. Really a problem, but you're aware of the effect
someone like Miss Beck will have on young males. He's probably impressing the
hell out of his old friends from university. I haven't the will to fire him for
it."
"You're a good man, Roland Lanois," I said.
"Thank you, Tom. I don't hear that nearly
enough." We clinked glasses again, and then Roland sat back, hand to his
chin. He looked as if he was considering something weighty, and actually had
the intellectual wherewithal to do it. "Tell me, Tom. What do you think of
Michelle Beck for the part?"
"I guess that depends if you're asking me as an
agent or as a lover of film," I said.
"Really," Roland said, an amused glint in
his eye. "I'd like to hear the agent response first."
"She'd be great," I said. "She's hot,
she's a draw, she'll absolutely guarantee you a $15 million opening weekend
plus strong foreign openings."
"And as a lover of film?"
"You'd have to be out of your mind to give her
the role," I said.
"Well," Roland said, sounding impressed.
"That's something you're not going to hear out of the mouth of every
agent."
I shrugged. "I'm not telling you anything you
don't already know," I said. "And I'd look like an idiot if I said
anything else."
"What I find interesting," Roland said,
"is that you think I'd be mad to give her the role, and yet here you are,
about to ask me to do just that. It's a near-Orwellian example of doublethink.
I'm fascinated to hear how you are going to reconcile the two."
"There's no need for reconciliation," I
said. "I think she'd probably be no good for the role. I'll be honest
about that. But -- and here's something you're not going to hear an agent say
much of, either -- I could be wrong, and wrong in a big way. I can name you any
number of actors and actresses that no one suspected would be able to take on a
role, who have turned around and made it work. Sally Field was Gidget for
years. Now she's got two Oscars. Hell, Ellen Merlow's first film role was a
straight-to-video horror flick."
"I didn't know that," Roland said.
"Blood City III: The Awakening," I said.
"It also features Ellen's first and currently only nude scene."
"Really. I'll have to find that."
"Now Ellen has two Oscars as well. My point here
is, just because I think Michelle is wrong for the part, doesn't mean she
is."
"All right, point noted," Roland said.
"But there is the complication of Miss Beck not being the right age or,
let's put this delicately as possible, having the right amount of intellectual
stamina."
"We have 40 year old actresses who move heaven
and earth to make themselves look 25," I said. "I think we have the
cosmetic technology to go the other direction as well. We might have to reel
back the age of the character half a decade or so, but that's not going to make
a real impact on the thrust of the story. As for the intellectual end, it may
surprise you to know that Michelle has recently been reading Hannah
Arendt."
"It does surprise me," Roland said.
"She and my assistant Miranda were discussing the
book just this afternoon," I said. I left out the part about Michelle
mangling the title of the book.
Roland put his arm on the top of the couch and sipped
his scotch, thoughtfully. Then he shook his head. "I'm sorry, Tom,"
he said. "But I just have a very hard time seeing any way that Michelle
Beck could work this role. I wouldn't want to give it to her, just to have it
be a fiasco for both her and me. You can see the position I'm in."
"I'm not asking you to give her the role," I
said. "All I'm asking is that you give her a reading. If she flubs it,
fine. But she'll know she had a shot at it. She'll know I made the effort for
it. Knowing Michelle, it'll make her work harder for the next thing that she
does. And again: we could both be wrong about this. It couldn't hurt to cover
the bases. Roland, what's the status of the movie right now?"
"It's been pushed back, of course," Roland
said. "We were in the process of hiring crew and now we've had to let them
all off. It's damned inconvenient -- I'm going to lose Januz, my
cinematographer, to another project. Some child's film. About primates."
He grimaced. "Those things never do well. I don't know what he's
thinking."
"Do you have any other actresses lined up?"
"Not any of the really good ones," Roland said.
"Once we selected Ellen, they all went off to other commitments. The
earliest we'll have any of our A-list choices open is nine months from now. We
have some B-listers who could do it, but this isn't the sort of film that will
succeed without an established name."
"Well, then," I said. "You've got
nothing to lose."
Roland did his thoughtful thing again. "Even if
Michelle confounded our expectations," he said. "I don't see how we
could afford her. You know that the studios don't throw any sort of money at
all to these things."
Inwardly, I did a victory dance. When a producer
starts talking about money, it means he's cleared off any philosophical
problems he might have with your client. We were now moving through the final
steps of the dance. Outwardly, of course, I showed no change in emotion.
"Michelle's not looking to do this picture for the paycheck," I said.
"I think that, should she confound us, we could come to an accommodation
concerning salary."
One more minute of the thoughtful thing. "All
right, fine," Roland said. "I don't suppose it could hurt to give her
a look. And if, God forbid, she pans out and we get this production on track,
all the better. To tell you the truth, Tom, I was thinking of abandoning Hard
Memories altogether for another project, which is actually along the same lines
-- Holocaust drama, that is."
"Really," I said.
"Yes. Well," Roland ducked his head in what
I suspected was his version of a shrug, "it's not really a project yet.
It's just a script -- came into our slush pile by a student at NYU, but it's
marvelous. It's about a Polish poet, a Catholic, who is put in a Nazi
concentration camp for helping Jews during World War II."
"Krysztof Kordus?" I asked.
Roland looked surprised. "Yes, right, that's the
man. Again, Tom, I'm impressed. Most people in this business don't know about
anything they didn't read in Variety. Anyway, this script is brilliant, really
moving. They did a thing on this Kordus fellow a couple decades back on
television," -- again, the word was almost spat -- "but this script
is far beyond what they did with that. The problem now, of course, is getting
clearance to use the man's works in the film. I'm going to have Rajiv chase
down who's in charge of Kordus' literary estate, and see what we can come up with.
Probably will charge us an arm and a leg for clearance. That's the way these
things work."
"You don't have to have Rajiv track anything
down," I said. "I can tell you who administers Krysztof's literary
estate. You're looking at him."
Roland slipped his arm off the couch and leaned
forward. "Get out," he said. "You can't be serious."
"I am," I said. "My father was
Krysztof's agent. When Krysztof died, he named my father administrator of his
literary estate. When my father died, I inherited the role. I tried to place
Krysztof's estate with a real literary agent, but his family asked me to
continue on. They wanted to keep it in the family, as it were. I couldn't very
well say no, so I stayed with it. It's really not very difficult, since the
deals for his books are already in place. All I do is sign off on the current
arrangements and mail his daughter a check every three months."
"Tom," Roland said. "I am so very glad
you dropped by. Hold on a moment, and I'll get you the script for this project.
Read it and let's talk."
"Two scripts, if you don't mind," I said.
"Remember why I came here in the first place."
"But of course," Roland said. "By all
means, let's set up the screen test. Will a week from today be good? Say,
noon?"
"That would be just fine."
"Brilliant," Roland said, and got up.
"Don't go anywhere. I'll be back in a flash." he went out to get the
scripts from his assistant. I finished my scotch. It was very good scotch.
*****
I called Michelle with the good news as soon as I got
home. She squealed like a happy pig, which in my mind didn't bode well for her
chances for the role.
"Thank you, Tom, thank you, thank you, thank
you!" she said. "I'm so happy! I can't believe it!"
"Settle down, Michelle," I said, not
unkindly. "All you're getting at this point is a reading. You haven't got
the film yet. You could go in only to find out they hate you." This was my
subtle way of getting her ready for the disappointment.
It wasn't working. "Oh, I don't care," she
said. "I'm ready. I've been doing my reading. They're going to be
surprised. You'll see. You'll be there, right, Tom?"
"Uh...," I said. "Oh, what the hey.
I'll be there."
"Tom, I could just kiss you," Michelle said.
"Let's not try to ruin our client-agent
relationship," I said. Michelle giggled. I cringed inwardly and changed
the subject. "Miranda tells me you called earlier with a problem with the
Earth Resurrected folks. Something about a latex mask?"
"Oh, that," Michelle said. "Tom, they
want to pour latex on my head so they can make a stand-in dummy, or something.
I don't want to do it."
"Michelle, it's not that bad. They have to make
those masks so they can get shots of your head doing things it doesn't normally
do, like having veins pop out or your eyes explode. Things like that. All the
great action stars have to have them made. Arnold Schwarzenegger has done it.
Really, you're not an action star until you have one made."
"But they pour goo on your head, and then you sit
there for hours." Michelle said. "How do you breathe through
that?"
"As I understand it, they stick straws up your
nose," I said.
"No way," Michelle said.
There was a scratching at the back door. I looked over
and saw Ralph the retriever standing on the other side of the door.
"Michelle, hold on a second, I have to let my dog
in," I said.
"Tom, I can't do the latex mask thing,"
Michelle said. "I don't want straws in my nose. What if I have a cold?
What if they fall out? How am I going to breathe?"
"Michelle, let me just, oh, just hold on a
sec." I placed the phone down, ran over the door and slid it open. I ran
back to the phone. Ralph walked through the door.
"Michelle, you still there?" I asked.
"I'm not going to do it, Tom," she said
again. "I'm claustrophobic. I can't even put a blanket over my head
without freaking out. I don't care if they fire me or not."
"Don't say that," I said. "Listen, when
are you supposed to have your mask made?"
"A week from today," she said. "3 in
the afternoon. I have to go to Pomona."
"Damn," I said. "That's the same day as
your reading."
"Well, then," Michelle said. "I can't
get the mask made."
Ralph walked over to me and sat. I started knuckling
his head, absently. "How about this," I said. "I'll go with you
to both. I'll pick you up, we'll go to the reading. Once the reading is done,
we'll go to have the mask made, and I'll make sure the straws stay in place.
Okay?"
"Tom...," Michelle began.
"Come on, Michelle," I said. "We'll go
to Mondo Chicken afterwards. I'm buying."
"Oh, all right," Michelle said. "You
always know the right thing to say, Tom."
"That's why you love me, Michelle," I said.
I hung up, set the phone down, and knelt down to rub Ralph's ears and coat.
"Hey, there, Ralph," I said, in the goo-goo
voice you use with dogs,."Where's your little friend Joshua? Yeah? Your little
friend? The one that I'm gonna kill for heading off into the woods when I told
him not to go? Huh? Where is the little bastard, Ralphie?"
"Why the hell are you asking me?" Ralph
said. "I'm just a dog."
I screamed for a really long time.
Chapter Twelve
"Eeyow," Ralph said, after I stopped
hollering. "That hurt. I would have been happy with a simple 'Welcome
back.'"
"Joshua?" I asked.
"Of course," Ralph/Joshua said. "But
I'm also Ralph now, too. Ralphua. Joshualph. Take your pick."
"Joshua," I said, "What have you
done?"
"Tom, snap out of it," Joshua said,
irritably. "It's obvious what I've done. Look, I'm a dog!" Joshua
barked. "Convinced? Or do you want me to hump your leg?"
I know what you are," I said. "Now I want to
know why you did it. I thought you liked Ralph. I thought he was your friend,
Joshua. And now look what you've done." I gesticulated, looking for the
right words. None came. I used the next best. "You ate him, Joshua!"
Joshua laughed, which sounded unbelievably bizarre
coming from a dog. "I'm sorry, Tom," he said, finally. "Now I
know what you're getting at. You make it sound like I was waiting for the right
moment to body-snatch Ralph. It didn't happen that way. I told you before that
the Yherajk don't do that sort of thing. Tom, Ralph was dying. And this was the
only way to save him."
"I don't understand," I said.
"Well, if you promise not to yell at me anymore,
I'll tell you. All right?"
"All right," I said.
"Good," Joshua said. Let's go into the
living room. Could you do me the favor of getting me a beer?"
"What?"
"A beer, Tom. You know. A brew. Oat soda. Suds. I
don't have any tendrils to open things with anymore. And just because I'm a dog
doesn't mean I couldn't use a drink every now and then. I'll meet you in the
living room." He padded out. I went to get him a beer, a bowl to drink it
out of, and a couple of aspirin for myself, and then joined him in the living
room, taking a seat in my lounger.
I downed the aspirin, took a slug of the beer to chase
them down, and put the rest of it in the bowl. Joshua lapped it up. I reached
over to pet him, but then I stopped. It didn't seem appropriate anymore. You
don't pet thinking things.
"That's better," Joshua said. "Thanks,
Tom."
"You're welcome," I said. "Now, what
happened out there?"
"Ralph had a heart attack," Joshua said, and
I watched his mouth as he spoke. His mouth hung open as the words came out --
it was like he had swallowed a radio. "We were a couple of miles from
here, going up a hillside. Ralph had been fine up until then. But on the way up
the hill, I heard him give a little whimper. I looked back and he had
collapsed. I went back to see if there was anything wrong, but I didn't see any
cuts or bone breaks. So that's when I entered his brain, and found out he had a
heart attack."
"How could you tell?"
"I could read where he was feeling pain,"
Joshua said. "His whole chest felt like it was being squeezed. Ralph was
confused, of course; he's just a dog, after all. He didn't know what was going
on."
"Why didn't you call me then?" I asked.
"I would have come back and taken Ralph to the vet."
"Think about it, Tom," Joshua said.
"You were in Venice Beach at the time, remember? By the time you got back
here and hiked out to where we were, Ralph would have been long gone. And even
if you had got back in time and had taken him to a vet, the vet would've just
told you there was nothing to be done. And besides, he's not really your dog.
You couldn't have done anything."
That stung. Joshua must have picked up on it. "I
don't mean to imply that you had done anything wrong, Tom," he said,
gently. "Just that there wasn't time. Even if there was, this was a better
way. Ralph deserved better than to die on a vet table with strangers over
him."
"So Ralph had a heart attack," I said, my
voice slightly husky. "What did you do then?"
"The first thing I did was I cut off the
pain," Joshua said. "I didn't want him feeling any pain. I also cut
off his motor control, so he wouldn't go bounding off because he was feeling
better. Then I sent a tendril into his chest to see how bad it was, and whether
or not we could make it back to the house. As it turned out, it was pretty bad.
Ralph was old and his heart was in bad shape.
"By this time, Ralph was pretty much out of it --
his little brain was blipping all over the place, Tom. I didn't want him to
die, so I did two things. First I called your assistant and told her that we'd
be late. And then I inhabited Ralph."
"What does that mean?" I asked.
"Well, look at me," Joshua said.
"I mean, how it that different from Ralph just
dying?" I said. "After all, it's not Ralph in there, Joshua. It's
you."
"Not quite accurate," Joshua said. "All
of Ralph's memories and feelings are still here. I distinctly remember being a
dog and doing doggie things."
"But you're not Ralph," I said.
"No," Joshua admitted. "But on the
other hand, Ralph didn't die. His personality just...melded into mine. From
Ralph's point of view, he suddenly became a lot more intelligent. He's the dog
with the 180 IQ. On my end, I now know the world from a dog's eye point of
view. I, being Joshua, am obviously going to be dominant. But don't be
surprised when I do something that reminds you of Ralph. It's all here, in one
big package. Which is why I said, 'Ralphua.'"
"What did Ralph think of this, if you don't mind
me asking?"
"He was good with it," Joshua said.
"Though not in any way you'd understand. I basically let him know not to
worry, and he basically let me know that he trusted me. Then he and I became
we. Which then became me. And I'm pleased to be alive, so there you have
it."
I leaned back in my chair. "This is making my
head hurt."
"Have some more aspirin," Joshua suggested.
I looked back down at Joshua. He sat there like a
typical retriever. "What did you do with your old body?" I asked.
"Did you leave it up there on the hillside? Do we need to go find it and
bury it or something?"
"Nope," Joshua said. "It's in here.
Timesharing, as it were. Right now my old body is in Ralph's digestive system
and in his blood vessels. He's not eating anything that I'm not eating,
obviously, and my cells are doing the role of blood, transferring oxygen to his
cells. See, look at my tongue," Joshua's doggie tongue rolled out, an
albino sort of pink, "not nearly as red as it used to be. Anyway, this is
only short term solution.-- controlling two bodies is a lot of work, even when
I have my old body more or less on autopilot."
"What's the long term solution?"
"Well, eventually my cells will take the place of
all his cells," Joshua said. "It's more efficient, especially since I
won't have all these damned specialized organs to deal with. The only thing
I'll need to be concerned with is maintaining my shape and appearance, which
won't be that difficult. It'll take about a week."
"What happens to the old cells?" I asked.
"I digest them."
"Oh, man," I said. "You are eating
him."
"Tom," Joshua said. "It's not nearly as
gross as you think. And anyway, it needs to be done -- I can't keep controlling
both bodies, and my Yherajk body is more flexible."
"And none of this," -- I waved my hands --
"conflicts with your 'don't take over other life forms' thinking."
"Hmmmm, well," Joshua said. "It's a
borderline case. The limitation is 'sentient life forms'. We could argue
whether or not Ralph, character though he was, truly qualified as sentient.
Now, I think he was -- a low-grade variety, you know, but that's a matter of
degree, not of kind. But I also feel that he gave me consent. Sort of. It's
something that could be argued. But I don't feel wrong for having done it.
Besides, I like being a dog. I marked every tree on the way here, you know.
It's all my territory now."
"Good thing my cat's not still alive," I
said "I think you and he may have had words about that."
"Hey, that reminds me," Joshua said.
"Was your cat a striped tabby?"
"He was," I said. "Orange. Big."
"Don't know about the orange part, but I've got a
memory of chasing a big tabby down the road a couple of years back and seeing
it get squashed by a big truck." Joshua squinted, which is a funny look on
a dog. "A Ford Explorer, it looks like."
"Great. Ralph is a cat murderer. Just what I
needed."
"He was just playing around with the cat,
Tom," Joshua said. "He felt really guilty about it afterwards."
I slapped my hands on my legs and stood up. "On
that note, I'm going to get another beer. I think I could use it."
"Could you bring me another one, too?"
Joshua asked. "Can't open one myself, you know."
"Now wait a minute," I said. "If you
can't make tendrils anymore, how did you make the call earlier today?"
"The cel phone has a 'redial' button, Tom. And
believe me, it was a pain in the ass to try to hit it."
"Where is the cel phone?" I asked.
"Uh...." Joshua hung his head. "I left
it out on the hillside. Sorry. I didn't want to have to carry it in my mouth
for two miles."
"Joshua, you're a retriever," I said.
"That's what you do."
"That's what I did," Joshua said. "I'm
in another line of work now."
*****
The next morning, Joshua and I visited Carl.
"Well, isn't that just the most adorable
puppy!" Carl's assistant Marcella said, leaning over her desk to look at
Joshua.
"Only on the outside," I said.
"Why, Tom, what a terrible thing to say,"
Marcella said. "You know that dogs can pick up on what you're saying about
them."
"I have no doubt whatsoever about that," I
said. "Is Carl in? I'd like to speak to him, if he has a moment."
"He's in," Marcella said. "Let me see
if he can see you." She motioned us over to the waiting area. As we sat,
Joshua put his paw on my foot, our signal for when he had something he wanted
to say to me. I leaned down, very close to his mouth. "What?" I
whispered.
"I just want you to know, I'm having a rough time
of things at the moment," Joshua said, his voice barely above a whisper
itself. "My dog nature is getting the best of me."
"What do you mean?" I said.
"I mean I have this incredible urge to stick my
nose in every crotch that goes by," Joshua said. "It's driving me
insane."
"Try to control yourself," I said.
"After this meeting I'll take you to the park and you can sniff some other
dogs' butts. Good enough?"
"You're mocking me, aren't you," Joshua
said.
"Maybe," I said.
"Tom?" Marcella looked over to us.
"Carl will see you now." She crinkled a smile and wiggled her fingers
at Joshua. Joshua surged, as if to make a beeline for her lap. I held him by
his collar and dragged him into Carl's office. Carl was at his desk, glancing
at a Hollywood Reporter. He set it down as I closed the door.
"Tom," Carl said, and then glanced down at
Joshua. "Is this Joshua's friend?"
"Not exactly," I said, and turned to Joshua.
"Say hello, Joshua."
"Hello, Joshua," Joshua said.
Carl was momentarily startled but recovered quite a
bit quicker than I did. "Cute," he finally said.
"Thanks. I love that joke," Joshua said.
"Would one of you mind telling me how Joshua got
in there?" Carl said.
"His dog friend was old and had a heart attack,
and Joshua decided to inhabit the body," I said.
"I've also melded with the dog's
personality," Joshua said.
Carl furrowed his brow. "You mean your
personality is part dog?"
"If you throw a stick, will I not fetch?"
Joshua intoned. "If you scratch my backside, will I not jerk my leg? if
you show me a cat, will I not chase? Sorry, Tom."
"It's all right," I said.
"Tom, "Carl said, "I'm hoping this
isn't your idea of how to bring our peoples together. Joshua appears happy to
be a dog, but I don't think that's the form that we want the Yherajk to take
for their grand debut."
"Believe me, it's not," I said. "But I
think letting him be a dog for a while has some interesting aspects."
"Explain," Carl said.
"Well, for one thing, it finally allows him to
interact with humans besides you and me," I said. "I can take him
places now. He's not going to get the full human experience, to be sure, but
he's going to see more of the place than he would trapped in my house all the
time. And maybe the interaction will give us some ideas to go on for how we
finally do introduce the Yherajk."
"Joshua?" Carl said.
"Being a dog isn't optimal for observation,"
Joshua said. "But it's better than what I was doing, which was watching
cable television and going into online chat rooms. And I'm having fun. I am the
Alpha Dog of the Universe. It doesn't get much better than that."
Carl turned his attention back to me. "What is
your plan?"
"I don't have one at the moment," I said.
"I thought I'd just take him places and let him look around. You know, be
a professional dog walker for a while."
"He's good at it," Joshua volunteered,
"and he needs the exercise."
"Quiet, you," Carl said to Joshua. Joshua
immediately looked like a dog who knows he's taken a dump in the wrong place in
the house. I never would have told Joshua to be quiet. But then, I'm not his
dad.
"I can't have you wandering around with a
dog," Carl said. "That Van Doren character is still floating around
out there. We have to keep you busy." Carl thought for a few moments, then
turned back to Joshua.
"Can you act?" Carl asked Joshua.
"I'm pretending to be a dog, aren't I?"
Joshua said.
Carl buzzed Marcella. "Get me Albert Bowen, if
you please, Marcella," he said, and clicked her off. He turned to me.
"You have anything going on in the next few days?"
"Not really. I got Michelle Beck a reading for Hard
Memories, but that's not until next week. Amanda's handling all the rest of my
clients. I'm free," I said.
"Good," Carl said. "Albert Bowen and I
went to college together. He's a vet and a trainer, and handles animal casting
for commercials and television. Let's see what we can do with this."
Marcella's came over the speakerphone. "Albert
Bowen holding for Carl Lupo," she said, and clicked off.
"Hey, Al," Carl said.
"Wolfman!" Bowen said on the other end. Carl
twitched slightly at the nickname. College familiarity was probably the only
reason Carl let him get away with it. "Haven't heard from you in a while,
my friend. What can I do for you?"
"I got an interesting potential client, Al,"
Carl said. "Animal trainer from the Yukon Territory. Trains dogs. One of
my agents did a trek up the Pacific coastline about a year ago and found this
guy doing a show outside of Whitehorse. Smartest damned dogs you ever saw. The
agent managed to convince the guy to ship one of the dogs down for a week, to
see if they might have a future in commercials and films. I think they might,
and if it works out, we're going to represent the trainer."
"The trainer shipped one of the dogs?" Bowen
said. "He didn't come down himself?"
"Said he didn't need to. Sent the agent a manual
with hand signs. Said that's all he'd need, the dog would understand. I told
you these were smart dogs, Al."
"Hmmph. I'll have to see it before I believe
it," Bowen said.
"Well, Al, that's my plan. I'm going to send the
agent over with the dog. The agent's name is Tom Stein, and the dog's name is
Joshua. You want to give the dog a looksee and tell me what you think? And if
you can use him in any commercials over the next week or so, that'd be good
with us. The trainer has given us free rein for this week only."
"Who is this guy?" Bowen said.
"Not going to say, Al," Carl said.
"Company secret until we have a deal signed. But if you like what you see,
I think we can work out an exclusive contract for your casting company. Work
for you?"
"Hell, yes, Carl," Bowen said. "Have
them come up today around one. We'll put the dog through the paces and I'll get
back to you by tomorrow morning. You know where my ranch is?"
"Valencia, if I'm not mistaken," Carl said.
"Right you are," Bowen said. "take the
Magic Mountain exit, go left, and head into the hills for five miles. Can't
miss it. We'll be looking forward to seeing them." Carl and Bowen did
their good-bye pleasantries and hung up.
"Yukon Territory? Whitehorse?" I said.
Carl smiled broadly. "I'd like to see anyone
check up on that whopper," he said.
*****
Al Bowen met us in the driveway of his ranch, clearly
eager to meet Joshua. That is, until he saw him.
"This is the dog?" Bowen said, after we made
our introductions. It was clear that he didn't think Joshua was any great
prize. But the same could be said of him; Al Bowen was one of those guys who
looked like he had spent far too much of his life being a roadie for the
Grateful Dead.
"That's him," I said. "He's really more
intelligent than he looks."
"I hope so," Bowen said, and knelt down.
"He's not a biter, is he?"
"Not that I know of," I said.
Bowen held out his hand to let Joshua sniff him.
Joshua declined. Bowen took hold of Joshua's snout and took at look at his gums,
then felt down Joshua's body.
"How old is this dog?" He finally asked.
"Eight years, I think," I said.
Bowen snorted. "He's twice that if he's a year,
Tom," he said, straightening up. "I have to tell you, if Carl hadn't
vouched for this animal, I'd turn you around right now. Come on, let's go this
way." He led us past the ranch house, into the back.
"Nice place you've got here," I said.
"Thanks," Bowen said. "It's nothing
big, just a couple thousand acres. Family land, you know. Been in the family
since the 1800s. Thought I might have to sell it in the 70s, but then I got my
vet degree and started doing this. Pays the bills. Got quite a menagerie here
-- dogs, cats, pigs, horses, even some llamas. We had a herd of cattle we'd
rent out for stampede scenes, but there's not much call for that recently. Had
to turn most of them into cat food." We stopped at an enclosed yard that
looked like an obstacle course.
"What is this?"
"Well, this is a training track," Bowen
said. "If we want to have an animal do something complicated, like run
through a house and open a window, we'll sort of create that here and run them
through it until it gets hardwired into their brains. I figure that dog of
yours has a repertoire of tricks. Tell me what they are, and we'll set up the
track and run him through a couple."
"That's not the way he was trained," I said.
Bowen looked at me like I was a bad peyote flashback.
"What do you mean?" he said.
"Well, as I understand it, he's sort of trained
the other way. Set up the track the way you want it, and tell him what to do,
and he'll do it." I was making all this up, and this sounded reasonable to
me.
But apparently it didn't sound that way to Bowen.
"Look, Tom," he said. "I don't know what fool chase Carl has you
running, or if you've pulled a fast one on Carl. But every dog has to be
trained for specific tasks. I love and respect dogs, but even the smartest ones
can't just be told to do something brand new and then do it. That's just not
the way their brains work."
"Mr. Bowen, before you say it can't be done, why
don't we try it first?" I said. "I think you'll be surprised."
Bowen looked irritated, and then he laughed.
"Fine, then," he said. "Give me a minute to prepare the
track." He went into the enclosed area and began moving things around.
"'Is he a biter'," Joshua said, under his
breath. "I almost nipped off his nose, just for that one."
"Behave yourself, Joshua," I said. "You
think you can handle this?"
"Deep in my bowels of my intellect, I have the
knowledge necessary to pilot an interstellar spacecraft," Joshua said.
"I think I should be sufficiently competent to walk and jump."
"No need to get testy," I said.
"Sorry," Joshua said. "Personally, I
think I'm a fine dog. Remind me to pee on this guy's shoes before we go."
Bowen came back to our side of the enclosure and
opened it to let us through.
"Let me walk you through this," he said.
"You can just tell me," I said. "That
should be fine."
Bowen smirked. "All right, then. Here's what I
want. I want your dog to leap over that plastic fence over there, come back
around this way to this" -- he motioned to a window with a shade on it --
"and grab the blind string in his mouth to open the blind. Finally, I want
him to go all the way back there" -- He pointed to what looked like a
kid's playhouse -- "there's a doorbell button on the right side of the
door that he should be able to press. Have him press it, turn around, sit, and
bark back at us."
"Is that all?" I said.
"Son," Bowen said. "It would take the
better part of a year for a dog to learn something this complicated. If your
dog can get just one of these things on the first try, he qualifies as the
smartest dog in the history of dogs."
"Joshua," I snapped my fingers as if to make
him heel. He sauntered over and sat, looking at me. I pointed to the plastic
fence.
"Jump!" I said. I then moved my arm over to
the blind.
"Pull!" I said. I then moved my arm over to
the playhouse doorbell.
"Press!" I said. I then made a spinning
motion with my hand, and mimed my hand sitting.
"Bark!" I said.
Joshua shot me a look that clearly said, give me a
fucking break.
"Go!" I said. He sprinted off.
"Mary mother of God in a lobster bib," Al
Bowen said, roughly twenty seconds later.
"I thought he was a little sloppy about the
blinds," I said. They were, in fact, slightly crooked.
"Listen," Bowen said. "I've got a
Mighty Dog commercial scheduled here for the day after tomorrow. Tell me you
can make it."
"Sure," I said.
"We start shooting at 10:30," Bowen said.
"Try to be here by 7. This is smartest dog I've ever seen in my life, but
he's still going to need a lot of grooming work." He shook his head and
walked away.
Joshua walked up. "Well?" he said.
"You're going to be in a Mighty Dog
commercial," I said.
"Well, all right, then," Joshua said.
"I would hate to be associated with anything that wasn't 100% pure beef,
you know."
Chapter Thirteen
On September 1, 1939, Nazi Germany began World War II
by bombing the hell out of the Polish capital of Warsaw. By September 27, the
Germans were dipping their feet in the Vistula river, which bisects the city;
shortly thereafter, the Jews of Warsaw were herded into the Warsaw Ghetto --
500,000 of them, initially, in an area roughly one mile square. In July of
1942, the Nazis began deporting the Jews en masse from the ghetto. Between July
22 and October 3, 300,000 were deported to the various concentration camps --
Treblinka and Chelmno were the closest to the city of Warsaw -- and exterminated.
In April of 1943, the 40,000 or so Jews who remained in the ghetto were
attacked by the Nazis. They fought back, heroically, for three weeks. And then
nearly all of them were killed.
One who survived was Rachel Spiegelman. In pre-War
times, Rachel and her family were well-to-do professionals; the daughter and
granddaughter of physicians, Rachel herself had studied law and worked as the
office manager of her husband's law firm. In addition to Polish and Yiddish,
she spoke German and English, and had even been to America as a child, to visit
family members who had emigrated there. She was a daughter and wife of
privilege, and the fall from having servants and summer homes to living six to
a room in the ghetto was a long one.
And yet, inasmuch as one can in the circumstances,
Rachel thrived. She was tough-minded and sensible -- and also formidable. When
the Nazis informed the ghetto residents that they were to form Jewish councils
that would oversee housing, sanitation and manufacturing production, she
forbade any member of her family from joining the councils, declaring that
those who worked with the Germans were leading the rest to the slaughter. When
her husband disobeyed her and served on a council, Rachel threw him out of the
room that they shared with Rachel's parents, her brother, and her brother's
wife.
She then organized her neighborhood to operate around
the councils and clashed with them repeatedly over their edicts. With a young
Pole who was rumored to be her lover, she operated a black market, somehow
finding meat and sweets when the Germans allowed only turnips and beets to be
sent into the ghetto. When the Nazis ordered the Jewish councils to find
"volunteers" for deportation, Rachel , working desperately, found her
neighbors work in armament plants or hid them, delaying but ultimately failing
to stem the death flow out of the ghetto. She fought alongside the remaining
Jews during the ghetto uprising for two weeks, one of the very few women left
in the ghetto to do so; in the third week, against her better judgment, she
attempted to escape the ghetto with her young Pole. They actually did it, only
to be turned in by one the Pole's "friends". He was shot and killed;
she was sent to Treblinka.
From April until the beginning of August, Rachel
slaved in the camp; on August 3rd, it was decided that she was no longer
needed. She was sent a mile up the road to Treblinka II, where the
"bathhouses" were. These bathhouses were connected to huge diesel engines
that pumped in carbon monoxide -- deadly, but not very efficient. It typically
took nearly a half hour before the hundreds crammed inside the
"bathhouses" died. It was a long and terrifying death, and between
700,000 and 900,000 people died that way, in that camp.
On August 3rd, however, there were some surprising
deaths at Treblinka II; namely, an SS officer and several guards. They were
killed by some of the Jews who worked at the camp, performing the executions,
excavating the corpses for gold teeth and other valuables, and transporting the
bodies to mass graves. The Jews chose that day to attempt a revolt, and while
it was not successful, over 200 Jews escaped the camp during the chaos. Rachel
was one of them. Most of the escapees were eventually recaptured or killed.
Rachel was not. Rachel went north, eventually finding passage to Sweden. After
the war ended, she emigrated from there to the United States.
Rachel's story would be remarkable enough if it had
ended there. But it did not. Once Rachel arrived in the US, she was outraged to
discover that her adopted country, the one that had fought for the freedom of
Europe, was dealing with Black Americans like the Germans dealt with the Jews.
Even some of the laws were effectively the same -- No intermarriage, segregated
schools and services, and violence either ignored or actively condoned by those
whose job it was to keep the peace. "There are black shirts beneath those
white robes," she would later write.
So she did something about it. She went back to law
school and got her J.D. -- and the next day got on a bus to Montgomery,
Alabama, the Heart of Dixie. She passed the bar and set up shop: a female,
Jewish lawyer, offering legal services to black sharecroppers and factory
workers. Her office was firebombed twice in the first month. The next, someone
drove by and put a bullet through her window. It ricocheted and struck her in
the leg. She went to the hospital to have it removed, and was denied medical
help by the emergency room resident, who refused to work on a
"nigger-loving Jew." Rachel responded by prying out the bullet
herself, right there, slamming it down on the resident's clip board, and
walking out under her own power. Then she sued the hospital and the resident.
She won. Her office was firebombed again.
She stayed on -- on through the Montgomery Bus Boycott
of 1955, when she bought her first car to avoid riding the buses and ferried
black friends to and from work. On through the Birmingham protests of 1963,
when she was arrested twice by white policemen and bitten three times by their
dogs. On through Martin Luther King's 1965 march from Selma to Montgomery, when
she and King walked arm-in-arm as they strode past her offices, now staffed
with partners -- half of them black.
Just before she died in 1975, she wrote in Time
magazine, "I feel the work I have done was the work I was destined to do.
I know what it is to lose my rights and to be told that I have no right to
exist, to see my family, my friends and my humanity stripped away from me. These
are hard memories, couched in sorrow and anger. But I also know what it is to
see others begin to gain their rights and their humanity, to be told, yes, you
are our brothers and sisters. Come join us at the family table, and be welcome.
My work, though such a small part of a larger whole, has helped to make this a
reality. It makes those hard memories a little easier to bear, because these
memories -- they are glorious."
This is the woman that Michelle Beck wanted to
portray. Could she do it?
Well, she was the right sex.
*****
By the time Michelle and I waited in Roland Lanois'
anteroom, however, any hint that I felt Michelle to be utterly wrong for the
role had vanished. After a certain point as an agent, you simply stop worrying
about the far-reaching implications of what you are doing and deal with the
at-the-moment details. Some would call it enforced amorality. But it's really
just a matter of being there for your client, and doing what needs to be done.
At the moment, I was trying to keep Michelle from hyperventilating.
"Breathe," I said. "Respiration is a
good thing."
"I'm so sorry, Tom," Michelle said. She was
gripping both sides of her chair so hard it looked like she might dent the
metal. "I'm just so nervous. I didn't think I would be. But I am. Oh,
God," she said. She started thumping her chest with her fist. "Oh,
Tom, I'm sorry." She sounded like a helicopter.
I grabbed the fist before she could break her ribs.
"Stop apologizing. You haven't done anything wrong. It's okay to be
nervous, Michelle. This is a pretty big role. But I don't think you need to
bruise yourself over it. Have you read the scene Roland wants you to do?"
"Yes," she said, and then grinned
sheepishly. "I actually memorized the whole thing. All the parts. I didn't
want to blow it. Isn't that stupid?"
"No, not really," I said. "You know,
when Elvis started work on his very first film, he memorized the entire script.
All the parts, not just his own. No one told him there was any other way to do
it."
Michelle looked at me, confused. "Elvis was an
actor?"
"Well, I don't know that I'd go that far," I
said. "But he was in movies. Jailhouse Rock. Love Me Tender. Blue
Hawaii."
"I thought those were songs," Michelle said.
"They are songs," I agreed. "But
they're also movies."
"Oh, great," Michelle said. "Now Elvis
songs are going on in my head." She stood up and started pacing. Watching
her was making me tired.
Rajiv, Roland's assistant, came out of Roland's
office. "Okay," he said. "We're setting up the video camera, so
if you want to come on in, we'll get started right away."
Michelle took in a sharp intake of breath; it sounded
like she was trying to inhale the ficus plant on the other side of the office.
Rajiv jumped slightly at the noise.
"Give us just a minute," I said.
"No rush," Rajiv said, and closed the door.
"Oh God," Michelle said, wringing her hands.
"Oh God oh God oh God oh God."
I went over and started massaging her shoulders.
"Come on, Michelle," I said. "This is what you wanted."
"God, Tom," Michelle said. "Why am I so
nervous? I've never been this nervous about an audition before."
"It's because you're finally using a script that
has words longer than two syllables," I said.
Michelle wheeled around and pushed me, semi-hard, in
the chest. "You're a jerk," she said.
"Noted," I said. "On the other hand,
you're not hyperventilating any more. Now, come on. Let's do this thing."
I took her hand, walked her to the office door, and opened it.
Inside was Roland, his assistant Rajiv, and a woman
that I did not recognize. Roland and the woman were sitting comfortably on the
couch; Rajiv was standing over a video camera, fiddling with something.
Roland got up and strode over to us as we came through
the door. "Tom," he said. "A pleasure to see you again. I hope
you are well."
"I am, Roland, thanks," I said, and motioned
to Michelle. "This is my client, Michelle Beck."
"But of course. Miss Beck. The woman who has
driven my poor assistant to traitorous activity. It is a pleasure." Roland
took Michelle's hand, and in a playfully dramatic fashion, kissed it. Michelle
smiled uncertainly and glanced over to me. I gave a shrug that said go with it.
"And now, if you'll both allow me to make
introductions of my own," Roland said. "First, Miss Beck, I should
like to introduce you Rajiv Patel, my assistant, with whom you have had many
long and interesting phone conversations. I believe somewhere in the office he
may have erected a shrine to you."
Rajiv was dark-skinned enough that it was somewhat
astonishing to be able to see his blush. "Hello, Michelle," he said,
and went back to fooling around with the video camera.
"And this," he said, turning to the woman on
the couch, "Is Avika Spiegelman, who is one of the assistant producers of
the film."
I walked over to shake her hand. "A
pleasure," I said. "Are you related to Rachel Spiegelman?"
"She was my aunt," she said. "Actually
my second cousin, or cousin twice removed, or whatever you'd like to call it.
But we all called her 'Aunt Rachel.' It was simpler that way."
"In addition to being one of our producers, Ms.
Spiegelman is acting as an advisor to the film, giving us insight to the real
Rachel Spiegelman," Roland said. "As such, I thought it might be
prudent to have her give us her thoughts."
"I loved you in Summertime Blues," Avika
said to Michelle. "You were perfect for that role."
Roland and I caught the subtext of that statement;
Michelle did not. Instead she smiled brightly. "Thank you," she said.
Avika smiled thinly. It was going to be a tougher crowd than I had expected.
"All right, we're ready," Rajiv said.
"Splendid," Roland clapped his hands
together and turned back to Michelle. "My dear Miss Beck, if you wouldn't
mind sitting in the chair in front of the video camera. Ms. Spiegelman will be
feeding you lines while Rajiv records you. Do you have a copy of the
script?"
"She memorized the scene, Roland," I said.
"Really," Roland said. "Well, that's
certainly a point in your favor, my dear. Let's have a seat, shall we?"
Michelle sat in front of the video camera. Rajiv fixed
the focus on the camera and then stepped back. Avika opened up her script.
Roland sat back down on the couch. I stood back by the door.
Roland looked at Michelle. "Are we ready,
then?"
Michelle nodded. Roland glanced over at Avika and
nodded. Avika scrolled down her page until she found the line she was looking
for. "'How dare you tell me what I can and cannot do,'" she said,
tonelessly. "'You are my wife, not my master.'"
Michelle blinked, opened her mouth as if to say
something, and then closed it again. "I'm sorry," she finally said.
"Could you say the line again?"
"'How dare you tell me what I can and cannot
do,'" Avika repeated. "'You are my wife, not my master.'"
Michelle stared at Avika, then stared over to me,
panicked.
"Is something wrong, Miss Beck?" Roland
inquired.
"I...uh...I," Michelle began, and placed her
hand on her chest. Eventually she got out the words. "That's not the scene
I memorized," she said.
"It's scene 29," Avika said, peering over
the top of her script.
"I memorized scene 24," Michelle said.
"I thought we were doing scene 24."
Roland looked over to Rajiv. "Rajiv, did you tell
Miss Beck we were going to be doing scene 24?"
"I don't think so," Rajiv said. "I'm
pretty sure I said scene 29."
"I must have read it wrong after I wrote it
down," Michelle said. "My nines and my fours look a lot alike."
"As do mine," Roland said. "It's a
common mistake, I'm sure. Why don't we just do scene 24, then."
Avika was already there. "This scene only has four
lines in it," she said. "Three of them are spoken by other
characters."
"What's Rachel's line?" Roland asked.
Avika looked down at the page. "'Yes,'" she
said.
"Hmmm," Roland said. "Not a lot to work
with."
"Now we know how she memorized the scene,"
Avika said. Even Michelle couldn't miss that one. She blushed and began taking
in sharp breaths.
Roland clapped his hands together again and stood up.
"Why don't we do this. Rajiv will go get a copy of the script for Miss
Beck, and we'll spend a couple of minutes preparing scene 29, and then we'll be
ready to give it a go. Sound good? All right. Rajiv, if you wouldn't mind
getting that script and working with Miss Beck for a couple of minutes, then.
I'm going to go for a little walk." He wandered out of the room,
distracted. After a moment, Avika Spiegelman followed him. Rajiv hovered, and
then went out into the main office to get another copy of the script.
I went over to Michelle. "Don't panic," I
said.
"What was I thinking?" Michelle said. She
ran both her hands through her hair.
"You just memorized the wrong scene, that's
all," I said. "It's nothing to worry about."
Michelle rolled her eyes at me. "Tom, the scene
has four lines," she said. "Don't you think I should have figured out
it was the wrong scene?"
"Well, I think that the fact you're only line was
'yes,' should have been a tip-off," I admitted.
Michelle looked restless. I quickly held my hand up.
"But -- even so. It was an honest mistake, Michelle. You need to roll with
it, and do the scene right." I took her hand and clasped it, lightly.
"You can do it, Michelle. Just be calm."
"Did you see how that woman looked at me?"
Michelle said.
"I get the feeling that Avika Spiegelman doesn't
get many thrills out of life," I said. "Think of her as an object of
pity, not of fear."
"She made me feel like an idiot, Tom. Like I'm
back in grade school and the nuns are out to get me."
I grinned. "That's a pretty good simile,
Michelle," I said.
"A what?" Michelle said.
Rajiv came back in the office with scripts in hand.
"Listen," I said. "Practice the scene
with Rajiv. I'll track down Roland and schmooze the man. It's what you pay me
the big bucks for."
Michelle smiled wanly as I exited.
Roland's office was tucked into a corner of the studio
lot; to the left were huge sound sets. To the right was a little park in the
center of a collection of offices. Roland was in the little park, standing.
Avika Spiegelman stood next to him. As I got closer, it became clear that Avika
was chewing Roland out over something. Before I could hear what it was,
however, she saw me approach, clammed up, shot Roland a look and walked away
from him. He stood there, a rueful little grin on his face, as I came up.
"Looks like you two had a nice chat," I
said.
"Lovely," Roland said, watching Avika walk
back into the office. "It reminded me of some of the more painful dental
experiences of my life."
"Up the anesthesia," I suggested.
"Or simply get defanged," Roland said.
"Which is, now that I think about it, the process I'm undergoing at the
moment. Tom, would you mind terribly if I had a smoke?"
"Not at all," I said.
"Thanks," Roland said. He fished out a
Marlboro, and lit up. "I'm trying to quit," he said. "But I'm
afraid now's not a good time."
"The audition is that bad?" I said.
"Well, Tom, we haven't really had the audition
yet, have we," Roland said. "We have to actually have lines read to
see if they're being done properly."
"Ouch," I said, on behalf of my client.
Roland picked up on it. "Sorry about that,
Tom," he said. "I'm don't mean to run Michelle down. She's a lovely
girl. And I'm afraid I haven't been straightforward with her or with you about
this reading."
"What do you mean?" I said.
Roland took a long drag on his cigarette before
answering. "To be brief," he said, "I have less than a month
left on my option for Hard Memories. If I don't have the lead cast by that
time, I'll lose the option. The buzzards are already circling, you know."
"I didn't know," I said.
"Yes. Well, that's why Michelle is having a
reading today, not because of your own work last week. In fact, once it became
clear Ellen was going to drop, I told Rajiv to do whatever he could to
encourage Miss Beck to read. I don't really expect her to be brilliant, mind
you. But if she was passable, I thought I might convince Ms. Spiegelman to let
us make the attempt. Michelle is, as you say, quite a draw at the moment."
"Not to be rude, Roland," I said. "But
why does it matter what Avika thinks? You're the director and producer."
"Funny about that," Roland said. "One
of the conditions the Spiegelman family put on my optioning the official
biography was the right of refusal for the lead actress. At the time, when I had
everyone from Ellen Merlow to Meryl Streep interested in the script, I
considered it the least of my worries."
"I take it that Avika isn't impressed so
far," I said.
Roland used his cigarette as a pointer towards the
office. "In our conversation prior to your arrival, Ms. Spiegelman
declared that she's met pets who are smarter than Miss Beck."
"Well, so have I," I said, truthfully.
"But they haven't brought in $300 million with their last two films."
"And I wish you the best of luck convincing Ms.
Spiegelman with that argument," Roland said.
"I didn't realize you had so much riding on this
audition," I said.
"That's why I said I was sorry, Tom," Roland
said. "I wasn't entirely honest with you on the matter. I don't know that
it would have changed anything if I had; still, I try to be more honest than
the typical Hollywood producer."
"You have other projects in the pipe, I'm
sure," I said.
"No, not really," Roland said, and brought
back the rueful smile. "I'm a prestige producer, Tom. One of those fellows
you hire when your studio has been cranking out one too many action films, and
you need to throw in an Oscar contender to prove you still care about the art
of filmmaking. None of my films actually make money. Even The Green Fields only
broke even, and that after video. So I tend to work one project at a time. I've
been thinking about that Kordus project, but you know where we are on that one.
Which reminds me, have you looked at that script yet?'
"I did," I said. "It's very good."
Actually, it wasn't just good, it was astonishingly good. And written by a
23-year-old film student. Reading it, I had made the mental note to myself to
get him to hire me as his agent, or steal him away from whichever one he
currently had.
"It is, isn't it?" Roland puffed a final puff
on his cigarette and threw it to the ground, snuffing it out. "If I don't
manage to pull this project's chestnuts out of the fire, I'll have a nice long
time to fiddle with it. Come on, Tom. Let's get back for the second act."
We headed back.
Back in the office, Rajiv had pulled up a chair and
was sitting with Michelle, going over scene 29. Avika, upon seeing Roland and
me enter, pointedly looked at her watch and then at us both. "Well,"
Roland said. "Are we ready to begin again?"
Michelle looked for me, uncertain. I smiled back at
her and gave her a thumbs-up signal. Rajiv rolled his chair back and took his
position behind the video recorder. Roland sat down again and nodded to Avika.
Avika recited her line.
My phone rang.
"Sorry," I said, after everyone glared at
me. I ducked out of the office.
It was Miranda. "Carl wants to know when you're
getting into the office," she said.
"Probably not long now," I said.
"Michelle is self-destructing at the moment. Did he say why?"
"He mentioned something about someone needing a
dog ASAP, and that Marcella would have details," she said. "I have no
idea what that means. It sounds like code, and I've lost my secret decoder
ring."
"I know what it means," I said. "But I
can't. I have to be with Michelle this afternoon. I promised her I would go
with her to have to her latex mask made."
"I'm just passing along messages," Miranda
said. "I can't give you permission to defy the orders of your CEO."
I sighed. "Is Carl in right now?" I asked.
"Let me check," Miranda said, and put me on
hold. My hold music, I was shocked to discover, was Olivia Newton-John. I was
going to have to have someone drag my Muzak out of the Seventies. Before it
became thoroughly intolerable, Miranda came back on the line.
"Marcella says he's in a meeting right now but
can schedule three minutes for you if you really need it. She also notes that
his tone indicated that you probably don't want to need those three
minutes."
The door to Roland's office opened up and Roland popped
his head out. "Tom," he said. "I think you'd better come in
here. We've had a development."
"Gotta go, Miranda," I said, and snapped the
cel phone shut.
In the office, Michelle was lying on the floor. Rajiv,
panting, was placing ice cubes on her forehead. He had sprinted to the bar to
scoop up the cubes, proving chivalry was not dead, merely out of breath. Avika
sat on the couch, not knowing whether to look concerned or outraged.
"I don't know what happened," Roland said.
"She was very nervous about doing the lines, but she seemed all right. And
then her eyes rolled back in her head and she fell off her chair."
"You're kidding," I said.
"She's out cold on the floor, Tom," Roland
said, his gentility cracking just for a second. "I don't generally brain the
actors at readings. I usually wait until we're actually on the set."
"What a fucking nightmare," I muttered, and
then turned to Roland. "It's her auto-suggestion," I said.
"What?" Avika said, from the couch.
I sighed again. "She's been going to a hypnotherapist,"
I said. "The damned fool put in an auto-suggestion that blacks her out
every time she gets too stressed out."
"That's the stupidest thing I've ever
heard," Avika said.
I ignored her. "Give her a few seconds and she'll
be good as new," I said to Roland.
"What a relief that is," Avika said, and
stood up. "Well, I've wasted enough time for one day. When she comes to,
thank her for her time and then show her the door. She's not getting the
role."
Roland looked at Michelle sadly. "Yes, right, all
right," he said.
"I don't think you're giving her a chance,"
I said. "You haven't even heard her do a reading yet."
"Who has the time?" Avika said.
"Between the wrong scenes and the fainting, by the time we run through the
scene, Roland's option will be up, anyway. As if it matters. Frankly, Mr.
Stein, I don't know what Roland was thinking. Your client is good for roles
that require teenagers to be deflowered. But this role is something else
entirely. Michelle Beck has about as much in common with my aunt as David
Hasselhoff has with Gandhi. After today, I'd rather give the part to a golden
retriever than to her."
"I could arrange that," I said.
Roland jumped in before Avika could respond.
"Thank you for coming, Ms. Spiegelman," he said, showing her to the
door. "And don't worry. We'll find someone for the role."
"No offense, Roland," Avika said. "But
if this is where we are in the casting process, I seriously doubt it." She
nodded to me and walked out.
Roland turned to me and slumped slightly.
"Scotch?" he said.
"No, thanks," I said. "I have to be
driving back soon."
Michelle moaned slightly as she worked her way back
into consciousness.
"Well, then," Roland said. "I'll have a
double for the both of us."
*****
"Bad day?" Miranda asked, when Michelle and
I arrived at the office.
"You have no idea," I said, and walked
Michelle into my office to lie down on my couch. Michelle's reaction to her
incredible imploding reading had passed beyond mere depression and moved into
the region of pharmaceutically untreatable mental states. I urged her to take a
nap before she went to have latex splotzed all over her face.
"That's terrible," Miranda said, after I
recounted our little adventure. "I mean, I didn't think she was going to
be good for the role, but what a way to flame out."
"If I were her hypnotherapist, I'd lie low for a
couple of weeks," I said. "I don't think their next session is going
to be very pleasant. Listen, did you find out anything more about what Carl
wants?"
"I did," Miranda said, reaching for her
notebook. "I went over to Marcella's desk and got the message. Here --
apparently a stunt dog they have on this Bruce Willis film contracted a nasty
case of mange, and they need a replacement for some shots they're doing this
afternoon." She tore the page out of her notebook and handed it to me.
"You're going to have to spend a lot of time in makeup, Tom."
"Hardy har," I said, taking the note. The
film was shooting in Pasadena, which was helpful -- it wasn't far from where I
lived, and not all that far from Pomona, where Michelle was to have her face
done. "It's not me. It's Joshua, the Wonder Pup."
"Isn't that the name of your friend that's always
calling?" Miranda said.
"It is. Oddly enough, they look a lot alike, too.
When am I supposed to be at the set?" I asked.
"You're supposed to go as soon as you can,"
Miranda said. "Which, I'd guess, means right now."
"Fine," I said. "Miranda, I'm going to
need you to do something for me. You need to take Michelle to have her face
done."
"I'm kind of busy here," Miranda said.
"Really," I said. "Doing what?"
"Answering phones?" Miranda ventured.
"Who's going to call? Carl isn't going to call,
because I'm transporting his dog to the set. Michelle isn't going to call
because she's going to be wrapped in latex. The only person who might call is
Van Doren, and I don't want to talk to him, anyway."
"Hmrph," Miranda said.
"Is there a problem here, Miranda?" I asked.
Miranda scrunched up her face. "No. It's just
that now that she's all depressed, I feel guilty for not wanting her to get the
part. I forgot that she's a real person sometimes, and not just this thing that
makes 12 million dollars for being perky. It annoys me to have pity for someone
who makes more in a day than I'm going to make in a year."
"Try," I said. "I'm supposed to go with
her, but I can't. You saw her, Miranda. She's definitely not in any condition
to be by herself at the moment. She's certainly not in any condition to drive.
I'm afraid in her state she'll zonk out on the 60, drive into opposing traffic
and mangle herself on a semi. Look, as soon as I'm done with this other thing,
I'll be there. And anyway, Michelle likes you. Thinks you like her too, for
some strange reason. Could be a big bonding moment for you two."
"Hmrph," Miranda said again.
"Come on, Miranda," I said. "You're my
assistant. Assist."
"Can I expense lunch?" Miranda asked.
"By all means. Expense dinner, too."
"Whoo-hoo," Miranda said. "Taco Bell,
here I come."
*****
"So," Joshua said. "Can I have my own
trailer yet?"
"Not yet," I said. "but, look, you have
your own water bowl."
"Man, that's the problem with being a dog,"
Joshua said. "The perks are just not there."
Joshua and I were waiting as the second unit crew of
Bruce Willis' latest action spectacular set up their next shot. The first unit
crew was in Miami, shooting on location with Willis and his costars. The second
unit crew, meanwhile, was roaming around Los Angeles, shooting all the scenes
the first unit didn't want to deal with: cut scenes, establishing shots, and,
of course, scenes with dogs. Joshua was, in fact, the biggest star on the set
that day.
In the space of less than one week, Joshua has become
the most requested dog in Los Angeles film. It was the Mighty Dog commercial
that did it: Joshua nailed it on the first take, no small feat in an industry
where 30 seconds of animal action is often stitched out of twelve to fifteen
hours of raw footage. This so stunned the director that he filmed the
commercial twice just to cover his ass. Even with the extra take, the
commercial was wrapped in two hours flat, saving the ad company about $200,000
in fees. The ad company tried to lock Joshua down to an exclusive contract
before the commercial was done. I politely declined. Joshua peed on the company
rep's shoes.
By the time we got back to the house, Al Bowen had
gotten ten phone calls asking to get Joshua for a commercial. We let Bowen pick
and choose the assignments; I got the distinct feeling that Bowen was using the
opportunity to rack up some long-term favors. He wasn't such a genial hippie
after all. Not that it bothered either Joshua or me. Joshua was having fun and
I didn't mind hanging around a set, grazing off the craft service table and
catching up on my reading.
Joshua especially liked hanging around with dogs now
that he was one -- when we weren't at a commercial set, we'd go to the beach or
a park where he could go off, tail wagging, to meet and greet other members of
the species. I suspected that his enthusiasm for other dogs probably came from
poor Ralph, who had spent most of his life not in the company of other dogs,
and was now making up for lost time. But then, since Joshua had been on Earth,
most of his time had been spent alone as well. So maybe they were both making
up for lost time.
The tendency for vicious gossip, however, was pure
Joshua. "See that dog over there?" Joshua pointed out a German
Shepherd with his muzzle. "It's my understanding that he was almost fired
off the last set he was on because he just would not stop licking his genitals
on camera."
"Stop it," I said. "What a horrible
thing to say about your costar."
"Hey, I didn't start the rumor," Joshua
said. "And anyway, it's true. I heard his trainer talking about it to
another trainer while I was on set. From what I hear, off-camera, he runs
through his paces perfectly. You couldn't ask for a better-trained dog. As soon
as he hears the cameras running, though -- bam, nosedive into the crotch. It's
the sound of the cameras, I think. Such a good-looking dog too, you know. It's
a real shame."
"You know, your gossip would be much more
interesting if it were actually about human beings," I said.
"Maybe for you," Joshua said. "But I'm
in the canine universe, Tom. It's a whole different ballgame down here. See
that poodle? She's a tick carrier. Saw one on her when we were doing that scene
near the trees. It was the size of a Jeep Cherokee, Tom. I was scared for
myself."
"I don't think any of the other dogs would like
you if they knew how you talked about them behind their backs."
"Well, that's just the point," Joshua said.
"I can't very well tell any of them, now, can I? Language capability is a
bitch, Tom."
"Pun intended, I'm sure."
"But of course."
Al Bowen picked that moment to walk up. "You sure
spend a lot of time talking with that dog," he said.
"Well, I see you talking with your dogs,
too," I said. "And with your other animals."
"I'm talking to my dogs," Bowen said.
"You, on the other hand, talk like you're having a conversation. I can see
you jabbering at Joshua from the other side of the set. I don't know how to
break this to you, Tom. You may have the smartest dog in the world, but he
still doesn't speak."
"Doesn't speak?" I said, feigning
incredulousness. "Doesn't speak? Joshua, what's on top of a house?"
Joshua barked a bark that could have sounded like
"roof," if one had enough to drink.
"And what's the bottom of a tree?"
This time, it could have been "root".
"And who's the greatest baseball player of all
time?
The bark, with a little help, could have been a
"Ruth."
"There you are," I said. "A talking
dog."
"Very cute," Bowen said. "Could you
please bring your talking dog to the set? It's the last shot of the day. We
need him as the strong, silent type, if you don't mind." He walked away.
"Hmmmm," Joshua said. "Guess I should
have said 'DiMaggio.'"
"I can't believe you actually knew the
joke," I said.
"Between my brain, Ralph's brain, and Carl's
memories, you'd be amazed at the stuff I've got up here," Joshua said.
"Now, let's go. I do so love those tasty liver snacks I get whenever I do
a scene right." He bounded off to the set, towards the German Shepherd he
had been backstabbing mere moments before. The German Shepherd, oblivious to
Joshua's treachery, greeted him with a sloppy canine grin.
It was a happy moment. As much as anything else, I
remember that fact.
I answered the cel phone on the second ring.
"Michelle can't possibly be done with her latex job," I said.
"It's barely five o' clock."
"Tom, you have to get out here," Miranda
said. Her voiced odd, strained. "We have a problem. A big problem."
"What's the problem?" I asked.
"It's not something I think you'd want me to talk
about on a cellular phone," Miranda said.
"It's a digital phone, Miranda," I said.
"Virtually snoop-proof. Now what is it?"
There was silence on the other end of the phone.
"Miranda?" I said.
Suddenly Miranda was back. "Michelle's in the
hospital, Tom. It's bad. It's very bad. They think she has brain damage. They
think she might die. They have her on a respirator right now, and they're trying
to figure out what to do next. You have to get out here now, Tom. She's at
Pomona Valley Hospital. It's right off the 10. Hurry up."
"All right," I said. "I'm on my way,
Miranda."
"Hurry up, Tom." Miranda said.
"I will," I said.
"Hurry," she said again, and then hung up.
After she hung up I realized her voiced sounded odd
because she'd been crying.
Chapter Fourteen
This much we knew.
Michelle and Miranda arrived at the workshop of
Featured Creatures, Inc., one of the special effects houses working on Earth
Resurrected, at 3:15. Miranda said that she and Michelle barely talked on the
way out to Pomona, or during the brief lunch they had at the El Loco Taco
drive-in before heading out. Michelle would answer questions asked her, but
that was about it; after about ten minutes of this, Miranda stopped trying to
converse and switched the radio on to a light hits station.
They were met at Featured Creatures by Judy Martin,
the technician who was going to plaster goo over Michelle's face. Miranda said
that Martin looked somewhat dazed right from the beginning. As it turned out,
Martin's husband had picked that day to announce to his wife that he was
divorcing her, and that he intended to marry her younger sister Helen, who, if
she really had to know, was the one he'd always been in love with, anyway.
Martin had spent most of the day on the phone with her lawyer, her traitorous
sister, her mother, and the Ford dealership at which she and her husband had
just jointly purchased an Explorer. She wanted to send it back.
Martin took Michelle and Miranda back through the
workshop to a room where the latex was to be applied. The room, fairly small to
begin with, was stuffed to the ceiling with monster body parts, motor equipment
for creature models, and two gallon cans of latex. In a corner of the room was
what looked like a dentist's chair, in which Michelle was to sit as the latex
was applied to her face. Michelle sat in the chair and was ready to go, when
the workshop intercom paged Judy to the phone. It was the Ford dealership.
Martin went to the phone in the room, punched the flashing line button, and
immediately began screaming into the receiver. Miranda looked over at Michelle
to roll her eyes. Michelle was just staring out, blankly.
Ten minutes later, Martin slammed down the phone,
hollered an obscenity at no one in particular, and stalked back over to the
chair to prepare Michelle. As she was doing so, she spoke to Miranda.
"You're going to have to leave," she said.
"You're going to get in my way."
"I'd rather stay," Miranda said.
"I don't care," Martin said "Get
out."
Miranda flushed, a bad sign for whomever it was who
caused the reaction. But before she could fully get her dander up, Michelle
spoke. "I want her to stay," she said.
"This isn't a committee," Martin said.
"How about we do this," Miranda said.
"You stay. We leave. We explain to the producers that we left because of
you. The producers fire your company from the film. And then your company fires
you."
At this point, Miranda swears, Martin actually
snarled. Miranda grabbed a stool from one of the work benches and took a seat.
Michelle reached over for Miranda's hand. Miranda gave it.
About five minutes later, as Martin applied the latex,
Miranda spoke up again. "How is she going to breathe?" she asked, to
Martin.
"What?" Martin said, spackling Michelle with
a frosting knife.
"You're about to cover her nose with latex."
Miranda said. "Once you do that, Michelle won't be able to breathe.
Shouldn't you be thinking about these things?"
"Don't tell me my fucking job," Martin said,
but went to find a couple of breathing straws for Michelle. As Martin covered
Michelle's nose and eyes with latex, Michelle squeezed hard on Miranda's hand.
Miranda squeezed back.
After Martin finished, she stepped back and turned to
Miranda. "That's going to take about three hours to dry," she said.
"She can't move between now and then."
"Where are you going?" Miranda asked.
"I have to make some phone calls," Martin
said.
"You should stay here," Miranda said.
"Why?" Martin said. "You're here,
aren't you?" She looked at Michelle again. "You know, she's my
husband's favorite actress. He's such an asshole." And she walked out.
Over the next half hour, Miranda slowly aware that the
chicken burrito she had at El Loco Taco was doing terrifying things to her
digestive tract. At first she ignored it, but near the end of the half-hour,
Miranda felt the line between discomfort and peritonitis had become
tissue-thin.
"Michelle, I have to find a bathroom," she
said.
Michelle's grip on Miranda's hand suddenly became
vise-tight.
"I'll go as fast as I can," Miranda said,
pried her hand loose, and went to find the bathroom.
It was back near the reception area. On the way there,
she saw Martin in an office, screaming into another phone. She thought about
asking her to go back and check on Michelle. Then Martin grabbed the phone and
hurled it furiously across the room. Miranda decided against it. In the
bathroom, Miranda discovered just exactly what the burrito did to her; it was
about ten minutes before she was done.
Miranda was walking back to the latex room when she
saw Martin standing outside of it, with the door open. As she got closer,
Martin heard her steps, turned around and yelled. "It's not my fault!"
"What are you talking about?" Miranda said.
Then she looked into the room and saw.
Michelle was out of a chair and sprawled on the floor
for the second time that day. This time, however, things were much worse. There
was creature debris all over the floor. A can of latex lay on its side, its
contents flowing out. Miranda looked up and saw the wreckage of a set of
shelves; they had collapsed. Miranda's gaze went back down to the floor and she
noticed a glint of red on the bottom of the latex can. Then she noticed the
small pool of blood near Michelle's head.
"Oh shit," she said, and pushed Martin out
of the way to get to Michelle.
Michelle sprawled face down; Miranda checked quickly
to see if she had broken any bones, and then turned her over. That's when she
saw that Michelle's breathing straws had fallen out and the latex had closed up
over Michelle's nostrils. Michelle was suffocating.
Miranda immediately dug her fingers into the latex and
began tearing it off from Michelle's face. Her lips were blue when Miranda
ripped the latex away. Miranda got down in the latex and blood, reached a hand
underneath Michelle's neck to lift it up, then began mouth-to-mouth.
"She wasn't supposed to move!" Martin said.
"Damn it," Miranda said, and checked for
Michelle's pulse. It was there, faint and fast. "Call 911," she said,
to Martin.
"Why weren't you watching her?" Martin
demanded. "This isn't my fault."
Miranda launched herself at Martin, grabbed her, and
slammed her against a wall. "I want you to do two things," she said
to the cowering Martin. "First, shut the hell up. Second. I want you to
get on the phone, call 911, and get an ambulance here, now. Do it, or I swear
to you, I'll rip out your fucking heart. Do it. Now."
She let Martin go. Martin goggled at her for a second,
then grabbed the phone and called 911. Miranda got back down on the floor and
kept up the mouth-to-mouth for another ten minutes, until the paramedics
arrived and pulled her off.
*****
What we didn't know is what happened between the time
Miranda left and when she came back. The most logical sequence of events has
Michelle, claustrophobic, getting up from the chair in a blind panic,
accidentally running into the shelves, being knocked unconscious from the
falling debris and then suffocating when the latex covered her nostrils. It was
the scenario that the Pomona police, in examining the scene and questioning
both Miranda and Judy Martin, latched onto and were going forward with.
There was one small problem. Miranda said that she
didn't recall seeing the breathing straws around Michelle when she was giving
her mouth-to-mouth. This might mean nothing, of course: when you're busily
trying to save someone's life, you're not going to take the time to notice all
the minutiae around you. But it might also mean that the breathing straws came
out earlier. And that opens up other possibilities.
For Miranda, who had to be physically restrained by
the paramedics from killing Judy Martin, the answer was simple: Martin's
slipshod preparation had allowed the breathing straws to fall out. Michelle,
frantic, reached for them, got up to get help, collided with the shelves, and
got brained. I also thought Miranda may have suspected Martin of pulling the
straws herself, as misplaced revenge against her estranged husband's favorite
actress, but that was a little far-fetched for me.
My own suspicions were also far-fetched, but not
nearly enough for my own comfort: I thought that Michelle, in her depressed
state, might have pulled the straws herself, in a melodramatic and
not-too-well-thought-out suicide attempt. Either she expected Miranda to come
back and panicked when Miranda didn't arrive on cue, or she was sincere, and
halfway through realized that suffocation was a nasty way to go. Either way,
that's when she got up out of the chair.
And that's when I think her autosuggestion kicked in,
knocking her out just in time to crash into the shelves. The only good thing I
could possibly see out of this scenario was that she was already out of it when
she was hit by the can of latex. She would have felt no pain.
No matter how you sliced it, however, Michelle was
lying in a hospital bed, respirator down her throat.
*****
I arrived over an hour after Miranda called; when I
announced on the set that I had to take Joshua with me, I had to deal with both
threats and begging on the part of the crew. I told them if they could do the
scene in exactly five minutes, I would wait. In the meantime, I called Carl's
office and told Marcella to have him call me as soon as possible. After that,
there was no one else to call; Michelle had been an only child, and both her
parents were dead. She wasn't married. As far as I knew, I was the person on
the planet closest to her. At that moment, that stuck me as the saddest thing
I'd ever heard.
Joshua pegged the scene in one take, and immediately
bounded towards my Honda; we screeched off without a goodbye and raced to the
210, got to the 10 by way of the 605, and then sat in evening rush hour traffic
for 45 minutes. Carl called; I filled him in on the situation, and he said he'd
make some phone calls. I had no idea what that meant, but it made me feel
better. I eventually got off the 10 and made it to the Pomona Valley Hospital
on surface streets, quicker than if I had stayed on the freeway.
I understood the power of Carl's phone calls when I
saw a man in a suit looking for me in the emergency area.
"Tom Stein?" he said.
"Yes," I said.
"I'm Mike Mizuhara," he said, extending his
hand. I shook it. "Chief of staff for Pomona Valley."
"Where is Michelle?" I asked.
"She's in ICU right now; I'll take you to her
immediately. But we have to do something with your dog," he pointed to
Joshua.
"What? Oh. I'm sorry," I said. "I
almost forgot he was with me."
"No problem," Mizuhara said. "Why don't
we take him to my office. He can wait there." We headed toward his office.
"Has the press arrived yet?" I asked. I had
been surprised not to see any reporters in the emergency room; news of these
sorts of things usually got around quickly.
"No press so far," Mizuhara said. "The
paramedics didn't know who it was because she had a whole bunch of
stuff...latex?....all over her face when she came in. The doctors working on
her either didn't recognize her or didn't care who she was when they got all of
it off her. Then I got a call from Carl about it. We've got her registered
under Jane Doe at the moment. She arrived just after a shift change. The next
shift change is at two am. With any luck, we should be able to keep this quiet
until morning. By that time, our press folks will be ready. Carl also wanted me
to let you know he's on his way himself as soon as he can. He's asked us to
clear a space for his helicopter in our parking lot."
"Carl is amazing," I said.
"Sure is," Mizuhara said. "But then, I
owe him one. He gave my son a job at Century Pictures just before he left. Now
my son is vice-president in charge of development. I never thought he'd ever
get a job. Carl can use me any time. Here's the office," he opened the door.
I walked Joshua inside; Joshua gave me a significant
look which I knew meant that he had something to say to me. I asked Mizuhara to
give me a minute to reassure my dog and then bent down.
"What?" I said.
"Try to get me in to see Michelle at some point,"
Joshua said. "I can scan her if you want. Find out what really happened,
at least."
"Thanks, Joshua," I said, and got up to go.
"Will he be okay in there?" Mizuhara asked.
"Sure," I said. "Don't worry. He's
house-trained. Let's go see Michelle."
Michelle was on the third floor, in a private room in
ICU. Miranda was waiting in the hallway; she rushed to me when she saw me
coming.
"Oh, Tom," she said. "I'm so sorry.
This is my fault. I'm sorry."
"Shhh," I said. "It's not anyone's
fault. It's all right."
"Actually, Miss Escalon saved her life,"
Mizuhara said. "From what I understand, her mouth to mouth kept Miss Beck
alive until the paramedics got there."
"Hear that?" I said, to Miranda.
"You're a lifesaver for sure. I think that deserves another raise, don't
you?"
Miranda gave a little laugh and then started crying
again. I hugged her.
I spent a few minutes with Miranda, getting her
version of events, and then went with Mizuhara to see Michelle. She was the
only patient in a semi-private room with three beds. Her head was bandaged; the
sounds in the room were of a heart monitor and the sound of a respirator
inflating and deflating. It was a terrible thing.
The door opened and a tall man in a lab coat came
through.
"Tom, this is Doctor Paul Adams," Mizuhara said.
"He's the one that worked on Michelle."
We shook hands. "How is she?" I asked.
"She's not good," Adams said. "We don't
know how long she was without oxygen, but we think she went right up to the
limit -- five or six minutes. Her heart activity is fine, but we haven't been
able to get her to breathe on her own. Her brain activity is very low; I think
it's very likely she's probably suffered some permanent brain damage. She's in
a comatose state now. I think we can expect her to come out of it at some point,
and then we can judge the extent of her brain injuries."
"'At some point,'" I said. "What does
that mean?"
"Hard to say," Adams said. "She could
come out of it later today, or it could be weeks. It just depends. The
concussion she got," he pointed to the bandage, "doesn't help any,
although it's actually the least of her problems; it was fairly superficial. In
and of itself, it would have knocked her out, but she would have come out of it
with nothing more than a bump and maybe some stitches. It was the lack of
oxygen to the brain that's the real problem. If you don't mind me asking, what
the hell was she doing with latex all over her face?"
"They were making a mask of her face for a
movie," I said.
"So that's how they do it," Adams said.
"Well, I'm no expert on these things, but I think they might want to find
another way to do it from here on out. That mask of hers just about killed
her."
"Dr. Adams," I said. "This may be
offensive, but I hope you won't be going to the press with any of this."
"You're right, it is offensive," Adams said.
"But I understand your concern. The staff that worked with me all
understand that it's more important for Miss Beck to recover than it is to be
shown in the National Enquirer with a tube down her throat."
"Thanks," I said.
"Of course," Adams said, and looked back at
Michelle. "Don't expect too much from her over the next couple of
days," he said. "But if you can, talk to her. Let her hear familiar
voices. That helps as often as not. If she has any family, you should contact
them and see if they can come as well."
"I'm afraid she has no family," I said.
"Although she has a dog. Would it be okay to bring him in to see
her?"
"I'd really rather not," Adams said.
"It's a question of hygiene. Also of state law. Unless it's a guide dog,
of course." We shook hands again and he departed.
"I have to join Dr. Adams," Mizuhara said.
"Carl should be arriving any minute now and we want to be there to meet
him." We shook hands as well, and he left.
I stayed in the room, staring at Michelle. Miranda was
in the hall, feeling guilty about Michelle's situation, but if anyone had to
shoulder the blame, I felt it should be me. If I had gone with her rather than
Miranda, this might not have happened. Michelle and I would be on our way to
Mondo Chicken, her to sulk in her oriental chicken salad, and me doing my best
to cheer her up. It occurred to me that if no one was closer to Michelle than
me, than the reverse was also probably true as well. I couldn't think of anyone
I was closer to than her. Except possibly Miranda, who I had managed to drag
into this mess as well.
I sighed to myself, and rested my head back against
the wall. I had really managed to screw this one up.
After a few minutes, there was a knock on the door.
Miranda poked her head through. "Carl is here," she said.
I went out to see Carl, Mizuhara and Adams chatting
about something or other. Carl turned to me when he saw me. "Tom," he
said, shaking my shoulder. "I'm terribly sorry. But you did right to call
me. Mike and I go back a ways."
"So I heard," I said. "Los Angeles
really is a small town."
"Yes it is," Carl said. "Tom, Mike and
I were trying to decide what we should do next. My first inclination is to move
Michelle closer, perhaps to Cedars, but Mike and Dr. Adams think she'd best off
here."
"If it's a question of the quality of
care..." Dr. Adams began.
"No, not at all," Carl said. "But in
the next 24 hours you're going to be dealing with things you've never had to
deal with before. Photographers posing as maintenance workers and nurses. Fan
vigils. Reporters trying to interview everyone down to the cafeteria staff.
It's a mess."
"We've managed to keep the lid on it so far,"
Mizuhara said. "And I think Dr. Adams will agree with me when I say that
the best thing for the patient is continuity of care. Additionally, I'm not
comfortable with moving her now. She's stable at the moment but she's certainly
not out of the woods."
"We'd probably cause more of a commotion moving
her than just keeping her here, anyway," Adams said.
"Tom?" Carl said. "What do you want to
do?"
"I don't think I'm really qualified to answer
that," I said.
All three of them stared at me for a minute. I suddenly
became very uncomfortable.
"What?" I asked.
"You don't know, do you?" Carl said.
"Know what?" I said, looking at Carl, then
Adams, and then Mizuhara.
"Tom, we had her insurance send over her
information," Mizuhara said. "Discreetly, of course; I handled the
request myself. Most people have someone listed who has the right to make
medical decisions for them if they are unable to make the decisions themselves.
Usually it's a relative or spouse or a longtime companion."
"Sure," I said. I'd filled out insurance
forms in my own time; if anything ever happened to me, my mother would have to
decide whether to unplug me or not.
"Well, Miss Beck doesn't have any of those,"
Mizuhara said.
"All right," I said. "So?"
"Tom," Carl said. "The person who
Michelle authorized to make medical decisions for her is you."
I found a chair and sat down.
"You really didn't know?" Adams asked.
I shook my head. "No. No, I didn't."
"I'm sorry," Adams said. "It's a hard
job to have."
"Tom," Carl said, again. "What do you
want to do?"
I covered my face with my hands and just sat there for
a few minutes, awash in guilt and grief. I felt my actions had put Michelle
here to begin with; now I was being asked to make decisions that could affect
the rest of her life. I was going to need a really good cry when this was all
over.
But not right now. I put my hands down in my lap.
"We'll keep her here," I said.
Now if I could just figure the rest of it out.
Chapter Fifteen
The leak, of course, was as impossible to track as it
was inevitable to occur. Sometime after the 2 am shift change, one of the
janitors or nurses or doctors hit the phones, waking up friends and relatives
because, after all, how often does the hottest female star in the United States
come into your hospital in a coma? At 3:35 in the morning, one of these friends
or relatives called KOST-FM and requested to hear "Your Eyes Tell
Me," the hit theme song from Summertime Blues, because she heard Michelle
Beck had died. After the song played, another listener called in to say no, she
wasn't dead, but she was in a coma, and she had heard that Michelle's corneas
were slated to be given to Marlee Matlin, who was, after all, deaf.
KOST happened to be the favorite morning radio station
of Curt McLachlan, KABC's morning news director, who was, at 3:35, getting into
his car to head to work. The first thing he did was switch off "Your Eyes
Tell Me," because it was, by any objective standard, the single worst pop
song of the decade. The second thing he did was get on the car phone with his
counterpart at Good Morning America, which, at 6:37 Eastern Time, was just a
few minutes away from air. GMA's news director screamed at the video morgue to
pull up clips of Michelle, and at some poor, groggy intern, 19 years old and
two days into her stint of slave labor, to ready a blurb for the hosts to
announce on the air. Once McLachlan got off the phone with Good Morning
America, he called his own assignment editor out of a sound sleep and told him
to get working on a package. He flipped on the radio just in time to hear about
the corneas going to Marlee Matlin. This prompted another round of phone calls.
News of Michelle's death and/or coma hit the airwaves
at 7:03 Eastern, 4:03 Pacific. The folks at GMA had the presence of mind to
stress that the report was from unconfirmed "radio sources". It
hardly mattered. Newspaper and magazine entertainment editors up and down the
Eastern seaboard of the United States leapt from their breakfasts and called
reporters at home, hollering their demand for verification. It was the biggest
potential star death since River Phoenix spasmed his life away in front of the
Viper Club.
My phone first rang at 4:13 am. It was the gossip
columnist from the New York Daily News, looking for verification. I hung up on
her and disconnected my phone. Less than a minute later, my cel phone rang.
Then the other. I turned them both off and then realized my third cel phone was
lost in the woods where Joshua had left it. I reconnected my home phone, which
immediately started ringing; I picked up the receiver, dropped it back in the
cradle, and then picked up again almost instantly, before it had a chance to
ring again. I called Miranda, apologized to her for waking her up, and told her
to meet me in the office. Then I called Carl, who, as it happened, was already
up and on the phone.
"I have the New York Times on call waiting,
Tom," he said. "They said they couldn't reach you directly."
"I disconnected my phone," I said. My own
call waiting was going off like mad, making the phone sound like a Geiger
counter.
"Good man," Carl said. "These guys are
nothing but a pain in the ass. I'm fending them off for now. What do you want
to do ?"
"I was going to ask you that same question,"
I said.
"Right now, we don't do anything," Carl
said. "I've got to call Mike and make sure they're ready for the onslaught
-- it's going to hit earlier than we expected. You'll need to make a statement,
though; let's schedule it for noon and have no comments from anyone until then.
Are you planning to go into the office right now?"
"I was, yes," I said.
"Don't. The fact that you're in the office at
four thirty in the morning will only verify the situation. Get in at your usual
time. And be ready for the reporters. See you at eight, Tom," Carl said,
and then hung up, presumably to yell at the New York Times reporter that had
the temerity to wake him up at home. I called Miranda as she was getting out
the door; she sounded grateful for the reprieve.
At Pomona Valley, Carl's promised onslaught had
already begun. The hospital switchboard was lighting up with calls from
reporters who were calling every Los Angeles area hospital trying to find the
one that was treating Michelle. This was followed by calls from fans looking
for the same thing. These in turn were followed by both fans and reporters who
had found out that Pomona Valley was in fact the hospital they wanted; the
reporters were invoking the First Amendment, and the fans their right to know
about their favorite star. These were followed by fans and reporters posing as
family members. As Michelle had no living family, this didn't get them very
far.
Credit where credit is due: Mike Mizuhara was as good
as his word. He had the ICU ward sealed off; everyone who stepped off the
elevator or out of the stairwell was greeted by a Pomona city cop, who had a
printed list. On the list was the name and, more importantly, the photograph,
of every doctor, nurse and staff member who had access to the fourth floor.
Anyone who showed up on the fourth floor without permission was quickly and
efficiently arrested for trespassing.
By eight am, more than a dozen people, posing as
doctors, nurses, or staff, were in the pokey. A couple of them, from the
tabloids, tried to bribe the officers. The officers were not amused; they had
integrity, and besides, Mike Mizuhara had informed them that any bribe would be
matched, plus ten percent; I later learned that Carl, who had bankrolled this
effort, ended up shelling out nearly $25,000. The would-be bribers ended up in
the pokey like everyone else, their money confiscated as evidence.
One amateur video guy, hoping to sell his tape to the
afternoon tabloid shows, simply got on the elevator and, when the door opened
on the fourth floor, sprinted down the hall, yodeling, waving his video camera
wildly in hopes that a frame or two would later show Michelle in her bed. He
was surprised when the cop stationed at the stairwell popped up in front of
him. He was even more surprised when the cop shot him with a taser. He was
given his props for the attempt, but went to the slammer anyway.
When it became clear that no one was getting onto the
fourth floor, more drastic measures were attempted: four people were arrested
when they tried to trip the fire alarms to cause an evacuation -- three by
pulling the fire alarm, one by setting fire to that morning's edition of the
Inland Daily Bulletin and waving it at the smoke alarm. He was caught by an
orderly's flying tackle; the tackle cracked his skull on the floor. He was
treated for concussion on the spot, and then transferred to the county jail
infirmary.
As Carl suggested, I went into work at the usual time.
I took Joshua with me, at his insistence. "I want to do something for
you," he said, though he wouldn't explain what. On the way in, I flipped
through the radio stations. Nearly all the radio stations were talking about
Michelle; on one, the DJ was lamenting the fact that Michelle's possible death
brought down the number of people on earth worth screwing. On another radio
station, a caller had noted proudly that he had uploaded the faked picture of
the three way between Michelle, George Clooney and Gwenyth Paltrow onto every
single pornographic Internet newsgroup as a "tribute."
The entrance to Lupo Associates was swarmed with
reporters, camera operators and sound men. As I parked I saw Jim Van Doren near
the periphery of the crowd, scanning the parking lot for my car; he spotted it
and started moving towards it. Some of the more alert camera operators followed
him; within seconds a stampede was coming toward my car.
"Oh, shit," I said.
"Let me out of the car," Joshua said.
"Then follow me. Get ready to run."
I hopped out of the car and let Joshua out. Joshua hit
the ground running and hurled himself at the oncoming swarm, snarling and
baring his fangs. There was chaos as members of the press retreated, screaming,
from Joshua's full frontal assault; suddenly a path miraculously appeared
through them. I set out at a sprint. Reporters, torn between being bitten by an
angry dog and getting their story, hollered questions at me as they retreated;
their sound people desperately swung their boom mikes towards me to catch my
response. At least one of the boom mikes connected with a camera operator. I
heard a crunch as a $75,000 video camera hit the ground but didn't stay to
watch.
Joshua snarled one last snarl, then raced towards the
agency entrance, getting there at the same time as I did. We were met at the
door by Miranda, who unlocked it just long enough to let us through, and then
pushed it shut again the second we were inside.
I turned around, expecting to see the reporters
pressed up against the glass, shouting questions. Instead, there was a riot
going on in the parking lot. Apparently the cameraman who got whacked by the
boom mike had decided to take the cost of the damage out of the mike operator's
hide. A couple of people were trying to separate the two; the rest, drawn into
the melee, were content to start swinging. There's something deeply satisfying
about watching some of the most overly-paid reporters in the country slugging
each other, pulling each other's hair, and kneeing each other in the groin.
"Tom, you should have been a movie star,"
Miranda said. "You sure know how to make a hell of an entrance."
"It's not me that did all that," I said,
still looking at the crowd. "You can thank my furry friend Joshua over
there."
Off to the side of the riot, Jim Van Doren leaned
against a car. He looked at the fight, then turned to look at me. Then he
saluted. What a kidder.
"Did you do that, Joshua?" Miranda said, in
that voice you use with dogs. "What a good dog!"
Joshua barked happily.
*****
I spoke to the press at noon, like we had planned.
Carl had flown in Mike Mizuhara and Dr. Adams from Pomona Valley; all four of
us were standing at a podium that had been put in front of the agency's
entrance. Slightly off to one side, Miranda sat, petting Joshua, who sat
attentively, waiting for a reporter to get too far out of line. I was told that
the press announcement was being carried live on three of the local stations
and also on the E! Channel. For some reason, I found this profoundly
irritating.
Precisely at noon, I stepped up to the podium, tapped
the microphone to make sure it was on, and got out my prepared statement.
"Good afternoon," I said, because at 30
seconds past noon, it was. "Since early this morning, the media has been
filled with rumors concerning the well-being of my client Michelle Beck. It has
come time to answer these rumors with the facts.
"First, and most important -- Michelle Beck is
not dead nor is she near death. Rumors of her death have been irresponsibly
spread; let them end here.
"Second, yesterday, at about four pm, Miss Beck
was involved in an accident during pre-production work on Earth Resurrected.
The accident caused her to be suffocated; first aid was administered at the
scene and Miss Beck was then taken to Pomona Valley Hospital, where she remains
now.
"Miss Beck has not regained consciousness since
the accident, nor is there a timetable for her to do so. After I am done, Dr.
Adams, who treated Michelle when she came in, and Dr. Mizuhara, the chief of
staff of Pomona Valley, will give a brief medical update on Miss Beck's
condition and will answer questions that relate to her medical condition.
"Those of us who knew her are praying for her
recovery and hope that her fans worldwide will also do so. However, we ask that
you do not attempt to visit her; she needs rest and quiet. Pomona Valley
Hospital and the Pomona Police Department will not hesitate to arrest and
prosecute any unauthorized attempts to visit Miss Beck. Please respect this
request: it's in Miss Beck's best interests.
"Pomona Valley has also requested me to ask fans
and admirers to stop sending flowers and fruit baskets -- their waiting room is
clogged and after this point they will just be thrown out. If you feel you must
do something, please write a check to the Pomona Valley Hospital general fund.
I know that Michelle would greatly prefer that to flowers -- these people are
helping her and they deserve all our support."
I folded up the prepared statement and asked if there
were questions. Obviously, there were.
"What will happen to Michelle if she doesn't
emerge from her coma?" asked the reporter from Entertainment Weekly.
"Will she stay on a respirator or will she eventually be
disconnected?"
"We haven't even thought about that yet," I
said. "Nor have the doctors at Pomona Valley given us any indication
that's where things are going. Until we know her medical situation a little
better, it would be premature to think about it."
"Who is the one that will eventually make that
decision?" asked the anchor of Inside Story. "Her parents or some
other relative?"
"Michelle's parents passed away a couple of years
ago," I said, "and she has no other family. When I got to the
hospital, I was told that I was the person to whom she entrusted her emergency
medical decisions to. So I suppose if that decision has to be made, I'll be the
one to make it."
This answer caused a mild stir. I pointed to the
reporter from the Los Angeles Times, but before she could ask her question,
someone in the back hollered a question.
"Do you think it's appropriate for you to make
that decision?"
Everyone's head swiveled around. It was Jim Van Doren,
of course.
"Excuse me?" I said.
"I said, do you feel it's appropriate for you to
be the one that makes that decision? Yes, you're her agent, but recently,
there's been some questions about your own work and the way you've treated some
of your clients. Do you really think it's wise for you to be the one who makes
this life-or-death decision?"
Over to the side of me, I could hear Joshua growling
lowly. I knew how he felt.
"Listen," I said. "I never asked to be
the one Michelle gave this responsibility to. Drs. Adams and Mizuhara can tell
you how surprised I was when I was told about it. Would I have wanted this
responsibility? No. Will I refuse it now? No."
"Uh-huh," Van Doren said. "Are you the
beneficiary of her estate?"
"What?" I said.
"I'm just thinking here," Van Doren said.
"If you're the person she trusts with her life, you're probably the person
that'd benefit from her death. She just got $12 million for Earth Resurrected; that's
a lot. So are you the beneficiary? Or will that be a surprise, too?"
The crowd of reporters erupted. I just stood there,
blinking, stunned that Van Doren could just casually imply that I was a crazed
murderer. On the other hand, he was driving me insane, and if he'd been in
reach, I probably could have killed him right there. Van Doren just stood
there, with a little smile that said gotcha.
I was still gripping the side of the podium when Carl
tapped me and gently dislodged me from where I was standing. Miranda came up to
me and pulled me back away. Joshua looked up at me worriedly. I heard Carl
speaking to the reporters -- "Let's try to keep our eye on the ball,
here...," he began -- and then wheeled around into the building.
I stormed into my office and went to my office closet.
Miranda came in about a second afterwards, followed by Joshua.
"What are you doing?" Miranda asked.
"Tony Baltz got me a set of golf clubs last
Christmas," I said, rummaging. "I'm going to take one and put a divot
in Van Doren's head. What do you think? The five iron? Or maybe the nine. Or
the putter, right between the eyes."
"I don't think that would be very helpful,"
Miranda said.
"Oh, I think it would," I said. I emerged
with the seven iron in my hand. "It would make me feel a lot better."
"Only for a minute," Miranda said. "But
I have to warn you, prison is just one long bummer."
I burst into tears. No one was more surprised than I.
Miranda rushed over and held me, returning the favor from the day before, when
I had done the same for her.
"I'm sorry," I said. "It's not every
day that I'm accused of murdering my client."
"Oh, shut up," Miranda said gently, cupping
my face in her hand. "You didn't kill her, did you?"
"Of course not," I said.
"Well, then," Miranda said. "Don't let
it bother you. Tom, you did more for Michelle than anyone else ever would have.
You're a good man, Tom. Everybody knows it. I know it. You're a good man."
I kissed Miranda. No one was more surprised than I.
"I'm sorry," I said. "I don't know what
I'm thinking."
"Oh, shut up," Miranda said, and kissed me
back.
After a couple of minutes of this, Joshua whined,
which I think is was doggie equivalent of clearing one's throat to remind
others you are there.
"Spectator," I said.
"He's a dog," Miranda said "He doesn't
care."
"You'd be surprised," I said.
The situation became academic a second later, when
there was a knock. Miranda and I disentangled ourselves as Carl came through
the door.
"I've got Mike and Adams at the podium now,"
he said. "Are you all right?"
"I'm severely pissed off, but other than that,
I'm fine," I said.
"Be prepared to be pissed off a little
more," Carl said. "Brad Turnow's on his way over."
My brain fuzzed a second before I realized he was
talking about the producer of Earth Resurrected. "Oh, Christ, what a
pain," I said.
Miranda looked at me and then at Carl. "What does
Brad want?" she asked.
"His money back," I said.
"His star is in a coma," Carl said.
"He's going to have to get someone else to play the part. He'll figure
that, since Michelle is laid up, it's only fair he should get his money
back."
"What a jerk," Miranda said.
"Do you want any backup?" Carl said, to me.
"We could gang up on him."
"No," I said. "It's all right. I can
handle him."
"That's what I like to hear," Carl said.
"Kick his ass a couple of times. He'll be here at 1:15. That leaves you
two about an hour to smooch."
I think I blushed; Miranda, who is made of sterner
stuff, merely smiled. "Mr. Lupo, with all due respect to your position,
that's just none of your damned business," she said.
"On the contrary," Carl said, smiling back.
"I didn't get where I am today by not noticing these sorts of things. Come
on, Joshua," he said, motioning to the dog. "Whether it's my business
or not, I know when I'm not wanted ."
*****
"It's a terrible thing that happened to
Michelle," Brad said, stating the obvious.
"Yes, it is," I said.
"I mean, my God," Brad said. "I'd hate
for it to happen to me."
My eyes flicked over to the clock on my phone. For
five minutes now, Brad had been finding new and not-so-exciting ways to restate
the obvious point that Michelle was in a world of hurt. I was giving him
another minute before I worked him over with a golf club.
The question is whether Brad would be missed. Somehow
I doubted it. Up until Murdered Earth, Brad was a distinctly lower-rung
producer, cranking out cheesy, low-production value science fiction and
adventure epics that would just about break even in the theaters and then eke
out a profit in the video store afterlife: the sort of films you make when
you're either on your way up or down the Hollywood food chain, but never when
you're anywhere near the top. Murdered Earth was the exception because for
once, Brad managed to get lucky with a star who was breaking into the
stratosphere. That was Michelle, of course; the studio estimated that
Michelle's presence in the film added $55 million to the $85 million domestic
take. Having seen Murdered Earth, I personally gave Michelle credit for another
ten million or so.
But with a hit movie under his belt, Brad was now a
mid-rung producer looking to move up the ladder a little more. Earth
Resurrected was going to do it for him, or so he thought. Now that Michelle was
down and his production suddenly air-braking into oblivion, Brad wanted to do
what he could before the whole thing derailed and sent him crashing back down
into the ranks of a straight-to-video producer. Which meant getting someone
else for the part and trying to recoup on his losses.
If I were in his position, I'd probably try to do
something like what he was doing. Of course, I wouldn't have given Michelle $12
million, either. Be that as it may, I could sympathize with his situation. The
problem was, he was about to try to screw my client. Sympathize or not, there's
no way I was going to allow that.
"Look, I'll tell you why I'm here," Brad
said.
"I'd appreciate that," I said.
"It's terrible what's happened to Michelle,"
Brad said again. Below his view, I was groping for the 7-iron. "But it
also creates a real problem for Earth Resurrected. Tom, we're just about ready
to roll, and we can't wait too much longer. Hell, we've already got the special
effects crews working on some scenes, and the second unit's out shooting."
I sat there silently, waiting for Brad to continue. He
wanted me to be openly sympathetic to his plight, which I was not willing to
do. After a few seconds of waiting for me to say something, he went on.
"The real problem is Allen Green," Brad
said. "In our contract, we committed to a start date, and if we miss that
start date by more than a week, he can walk, with his full paycheck. Pay or
Play. That's 20 million, shot right down the tubes. The start date's in ten
days, Tom. Even if Michelle comes out of her coma today, she's not going to be
ready to go in ten days. You know that."
Again, I said nothing. Why make it easy?
Finally, Brad said what he came to say. "We have
to replace Michelle, Tom. I'm sorry, but we can't wait."
"The reason you paid $12 million for her was
because you thought she was indispensable," I said. "I don't see how
that's changed. She's a lot more indispensable than Allen Green. She's the only
person who'll have been in both films."
"She was indispensable," Brad said.
"Don't get me wrong, Tom, I want her to be in the film. But she's in a
coma! And everybody knows it."
The subtext here: since everyone knows Michelle's in a
coma, no one will actually expect her to be in the sequel anymore. It can be
used as an excuse to replace her without anyone complaining. It's a fair enough
assessment, although it left unanswered the question of who would go see the
sequel, good excuse or not, if the reason that over two-thirds of the audience
went to see the original isn't there anymore.
"If you're going to replace her, you must have
someone lined up already, Brad," I said.
"We do," he said.
"Gee," I said. "That was fast. Michelle
hasn't been in a coma a whole day yet."
Brad flushed at that one. "I told you, we're
under some time pressure here," he said.
"You did," I agreed. "Who is it?"
"Charlene Mayfield," Brad said. "You've
heard of her?"
I had, barely. Charlene was a clone of Michelle, which
is not saying all that much, as blonde, perky types are fairly endemic in these
here parts. Charlene played a waitress on one of those sitcoms that acts as a
sacrificial offering against NBC's Thursday night lineup and is thus canceled
after six or thirteen episodes; if you weren't actually in the business, you'd
probably have no idea who she is.
"She's going to be great," Brad said.
"I think she'll be able to step right into the part. Not that she could
ever truly replace Michelle, of course," he added hastily.
"Of course," I said.
"So," Brad said. "Are there any
problems? You understand where we're coming from?"
"No, I have no problems," I said.
"You're on a tight schedule, I understand."
Brad smiled. "That's really great to hear, Tom. I
knew you would understand."
"Thanks," I said.
"There is one other issue," Brad said.
"Shoot," I said.
"It's about Michelle's salary."
"What about it?"
"Well, seeing as Michelle is no longer on the
film, there's some question about salary disbursement," Brad said.
"What question?" I said . "You already
mailed me the check. I've already handed it over to our accountants to be
processed. It's been disbursed, so I don't see how there could be a question
about it."
"Well, that's just it," Brad said,
uncomfortably. "I think you can see what I'm getting at here."
"I'm afraid I can't," I said. "You'd
better spell it out for me, Brad."
He squirmed. It was fun to watch.
"Look," he said. "We'd like you to
return the salary."
"Oh, is that all?" I said. "Heck.
That's easy. The answer is no."
"What?"
"No."
"No?"
"What part of that two letter word don't you
understand, Brad?" I asked. "Was it the vowel that threw you, or the
consonant?"
"God damn it, Tom," Brad said. "This isn't
a joke. You can't just expect us to walk away from twelve million
dollars."
"I can," I said. "I do. You hired
Michelle for a job. Now, through no fault of her own, you have decided you want
someone else in the role. I'm fine with that. But inasmuch as Michelle did
nothing to warrant her dismissal, I don't see how you could begrudge her her
salary as severance pay."
"Jesus Christ," Brad said. "The girl's
in a fucking coma!"
"Yes, she is," I said. "One that was
brought about by the negligence of one of your crew members."
"That's not true," Brad said. "That
woman worked for Featured Creatures."
"Which worked for you," I said. "You
hired them, Brad. The legal line of responsibility goes right back to
you."
"I think that could be argued," Brad said.
"You could try," I said. "It'll take
you about two years to get a court date. In the meantime, I'm sure our legal
department could probably hold up the start of your production a couple of
weeks. Maybe a month, if we have to."
"You're a real son of a bitch," Brad said.
"Hey," I said. "I'm not the one trying
to screw someone in a coma."
Brad decided to try another tactic. "Tom, look.
It's not a matter of me not wanting to do right by Michelle. You know I want
to."
"That's good to hear, Brad," I said.
"But now we're paying two actresses for the same
part. We have to have some economies of scale going on here."
"So you're paying Charlene Mayfield $12
million?" I asked.
"Well, of course not that much," Brad said.
"But we're paying her quite a bit."
"How much?" I asked.
"Well, I can't really discuss it," Brad
said.
"Hmmm." I said. I buzzed Miranda.
"Miranda, how much is Charlene Mayfield getting for Earth
Resurrected?" I asked.
"One hundred seventy five thousand dollars,"
Miranda said. "According to her agent, who I just called."
"Really," I said. "Do we know if she's
making any gross points?"
"Of course she isn't," Miranda said.
"Although she's apparently getting a point on the net."
Net points are a promise of the percentage of profits
the film makes, should it ever make it into the black; as opposed to gross
points, which are a straight percentage of the film's haul at the box office.
Since studio bookkeeping is such that even a film that makes a quarter of a
billion dollars in domestic box office can run deeply into the red, net points
are rarely if ever given -- they're what you're given if you're gullible,
stupid, or the screenwriter.
"A whole point on the net," I said, looking
directly at Brad.
"That's right," Miranda said. "That'll
be worth at least a case or two of Fresca." I thanked her and signed her
off.
"Wow, Brad, a hundred seventy five thousand
dollars," I said. "Aren't you the generous one. That's nearly as much
as you're going to pay for your second unit catering. Good thing I had Miranda
listen in on the conversation and double-check that salary for us."
"That was a dirty trick," Brad said.
"It's not dirty, it's called looking out for my
client's well-being."
"Is it about your percentage?" Brad said.
"Because if it is, I'm willing to deal. What if I said you could keep your
ten percent, clear? No questions."
I rubbed my forehead. It was barely 1:30, and I was
tired already.
"Look, Brad," I said. "What say we cut
the shit, because I'm having a really bad day, and you're not making it any
better."
Brad blinked. "All right."
"Good," I said. "The fact of the matter
is, you're not getting the twelve million back. The way I figure it, since you
are the one who indirectly put her into the coma, it's the very least you can
do. It's possible that if we took it to court, you might get that money back.
But in the meantime you will have tanked your entire movie production. What is
it budgeted at? 80 million? 90 million?"
"83 million, counting salaries." Brad just
about spat the word salaries.
"83 million against twelve million is a bad bet
any day, Brad. And that's not counting the money you're going to throw down the
lawyer hole. Our lawyers are on staff. We don't pay them any extra. And, of
course, we're not even talking about the counter-suits we'll throw back at you
for negligence and violation of contract. Not to mention the other suits that
will be filed against you by the studio and your other investors if you close
down production. Make no mistake, Brad, you're going to get fucked. You won't
be able to sit for a year."
Brad bristled, which is exactly what I wanted him to
do. I'd gotten into the sensitive area where males feel threatened and will
make stupid, macho statements just so they'll feel their balls are still
attached. I was hoping that Brad would grope for his testicles.
Sure enough, he did. "Don't you threaten me, you
little asshole," Brad said. "If you want a court fight, I'll give it
to you. You'll spend so much time giving depositions you'll forget what the sun
looks like. Don't think I don't have what it takes to win this."
"I don't doubt that you'd try, Brad. But let me
scope out a scenario for you. You go to court to snatch money away from an
actor who your own negligence has managed to put in a coma. You tank the film
you're working on to do it. Let's say that somehow you manage to win. Fine. You
get your twelve million back, and you go back to your offices to get ready to
do another movie...and no one will work with you."
Brad's eyebrows knitted. "What do you mean?"
"I mean no one will ever work with you again.
Actors won't want to work with you, because you've given the clear signal that
you don't give a shit about them. Agents won't want to work with you, because
they'll never be sure you won't try to dick their clients around. Studios won't
want to work with you because you'll have made it clear that you value your
pride over their money. Which is not an attitude they want to know about. You
will never work in this town again. Never."
Brad looked like he'd been kicked in the balls. Which,
in a way, he had. "You don't know that for sure," he said.
I leaned forward in my chair, over my desk, close to
Brad's ear. "Try me," I whispered.
I sat back. Brad sat there, stunned, for a good
minute. The he got up, spun out of his chair, stalked around the office a
couple of times, sat back down, and started gnawing on his thumb.
"Fuck!" he finally said.
It was over. I won.
Now was the time to get him back to our side.
"Brad," I said. "You don't want to have the money back. You think
you do right now because you're cheap and you're in a panic. But it's penny
wise and pound foolish. In the long run, you're going to look good by letting
Michelle keep it."
Brad smirked. "Somehow I doubt that," he
said.
"Such little faith," I said. "Try this
one on: today, as you may or may not know, I was casually accused of setting up
my client for her accident."
"I watched that in the office, right before I
called," Brad said. "What an asshole."
"You have no idea," I said. "What if we
say that I set up this meeting in a panic, and begged you to take the twelve
million back? That way, from my point of view, any suspicion would be off of
me, because I'd have no financial reason to off my client."
Brad looked at me strangely. "This benefits you,
but I'm waiting to see how it benefits me."
"It benefits you, Brad, because you angrily
refuse to accept the money back. How dare I assume that just because Michelle
is in a coma, that'd you'd snatch the money back. We can say that in addition
to refusing the money, you demanded that if Michelle didn't recover, that I
donate the money to brain trauma research. Say, fund a professorship at UCLA
Medical School or some such."
"What were you going to do with the money, if you
don't mind me asking?"
I gestured to the heavens with my hands. "Damn
it, Brad. I don't know that she left me her money. Even if she did, I sure as
hell don't want it. If it got given to me, that's probably what I'd do with it.
Yes, that's what I would do. But my point here is -- this idea came from you.
You look good because you took a stand for Michelle."
"And you throw the scent off of yourself."
"There is that added benefit, yes."
Brad thought about it. "And you'll say that this
is what happened?"
"No, Brad," I said. "This is what
happened. At least, as I remember it."
Brad smiled, even though I'm sure it hurt to do it.
"You sure are a piece of work, Tom. All right, keep the twelve."
"And her gross points."
"Oh, come on, Tom," Brad said. "Stop
with the kicking."
"Tell you what," I said. "I'll drop our
twelve gross points if you give Charlene Mayfield six."
"What do you care?" Brad said. "She's
not even your client."
"Brad, you moron," I said. "They're not
from me. They're from you. Remember the concept: Make Brad Look Good."
"Oh. All right."
"Great," I said, leaned back and closed my
eyes. I was getting a headache. When I opened them again, Brad was still
sitting there, looking pensive.
"Something on your mind, Brad?" I asked.
"Hmmm? No, just thinking about the accident. It's
a terrible thing, you know."
"I know," I said. "We've been through
this."
"No, I know," Brad said. "I was just
thinking about why we were having the mask made in the first place."
"You were going to have her head explode, or
something, I thought," I said.
"Well, not really that," Brad said.
"It's for this scene in the film where the alien overlord is trying to get
control of Michelle's body -- we were going to have the overlord stick his
tentacles in her mouth and ears as a way to get to her brain. Really
disgusting, of course -- eyeballs popping and mouth really huge and all that.
Obviously we couldn't do any of those effects with Michelle's real face."
"Glad that you recognize that, Brad."
"We could have used digital effects, but those
things are expensive," he said, apparently oblivious to the fact that his
latex mask had, in fact, just cost him twelve million dollars. He grinned
suddenly, a rueful grin. "You know, I could have used that alien overlord
right about now."
"What do you mean?" I said.
"Oh, nothing," Brad said, waving me off.
"I was just free-associating. If our alien overlord was real, then it
wouldn't matter if Michelle was in a coma or not. He'd just suck her brain out,
plop himself in, and do the part himself. No one would know any better.
Michelle's not exactly Meryl Streep. Would have saved me money, anyway."
Brad caught a look at my face. "Jesus, Tom,"
he said. "I'm sorry. That was probably not the nicest thing I could have
said right about now. Sorry if I just upset you. You all right?"
"I'm fine," I said. "I'm sorry, Brad. I
just had a thought myself."
Chapter Sixteen
The door to the fourth floor of Pomona Valley Hospital
opened, and I was confronted by the face of officer Bob Ramos.
"Hi, Mr. Stein," he said.
"Hi, Bob," I said.
"Nice dog you have there," Officer Ramos
said.
Joshua did his best stupid dog grin.
"Not my dog, it's Michelle's," I said.
"I thought he might help bring her out of it. You know."
"Sure," Ramos said. "I guess we can
pretty safely say you don't want Dr. Adams to know about it, right?"
"Right," I agreed. "I'm not visiting at
two in the morning just because I'm not sleepy."
"Got it," Ramos said.
"By the way," I said. "I've got
something for you." I pulled out a CD that I'd been carrying under my arm.
Ramos took it. "What is this?"
"You mentioned that your daughter was a fan of
Tea Reader's," I said. "So I thought she might like to have an
autographed copy of the CD. See, look, it's even made out to 'Maria.'" I
didn't tell Ramos that the CD had in fact been autographed by Miranda. The
chances of Tea Reader herself doing me a favor these days were slim and fast
approaching none.
"Well, that was really nice of you to do
that," Ramos said. "My little girl is going to be thrilled right out
of her socks. You're a real stand-up guy, Mr. Stein."
"It's nothing," I said. "Glad to do it.
Is anyone else in with Michelle?"
"I've been here since midnight and no one's come
through except for the nurse," Ramos said. "You might check with
Officer Gardner. She's over at the stairs. Been there since 11."
"That's all right," I said. "I'm just
going to pop in for a couple of minutes. You'll let me know if the nurse comes
by again?"
"Sure," Ramos said. "I'll make a lot of
noise. Give you enough time to hide the dog in the can."
"Thanks, Bob," I said, and then headed down
the hall with Joshua.
The door to Michelle's room had been left open.
Inside, a cone of light illuminated Michelle, whose bed had been positioned so
she was reclining rather than lying down directly. The rest of the room was
dark, and the other two beds in the room, still empty, had their curtains
closed around them. I closed the door, and then went over to Michelle. She was
unchanged: comatose and on a respirator. I felt a fresh wave of guilt.
"Tom," Joshua said. "I can't do
anything from down here."
"Do you want to get on the bed?" I asked.
"No, that'd be mighty uncomfortable," Joshua
said. "Grab me one of those visitor's chairs and put it near the head of
the bed, please."
There was one near the bed on my side; I wheeled it
around to Joshua's side, to avoid him accidentally knocking over the IV. He
asked me to turn it around so that the back faced the bed; when I had done so,
he jumped up on the chair and propped himself up on the back of the chair,
putting himself on a level with the bed.
"That'll probably be close enough," Joshua
said.
"Are you going to be able to reach her?" I
asked.
"Sure," Joshua said. "Ralph's body is
totally gone now, you know. It's all me. I can make tendrils now. It still
helps to be close, of course. Now I have to figure out where to enter her head
-- she's got so many tubes in her. I think I'll go through the ears. This is
going to take a couple of minutes, so don't talk to me for a few. I'm going to
have to concentrate."
With that, Joshua made sure he was securely
positioned, and closed his eyes. Then his face disappeared. His snout elongated
and became the transparent goo that Yherajks were usually made of. It looked
like a glass elephant trunk. The trunk waved in the air for a second, as if
tasting the air, and then made its way to Michelle's head. An inch above her
face, the trunk split in two; each tendril wandered casually over to an ear,
then covered it. Michelle looked like she was wearing headphones that were
attached to a headless dog.
The scene was so surreal that I lapsed into mute
gawking. It took Joshua to bring me out of it.
"Tom," he said, "I think we have
company."
"What?" I said.
"Turn around."
I did. Miranda stood there, a book in her hands.
Behind her, the curtain was pulled back from one of the vacant beds. Miranda
was looking past me, at the scene of Joshua and Michelle. Her eyes were wide and
black, and she had the expression you get when you're seeing something
horrifying and you hope you're dreaming.
"Miranda," I said.
Miranda glanced over at me, not really seeing me at
first. Then I could almost hear her brain click as to who I was, where she was,
and that she, in fact, was not dreaming. She opened her mouth and took a sharp
intake of breath. In one more second, I knew, it would come out as the loudest
scream I had ever heard.
I leapt at her. I clamped my hand over her mouth and
turned her around. Then I picked her up and sprinted to the bathroom with her,
kicking, in my arms.
Behind me, I heard Joshua say, in a conversational
tone of voice, "If she screams, we're fucked, Tom. Calm her down."
The conversational tone of voice was simply so that it couldn't be heard
outside the room -- Joshua's voice was as tense as I'd ever heard it. As I
shoved Miranda into the bathroom, I caught a whiff of something rotten and
realized that Joshua was screaming -- just in his own language. I closed the
bathroom door behind me, locked it, and hit the light switch to start the fan.
In shoving her into the bathroom, I had accidentally
pushed Miranda into the sink. Her aborted scream went out of her with a whuff;
her book went flying. She reeled sideways, colliding with the tub. I reached
for her to help her regain her balance; Miranda grabbed me, ducked her head
down, and launched herself into my abdomen. It felt like I had been hit by a
cannonball, and the impact slammed me up against the door -- I felt myself bounce
off of it. I couldn't breathe and went down to the tiles.
Miranda was now pushing me away from the door, trying
to unlock it. I lurched up from the floor, grabbed her around the waist, and
pulled her to the floor with me. On her way down, Miranda cracked me in the eye
with her elbow. There was a mushrooming sensation of pain behind my eyeball; I
was pretty sure I was going to be blinded for life. But I held on, rolled over
on top of Miranda, pinned her arms with my legs, and used my weight to pin her down.
Miranda opened her mouth to scream again. I reached down to cover her mouth.
Her head dodged sideways and then flicked back; she caught the side of my hand
in her mouth and bit down, hard. I had to bite the side of my cheek to keep
from screaming myself.
"Miranda," I said, gritting my teeth.
"This is really beginning to hurt."
Miranda let go of my hand; I pulled it up and started
shaking it in pain.
"Thank you."
"Get off of me, now," Miranda said.
"I will," I said. "But you have to
promise me not to scream."
"Tom, I want to know what the fuck that thing was
out there."
"That's good," I said. "Because I want
to tell you. Now I just need you to promise me you're not going to run
screaming. Okay?"
Miranda nodded her assent. I gladly collapsed off of
her and leaned my back against the door, clutching my hand. I could feel the
blood; I wasn't yet mentally prepared to look at it and see the carnage.
Miranda got up slowly, never taking her eyes off me, and perched on the tub;
she was preparing to make a hole through me if she had to in order to escape. I
had been lucky to catch her by surprise. In a real fight, she could have sent
me to the hospital. Fortunately, we were already there.
"Explain," she said.
"Remember Joshua?" I said.
"The dog?" she said.
"No, the other Joshua," I said. "Well,
actually, yes, the dog Joshua, too. They're both the same person."
Miranda looked at me very dangerously. I held my hand
up.
"Start over," I said, took a second and then
started again. "You remember that secret project Carl has me doing."
"Yes."
"The project is about aliens. Space aliens. They
had contacted Carl. He wanted me to find a way to introduce them to the world.
That thing out there is one of them."
"Joshua," Miranda said.
"Yes," I said. "He was an alien first,
and then he took over the body of a dog named Ralph. Long story."
"What is it doing to Michelle?" Miranda
asked.
"He's scanning her brain," I said.
"Trying to see if she's ever coming out of the coma."
Miranda shook her head violently. "This doesn't
make any sense."
I laughed, weakly. "If you have a more rational
explanation, Miranda, I'd love to hear it." I finally got up enough
courage to look at my hand. It was covered in blood; Miranda looked to have
ripped out a fairly large chunk.
Miranda noticed it too. "My God, Tom, you're
bleeding," she said.
"I know," I said. "I think I have a
black eye, too. Our first fight. Remind me never to piss you off again."
Miranda came off the tub, helped me up, and walked me
over to the sink. She turned on the water and put my hand under it; I just
about jumped out my skin from the pain.
"Sorry," Miranda said. "Sorry about
everything, Tom. I just didn't know what was going on. I still don't."
"What were you doing here, Miranda?" I
asked. "The officer at the front said no one was here."
Miranda shrugged and started soaping the wound, which
hurt like you wouldn't believe. "Dr. Adams said that we should talk to
her, that it might help bring her back out. I figured I would come read to her.
I brought Alice in Wonderland, if you can believe it. I got here about eight.
Around eleven I got tired. It was a long day. I didn't think anyone would mind
if I took a nap."
The blood had been pretty much washed away; with it
gone the wound appeared much less severe than it had seemed. Miranda grabbed a
washcloth from the rack near the tub, folded it once, and pressed it over the
wound.
"Hold it there for a while," she said.
"It doesn't look that bad. I don't think you'll need stitches."
"That's a relief," I said. "It would
have been a little difficult to explain how it happened." It was an
attempt at humor, but Miranda wasn't biting. So to speak.
"Tom," she said. "You said that he was
scanning her brain."
"That's right," I said.
"What happens then?" she asked.
"Well, if it looks like she'll come out of it,
he'll do what he can to help her. He's got the experiences of thousands of his
people, Miranda. One of them has to have been a doctor or a scientist that
could make guesses on how to do that."
"What if she has permanent damage, Tom? What if
she's never going to come out of the coma?"
I took a deep breath. "Then I'm going to ask
Joshua to inhabit her body."
Miranda drew back. "What?" she said, rather
too loudly.
"Keep it down," I said.
"Keep it down?" Miranda said. "We're
talking about Michelle's life, and now that thing wants to take it so he can
have the body? Don't you have a problem with that?"
"Miranda," I said. "If Michelle's never
coming out of the coma, she's already dead. Brain dead, at least, with her body
kept alive by a machine. She's gone. And if that's the case, then there's an
opportunity to make her death at least have some meaning, an opportunity for
something historic."
"It's body snatching," Miranda said.
"Not any more than organ donation," I said.
"Look, Miranda, the Yherajk --"
"The what?"
"The people who Joshua come from," I said.
"They're called the Yherajk. In their natural form, they look like Jell-O
globs. People will be terrified of them. But if they could see them in human
form first, it would make it easier. We need a Trojan horse, Miranda. Something
that will allow the Yherajk to make it through the door of human consciousness
without terrifying humanity half out of its brain. Think how you just felt out
there; now multiply that by six billion. We need a Trojan horse."
"The Trojan horse wasn't so great for the
Trojans," Miranda said.
"It's just an analogy," I said.
"How do you know Joshua won't just say she's not
coming out the coma, so he can get control of the body?" Miranda asked.
"Because he doesn't know I'm going to ask him to
do it," I said. "This isn't his idea, Miranda. It's mine."
Miranda slumped back down onto the tub and pressed
both hands against her head, as if to keep it from exploding. "I think I'm
in shock," she said. "I can't feel anything. I don't know what to
make of what you're saying to me."
I knelt down until I was at her level and took her
hand. "If you were in shock, you wouldn't know you were in shock,
Miranda," I said. "I think you're going to be just fine. Listen, I
know how sudden this feels. When Carl introduced me to Joshua, it was the same
thing -- just threw me right into the deep end. He trusted me to be able to
swim. I trust you to be able to swim, Miranda. And I'm going to need you to
help me from here on out. I've had to deal with this thing by myself -- Carl
gave it to me because he couldn't be seen handling it, and I couldn't get help
from anyone else. Now you know. I need you to help me. I need you, Miranda.
Okay?"
"Oh, God, Tom," Miranda said. "If I
knew the job was going to be this tough, I would have asked for more up
front."
"Hey," I said. "I already got you two
raises in the last few weeks. Don't push it."
Miranda laughed that time. She had a very nice laugh.
*****
"Good to see you're both alive," Joshua
said, as we returned to the bed. "I was worried there for a while. It
sounded like a cat got caught in a dryer."
"We got it worked out," I said.
"Good thing, too," Joshua said.
"Because from the look of it, Tom, she kicked your ass."
"I pulled my punches," I said.
"I'm sure you did," Joshua said, dryly.
"Hello, Miranda. Sorry about the surprise. I'm afraid you're not seeing me
at my best. I really do look nicer with a head. But then, really, don't we
all."
"Hello, Joshua," Miranda said. "I hope
you don't mind if it takes me a little while to get used to this all."
"No problem," Joshua said. "Personally,
I'm glad you're in on the secret. Tom could use a better brain than the one
he's got."
"Enough with the insults," I said.
"Have you found anything?"
"I'm afraid I have," Joshua said. "I
have bad news and worse news. Do you have a preference to which you want to
hear first?"
My heart sank. Miranda reached over and took my hand.
"Might as well tell me the worse news," I said.
"She's gone, Tom," Joshua said, bluntly.
"From what I can tell, large chunks of her brain had already died before
Miranda got to her. She was down a long time. It's pretty obvious, actually;
I'm surprised that the doctors here haven't already told you. They probably
want to do a couple more CAT scans to be sure. But I'm sure. It's a mess in
here. I'm sorry, Tom. I really am."
"Isn't there anything you can do?" Miranda
said. "Tom said that you have the experience of doctors and scientists.
Can't you do anything?"
"It's not a question of expertise, it's a
question of raw materials," Joshua said. "Michelle's brain is
severely damaged, and the damage affects a wide range of functions. It's not
like a stroke, where the damage is localized, and the brain might find some way
to route around the damage. Here, if I was to try to route around damage, I'd
only come across more damage. They're never going to get her lungs pumping
again on their own, and from where I'm at, most of the parts of the brain that
control things like her liver and kidneys look to be non-functioning. I'd
expect that in another day or so, you'll be told they expect liver and renal
failure within a few days. I'm sorry, Miranda. If I could do something, I
would. But there's nothing to do."
"What parts of her brain do work?" I asked.
"Well, her heart's still pumping, so that tells
you something," Joshua said. "Her digestive tract is fine, not
counting the liver or kidneys, which I've already spoken about. Her auditory
centers are working --"
"She can hear?" I asked.
"That's not what I said," Joshua said.
"The parts of her brain that process sound are still doing that. But the
parts of the brain that interpret sound aren't. Sound is going into the
microphone, but it's not being recorded, if you know what I mean."
"What about her?" Miranda said. "You're
talking about her body processes. What about her? Her personality? Her
memories? Those things?"
"Like everything else," Joshua said.
"Some parts are there, some aren't. Most of her recent memories are here;
I'd say the last couple of weeks for sure. After that, it gets spotty. Of
course, that could just have been the way her mind worked, anyway. You humans
remember some things better than others. But as to her personality -- well,
let's just say that if we managed to somehow get the rest of her brain working,
and she came out of it, she wouldn't be the Michelle you remember."
"What would she be?" I asked.
"Psychotic," Joshua said. "Frankly I
doubt that she would comprehend the world anymore. It would just be some
terrifying blur to her."
"So she's dead," I said.
"She -- Michelle -- is dead now," Joshua
said. "This body, on a respirator, will last about another week. Best
estimate. I'm going to disconnect from her now, Tom, if you don't mind. The
scenery in here is starting to make me depressed."
About a minute later Joshua was completely
reconstituted as a dog. He leapt down from the chair and padded over to us.
"Is anyone else hungry?" he said. "I
don't know what it is, but ever since I melded with Ralph, every time I'm
depressed I just want to eat."
"Hold that thought for a second, Joshua," I
said. "I have a question for you."
Joshua sat. "All right, what is it?"
"You're positive that Michelle is gone and that
the body will be dead within a week."
"Pretty much," he said. "I'm sorry
about that for you."
"Joshua, why don't you use her body?" I
said.
Joshua looked perplexed. "Come again?"
"She's dead," I said. "And you could
use her body. You would finally be able to walk around and interact with
humans. Michelle was famous. You'd already have a high profile. You could
finally be a true intermediary between our species. Michelle's gone, we know
that. But here's an opportunity."
"Tom," Joshua said, slowly. "I know you
think that what you're suggesting is a good idea. From where you're standing,
maybe it looks that way. But it's not. I can't take Michelle's body."
Beside me, I could feel Miranda nearly collapse with
relief. Despite what I told her, she must have still harbored the worry that
Joshua was simply waiting to snatch Michelle's body. Now that he was rejecting
the offer, Miranda could believe that he was genuine and honest in his intentions.
I, however, was merely confused.
"I don't follow," I said. "Can't take
Michelle's body? Or won't take Michelle's body?"
"Either," Joshua said. "Both. Can't and
won't."
"Why not?" I asked.
"Tom, Michelle is brain damaged. Even if I could
inhabit her body, I couldn't control it or keep it alive. I need an at least
nominally functioning brain to do that. Michelle doesn't have that any more.
It'd be like trying to drive a car without a steering wheel."
"But that's just temporary," I said.
"You have Ralph's appearance now, but there's none of Ralph's body in you
anymore."
"That's true," Joshua said. "But
Ralph's brain was in one piece when I inhabited him. I had time to learn how to
be a dog. I don't have that here."
"That's the can't," I said. "And maybe we
can find some way around that. What's the won't?"
"The won't is that Michelle didn't give me
permission to inhabit her body or transfer her personality," Joshua said.
"That's incredibly important, Tom. Otherwise it's tantamount to causing
soul death. I won't do that. It goes against everything that a Yherajk stands
for, ethically."
"You didn't get explicit go ahead from Ralph, and
yet you inhabited his body," I said.
"But I felt that Ralph wanted me to," Joshua
said. "It's hard to explain. And at the very least, Ralph was my friend,
my very good friend. I knew better what he wanted that I would Michelle, who I
didn't know at all."
"It's what I want," I said. "And
Michelle gave me permission to make decisions on her behalf."
"Not this decision," Joshua said.
"You don't know that," I said, almost
accusingly.
Joshua sighed. "Actually, Tom, yes, I do."
"What do you mean?" I said.
"Remember when I asked you if you wanted the bad
news or the worse news?" Joshua said. "Well, the worse news is that
she's gone. But the bad news was, she did it to herself."
"What?" Miranda asked.
"I saw it," Joshua said, turning to Miranda
"Her last memory. After you left, Miranda. Michelle pulled the breathing
straws out and closed the latex over her nostrils. Then she waited to suffocate.
She committed suicide."
Joshua turned back to me. "Right or wrong,
Michelle chose to end her life, Tom. And that's why I can't take her body, no
matter what you say. Her decision was to die. And I can't take that decision
away from her. Neither can you. No one can."
Chapter Seventeen
Carl opened his door and squinted out at us.
"This had better be good," he said.
It was not quite four am.
"It is," I assured him.
Carl tightened his bathrobe and turned away from the
door. "Fine. Stop hanging around on my doorstep, then. The cops around
here arrest anyone who's not in a house or in a car."
Joshua, Miranda and I walked into the house. Carl had
lumbered off towards his kitchen. When we caught up to him, he was stuffing
coffee into a filter.
"All I can say is that you're lucky Elise is in
Sacramento," he said. "She would have pepper sprayed first, asked
questions later." He shoved the filter into the coffee maker and flipped
the switch to start brewing. He turned around, and finally got a good look at
me.
"God, Tom," he said. "Who did that to
you?"
"I did," Miranda said.
"That was quick," Carl said. "Most
couples don't get to the hitting stage until after the wedding."
"Carl," I said.
"All right," he said. "What is
it?"
"We need some moral guidance," I said.
Carl laughed. "Tom, I'm an agent," he said.
He stopped laughing when he realized that no one else was. "Go on,"
he said, grumpily.
I explained the events of the evening; discovering
Michelle's condition, my body-switching suggestion, Joshua's refusal. Joshua
and I had argued about it for another hour after that point, stopping just long
enough to be booted out of the room by the nurse, who gave me a lecture for
bringing a dog into the ICU. Joshua and I continued the argument in the parking
lot, neither of us giving any ground to the other, before Miranda suggested
that we bring Carl into the discussion. Miranda had meant for us to bring it up
in the morning, but Joshua and I decided it need to be dealt with at that
moment. We drove to Carl's place, Joshua riding with Miranda to keep us from
killing each other.
By the end of the recount, the coffee was ready. Carl
got down three cups, poured and gave me and Miranda both a cup. After a
moment's reflection, he pulled down a bowl, filled it with coffee, and set it
down in front of Joshua.
"This is an interesting philosophical
debate," Carl said. "But I'm still not sure what you want out of
me."
"Easy," Joshua said. "We want you to
pick a side. I'd prefer you pick mine."
"Joshua, this isn't a bar bet," Carl said,
irritably. "It's not a matter of choosing sides. And if I sided with Tom,
I doubt you'd do what he's asking of you, anyway."
"You're right," Joshua said. "I guess
we woke you up for nothing. We should be leaving. Thanks for the coffee."
"Sit, Joshua," Carl said.
"Hey," Joshua said. "That's not
funny."
"Tom," he said, turning to me. "You
realize if Joshua is right about how Michelle died, he's also right in his
position of not bringing her back."
"Why?" I said. "Carl, Michelle is gone.
She doesn't need the body any more. And we can use it. You know this makes
sense."
Beside me, Miranda gave a shudder and set her coffee
down on the countertop.
"Something wrong?" Carl said.
"I'm sorry," Miranda said. "I
understand where Tom's coming from, but the thought of having Joshua inside
Michelle's body gives me the creeps. All I can see in my head is Michelle as a
zombie. It just feels wrong in my gut." She glanced at me, then glanced
away. "I'm sorry, Tom. But that's the way I feel."
"Go with that feeling," Joshua said.
"Oh, shut up," I said, to Joshua.
"Christ," Carl said. "You two are worse
than kids in a back seat. Tom, if Michelle wanted to die, then let her die. All
of her. Michelle's body is Michelle. Unlike Joshua's people, our souls, if we
have them, appear permanently attached to our body. Michelle has her right to
die, not to be shuffled around like a puppet."
"Yes. Right. Thank you," Joshua said.
"You're welcome," Carl said, and then
slurped at his coffee. "But I'm not on your side, either."
"What do you mean?" Joshua said.
"Joshua, let me ask you a question," Carl
said. "What would you do if you discovered that Michelle had actually
wanted to live?"
"She didn't," Joshua said. "I saw the
memory of her pulling the tubes out myself. It was a conscious, active act. It
couldn't have happened by accident."
"That may be," Carl said. "But that's
not relevant to the question I'm asking."
"Sure it is," Joshua said. "Because
that's what happened."
"Fine," Carl said. "Hypothetically,
then. If you were to come across a situation that was a near duplicate of our
Michelle's situation, with the only variation being that the person in the coma
had wanted to live, would you inhabit her body, if asked by someone in Tom's
situation?"
"No," Joshua said, "because that
hypothetical person would still have severe brain damage, which would mean I
could never control that body."
"Let's take as a given that some way could be found
around that."
"That's a mighty big given," Joshua said.
"That's the magic of hypotheticals, Joshua,"
Carl said. "You can make the givens as big as you need them. Now stop
stalling and answer the question."
"I don't know what I'd do," Joshua said.
"Even if the situation fulfilled all the conditions you described, there's
still this huge grayness to it. There's no way I could make the decision and
feel absolutely sure I was morally in the right. If I was wrong, I'd be branded
a murderer by the Yherajk."
"Even if we had urged you to do it?" Carl
said.
"Carl, with all due respect, you're not a
Yherajk," Joshua said. "You don't fully understand the implications
of what you'd be asking. It's just not in your frame of reference."
"But you have my thoughts and memories in
you," Carl said. "They're human thoughts. You should be able to know
whether or not I, at least, understand the implications."
"Yes, but I'm not human," Joshua said.
"There's a chance I could misread what's there, just as much as you could
misread us."
"You'll admit to the potential for error?"
Carl said.
"Well, shucks, Carl," Joshua said.
"Nobody's perfect."
"So, theoretically, if there was some way that
you could know that it was morally kosher, that you could somehow control the
body and that Michelle had actually wanted to live, you could inhabit the
body."
"Yes," Joshua said. "Throw me a
sparkler and a kazoo, and I'd sing 'Yankee Doodle' while I was doing it,
too."
"Well, then," Carl said. "Your problems
are solved."
Joshua turned to me. "Tom, did you just follow
that last turn of logic?"
"Not at all," I said. "You've managed
to lose both me and Joshua, Carl."
"I got it," Miranda said.
"Ah," Carl said. "The smart one finally
speaks. Would you please enlighten our little boys, Miranda?"
"Joshua, you just said what you needed in order
to feel comfortable with what Tom is asking you to do," Miranda said.
"Now all you have to do is do it."
"I said nothing of the sort," Joshua said.
"Yes you did," Miranda said. "You have
three conditions: that you know it's moral, that you know it's technically
possible, and that you know Michelle wanted to live."
"But we were dealing in hypotheticals,"
Joshua said. "I don't know why I have to keep bringing this up, but
Michelle killed herself. She wanted to die."
"We don't know that," Carl said.
"Carl," Joshua said. "I saw the
playback."
"But you said yourself a few moments ago there
was a potential for error," Carl said. "You said that there was a
chance you could misinterpret emotions and motivations."
"Pulling out your air supply is pretty
straightforward action, Carl," Joshua said.
"The action is. What I'm interested in here is
the emotion behind the action," Carl said. "Joshua, people act like
they're killing themselves all the time around here. But a lot of them don't
really want to die. They just like the attention they get afterwards. Or they
don't truly comprehend that dying means death. Teenagers try to kill themselves
all the time, because they want to see how people will react once they're gone.
They don't make the connection they won't be there to see the reaction."
"Michelle wasn't a teenager," Joshua said.
"No, but she was a movie star, which on the
maturity scale is pretty close," Carl said. "She was 25, worth
millions, and people never told her no."
He pointed over to me. "Tom couldn't say no to
her. He just tried to get her a part she had no business trying for, because he
didn't want to say no to her."
I took that moment to pay especially close attention
to my coffee cup. I could see where Carl was going, but it didn't make that
last statement any less painful.
"When someone finally did say no to her, she got
depressed and moody, and decided to make a statement. But that doesn't mean she
really wanted to die," Carl said. He set his coffee cup down. "Now,
if Michelle wanted to die, then we should let her die. Simple. But if she
wanted to live, then, in a way, we can make that happen. Point is, we don't
know what she wanted. We only have your version of the event."
"Then we have a stalemate," Joshua said.
"Because I'm the only one that can get into her brain."
"No, you're not," Carl said. "You're
just the only one on this planet."
Joshua and I exchanged looks again. Carl being
inscrutable was really beginning to annoy me.
"What are you saying?" I said to Carl.
"We need a second opinion," Carl said.
"Fortunately, we have a whole spaceship full of them."
"I don't want to take Joshua's side in
this," I said, "But if we can't trust Joshua's take on Michelle's
suicide, I don't see how getting another Yherajk's opinion is going to help
anything."
"We don't need a Yherajk for the opinion,"
Carl said. "We need one to act as a conduit. Yherajk can connect into our
nervous systems; that much is obvious, since Joshua looked at Michelle's, and
my memories were downloaded to the entire ship's community. Now we just need it
to go the other way, to let a human look at the memory. And I have just the
Yherajk to do it."
The light suddenly went on in my head.
"Gwedif," I said.
"Bingo," Carl said. "He's done it
before, and, as it happens, is the only Yherajk around that wasn't one of
Joshua's parents. As far as these things go, he's the most objective
party."
"I'm not following any of this anymore,"
Miranda said.
"I'll explain it later," I said.
"Promise."
"I'm waiting to hear how you're going to get an
alien through security at Pomona Valley Hospital," Joshua said.
"We're fresh out of dog bodies."
"If Mohammed can't go to the mountain, the
mountain will go to Mohammed," Carl said. "We can't bring Gwedif to
Michelle. So we'll take Michelle to Gwedif."
"Go to the spaceship?" I asked.
"Of course," Joshua smirked. "That's so
much easier."
"Joshua, it's the only way," Carl said.
"Think about it. Suppose we find that you were in error. That solves one
of our problems. But then we have two other issues to deal with: trying to find
a way you can successfully inhabit Michelle's body, and making sure it's
morally right to do it. We need to confer with the other Yherajk on each of
these. She has to go to the Ionar."
"How do you suggest we get Michelle there?"
Joshua asked. "We won't even be able to get her out of Pomona Valley.
They've got tabloid reporters covering all the exits, Carl. They're going to
know if we try to move Michelle."
"Let me worry about getting Michelle out of the
hospital," Carl said. "You worry about arranging the rest of the
trip."
Joshua sat there for a minute, considering. "All
right," he said, finally. "I still have problems with this, but I'll
get in touch with the Ionar. We'll see what they have to say up there." He
padded off towards Carl's study.
"Where is he going?" Miranda asked.
"To the computer," Carl said. "I set up
an America Online account for him and the Ionar. It's a non-conspicuous way for
them to communicate."
"How does the Ionar sign on?" I asked.
"Well, it's a hell of a long-distance call,"
Carl said.
*****
The e-mail response from the Ionar was brief. You
idiots, it said. You were supposed to solve problems, not make them. Haul her
up here.
*****
Here's how you get one of the most popular actress in
the United States out of a hospital without anyone noticing.
First, you let it leak that your actress is going to
be moved. This is a simple matter of having the appropriate doctor causally
mention the fact to one of the nursing staff. From there it spreads like an
airborne virus. From the staff, it logically goes to the press; despite Mike
Mizuhara's best efforts, some of his staff was in the pocket of the tabloids.
It's not just the custodial staff, either -- you'd be surprised at what a
cardiac surgeon pulling down $300,000 a year will do for an extra thousand
bucks. It was time to let this blatant self-interest work for us.
At 9 pm, an ambulance pulls up to the emergency
entrance of Pomona Valley. Nearly as soon as it pulls up, someone is hustled
into it on a stretcher. The stretcher is effectively blocked from view by a
clutch of burly orderlies and doctors -- Only the briefest of flashes show the
blonde hair that give those watching (and taping) a clue as to who it might be.
The ambulance pulls away, with much slamming of doors, flashing of lights, and
wailing of sirens, followed by a caravan of hastily-gotten-into cars. Two of
these cars are in a slight fender bender as they rush out of the parking lot;
neither driver bothers to stop as they speed after the receding ambulance.
That's the decoy ambulance.
Roughly twenty minutes later, a medical helicopter
screams overhead, dropping dramatically into the Pomona Valley parking lot, as
Pomona Valley has no helipad. The doors to the emergency entrance burst open,
and a stretcher races to the helicopter, orderlies and doctors in a full
sprint. On the way, a woman's arm slips off the stretcher and dangles, her IV
tube fluttering with the speed of the stretcher's journey. As the stretcher
approaches the helicopter, the side doors launch open; in one unbelievably
smooth motion the stretcher is lifted into the helicopter and the doors slammed
shut.
The helicopter is lifting off even as the ducking
orderlies scurry away, its final destination telegrammed, perhaps, by the
lettering on the tail of the copter: Cedars Sinai Medical Center. This time, a
smaller contingent of cars flies out of the parking lot, their drivers fiddling
with their scanners in an attempt to grab the frequency the helicopter is on,
or yammering on cellular phones, trying to contact the editor at the home
office whose job it is to listen to the scanners.
That's the decoy medical helicopter.
The next ambulance ambles in 10 minutes later. This
time around, there's no mad rush; the press has been rousted out of the blinds,
so now Michelle can be taken to her destination safely, securely, and at sane
speeds. Only two orderlies and one doctor accompany the stretcher to the
ambulance. In a few minutes she's in; the doctor confers briefly with the
paramedics, then walks away as they step back into their rig and drive away, no
lights, no sirens, and proceed normally toward the 10 freeway. Only one car,
bearing one smart, experienced reporter, follows. Patience is a virtue -- it
shall be rewarded.
That's the second decoy ambulance.
The real ambulance rolls in, lights flashing but no
siren, as the other ambulance exits. The orderlies and the doctor, heading back
into the hospital, turn around. Inside this ambulance is a man who appears to
be having a stroke; the doctor does a quick assessment as the paramedics unload
the patient, and rushes him through the emergency door. As the door opens on
one side, it opens on the other, and another stretcher pops out and into the
back of the ambulance, just like that. There's only two orderlies this time --
me and Miranda. We go in the ambulance with the stretcher. The paramedics close
the doors behind us.
Mike Mizuhara and Dr. Adams were, of course, adamantly
against moving Michelle. By now they knew she was never coming out of the coma,
and were pressing us to let them do what they could to make her comfortable, to
see out the process that began at their hospital. Dr. Adams in particular was
bitter about my decision to move Michelle; he relented only after I had
promised that he would be able to actively consult with the doctors that were
continuing her care. It was a lie, of course, since the doctors continuing her
care were 50,000 miles in orbit and not doctors in any conventional sense of
the word. But that's not really something I could discuss without a long
explanation, or without being committed to psychiatric observation by Dr.
Adams.
The ambulance pulled away and got on the 10 heading
east. Two miles later it exited, drove behind an Albertson's supermarket and
stopped. That was where the paramedics got out. Their cars were stashed there.
They weren't paramedics; they were out-of-work actors with emergency medical
training. Where Carl found two actors with that combination of talents in less
than a day, I have no earthly idea. That's why he's the boss.
As it was, one of them was hesitant to leave Michelle.
She took the time to check her respirator's function and to make sure we knew
what to do if it malfunctioned. I assured her that we would be fine.
"Ted and I talked up front on the way here,"
she said. "Both of us would be happy to take her all the way to where
she's going. We won't tell a soul. We just want to make sure she gets there in
one piece."
"I believe you, and thanks," I said.
"But that's really not possible."
She sighed and looked at Michelle. "Look at
her," she said. "You know, a week ago, I would have done just about
anything to be where she was. Now, I'd bet she'd do anything to be where I am.
It's kind of funny, isn't it? Funny ironic, not funny ha-ha."
"It is," I said. "What's your
name?"
"Shelia Thompson," she said.
"Shelia, if you don't mind me asking, what are
you and Ted getting out this?"
"I don't know what Ted is getting," she
said. "I never met him before, actually. I'm getting a part on a pilot. I
don't have to audition -- do not pass go, do not collect $200, just go straight
to acting. I've actually read the pilot. It's a medical drama, of all things.
It's not bad. It might even have a chance to get on TV somewhere. It seemed
like a smart move."
"You're not sure now?"
She shrugged. "It feels like I'm walking over
Michelle Beck to do it. It's not what I expected. I hope that doesn't sound
ungrateful."
"It doesn't," I said. "Listen, I never
do this. But do you have an agent?"
"No."
"In a week, give me a call at Lupo Associates. My
name is Tom Stein."
"I will give you a call, but not about
acting," Shelia said. "I want to know to what happens to Michelle.
It's going to be hanging over me until I find out. And if I find out she died,
I'm going to feel partly responsible. So you'll tell me. Fair enough?"
"Fair enough," I said, and shook her hand.
"Try not to worry, Shelia. Michelle's going to be all right. Really."
She smiled a little smile and walked away to her car.
Miranda stayed in the back with Michelle. I got in the
front and got behind the wheel. Joshua was already in the front with me, having
driven over with the actor-paramedics.
"You would think these things would be roomier in
the front," Joshua said. "But they're not. I spent the last hour
squashed down in the footwell. The woman paramedic had to keep her feet under
her."
"I just met her," I said. "She seemed
nice."
"She was," Joshua said. "The other guy,
on the other hand, was a real jerk. Talked about his acting all the way over,
and kept hitting on the woman. I nearly ripped out his throat with my teeth.
Only the fact that he was driving kept me from doing it."
"It's good that you think these things out,"
I said, starting the ambulance.
"Thanks," Joshua said. "One of us has
to."
"What is that supposed to mean?" I said.
"Tom," Joshua said. "If we can't bring
Michelle back, what are you going to do? You can't just take her back to Pomona
Valley, you know. And you can't drop her off anywhere else. And if she dies,
people are going to want to know the circumstances. What are you going to do?
You don't have a backup plan."
"What are you talking about," I said,
turning out of the Albertson's parking lot and towards the 10. "Of course
I have a backup plan."
"Really," Joshua said. "Why don't you
share your backup plan with your studio audience, Tom."
"Sure," I said. "If this doesn't work,
I'll be fresh out of ideas. We'll have failed. The Yherajk will have to go
back. By way of compensation, you can take us back with you."
"I like it," Joshua said. "It's
desperate and half-baked, but with a certain pathetic charm."
"Thanks," I said. "I just thought it
up."
"I'm wondering what Miranda might think of
it," Joshua said.
"Shhhh," I said. "I'm saving it for a
surprise."
We got on the 10 and headed east to the 15, towards
Baker.
*****
"I can't see a damned thing," I said.
"That's the point, Tom," Joshua said.
"if you can't see anything, no one else is going to see anything, either.
Now shut up and turn left......now."
I swerved left onto an unpaved road that I would have
missed if Joshua hadn't have pointed it out. The ambulance bounced as it
slipped into the ruts left behind by years of rancher's trucks.
"Could you try to drive a little more
carefully?" Miranda yelled, from the back. "I don't want to think
what this is trip is doing to Michelle."
"It's not exactly paved road, Miranda," I
shouted back. "We left that world behind about a half-hour ago. I'm going
as carefully as I can."
The ambulance descended as I hit a ditch that wasn't
there two seconds before.
"I think I just trashed the shocks," I said
to Joshua.
"Tom! Carefully!" Miranda yelled.
"Sorry!" I yelled back. "Are we there
yet?" I asked Joshua.
"No," Joshua said.
"Are we there yet?" I said.
"No."
"Are we there yet?"
"No."
"Are we there yet?"
"Yes," Joshua said. "Stop the
car."
I stopped the ambulance.
"Thank God," Miranda said, from the back.
"I can't see anything," I said.
"You've said that before," Joshua said.
"Well, it's still true," I said.
"There's nothing to see," Joshua said.
"They're not here yet."
"When are they getting here?" I asked.
"What time is it?" Joshua asked.
I looked at my watch.
There was a very large whump. The ground rattled. A
wave of dust pelted the ambulance.
"Just after midnight," I said.
"Well, then, they should be here," Joshua
said. "And there they are."
The cube was exactly as Carl had described it --
black, featureless, nondescript in every way except that it had just dropped
out of space into the middle of nowhere.
Miranda stopped her hovering over Michelle long enough
to peer out from the back. "That's our ride?" she said.
"It doesn't look like much, I know," Joshua
said. "But it gets incredible mileage."
"Do we just drive into it?" I asked.
"Yep." Joshua said.
I started the ambulance and inched it forward, cutting
the 50 yards separating it from the cube. Then we were inside.
"When do we leave?" I said.
"In just a minute, I'd expect," Joshua said.
"Here, let me out. I've got to go help pilot this thing."
I opened my door and got out, followed by Joshua.
Joshua went over to the overhanging ledge on the other side of the cube, where
the pilots were; a portion of the ledge descended and allowed him to get on. I
went to the back of the ambulance and opened the doors. Miranda peered out at
me.
I nodded at Michelle. "How is she doing?"
"Fine, I suppose," Miranda said. "She
hasn't moved or done anything since we got in the ambulance, so all things
considered, I guess that's good."
"How are you doing?"
"I'm all right," Miranda said.
"Actually, I think this cube is helping. If it looked like an actual
spaceship, I think I might be freaking out a lot more. How long are we going to
be gone?"
"I don't know," I said. "Carl was gone
less than a day when he went."
"We should have packed a lunch," Miranda
said. "I'm hungry already."
"I've got gum," I said.
"Hey," Miranda said. "Do you hear
that?"
I stopped and listened. Not far away, and getting
closer, was the sound of a car.
"Joshua!" I yelled, moving away from the
ambulance. "We need to leave! Now!"
The side of the cube tore open. A dirty white Escort
shot through the hole, swerving. It was heading directly towards me. I froze,
which was probably not the smartest thing I could have done.
The driver of the Escort hit its brakes just in time
to keep from squashing me like a bug. Then he turned off his engine, undid his
seatbelt, and got out of the car. There was a small grinding sound as the
automatic shoulder belt moved forward.
"Sorry about that," the driver said. "I
didn't expect anyone would be standing right in front of my car."
"What in fuck's name are you doing here," I
said.
"Getting my story," he said. "What's
your excuse?"
It was Van Doren, of course.
Chapter Eighteen
"Joshua," I hollered. "We have to
stop."
Joshua poked his head over the ledge and looked down.
"It's too late," he said. "We're already off."
"Can we throw him out anyway?" I asked.
"Now, there's a thought," Joshua said.
"But the answer is no."
"Pity," I said.
"It's the problem with being a civilized
species," Joshua agreed. "No convenient falls from a great
height."
"Hey," Van Doren said. "That dog is
talking."
Joshua laughed. "You think that's weird, wait
about a half hour. It's going to be a long night, pal." He stepped back
out of sight.
Van Doren turned back to me. "What's going
on?"
"I'm interested in hearing what you think is
going on," I said. "And as long as you're talking, how you managed to
follow us here."
"I got word that you were moving Michelle
today," Van Doren said. "I considered staking out the hospital, but I
decided to stake you out instead. I figured that no matter where Michelle was
going, you'd have to go there, too, sooner or later. You weren't in the office
this morning, so I went to your house, where I saw your car. And waited. At
about four, you and Miranda left your house in your car. What's up with that,
by the way?"
By this time Miranda had made it over to where we
were. "None of your business, creep," she said.
"Sorry," Van Doren said, mildly.
"Professional curiosity."
"I doubt the 'professional' part," Miranda
said.
"Yow. Feisty," Van Doren said.
"Tom," Miranda said. "Don't worry about
kicking him out of this thing. I'm going to rip his teeny little heart out
myself."
"Works for me," I said.
Van Doren looked at us both uncertainly and then
continued. "You two went to Lupo Associates from there, and then spent
about an hour there before heading to Pomona Valley. A couple more hours passed
before you guys had the parade of ambulances."
"Why didn't you fall for it?"
"Because I was following you," Van Doren
said to me. "None of those people rushing out with stretchers looked like
you. Or like her, for that matter. As it was, I just barely saw you when you
did sneak out. That was a pretty tricky operation."
"Not tricky enough, obviously," Miranda
said.
"Well, I'm more motivated than most," Van
Doren said. "I followed your ambulance to that parking lot and then waited
to see what you did next. A couple minutes later you guys got back on the
freeway, and from there it was just a matter of not calling your attention to
me. I've gotten a little better at that since the last time I tailed you,
Tom."
"I still don't see how you followed us out when
we went on the dirt roads," I said. "There was no one else out there
with us. I'd have seen your car."
"I followed you quite a ways back," Van
Doren said. "And I killed my lights."
He pointed to his car. His parking lights and brake
lights were shattered and broken. His headlights were fine, but then he could
just turn those off.
"Nice," I admitted.
"Yeah, well, it'll probably be the last time they
let me use a company car, anyway," Van Doren said. "I just about
wrecked it on these dirt roads. Between that and having this car towed from
when you kidnapped me, Tom, they're not going to give me the keys again."
"You're breaking my heart," I said.
"That's how I followed you here. As to where here
is, and what's going on, I have no clue. I assumed this building was some sort
of weird clinic."
"Building?" Miranda said.
"Didn't you feel the thump, Van Doren?" I
said. "You didn't see this thing before you got to it?"
"I felt a tremor, sure," Van Doren said,
slightly confused. "So? This is southern California. We have tremors all
the time. It didn't feel like it was close by. And no, I didn't see this place.
It's black. I saw your tail lights disappear and I just followed you in."
"It didn't strike you as odd, the way you came
in?" I said.
"I came in the same way you did," Van Doren
said.
"Wow," Miranda said. "You're just totally
clueless, Van Doren."
"Thanks for the vote of confidence," Van
Doren said.
"She doesn't it mean it as an insult," I
said. "She means it literally."
"I'm not following you," Van Doren said.
"Joshua," I called.
"Yo." He poked his head over again.
"I'd like to show our friend here exactly where
we are," I said.
"No problem," Joshua said.
The cube disappeared. The Earth hovered below us, the
moon off to one side.
Jim Van Doren screamed higher than I had ever heard a
grown man scream before.
"I think we have some sedatives back in the
ambulance," Miranda said, after we had Joshua re-tint the cube.
"Nah," I said. "He maintained bladder
control. He'll be fine."
Van Doren leaned on the side of his Escort. For some
reason he had a death grip on his radio antenna. "Holy shit," he
said.
"I remember having that very same reaction
once," I said.
"Are we really in space?" he asked.
"Oh, yes," I said.
"What the hell is going on?" Van Doren
asked.
"Jim, remember that time in my car, when you
asked me to tell you what I was up to?"
"Sort of," Van Doren said. "I'm not
thinking too well at the moment."
"Try," I said. "It'll help."
Van Doren closed his eyes to concentrate. "You
told me that you were doing something with space aliens," he said.
"Right," I said.
"I thought you were just being an asshole,"
he said.
"Just goes to show," I said.
He pointed over to Joshua's ledge. "And the dog
is an alien."
"Mostly. It's sort of a long story," I said.
Van Doren's mind was working furiously now.
"Is....," he began, looked towards the ambulance, and then back at
Miranda and me. "Michelle Beck's an alien, isn't she? Something's happened
to her and now you have to take her back to the mothership?"
Miranda giggled. Van Doren scowled. "I'm
sorry," Miranda said. "I think the word 'mothership' did it to
me."
"Well?" he said, to me. "Is Michelle
Beck an alien?"
"No," I said. "At least, not yet."
"Not yet?" Van Doren said. "What does
that mean? Are they going to assimilate her into their collective?"
Miranda burst out laughing.
"What?" Van Doren was shouting now.
It was a second before Miranda could catch herself.
Then she gently touched Van Doren's arm.
"Jim, you've got to stop watching so much science
fiction," she said. "It's making you talk funny."
"Ha ha ha," Van Doren said, peevishly, and
pulled away. "Look, I'm just trying to figure out what's going on."
I considered Van Doren for a moment, trying to decide
what I was going to do with him. Joking aside, murdering him wasn't an option.
But he now knew more about the existence of the Yherajk than anyone outside of
me, Miranda and Carl, and that could be dangerous to us. I was loyal to Carl
and Joshua, and Miranda was loyal to me, but Van Doren wasn't loyal to any of
us. Certainly not to me. Quite the opposite, in fact, since he in the last few
weeks he'd been doing his damnedest to cut my career out from under me.
Well, I thought. Time to change all of that.
"Jim, why do you work for The Biz?" I asked.
"What?" he said. "What does that have
to do with anything?"
"I'm just wondering," I said. "You make
no bones that it's a shitty little magazine, and that you're doing shitty
little jobs on it. But you're still there. Why?"
"I don't know if you've noticed this, but journalism
is not exactly a rapidly expanding profession," Van Doren said.
"Particularly in Los Angeles, where you basically have to put a gun to
peoples' heads to make them read."
"You could always move," I said.
"What, and miss all this?"
"I'm serious," I said.
"So am I," Van Doren said. "Would you
want to be an agent in Omaha, Tom?"
"No, but that's not where my business is," I
said.
"Well, neither is mine," Van Doren said.
"I write about the entertainment world. Have to be here to do that. I'm
writing for a magazine that's near the ass-end of that world, I admit that. But
you have to start somewhere. Think of it as the journalism equivalent of
working on a straight-to-video flick."
"Why write about entertainment?" I asked.
"Really, who gives a shit about it? It's not really important. It's not
real news. You're just wasting your time and talent, such as it is."
"Nice cheap shot," Van Doren said.
"I try," I said.
"And you're wrong," Van Doren said.
"It's not a waste. You're so stuck in the belly of the beast that you
don't notice it, but our entertainment is the single most successful export
America has."
"Shucks," I said. "And all this time I
thought our most successful export was democracy. Guess that was just another
lie I learned in school. I hear evolution's kind of a crock, too."
"Look," Van Doren said. "Other
countries pass laws requiring that their movie theaters, television networks
and radio stations have to play a certain percentage of home-grown
entertainment. Because if they didn't, Hollywood would wipe it all out. We're
not a world leader because we have nuclear missiles and submarines. We are
because we have Bugs Bunny and the Dukes of Hazzard. Our planet is what
Hollywood has made it."
"Planet Hollywood," I said.
"Catchy."
"I thought you might like it," Van Doren
said.
"But that's a stupid argument," I said.
"The only people who believe that Hollywood sets political agendas are
nuts on the left who are scared of action figures, and nuts on the right who
are scared of nipples."
"Who's talking politics?" Van Doren said.
"We're talking about how people around our world want their world to be.
And the world they want it to be like is the one they see in our films, and in
our TV shows and hear in our music. That's power. Hollywood that's where the
world culture starts. If someone wanted to address the world today, he wouldn't
do it from Washington, or Moscow, or London. He'd do it from Hollywood. That's
why I work in LA, Tom."
"Sure," I said. "And as a bonus, you
get to meet stars."
"Well," Van Doren admitted, "There is
that too."
"Joshua," I said. "You wouldn't happen
to have been listening to this little diatribe, would you?"
"As it happens," Joshua said, from his
perch. "I've been hanging on every word."
"Does it sound familiar to you?"
"A little," Joshua said. "Of course, I
said it better."
"Jim," I said, turning back to Van Doren.
"I have a proposition for you."
"Do you, now," Van Doren said, and leaned back
on his car. "This is going to be good."
"I don't suppose you can guess why I, of all
people, am the one that knows about these aliens."
"It's a stumper, yes," Van Doren said.
"It's because I'm their agent."
"Their what?" Van Doren said.
"I'm their agent," I said. "In one of
those bizarre and strange coincidences, Jim, their outlook on things is
remarkably similar to yours: if you want to get the attention of the world, you
have to go through Hollywood. So they decided to hire an agent. I'm him. As
such, I'm authorized to make deals for them."
"Wow," Van Doren said. "How do you
collect your fee?"
"After this is all done, I get New Zealand,"
I said. "Now, are you going to shut up and let me tell you what I have in
mind?"
"By all means," Van Doren said.
"This offer stands for the next ten minutes.
After that, you're out. No second chances or second thoughts. Are we
clear?"
"Sure," Van Doren said.
"Here's the deal," I said. "You get the
story. Exclusive."
"What story?" Van Doren said. "Your
story? I have that already."
"This story," I said. "The first
contact between humanity and an intelligence from another world. It's the
single most important story in the history of the planet, Jim. And you'll be
the only one who's in on it from the start. The only one who knows the whole
story. Everyone else will have the reaction story. You'll be the one who gets
to tell the world how it happened and what it all means."
"Jesus," Van Doren said, after a minute.
"You don't screw around, do you?"
"Not when it's business, Jim."
"What's the catch?"
"The catch is this: Drop your stories on me and
Michelle. Quit The Biz. And keep your silence until we're ready to make our
debut."
"When is that going to be?"
"I don't know yet," I said. "We're
still working it out. It could be tomorrow, or it could be years. But whatever
it is, not a peep out of you until then. Not even a hint of a peep."
"What happens if I refuse?" Van Doren asked.
"Nothing," I said. "Except that you
won't be able to get off this ship while we're off doing what we're doing. In
fact, you'll be sent back as soon as we get there."
"Without your car," Joshua said. "Have
fun hiking back to the 15."
"What's to stop me from filing a story when I get
back?" Van Doren said.
"Nothing at all," I said. "You can tell
anyone you like. In fact, I encourage you to, since there's probably not a
quicker and easier way for your credibility to get squashed than for you to run
around, saying that Michelle Beck is an alien."
"So she is an alien," Van Doren said.
"Jim," I said. "Stay focused,
here."
"I am focused," he said. "I'm just
trying to make sure I have the story right."
"Then you're in?"
"Are you kidding?" Van Doren said.
"You're offering me the biggest story ever in the universe, and you're
asking me if I want it? Are you that dumb?"
"It's not actually the biggest story ever in the
universe," Joshua said. "Just in this little corner of it."
"Close enough for me," Van Doren said, and
turned back to me. "You've got a deal, Tom."
We shook on it. Chalk one up for our side.
"You all right with this, Joshua?" I asked.
"Well, the only thing I've seen of his is that
piece he wrote about you," Joshua said. "It was kind of lousy."
"I can do better," Van Doren said.
"Lord, I hope so," Joshua said.
"I don't suppose you could tell me now how much this
gig pays," Van Doren said, to me.
"Don't worry about it," Miranda said.
"Tom's easy to score a raise off of."
*****
One of the Yherajk meeting us in the hangar pointed at
Van Doren as the cube melted away. "Who is that?" it asked.
Van Doren pointed back. "What is that?"
"That's what my people normally look like,"
Joshua said.
"Yeeeg," Van Doren said. "I like the
dog suit better."
"This is Jim Van Doren," Joshua said.
"He was a stowaway."
"A stowaway? Arrrgh," The Yherajk said.
"Ye'll be walking the plank come morning, laddie. Arrrgh."
"This is really not what I expected out of an
alien race," Van Doren said to me.
"You get used to it," I said.
The Yherajk slimed his way over to me and extended a
tentacle. "You must be Tom. I am Gwedif."
I took the tentacle. "It's nice to finally meet
you, Gwedif. I've heard a lot about you. I'm sorry we have to meet in these
extreme circumstances."
"Extreme? You have no idea," Gwedif said.
"No one around here has been able to talk about anything else. The air
stinks of shouting. That reminds me." A smell like a wet, mildewed rug
erupted from Gwedif; one of the other Yherajk immediately set off towards the
door. "Now that we have an extra human, we need another set of nose
plugs."
Gwedif moved the tendril to Miranda. "This is
Miranda, I assume," he said.
"Hi," Miranda said. She didn't make an
attempt to shake the proffered tendril. "You'll have to excuse me,"
she said. "This is the first time I've seen one of you in your natural
state."
"Of course," Gwedif said. "I look
pretty ooky. But I'm a really nice guy once you get to know me."
"I'm sure you are," Miranda said.
Gwedif next considered Van Doren. "How did you
happen?" he said.
"I'm a journalist," Van Doren said. "I
was following a story."
"I'd say you caught it," Gwedif remarked.
"What do you think of us aliens so far?"
"You remind me of the headcheese at a
smorgasbord," Van Doren said.
"Is he always like this?" Gwedif said to
Joshua.
"We don't know. He was sort of a last minute
addition," Joshua said.
"Usually he's worse," I said.
"Hmmmmm," Gwedif said. "You know,
headcheese man, you and I are sort of in the same line of work."
"Nuts," Van Doren said, smiling. "And
they promised me I'd have an exclusive on the story."
"I'm sure we can collaborate," Gwedif said.
The noseplug Yherajk had returned with three pairs of
noseplugs. We each fitted them in. Then he joined the other Yherajk at the
ambulance and lowered Michelle's stretcher onto the floor. I went over to her
stretcher and checked the battery on the portable respirator. It was
three-quarters drained.
"We'd better get moving on this thing," I
said.
"What are we doing now, anyway?" Van Doren
wanted to know.
"Nobody tell him anything yet," I said. I
looked at Van Doren. "Sorry, Jim. Hold your horses a couple more
minutes." I looked over to Gwedif. "Jim doesn't know exactly why
we're here. I think that's something that could be useful for what we need to
do."
"Yes, you're right." Gwedif said. "How
about that, headcheese man. You might come in useful after all. We won't
install the plank until tomorrow."
"How long are you going to call me 'headcheese
man'?" Van Doren said.
"Oh, I don't know," Gwedif said. "It
just has such a nice ring to it. Now, follow me, please, all of you. We're
going to the meeting chamber."
The corridors were as low as Carl promised. Van Doren,
the tallest of us, suffered the greatest from the low ceilings and lower
gravity, bumping his head and cursing. Here and there Yherajk crossed our path,
but mostly stayed out of our way as we headed towards the meeting chamber.
Gwedif pulled up to me as we walked. "I wish we
had more time," he said. "This happened with Carl, too. Barely time
for introductions, and then off to decide the fate of our peoples. If nothing
else, we've learned that you humans thrive on crisis."
"Anything worth doing is worth doing at a fevered
pitch," I said.
"I don't know about that," Gwedif said.
"I think the first place I'll go when I visit your planet -- really visit
your planet, I mean, not that little trip I took earlier -- I think I'll go
visit a monastery. Those people seem to have the right idea. Slow, meditative
spiritual contemplation."
"I think most of the monasteries these days are
either making chant CDs or boutique wines," I said.
"Really?" Gwedif said. "Well, hell.
What is it with you people, anyway?"
Before I could answer, we got to the meeting chamber.
Gwedif touched the door, and we went inside.
Inside, a double-tiered low riser had been
constructed, on which lay several Yherajk. I suspected the tier was for our
benefit, not the Yherajk's, so that we could see who we were speaking to. The
Yherajk who brought Michelle's stretcher in set the wheel locks and left. I
went and stood next to Michelle. Miranda joined me; Joshua walked over to one
side and sat, his eyes closed. Van Doren stood between Joshua and the
stretcher, looking lost.
"Will you be speaking for your group?" Gwedif
asked me.
"I will," I said.
"Very well. Today's meeting is a little smaller
than the one Carl endured, for which your nostrils will no doubt be thankful
for," Gwedif said to us all. "Rather than a shipwide meeting, we have
convened the ship's senior officers. Tom, you may be familiar with our ientcio
--" The Yherajk on the far left raised a tendril -- "who, of all
Yherajk, is our leader."
"I have indeed heard him spoken of, in the
highest terms," I said. "I hope he is well at this moment in the
journey."
"Oooh, nice," Gwedif said. "You must
have paid attention to whatever Carl told you. The ientcio returns your
respects and welcomes you to the ship." Gwedif then introduced the rest of
the officer complement, about twenty in all. I didn't bother trying to remember
them all; I concentrated on Gwedif and the ientcio.
"Joshua has already given us his version of your
request, and his issues with it." Gwedif said.
"When did he do that?" I said.
"Just now," Joshua said, and turned to me.
"I used High Speech, Tom. One nicely pungent fart gets it all
across."
"I'm glad my noseplugs were in," I said.
"You don't know how true that is," Joshua
said.
"Now that Joshua has given his report, the
ientcio would like to hear your request from you, and hopes you will be willing
to answer some questions as well," Gwedif said.
"Of course." I said.
"Please begin whenever you are ready."
"All right," I said. I closed my eyes, said
a little prayer to whomever might be listening, and opened my eyes. Then I
began.
*****
"The human you see in this stretcher is named
Michelle Beck," I said, motioning to Michelle. "I was her agent, and
also her friend. We were probably each other's best friends, though I don't
think either of us realized it. As her agent, I helped to make her one of the
most well-known actresses in Hollywood -- people everywhere recognize her face.
"A few days ago, Michelle suffered severe and
irreversible brain damage due to lack of oxygen to her brain. My friend is now
for all purposes dead. Her body is being kept alive through the use of this
respirator, but it will not sustain her body for much longer. Soon her body
will be as dead as her mind already is.
"I mourn the passing of my friend, more than I
can express. As I said, I don't think I appreciated what she meant to me when
she was alive. Michelle was a good person -- good in heart and in intention,
which I think counts for something. I could be wrong. But I think it does.
"As much as I mourn Michelle, I see an
opportunity in her passing, and opportunity that I think gives her death, which
was as banal and meaningless as any death could be, some resonance. I have been
asked by Carl Lupo to find a way to introduce the Yherajk to humanity, so that
humanity can accept you as the friendly race you are, rather than for the
terrifying creatures you appear to be.
"It occurs to me that one way to this -- perhaps
the best way -- is to have Joshua inhabit Michelle's body. To be Michelle.
Michelle is already known around the world. That much of the battle is already
fought. What we can do now is to raise Michelle's profile even further, and
give her a worldwide platform to be the spokesperson for the Yherajk. She can
be the most effective bridge between our two peoples -- someone that humans
know and who is not only non-threatening, but the focus of admiration. She can
be the human face of an inhuman race -- the Trojan horse, if you will, that
gets the Yherajk through the gate of humanity's fears.
"Joshua has several issues with inhabiting the
body. The most objectionable of these has to do with her manner of death -- not
the actual moment itself, but the events leading up to it. Before any other
issues can be raised, this one must be dealt with. We have to have a clear
accounting of her death. That being the case, I'm asking that a Yherajk other
than Joshua connect to Michelle's mind, and acting as a conduit, send the
memory into the brain of a human. This would allow us to see more perfectly
what Michelle was thinking in those last moments.
"Without this information, this opportunity for
our peoples could be gone forever. And, as importantly for me, my friend, who I
did not value as I should have in life, will be gone as well."
I bowed my head, and put my hand over my eyes. I
didn't mean to choke myself up as much as I did. But saying how much someone
means to you jackhammers into your head the fact of whether you mean it or not.
I had meant it. I didn't realize how much.
"That was a very noble speech," Gwedif said,
after a minute. "But we must hurry. Are you ready to answer
questions?"
"Yes," I said, clearing my throat. "I'm
ready."
"Very well. The ientcio will speak for the
officers, and I of course will speak for him."
"All right."
"The ientcio wants to know what you think
happened in those last minutes of your friend's life."
"If the ientcio will allow it," I said,
"I'd rather hold off on that question, for reasons that I'll get into in
just a minute. But I can say that, being a human, I suspect that the situation
was not as clear-cut as Joshua saw it. Joshua was looking at Michelle's
actions, but perhaps not her state of mind."
"What gives you the right to make this decision
for your friend?"
"She gave me the right, if she were incapacitated
such as she is, to make medical decisions for her. I believe this qualifies me
to take this action."
"What will you do if we refuse your request, or
if the results are such that Joshua is not able to inhabit your friend's
body?"
"I don't know," I said. "I don't really
have a backup plan."
"That's not very wise," Gwedif said.
"No, it's not," I agreed. "But giving
her a chance here is better than her having no chance back on Earth."
"You realize that if Joshua inhabits your
friend's body, your friend will still be dead."
"I understand that. At the same time, Joshua has
told me that he has retained the memories and some of the personality traits of
Ralph, the dog whose body he inhabited, and those traits are still with him
even now. My hope would be that some of who Michelle was might still remain
after Joshua inhabits her body. However, even if doesn't work out that way,
from the practical purposes of having Joshua inhabit Michelle's body, it won't
matter."
"It occurs to the ientcio that you might be
proposing having Joshua inhabit your friend's body merely out of
convenience."
I blinked. "I'm not sure I follow that," I
said.
"You said that this course of action may be the
best way to introduce the Yherajk to humanity."
"Right," I said.
"What are some other courses of action?"
"I didn't come up with any others that were as
good as this one, I'm afraid," I said.
"That's what the ientcio means," Gwedif
said. "This is, you'll admit, a rather extreme course, and your pressing
for it may simply be a way to keep you from admitting that you couldn't figure
out a more conventional or at least sane way of introducing the Yherajk to your
people. How is the memory of your friend served well by what might be your
instinct to save your own skin?"
I flushed. "I wouldn't deny that having Joshua in
Michelle's body would keep me from having to admit total defeat," I said.
"But with all due respect to the ientcio, if he or the rest of you had
wanted to do this conventionally, you should have just dropped a cube down on
the steps of the White House and gone in for the tour. This is an extreme
course, yes. But it will give a Yherajk a chance to live as a human, to be a
human. Joshua has human memories, but that's not enough. It's like watching a
documentary of a war. You can watch it a thousand times, but you still can't
say you've fought. If you want to understand humans, you have to be one. Here's
a chance."
"Wouldn't her family know that your friend has
changed?"
"She has no family," I said. "The only
person who would have been close enough to note the change would have been me.
And maybe her hairdresser. I don't know."
"You say that a Yherajk could send the memory to
another human being, so they might see it. Which Yherajk? Which human?"
"The Yherajk would be Gwedif," I said.
"He's worked with humans before, and he's the only Yherajk on the ship who
didn't parent Joshua, so that makes him more impartial than any other Yherajk
might be. As for the human, I had originally thought I could do it, but I'm
biased towards my argument. So it would have to have been Miranda. Miranda is
morally opposed to the idea of Joshua inhabiting Michelle's body, but I trust
her not to let her own opinion color what she would experience in the memory.
But now, as it turns out, we've happened to pick up someone who is totally
unbiased, since he doesn't know the specifics of Michelle's event. So the human
who sees the memory should be Jim Van Doren."
"What?" Van Doren said.
"You're the man," I said, "Who gets to
read Michelle Beck's mind."
"How do I do that?" Van Doren said.
"I'm going to stick tendrils into your
skull," Gwedif said.
"Is it going to hurt?"
"Not if you're nice to me from now on,"
Gwedif said, sweetly.
"Tom, you never told me that I was going to get
probed," Van Doren said.
"It's not really a probe," I said.
"Come on, Jim. You wanted to get the story straight, anyway."
"Is this seriously necessary?" Van Doren
said.
"Yes, it is," I said. "Honestly. What
you experience now could change the course of the world."
"It sounds so hackneyed when you put it that
way," Van Doren said.
"It's hackneyed, but it's true," I said.
Van Doren turned to Gwedif. "Promise me my brain
isn't going to end up in a jar," he said.
"It will stay safe and snug in your chubby little
skull," Gwedif said. "I promise. You'll be fine."
"God, what have I gotten myself into," Van
Doren said. "All right. Fine. Whatever."
"The ientcio has a question for Jim Van
Doren," Gwedif said.
"Okay," Van Doren said. "What?"
"Tom feels it would be appropriate for Joshua to
inhabit Michelle Beck's body. Miranda does not. The ientcio wishes to know what
you think about Joshua inhabiting this human body."
"Well, it would take her off my list of people to
date," Van Doren said. "Other than that, I don't know."
"The senior officers will now debate the issue
and render a decision," Gwedif said. "You may notice the room getting
smellier for a few minutes."
It did. By the time they were finished, my eyes were
watering. Miranda had to sit down. Van Doren was standing his ground, but just
barely.
"The senior officers have decided to allow me to
probe Michelle and transmit the memories to Jim Van Doren," Gwedif said.
"Good," I said. "Another minute of
discussion and my sinus cavities would have imploded."
"It was not a unanimous vote," Gwedif said.
"There was a lot of shouting."
"What do I do now?" Van Doren wanted to
know.
Gwedif had him sit next to the stretcher and explained
Van Doren's options -- Gwedif could go through his nose, which was the most
efficient way, but the most uncomfortable, or through the ears, which was less
efficient but least uncomfortable. Van Doren chose the ears.
"What am I going to be looking at?" Van
Doren asked me, as Gwedif was preparing Michelle.
"You're going to be looking at the last moments
of her life," I said. "The ones just before she goes into the
coma."
"What am I looking for?"
"Don't look for anything," I said.
"That's the whole point of you doing this: you don't know what to look
for. Just let us know what you're experiencing."
"Will I be able to tell you as it happens?"
"How should I know?" I said. "I've
never done this before, either."
"Man, your alien dog was right," Van Doren
said. "This is the weirdest night of my life."
Gwedif slopped onto his ears before he could say
another word.
*****
"What are you seeing?" I asked Van Doren.
"I'm seeing your ugly face, Tom," Van Doren
said.
"Try closing your eyes," I suggested.
Van Doren did. "This is so very odd," he
said, finally. "I'm seeing some woman pouring goop over my face. I'm
feeling the goop. What is this stuff?"
"Try sensing it for yourself," Gwedif
suggested. "Just like you would your own memory."
Silence for a moment.
"It's latex," Van Doren said. "I'm
getting a latex mask done for this stupid movie I'm doing. The woman who's
putting the mask on me is a real bitch. A minute ago she tried to make Miranda
leave. Miranda stood up to her, and she's talking to her now about something
else."
Silence for another moment.
"Now the woman is sticking straws up my
nose," Van Doren said. "It hurts, the way she's doing it, but I don't
say anything because I just want to get this over with. I'm more depressed than
I've ever been in my life. Hmmm. That's odd."
"What's odd?" I say.
"The way Michelle is experiencing that," Van
Doren said. "She is depressed. Really, really depressed. But she's trying
to make herself more depressed than she is."
"Why?" I ask.
"I don't know....." Van Doren trailed off
for a minute. Then he said, "I think it's because she feels stupid. The
audition earlier in the day went incredibly badly because she had prepared the
wrong scene and because she fainted because of her treatment, whatever that
means. She knows these things are her fault, and they were stupid little
things. I think she'd rather be depressed than feel stupid. Yes, that's exactly
what it is."
Silence again.
"My face is completely covered now. Miranda is
telling me she has to go. I don't want her to go, because I don't want to be
left alone. But I can hear the pain in her voice. I think she ate a bad
burrito. I feel sorry for her; my lunch was fine. I let her go.
"Now I'm just lying here, thinking, trying to
make myself more depressed. But it's not working. I'm replaying the earlier
audition in my head and I'm looking stupider each time I replay the memory. And
now, to top it all off, I'm sitting in Pomona with straws sticking out of my
nose, for a part that I got because someone wanted to fuck me a couple years
back. I'm disgusted with myself. I yank out the straws, and fling them away.
I'll just sit here and die with goo on my face."
There it was.
I looked at Joshua, who was sitting there, a sad
doggie look on his face. He was right. He wasn't happy about it, but he was. I
bit the inside of my cheek until it bled. I was in a jumble of emotions. Sad
for Michelle, who chose a stupid, stupid way to end her life. Angry at myself
for believing that Michelle couldn't, wouldn't try to kill herself, and for
taking her body so far away from where it should be. Fearful, because now I
didn't know what I was going to about Michelle. Or myself. Where could I take
her to die? To finally die?
Miranda was sobbing quietly next to me. I reached over
to her and held her. All she had to deal with was simple grief. I almost envied
her. Which made me feel worse.
"Oh, this is stupid," Van Doren said.
"What?" I said.
"This is stupid," Van Doren repeated.
"Now I can't breathe. I try exhaling really hard to blow the latex out of
my nose but the goo keeps dripping down. I need those stupid straws. Now I'm
going to have to get up and crawl around to find those damned things. Without
messing up my mask, if possible, so I don't have to do this ever again. I try
to get up out of my chair while keeping my face in the same position. I get up
and start walking around, feeling for things. I bump into the side of
something. I trip. Now I'm trying to keep my balance. It's not working. I crash
into something backwards. I can hear and feel stuff falling behind me. Now
nothing's making sense -- there's a flash of brightness and a ringing in my
ears. I fall down. I realize I'm bleeding from the back of my head. Something must
have dropped on my head. I'm dizzy. I can't get up. I feel sleepy. I guess I
really am going to die. This really sucks."
Chapter Nineteen
The response was immediate. Seconds after Van Doren's
recounting of Michelle's last memory, the room erupted in a smell that can
truly only be described as utterly fucking rank.
Somewhere in the smell processing centers of my brain,
my olfactory nerves handed in their resignations; Miranda moaned, turned away,
and threw up. Van Doren, still connected to Gwedif, appeared unaffected. Later
I found out Gwedif had suppressed his olfactory sense. Lucky bastard.
"Uh oh," Joshua said. "Now we've done
it."
I leaned over Miranda and tried to help her.
"Jesus, Joshua," is said, perhaps redundantly. "What's
happening?"
"Remember what Gwedif said about the vote not
being unanimous?" Joshua asked.
"Yeah," I said. "So?"
"Well, actually, it was. The senior officers were
all against having Gwedif probe Michelle. All of them."
"What? So why did we go ahead?" I said.
Gwedif piped in. "The ientcio overruled them,
Tom. On the grounds that it was important to see how accurate Joshua's
interpretation of the event was, not because of your arguments. He said he was
confident that Joshua's version was the correct one, and that it would only be
polite to fulfill your request, as you are our friend and partner."
"He did this as a favor?" I was suddenly and
uncontrollably outraged. "Hey, fuck him. And fuck you for going along with
it, Gwedif. I'm not interested in favors for the sake of appearances. I'm
trying to offer your fucking people what you said you want."
"Tom, please," Gwedif said. He voice sounded
strained; I wondered how much of it was actual strain he was allowing me to
hear, and how much was play acting, since the voice was an artificial way for
him to communicate. "You don't know what's been going on around
here."
"Enlighten me," I said.
"The senior officers aren't the only ones who are
opposed to the idea of allowing Joshua to take control of your friend's body.
Nearly everyone on the ship is. The taboo against inhabiting a thinking being
against its will is extremely strong for Yherajk. It's entrenched in our
culture in ways you can't appreciate."
"It's worth about five or six of the Ten
Commandments," Joshua said.
"That's a flip way of putting, but yes,"
Gwedif agreed. "And now you come and want us to throw aside all that
entrenched thought, Tom. Frankly, there's a large group of Yherajk on this ship
who think your request may be proof that humans aren't ethically developed
enough for us to be involved with at all. They want to call this all off."
"But it's not as if Michelle is alive," I
said. "She's brain dead. Dead."
"We don't have brains, Tom," Gwedif said.
"'Brain dead' is not a concept that has a direct translation. It doesn't
come across to us. For Yherajk, there is body death, which doesn't necessarily
mean the death of the personality. And there's soul death, which doesn't
necessarily mean the death of the body. But if a Yherajk inhabits the body of
another Yherajk, its because he's caused the soul death of the other. Murder,
Tom. This looks and feels like murder to us."
"But she's gone," I said, almost
plaintively.
"It's a distinction without difference,"
Gwedif said, quietly. "At least, for most of us. That's why the ientcio
had to say that he was being polite."
"Huh?" I said.
"Christ, Tom, you can be dense sometimes,"
Joshua said, irritably. "The only way that the ientcio could get the rest
of the senior officers to go along was by saying that we ought to honor your
request for the sake of politeness. The senior officers went along with it
because they had expected my version of the events to play out. Now that it
didn't they've got a whole new thing to think about. And you've got your foot
in the proverbial door."
I took a minute to let what Joshua said sink in.
"Wow," I said, finally. "They must not be very happy with you at
the moment, Joshua."
"They're not," Joshua said. "Screw 'em.
They were being provincial about it."
"But you were against it, too," I reminded
him.
"Sure," Joshua said. "I'm still not
entirely thrilled about the idea, to tell you the truth. But now I know that
Michelle didn't really want to die. That helps. And also, you're right. This
would probably be the best way for the Yherajk to meet humanity."
"I'm glad you've come around," I said.
"Don't get cocky," Joshua said. His tongue
rolled out of his doggy mouth.
"What happens now?" I asked Gwedif.
"Now we argue," Gwedif said. "We have
to see if the senior officers can wrap their minds around the concept of human
death. Once we've done that, we might get them to see the wisdom of having
Joshua inhabit this body. It could take some time."
"Hope you brought a good book with you,"
Joshua said.
Miranda, who had been slumped at my side, moved.
"Do we need to be here for this?" she said. "If they yell
anymore, I may have to barf up a lung."
"I'm sorry," Gwedif said. "You're
right. No, you don't have to be here. This is something the officers will have
to hash out for themselves. I can take you back to your car, if you like."
"I have to pee," Van Doren said, coming out
of his daze. Gwedif disconnected; Van Doren's nose immediately scrunched up in
disgust.
"I thought I told you to go before we left,"
Joshua said. "Now you're just going to have to hold it."
"Really?" Van Doren said.
"No, not really," Joshua said. "Hmmmm.
We don't really have bathrooms, though. Let's go see if we can go find you a
secluded corner or something."
Joshua and Van Doren went off to find a bathroom
substitute; Gwedif, Miranda and I headed back to the ambulance. Miranda opened
the back and crawled onto the stretcher there. Gwedif took his leave of us,
promising news as soon as it happened.
I got into the back of the ambulance with Miranda and
started rummaging around. "I thought I saw water around here
somewhere," I said. "Though it might have been plasma. I'm not
sure."
"If you find it, give me some," Miranda
said. "I've got the great taste of vomit in my mouth and I want it
out."
"Water or plasma?" I asked.
"At this point I really don't care," she
said. She rolled on her back and covered her eyes with her arm. "God. What
a bizarre day."
"So what do you think of the Yherajk?" I
said. "Everything you ever wanted in an alien civilization and more?"
"They're fascinating," Miranda said,
languidly. "An entire people, amazingly technologically and ethically
advanced, all in desperate need of Dr. Scholl's foot deodorizers. Where's that
water?"
"Here," I said, handing her the bottle I
found. "This is clear, at the very least."
"Good enough," she said. She propped herself
up on her elbow and took a slug. Then she offered the bottle to me. "Want
some?"
"What, after you put your vomit-coated mouth on
it? I don't think so," I said. "Besides, I don't know where you've
been."
"Yes you do."
"Well, over the last twenty four hours or so,
yes," I said. "But before that, it's all one big, scary, dangerous
blank. Twenty seven years worth of blank. Yikes."
"You're silly," Miranda said. "All my
time is spent at work. When I'm not at work, I'm at home. No mystery
there." She patted the stretcher. "Come take a nap with me."
"I think I should stay awake," I said.
"Gwedif might come back."
"Tom, it smelled so bad in there that I threw
up," Miranda said. "I think it will be a while."
"There's not enough room on that stretcher for
both of us," I said.
"Don't be a baby," Miranda said. "I
don't bite."
"I'm bitterly disappointed to hear that."
"Get me sometime when I'm not so tired,"
Miranda said.
I maneuvered onto the stretcher.
"See," Miranda said. "That wasn't so
bad."
"I've got a metal rail in my back," I said.
"It builds character," Miranda said.
"Just what I need now," I said.
"Character. Oh, great. I've got the extra arm."
"What?" Miranda said.
"When two people are in the same bed together,
there's always an arm that gets in the way. It's this one."
"We're not in bed," Miranda said.
"We're in a stretcher."
"Same concept," I said. "Even more so,
in fact."
"Well, move it."
"Where?"
"Here."
"Here? That doesn't help."
"Here, then."
"If I keep it here, my entire arm will fall
asleep. Ouch. No."
"You are a baby," Miranda. "How about here?"
"Wow," I said. "That is comfortable.
How did you do that?"
"Hush," Miranda said. "I should have
some secrets."
We were asleep in seconds.
*****
We woke when Van Doren pulled open the doors of the
ambulance. "Rise and shine, sleepy heads," he said, rather too
cheerily.
Miranda grabbed at the water bottle and chucked it
half-heartedly at Van Doren. "Die screaming," she said.
"Remind me not to be around you in the
morning," Van Doren said.
"I don't think you'll need to worry about that
one," Miranda said.
"Sorry to wake you guys up, but the senior
officers have come to a decision and they want you guys to come," Van
Doren said.
"A decision?" I said. "How long have we
been asleep?"
"About six hours," Van Doren said.
"Six hours? Jesus, Jim," I struggled to get
up without putting an elbow into Miranda. "Michelle's portable respirator
only had a quarter charge in it."
"Relax," Van Doren said. "They
recharged the battery."
"How did they do that?" I asked.
"These people use their technology to travel
trillions of miles, and you ask how they can recharge a battery," Van
Doren said. "Sometimes you're just not too bright."
"What have you been doing all this time?"
Miranda asked Van Doren.
Van Doren puffed himself up, mock pridefully.
"While you two were wasting time sleeping, I wandered around this place.
Not bad. Although I have to say if we ever plan any joint human-Yherajk
spaceship, they're going to have to come up with taller passageways. The top of
my head is bruised. Enough chatter. I was sent to get you. They'll be annoyed
with me if I show up by myself."
"Go on without me," Miranda said. "I'll
just stay here and nap a little longer."
"No can do," Van Doren said. "They
specifically asked for you to come, Miranda."
Miranda sat up when she heard this. "Why?"
"Do I look like I can interpret their smell
language?" Van Doren said. "They didn't give me reasons. They just
asked for both of you. Now, as Tom once said to me, less talk. More walk. Get
up."
When we got to the meeting room, it was much less
stench-filled than when we left it. Still, the residue of the hours-long debate
wafted in the air of the room, like the echoes after a rally; it smelled like
the lion cage at the zoo after a particularly large meal had been consumed.
"Tom, Miranda, Jim," Gwedif said, as we
entered. "Welcome back."
"Thank you, Gwedif," I said. "It smells
much better in here now."
"It got worse before it got better," Gwedif
confided. "At some points it was so thick in here that we had to stop to
clear the air."
"We use that expression, too," I said.
"Yes, but you don't mean it literally,"
Gwedif said.
Joshua, who had been conferring with one of the
Yherajk, trotted over and spoke to Gwedif. "Got the last-minute objection
ironed out," he said. "We're ready."
"Very well," Gwedif said. "Should you
speak or should I?"
"It's your show, big man," Joshua said.
"Far be it from me to steal your thunder."
"All right, then," Gwedif said, and wafted
out a not-too-obnoxious odor. The Yherajk on the risers, who had been clustered
in groups, broke out of the groups and arrayed themselves in their formal
positions. When they had gotten to their places, Gwedif spoke to us.
"The ientcio wishes me to inform you that after
much debate, the senior officers have decided, at this juncture, to withdraw
all opposition on moral ground to Joshua's inhabitation of your friend's
body," he said. "Be aware that this does not mean that the senior
officers have fully resolved the overarching philosophical and ethical issues
at hand. Far from it, in fact. Be that as it may, the senior officers have come
to agree that what is moral and ethical for Yherajk may not have an exact
analogue for humanity, and that this is likely to be one of those issues where
the analogue does not exist. If nothing else comes of this, you may at least
have the consolation that you've introduced a new philosophical issue for the
Yherajk to argue about for at least a century or two."
"I didn't mean to cause trouble," I said,
looking at the Yherajk that I assumed was the ientcio. "You have to
believe that I meant well."
"The ientcio says he understands that you humans
have a phrase -- 'The road to Hell is paved with good intentions.' He suggests
that this may be a case where that phrase might apply."
"Possibly," I said. "But we also have
another phrase, 'You have to go through Hell before you get to Heaven.' It
might also apply."
"The ientcio agrees that it might indeed,"
Gwedif said.
"I can't believe you just quoted a Steve Miller
tune to the leader of an alien race," Van Doren, standing next to me,
muttered under his breath.
"Shut up," I muttered back. "It
worked."
"With the ethical issues in this case tabled at
least for the moment, we have one final issue to confront," Gwedif said.
"But there is a complication. It involves one of you."
"Which one?" I asked.
"Before I can answer that, I have to request
something," Gwedif said. "We have to ask something of one of you.
That person must answer a question, and that answer must be truthful, arrived
at without coercion from the other two of you. There's a number of ways that we
could do this, but the most convenient would simply be that the one of you
asked the question to answer it without conferring with others."
"How would you do that?" I asked.
"We'd ask the other two of you to step away and
turn around."
"Kind of low-tech, isn't it?" Van Doren
asked.
"You'd prefer electrodes or something?"
Gwedif said, breaking formality for just a second.
"Well, no," Van Doren admitted.
"Then I suggest we do it my way," Gwedif
said. "Will you all agree to this?"
We all nodded our assent.
"The person is Miranda," Gwedif said.
"Crap," Miranda sighed. "It
figures."
"Tom, Jim, please turn around and step
back," Gwedif said. "Please listen, but do nothing else."
We did as we were told.
"Now, Miranda," we heard Gwedif said.
"As I'm sure you know, your friend Michelle's mind is severely damaged.
Even if Joshua were to attempt to inhabit the body, he would not be able to
control it, because of the severity of the brain damage."
"I understand that," I heard Miranda say.
"Normally, this would be the end of the
issue," Gwedif said. "But Joshua has suggested another avenue that we
have never explored. Simply put, it involves removing Michelle's remaining
personal memories, then replacing the damaged brain, and using a template of
another, similar brain to control Michelle's body."
"My brain," Miranda said.
"That's right," Gwedif said. "By
examining how your brain functions and handles body operation, it's possible
that Joshua might be able to train his own body to mimic your total brain
function, and then use those functions to handle Michelle."
"Will that really work?" Miranda asked.
"We don't know. There are several issues that
complicate matters. The first, of course, is whether Joshua can successfully
map your brain at all, well enough to have that map control a human body. The
second issue is whether the way your brain handles your body is at all similar
to the way Michelle's brain handled hers. There are bound to be subtle
differences, and possibly some that are not so subtle. The advantage would be that
it would help give Joshua an even better idea of what it is to be human. It's
also the only idea we've come up with that has a chance, however small, of
succeeding."
"Why can't you use Tom's brain or Jim's brain as
a model?" Miranda asked. "They're human, too."
"Yes, but they're men," Gwedif said.
"On the level of bodily function, this presents obvious problems, since
men and women are physically sexually differentiated. Tom's brain or Jim's
brain aren't prepared, for example, to handle something like menstruation."
"There's a comment that works on a whole bunch of
levels," Miranda said.
"I'll bet," Gwedif said. "Beyond the
physical issues, men and women also have different cognitive structure to their
brains -- they use different parts of their brains to handle the same tasks.
They're different enough that it would just make sense to use a woman's brain
if we can. In a way, it's very lucky that you found out about Joshua; otherwise
the chances of success for this idea would be even lower than they already
are."
"How would you make a template of my brain?"
Miranda asked. "Would you do what you did with Jim?"
"It's going to be quite a bit more involved than
that, I'm afraid," Gwedif said. "Joshua would literally have to go
swimming in your brain, examining each part of it, discovering how it functions
and how it relates to every other part. He did this to some extent with Ralph,
the dog whose body he inhabited, but in that case he had a couple of weeks to
do it, and it was a fairly organic process. This will be much quicker and more
invasive. There is some potential for injury on your part. We feel that it is
small, but we would be remiss not to bring it up."
"What happens to Michelle's brain?" Miranda
said. "I mean, the one that's in there right now?"
"I suppose we'd get rid of it," Gwedif said.
"It serves no further purpose at that point. It's already terribly
damaged, and if we can't get this to work, your friend Michelle will be dead
regardless."
"That's terrible," Miranda said, and I could
hear a trace of bitterness in her voice. "She deserves better than to have
her brain, or any part of her, just thrown in the trash. Any of us do."
"I understand," Gwedif said. "And we're
all very aware of your opposition to having Joshua inhabit the body. That's why
we need to ask you, without input from Tom or Jim, whether you would do this.
You will possibly be risking your own life and your own brain for something
that is not likely to work. If it does not, your friend will certainly die. If
it does, your friend is still dead and another person will have taken her
place. This is your decision, Miranda. It can be made by no one but you."
I suddenly felt my hand taken up by Miranda's.
"It's funny," she said. "I understand why you don't want me to
ask Tom or Jim about it. I know how much this means to Tom. I don't know what
it means to Jim, but if I had to guess, I'd say that he'd agree with Tom. But I
think that either of them would tell me to make up my own mind. I'm sure of it,
in fact."
I squeezed Miranda's hand fiercely. She squeezed it
back briefly, and then let it go.
"I have a few more questions," Miranda said.
"Of course," Gwedif said.
"If Joshua goes into my brain, will he be making
a copy of me?"
"I'll answer that," I heard Joshua said.
"Miranda, no. I don't have any interest in things like your memories, just
the way your brain handles your body."
"But who I am isn't just my memories, it's how I
see the world," Miranda said. "Part of that's got to be how my brain
works."
"Well, yes," Joshua said. "But,
remember that your brain pattern is going to be overlaid onto my personality as
it is now, and that Michelle's memories will also be in a mix. The end result
is going to be something that's part you, part me, and part Michelle. And part
Ralph the dog, now that I think about it. It's going to be a wild time inside
that skull, let me tell you."
"How much of Michelle is going to be in
there?" Miranda asked.
"I haven't decided yet," Joshua said.
"I have to see what works and what doesn't."
"You have to promise me that you have as much of
Michelle in there as possible," Miranda said. "And not just memories,
Joshua. Anything of her that can be salvaged."
"I don't know if I can do that," Joshua
said. "It may make it more difficult to inhabit the body."
"I don't care," Miranda said. "If you
need me to do this, you have to live with my conditions. That's my condition.
You and I don't belong in that body, Joshua. She does. I want as much of her in
there as can be there. Or we have no deal."
"You understand that what you're asking may put
you yourself at additional risk," Gwedif said. "Joshua will have to
spend more time integrating your brain with what remains of her brain. The
longer he has to be in your brain, the more dangerous it is for you."
"I figured as much," Miranda said. "But
it's important to me. And it's the only way I'll do it."
"Are you sure?" Joshua asked.
"I am," Miranda said.
"All right," Joshua said. "I'll do it
your way."
"Then I'll do it," Miranda.
It was only after I relaxed that I realized I was
tense. I turned around.
"When do we start?" Miranda asked Joshua
"As soon as you're ready," Joshua said.
"You might want to have that extra stretcher from the ambulance to rest
on, though. It's going to be a long, drawn out process."
"I'll make arrangements," Gwedif said, and
slid away to do so. Joshua stepped back to the risers, apparently to confer
with the senior officers. I went to Miranda, who stood there, looking drained.
"You're a star," I told her.
She smiled wanly. "I bet you say that to all the
girls," she said.
"Sure," I said. "But I really mean it
this time."
Miranda laughed a little, and then rested her head on
my shoulder and cried just a little bit as well. Van Doren, who had been
watching us, decided this was a good time to stare at a far wall. "Oh,
Tom," Miranda said, finally. "I don't have the slightest idea what
I'm doing."
"You'll be fine," I said. "You'll be
just fine. I'll stay with you, if you want."
"And have you see me with aliens digging into my
skull?" Miranda smiled more widely and wiped her eyes, clearing away the
film of tears. "I don't think so, Tom. I don't think we're at that point
in our relationship yet."
"I guess that's true," I said. "Most
couples would save the alien probe scene until at least the tenth anniversary.
You know, to add some zip to a stale relationship. We're just way ahead on that
curve."
Miranda placed her hand on my cheek. "Tom,"
she said, not unkindly. "Right now, that's nowhere as funny as you think
it is."
*****
Miranda, Michelle and Joshua wheeled away towards the
Yherajk medical area, shapeless Yherjak pooling on the sides of the stretchers,
pulling it along. Van Doren and I looked at each other. We had no idea what to
do with ourselves now. Gwedif, who remained with us, offered a full tour. I
accepted, and Van Doren tagged along, apparently excited at the idea of actually
understanding what it was he was looking at this time.
The rest of the ship was as visually unappealing as
what we had already seen: corridor and rooms carved out of the stone of the
asteroid, smoothed over and filled with the Yherajks' equipment. For all
intents and purposes, we could have been at a science lab anywhere on the
planet -- everything functional, none of it esthetically pleasing.
Gwedif, who was trying to keep us distracted from our
concern about Miranda and Michelle, acknowledged that for us the ship might not
be tremendously exciting to look at. That's the problem with our species having
different primary sensory organs, he said. It's really fascinating to smell, he
assured us. Of course, most of the smells on the ship would make us pass out
from their potency if we didn't have noseplugs. Which Gwedif also admitted put
a damper on the wonder of the ship.
The one area of the ship that I found the most
interesting was what Gwedif labeled as the art gallery, with the tivis that
Gwedif described to Carl. Like everything else on the ship, the tivis weren't
much to look at -- they looked like shallow bowls left on the floor, with
blackened crusts of something surrounded by wires. Gwedif steered us to one,
suggested we sit down to get closer to the tivis, and then slid a tendril into
a slot on the floor near the tivis.
The tivis immediately started to warm up; the wires
were apparently heating elements. Through my noseplugs, I smelled something
acrid, but I was also immediately overwhelmed by a sense of wistfulness, with
overtones of happiness but the slightest bit of regret. It was the feeling you
get when you see an old girlfriend, realize that she's a wonderful person, and
that you were kind of an idiot to let her go, even if you're happily married
now. I mentioned this (without the drama) to Gwedif.
"It worked, then," Gwedif said. "Tivis
work by stimulating certain emotions through smells. This one," he pointed
to the one we were at, "is actually fairly crude -- it's just one primary
emotion with only a couple of emotional harmonics. Any of us could have made
it, actually. It's the tivis equivalent of a paint-by-numbers. Some of our
tivis masters can create works of incredible emotional depth, layering emotion
on emotion in unexpected combinations. You can get really worked up over a good
tivis."
"I'll bet," I said. "These could go
over real big on earth. You need to introduce me to some of the Yherajk who
make these."
"Looking for clients already?" Gwedif said.
"I've already got all of you as clients,
Gwedif," I said. "Now I just need to find out which ones of you need
individual attention."
We sampled a few more tivis before I got restless and
wanted to return to the ambulance. If I was going to be worried, I wanted to be
worried near something familiar. Van Doren came with me. We hung around the
ambulance for an hour before Van Doren fished through the glove compartment and
unearthed a pack of cards. We played gin. Van Doren kicked my ass; he
apparently didn't believe or understand the concept of a friendly game of
cards. After I got sick of cards, I grabbed a blanket out of the ambulance,
spread it out on the floor of the hangar and willed myself into another nap.
I awakened this time by someone sticking their toe in
my side. I swatted at the leg. It jabbed, harder.
"Wake up," Someone said. It was Michelle's
voice.
I spun up, whacking my head on the ambulance as I
struggled to get up. Michelle stood before me, naked. There was a crooked and
slightly sardonic grin on her face. Never in all the years that I knew her had
she ever had an expression like that. Sardonicism would have been a little much
to ask out of Michelle.
"Joshua?" I asked.
"You were expecting maybe Winston
Churchill?" Joshua said. "By the way, I think you might as well start
calling me Michelle. There are very few people who look like this," she
motioned to her body, "That would be called Joshua."
"All right....Michelle," I said.
Van Doren came over and frankly stared at Michelle's
naked form. "Wow," he said. "I may have to revise that comment
about taking you off my list of women to date."
"Back off, jerky," Michelle said.
"I just can't win," Van Doren complained.
"I guess we can say the transfer was a
success," I said.
"It was easier than I thought," Michelle
said. "It helped that Gwedif had rummaged around through a human brain
before. When I first suggested the idea of going into Miranda's brain, he
shared his knowledge with me so I didn't have to fly completely blind. And
Miranda was very open as well. Between the two of them, we made some remarkable
progress."
"Where is Miranda?" I asked.
"She's sleeping," Michelle said. "The
experience took a lot out of her."
"Is she all right?" I said. "I mean, no
damage to her?"
"Other than fatigue, no, none," Michelle
said. "Though you might give her a few days off when we get back. Let her
rest up."
"She can take the rest of the year off," I
said.
"Give her a raise, too," Michelle said.
"Hazard pay."
"Pretty soon she'll be making more than I
do," I said.
"And about time, don't you think," Michelle
said.
"How much of you is you?" Van Doren asked
Michelle.
"Which me are you talking about?" Michelle
said. "Joshua, Michelle or Miranda?"
"Michelle, for starters."
"There's actually quite a bit of who Michelle was
in here," Michelle said. "Miranda's insistence on that matter made me
take a look at the whole picture again. It took more time to get it all in, but
now I agree with Miranda. It was the right thing to do. Now, I did do some
judicious editing. Miranda's natively smarter and has more common sense than
Michelle. In those matters, I had a tendency to model the template towards
Miranda than Michelle. And at the end of it, everything that was Joshua is in
here too, although a lot of it is being subsumed by the parts from Miranda and
Michelle. I'm much more human than I was before. And yet I retain all my
endearing qualities from before. Truly, a perfect being."
"And modest, too," Van Doren said.
"Feh on you," Michelle said. "I'm going
to remember that comment when the revolution comes."
The door to the hangar opened and a stretcher wheeled
out, pulled along by Yherajk. Miranda lay on it. She smiled and waved as her
stretcher was pulled up to where we stood.
"You ought to be sleeping," Michelle said,
severely.
"You ought to be dressed," Miranda said.
"That hospital gown was so not me," Michelle
said. "I've retained Michelle's fashion sense."
"I urged her to rest, but she insisted on coming
back here," Gwedif said. He was one of the Yherajk pulling the stretcher.
"How are you?" I asked.
"I'm fine," Miranda insisted. "I feel
like my sinuses were used as a bypass for the 405, but that's over with. Now I
want to go home. It's been fun having an alien probe, really, but I have plants
to water and a cat to feed. I've already missed two feedings. I miss one more,
and I get classified as food myself."
"Is she well enough to move?" I asked
Michelle.
"She's fine," Michelle said. "But I
still think she needs some more rest."
"I can sleep on the way down," Miranda said.
"Good luck with that," Michelle said.
"Don't make me get huffy," Miranda
threatened. "Besides, we have to go back. You need to be outfitted,
Michelle."
"That's true," Michelle admitted.
"There is much shopping to be done. We should head back immediately. Stores
are about to open."
"Do we all have to go back?" Van Doren said.
We all turned to him. He shifted, slightly uncomfortable. "If no one
minds, I'd like to stay here for a while."
"Why?" I asked.
"If my job is to be the storyteller for this
little venture of ours, then it stands to reason that I should spend time
getting to know the Yherajk," Van Doren said. "I think Gwedif and I
could stand to spend a little more time together. I want to get this story
right, Tom. Besides, it's not like I have anything going on back on earth. I
don't even have a cat. And this way you're guaranteed that I'm out of your
hair."
"Gwedif?" Michelle asked.
"I don't mind," Gwedif said. "It could
be valuable, in fact. It could be helpful in figuring out what we need to do to
make the Ionar more friendly to humans."
"Start with air freshener," Van Doren
suggested.
"Watch it," Gwedif said.
We said our goodbyes to Van Doren and Gwedif. Miranda,
still in her stretcher, lay in the back; Michelle, still naked, stayed in back
with her. Two Yherajk pilots arrived and positioned themselves; in a moment a
platform formed beneath them and a transport cube began taking shape. Behind
the wheel, I waved again at Gwedif and Van Doren. Then the cube wall slid
higher, obscuring the view.
Michelle poked her head up to the front. "Well,
you did it," she said. "You got me into this body. You've made me a
human. What are we going to do now?"
"It depends," I said. "How well do you
think you can act?"
Michelle snorted. "Better than I could before,
that's for sure."
"Well, then," I said. "I have a
plan."
Chapter Twenty
"Tom," Roland Lanois said, stepping out of
his office. "What an unexpected pleasure." His intonation stressed
unexpected slightly more than it emphasized pleasure.
"Roland," I said. "Sorry about the
sudden visit. But I have a proposition that I think you'll be interested in,
and I thought you'd want to hear about it immediately."
"I'm afraid that you've picked a rather hectic
time to drop by," Roland said. "I have a five o' clock, and it's already
a quarter of five."
"I only need five minutes," I said.
"I'll be long gone before your five o'clock."
Roland grinned. "Tom, you are so unlike other
agents. I actually believe that you only need five minutes. Very well,
then," he motioned into his office with his hand. "The clock is
ticking."
"Here's what I came here for," I said, after
Roland had closed his office door behind us. "I've got a deal for you on
the Kordus material."
"That's excellent," Roland said, taking a
seat at his desk. "I hope your price is not too steep. We'll be doing this
story on a shoestring."
"Oh, I think you'll be able to afford it," I
said. "You can have the rights to excerpt any of Krysztof's writing at no
cost."
Roland sat, silent. "That's impossibly
generous," he said, finally. His intonation stressed impossibly more than
generous.
"I spoke to the Kordus family," I said.
"I showed them the script. They love it. Moreover, they are
well-acquainted with your work and trust that you will do a brilliant job. They
feel that if giving you the rights at no cost will help this script make it to
the screen, it's worth it. They expect that the additional book royalities that
will be generated through the exposure of the work in the film will offset any
loss they take giving you permission to use the work. They're taking the long
view. Of course, they will want your permission to use artwork from the film to
help promote the book reissues."
"Yes, of course," Roland said. "Of course.
Tom, we'd be happy to do that. And you must thank the Kordus family for me,
profusely. This is a true gift."
"Well, yes and no," I said. "There is
one thing you have to do for me first."
"What is that?" Roland said.
"Give Michelle Beck another reading for Hard
Memories."
"Um-hmmmm," Roland said. "That might be
difficult."
"Why is that?" I said.
"Well, to begin with, I understand that she is
currently in a coma."
"She was," I said. "She got
better."
"Better?" Roland blinked. "How does one
get better out of a coma?"
"We took her to an exclusive clinic where we
tried some experimental therapies," I said. "She's fine,
really."
"Experimental therapies."
"Very experimental. You wouldn't believe how
experimental."
Roland continued to look dubious. "If you say
so," he said. "However, there is the more pressing issue that Avika
Spiegelman is dead set against Michelle for the role. I don't think that
there's anything that could be done to change her mind. And without her
consent, nothing happens."
"Let Michelle worry about that," I said.
"All you have to do is get Avika to come here for another reading."
"She won't come if she knows it's Michelle who is
having the reading."
"Surprise her," I suggested.
"I'd rather not," Roland said. "Tom,
you don't understand how close I am to losing this project to begin with. If
Ms. Spiegelman shows up with Michelle here, I will be well and truly
screwed."
"Roland, you're well and truly screwed
anyway," I said. "You don't have an actress. None of the actresses
who could carry this film are available. You have slightly under two weeks to
cast this thing, if I'm correct. If you blow it now, you're only losing
something that's already lost. This is in fact your last chance to save the
project. All Michelle wants is a second reading, Roland. That's it. You really
have nothing to lose."
"Except possibly my professional
reputation," Roland said. "It might be cheaper just to pay cash for
the Kordus rights."
"All right, Roland," I said. "You force
me to bring out my big gun."
"I can't wait, Tom," Roland said. "Are
you going to suggest Pamela Anderson Lee in a supporting role?"
"How much would it take for you to produce the
Kordus film?"
"The Kordus film?" Roland said. " I did
a preliminary budget not long ago. My first estimate is about eight million.
Possibly less if I film entirely in Poland."
"How would you finance it?" I asked
"I'm still thinking about that," Roland
said, "I have a nice arrangement with BBC, which will finance a couple
million in the front end in exchange for broadcast rights in the UK. The CBC
will kick in just under a million for Canadian rights. I might be able to
extort financing out of the French if I hire enough French nationals to work on
the film. Miramax or Fine Line might be worth a few million, although with these
sorts of properties, they tend to purchase distribution rights on the back end
rather than up front."
"But no matter what, you end up a couple of
million dollars short," I said.
"That's the drama of making small, serious
films," Roland said.
"Here's the big gun," I said. "Get as
much financing as you can from your usual sources, and whatever your shortfall
from eight million, Michelle will cover it. Whatever it is."
"What if I get less financing than I expect for
the Kordus project? Or none at all?"
"Then Michelle will bankroll the entire eight
million," I said. "Though I think we should reasonably expect you to
make the effort to line up other financing as well. But no matter what, you get
the eight from Michelle if you need it. It's solid."
"And all I have to do is give Michelle another
reading," Roland said.
"That's right. If Michelle dazzles, then you get
to make Hard Memories and then go with the Kordus story. If not, you can get to
work on the Kordus picture right away. No lost time. You win either way."
"Christ, Tom," Roland said. "You sure
know how to pack your five minutes."
"You know me," I said. "Always go for
the dramatic gesture."
"When do you want your reading?" Roland
asked.
"Give me three days," I said. "I need
that much time to prepare Michelle."
"Tom," Roland said. "I appreciate your
offer, and Michelle's as well. But I have to tell you I suspect that three days
is not going to be enough time for Michelle to get herself up the level she
needs to be to convince Avika Spiegelman."
"I think you'll be surprised," I said.
"Michelle's accident changed a lot of things. In some ways she's a whole
other person."
*****
"I still don't know why I'm going to
Arizona," Michelle said.
"You're going there because I asked you to,"
I said.
"Remind me not to listen to you when you ask me
to jump off a cliff." Michelle said.
"Arizona is not so bad," I said. "It
has some lovely scenery."
"Are we going to visit any?" Michelle asked.
"No," I said. "But you can look out the
window."
Our chartered jet was descending into Sky Harbor
International Airport.
"Let me take a different tack," Michelle
said. "Why did you want me to go to Arizona?"
"Because there's someone here I want you to meet.
Someone I think will make a difference in your reading tomorrow."
"Oh, yes, that," Michelle said. "The
one you gave me so much time to prepare for. Thanks."
"You said you still retained Michelle's memories
of the script and her reading ," I said.
"I did," Michelle said. "But Tom, just
because she read it doesn't mean she understood it. It was not as much reading
as staring at the page and waiting for the sentences to come into focus.
Michelle was a nice person, but she really was in over her head."
Our jet was now sliding over the runway. We landed
with a small bump and much squealing of tires.
"Thank God," Michelle said. "I'm afraid
of flying."
"You were never afraid of flying before," I
said. "And you weren't scared when we dropping into the atmosphere in a
cube at Mach 20."
"Welcome to the new me," Michelle said.
"And I trust Yherajk technology a lot more than I trust yours. Now get me
the hell off of this plane. I have to go kiss the ground."
A limo driver was waiting for us as we exited the
plane. We went through the crowd rapidly, before anyone could recognize
Michelle, and were in the limo and on our way in a matter of minutes.
I rolled up the barrier between us and the driver
almost immediately. "How flexible are you?" I asked.
"Why?" Michelle asked. "You looking for
excitement in the back of a limo?"
"No," I said. "What I mean to say is,
can you generate any tendrils or tentacles?"
"Sure," Michelle said. "It's not like
when I was in Ralph and I was stuck in his digestive system. I've got
Michelle's whole head undergoing transformation. See, look." Michelle's
eyes suddenly bulged, dropped out of her eye sockets, and began swinging
around.
"That's the most disgusting thing I think I've
ever seen," I said.
"Now you know what I'm going to be doing for
Halloween," Michelle said.
"Can you make the tendrils any smaller?" I
asked.
"Of course," Michelle answered. "I can
make them invisible, if you like."
"I would like," I said. "I think you
may need them where we're going."
"Where are we going?" Michelle asked again.
"We'll be there soon enough," I said.
Less than half hour later, we were there.
"The Beth Israel Retirement Home," Michelle
said, reading the stone sign out front of the facility. "Tom, I realize
that Hollywood stops hiring actress after a certain age, but this is ridiculous."
"Hyuck, hyuck, hyuck," I said. "Come
with me." We went inside.
The nurse at the reception desk wasted no time looking
at me, preferring to look at Michelle instead.
"Aren't you Michelle Beck?" She asked.
"I'm not Michelle Beck," Michelle said.
"But I play her on TV."
"Excuse me," I said, drawing the nurse's
attention to me. "I made an appointment to see Sarah Rosenthal. I'm Tom
Stein, her grandson."
"I'm sorry," The nurse said, snapping out of
her celebrity stupor. "Of course. She's just woken up from a nap, so she
should be quite alert. It's good of you to visit. We've heard a lot about you.
Your mother comes in quite frequently, you know."
"I knew that," I said. "Since I was in
town, I thought I might come for a visit as well."
"That's very sweet of you," the nurse said.
She glanced over at Michelle. "Are you two together?"
"For the first 10%, yes," Michelle said. The
nurse looked slightly confused. Below the nurse's view, I stepped onto
Michelle's toes. Hard.
"Yes, we're together," I said.
"Follow me," The nurse got up and motioned
towards the corridor.
Sarah Rosenthal, my grandmother, was in her
wheelchair, staring out her window. The nurse knocked on the open doorway to
get her attention. My grandmother turned, recognized me, and broke into a wide grin.
Her teeth were in. I went over to give her a hug; the nurse excused herself.
Michelle stood in the door, attentive but uncertain.
"I didn't know your grandmother was still
alive," Michelle said.
"She is," I said, crouching down and holding
my grandmother's hand. "But I don't see her very much. She retired down
here while I was still in elementary school. We'd see each other at high
holidays and during the summer, but not very much beyond that. Grandmama was a
very independent soul. She had a stroke not long after my father died, which
took away her power of speech; my mother came down to be closer to her."
My grandmother peered over at Michelle and motioned
her over. Michelle came over; Grandmama held out her other hand, and Michelle
gave her hand. Grandmama shook it in welcome, and then turned it over. Then she
looked at me.
"What is she doing?" Michelle asked.
"She's looking for an engagement ring," I
said. "Grandmama's been pushing me to get married since I was about
thirteen." I turned back to my grandmother. "Michelle's just a
client, grandmama," I said. "But you'll be happy to know I have a
nice girlfriend now. Very nice."
"She's a little like me," Michelle said, to
my grandmother.
"I'll bring her down next time," I said.
"Okay?"
Grandmama nodded in agreement, and then patted
Michelle's hand, as if to say, I'm sure you're a very nice girl, anyway.
"Michelle, would you close the door?" I
said.
Michelle went to close the door; then she came back over.
"Now will you tell me what we're doing
here?" she asked.
"My grandmother wasn't born here in the
U.S.," I said. "She was born and lived the first part of her life in
Germany. She was a child when Germany lost the first world war and in her teens
when Hitler came to power. She was in her twenties when she and most of her
family were sent to the camps."
"My God," Michelle said. "I'm terribly
sorry."
"Grandmama came to the US after the war, married
again, and had another child," I said. "My mother. And now we've come
to the end of what I know of the story," I looked over to Michelle.
"Grandmama would never talk much about her life before the US to my
mother, and of course my mother never did talk about it much with me. I'm
hoping I can get her to share her experiences with you."
"Now I see," Michelle said.
My grandmother looked over to me, confused.
"Grandmama," I said. "I haven't gone
over the bend. I know you can't talk. This is hard to explain, but Michelle has
a way of talking without talking. I know your memories are painful, and that
you don't share about them for a reason. But Michelle wants to know what your
memories are, if you'll share them. It will help her understand many things
about our lives, and our history. It would mean a lot to me if you would share
your memories with her."
Michelle got down on her knee and took Grandmama's
other hand again. "See what I'm doing now?" Michelle said, holding
grandmama's hand lightly. "This is all I'd have to do. Just sit with you
for a little while. You wouldn't even have to think about those things, if you
didn't want to, Sarah. All we'd have to do is sit together."
My grandmother looked at Michelle, and then at me. She
smiled, gently slid her hand out of mind, put it to her temple, and made a
corkscrew motion.
I laughed. "I know. We both sound nuts. They're
going to be hauling us both off sometime soon. But in the meantime, will you
help us?"
My grandmother looked me and at Michelle. Michelle she
patted on hand. Then she lightly tapped my shoulder, and pointed at the door. I
looked at her quizzically.
"I think she's saying she's willing to do it, but
she doesn't want you around," Michelle said. "Maybe she had a reason
for not telling the story to your mother or you, Tom. She doesn't want to run
the risk of you hearing it."
Grandmama nodded her head vigorously and patted
Michelle's hand again.
"Out you go," Michelle said.
I stood up. "How long will you need?" I
asked Michelle.
"An hour, maybe two," she said. "If you
can manage it, I'd prefer that we weren't disturbed. I want to get this all at
one time."
"I'll do what I can."
"Thanks, Tom," Michelle looked up at me
briefly, and then back to grandmama. "Now, shoo. Sarah and I are going to
have a conversation."
*****
Twice a nurse came by to check on things. Twice I sent
her away, the second time bribing her with the promise of an autograph by
Michelle. The nurse left behind her clipboard and her pen as insurance. I hoped
it didn't contain serious information about any of the other folks in the
retirement home.
Three hours after she began, Michelle opened the door
to my grandmother's room and came out. She touched my arm distractedly, and
then propped herself against the corridor wall. She looked exhausted.
"Here," I said, handing her the clipboard.
"I promised the nurse an autograph if she would go away."
Michelle took the clipboard and stared at it like it
was some sort of strange animal.
"Michelle," I said. "You okay?"
"I'm fine," she said, taking the pen from
the top of the clipboard and scratching her name on the piece of paper it
contained. "I'm just very tired."
"How is grandmama?" I asked.
"She's nodded off in her chair," Michelle
said, handing the clipboard back to me. "You should have the nurse put her
to bed."
"I will," I said. "Did you get what you
need?"
For the first time, Michelle looked directly at me.
Her eyes were startling; they were the eyes of someone who had walked through
the coals of Hell and came through them, but not unscathed, not without wounds.
"Your grandmother is a remarkable woman,
Tom," she said. "Remember that. Don't ever forget it."
Then she lapsed into silence. We didn't talk again
that day.
*****
"What the hell is she doing here?" Avika
Spiegelman said, referring to Michelle.
Roland had taken my advice and surprised Avika, saying
only that he found an "interesting" actress that he thought might
pull off the role. The withering glare she was now carpetbombing Roland with
made me understand why he had been reluctant to go along with my scheme to
begin with.
"We never got a full reading the first
time," Roland said, holding his ground with aplomb. "I felt Miss Beck
deserved that much before we rejected her out of hand."
"Roland, she fainted at the last reading,"
Avika seethed. "And a good thing too, since she was clearly incapable of
the reading to begin with. I can't believe you would be wasting your time with
her now, considering how little time you have left with this property."
Michelle, who sat in front of the video camera, just
as she had at the last reading, had a smirk on her face that did not indicate
she was taking Avika's insults seriously. Positioned as I was on the couch, I
was getting the full panoramic view: Michelle's smirk, Roland's aplomb, Avika's
seething. This was going to be a fun reading.
"Boy, it's swell to see you again too, Ms.
Spiegelman," Michelle said.
Avika regarded Michelle coolly. "Aren't you
supposed to be in a coma?" she said.
"I got over it," Michelle said. "Which,
apparently, is more than you can say."
"You planning to faint again?" Avika said.
"I won't if you won't," Michelle said.
"Do we have a deal?"
"Fat chance," Avika said, and turned to
Roland. "I'm leaving now, Roland." She turned to leave.
"Bitch," Michelle said.
Avika froze. Very slowly, she turned around.
"What did you just say?" She spat at
Michelle.
"You heard me perfectly well," Michelle
said, leaning back in her chair with an air of supreme relaxation. "I
called you a bitch. I was going to call you a raging bitch, but then I thought,
why give you the courtesy of a modifier? You're just a bitch, plain and
simple."
Avika looked like the top of her head was going to pop
off. She turned to me. "Tom, do you always let your clients insult the
people who can give them the roles they want?"
"Hey," I said. "I'm just here for the
show."
"I'm not calling anyone who will give me a role a
bitch," Michelle said. "Clearly, you have no intention of giving me
the role. As far as I can see, the only reason I'm calling you a bitch is
because that is what you so obviously are."
"I don't need to be insulted by you," Avika
said.
"Well, you need to be insulted by someone,"
Michelle said. "And it looks like I'm the only one here with enough
interest in you to do it. Sort of sad, really."
"Listen, you little shit," Avika said.
"You don't even deserve to read for this part, much less play it."
"Well then, we're equal," Michelle said,
"Since you don't deserve to make that decision."
"I'm her niece," Avika said.
"You're her third cousin, twice removed,"
Michelle said. "I checked. And your only qualification is that you're
tangentially related. All you're interested in is appearances. I don't fit your
notion of who your sainted aunt was, so I'm out."
"You're nothing like my aunt," Avika said.
"I'd say I'm a lot like your aunt. Your aunt
spent a lot of her time flying in the face of ignorant morons who decided the
world was one way and there was no other way the world could be. As far as I
can tell, I'm doing the same right now. I'm more like your aunt than you are."
"How dare you say that," Avika hissed.
"You can't even act."
Michelle smiled. "Neither could your aunt,
bitch."
Roland, who had been observing the exchange between
Michelle and Avika with an increasing expression of horror, glanced over at me
with an expression that loosely translated to Get me out of here. I shrugged.
There was nothing to do now but to ride this one out.
Michelle got up, grabbed a script, and walked over to
Avika. "I'll tell you what, Avika," Michelle said. "I'll admit I
could be wrong about you being a bitch. I'm entirely convinced you are, but it
is within the realm of possibility that I'm wrong. But the only way you can
prove it is to admit you might be wrong about me not being able to do the
part."
Michelle slapped the script on Avika's chest.
"The only way you're going to do that is to let me read. Come on, Avika.
It can't hurt."
"I don't have to prove anything to you,"
Avika said, grabbing the script.
"Sure you do," Michelle said, turning around
and heading back to her seat. "Because there's one difference between you
and me, Avika. You see, I couldn't give a shit that you think I can't act. But
it's clear that it bothers you that I think you're a bitch."
"Hardly," Avika said.
"Really?" Michelle said, sitting down.
"Then why are you still here?"
Avika's mouth dropped open. Roland, a strapping man,
looked like he wanted to curl up into a fetal ball.
"Come on, people," Michelle said.
"Let's shit or get off the pot. Read me or don't, but let's make a
decision."
Roland snapped out of it before Avika could utter
another word. "What scene would you like, Miss Beck?"
"Your choice," Michelle said. "I really
did memorize the script this time."
"The whole script?" Roland said.
"Sure, why not?" Michelle said, and glanced
over to me mischievously. "Elvis did it."
Avika flipped the script open and read. "'How
dare you tell me what I can and cannot do,'" Avika said. "'You are my
wife, not my master.'"
"'I am your master's instrument, Josef,'"
Michelle said, the words ripping out of her with an intensity that took us all
by surprise. "'Go on the Judenrat and you turn your back on your people
and your God. And you turn your back on me. For I am your wife, Josef. But
cooperate with the Germans and we are not married. You will be as dead to me
now as you will be soon enough by the hands of the Germans.'"
There was dead silence. We all stared in disbelief.
Even me.
Michelle smiled sweetly. "Got your attention,
didn't I?" she said.
Avika opened the script at random and quoted line
after line. Line after line was responded to with the sort of stunning display
of acting that you get to see one or twice in a lifetime. It was
flabbergasting. It was impossible. It was the most incredible acting experience
I'd ever seen. And it was just a line reading. We were all beginning to wonder
what was going to happen once Michelle actually started acting for the record.
After an hour and a half, Avika dropped the script at
her feet. "I wouldn't have believed it," she said, simply.
"I know you wouldn't," Michelle said, as
simply. "And I thank you, Avika, my friend, for finally letting me show
you."
Avika burst into tears and headed towards Michelle.
Michelle burst into her own tears and met Avika halfway. They stood in the
middle of the room, crying hysterically. Roland and I looked over at each
other. Both of us had these incredibly smug smiles on our face.
We were in business.
Chapter Twenty
One
A montage of the next year, as told through headlines:
Daily Variety, March 5th
MICHELLE BECK VOWS "HARD MEMORIES"
Michelle Beck, wasting no time after her near-death
experience during the pre-production of Earth Resurrected, signed today to star
in Hard Memories, a biopic of civil right activist and Holocaust survivor
Rachel Spiegelman. Spiegelman became famous for her association with Martin
Luther King during the late 50s and early 60s. Hard Memories is to be directed
by Roland Lanois, and produced by Lanois in association with the Spiegelman
family. Compensation package was not discussed, though with a total budget of
less than $18 million, Beck is undoubtedly taking much less than the $12.5
million she scored for the ill-fated Earth Resurrected. Filming in the Czech
Republic and Alabama is expected to begin in April for an Oscar-look release
date of December 19th in New York and Los Angeles.
Beck is repped by Tom Stein of Lupo Associates.
*****
Los Angeles Times Calendar Section, March 11th
Jewish Groups Protest Casting of "Promises."
Decry casting of Michelle Beck as "stunt";
producers, family stand firm behind their star.
BEVERLY HILLS -- Michelle Beck is 25. Blonde. Blue
eyed. Gentile. Rachel Spiegelman was brown haired. Brown eyed. Jewish. And at
the height of her notoriety, she was well into her fifties.
So how did Michelle Beck get the call to play
Spiegelman, noted civil-rights lawyer and Holocaust survivor, in the upcoming
Roland Lanois-directed biographical film Hard Memories? It's a question that
several Hollywood Jewish groups would like to have answered.
One of these groups, the Jewish Actors Association,
went so far as to place a full-page ad in film industry trade magazine Variety
on Friday, decrying the movie as "stunt casting" and calling upon
director Lanois and the Spiegelman family to drop Beck for a more suitable
actress.
"It's not about Miss Beck being Jewish or
not," said Avi Linden, communications director for the JAA. "What
bothers us is the fact that here is someone who is so clearly cast for box
office purposes. She's made $300 million in her last two films, and that's what
the producers are looking at -- not how truthful the casting is to reality. The
fact is, there are dozens of actresses, Jew and gentile, who are more suited to
the role."
Roland Lanois, the Oscar-nominated director and
producer, acknowledges that his selection of Beck was bound to be
controversial.
"We understand that this casting is not intuitive
at first blush," he said, noting that Beck was not the first choice,
landing the role only after actress Ellen Merlow dropped the role to take on a
television series. "We ourselves were hesitant at first. All we can say at
this point is that it was Michelle's performance, not any other consideration,
that got her the role."
Avika Spiegelman, spokesperson for the Spiegelman family,
which had unusual veto rights on the casting of the role, issued a terse press
release. "Michelle Beck is the best person for the role, period," The
release said. "She has the full support of the Spiegelman family."
*****
Entertainment Weekly, March 17
Jim Mullen's Hot List
.....
3. Jim Carrey's Poodle: They say you shouldn't work
with dogs or children. Well, the poodle was warned.
4. Michelle Beck: 25-year-old beach babe cast as
serious, 50ish civil rights crusader. Next up for Beck -- playing Jim Carrey's
poodle.
5. Roseanne's Country Album: Stop her before she sings
the Star-Spangled Banner!
.....
Variety, March 24
JUST FOR VARIETY
BEVERLY HILLS -- The atmosphere was electric at the
Fine Arts theatre on Wilshire avenue, but not for the usual reasons. On
Saturday night, the Fine Arts was the scene, not of a movie, but of an
unprecedented SRO reading of Hard Memories, the film made controversial by the
casting of Michelle Beck in the central role of civil rights activist and
Holocaust survivor Rachel Spiegelman. The guest list for the reading included
the cream of the film industry and several members of the Jewish groups that
had criticized Beck's casting. It was a tough crowd, and Hard Memories
director-producer Roland Lanois knew it. "If I were in their shoes, I
would have the same reaction that they have had. Absolutely. No doubt,"
Lanois said prior to the reading. "What this is about is helping them into
our shoes. I think they're going to be surprised." Beck, in the center of
the storm, waded into the crowd before the reading, thanking folks for coming
and chatting directly with those who had opposed her casting, as if to show
there were no hard feelings. At 8:30, Beck, co-star and noted legit theater
star David Grunwald, and Lanois and producer Avika Spiegelman sat up front on
simple stools and read the script, Beck as Rachel Spiegelman, the other three
trading off the other roles. By 9, there were already tears. At 10:30, when the
reading was finished, Beck and her crew were treated to an ovation the likes of
which I have not seen in many a year. It was a tough crowd, but Beck won them
over in spectacular fashion. Next up: the audience at large.....
*****
Hollywood Reporter, April 30th
Young Ankles Lupo Associates
Elliot Young, star of the mid-rated ABC series Pacific
Rim, has dropped agent Ben Fleck of Lupo Associates in what insiders call an
acrimonious split. Young was apparently disappointed in Fleck's inability to
transfer Young's moderate television stardom into a film career.
"Fleck had come in promising Elliot the
moon," said Pacific Rim director Don Bolling. "Then he of course
experienced trouble delivering. Elliot dropped him and, I think, rightly
so."
Young is currently being repped by Paula Richter of
Artists Associated.
*****
Daily Variety, May 22nd
DISH: MERLOW'S FURLOUGH FROM 'GOOD HELP'
Dish hears that the already legendarily tense set of
Good Help is Hard To Find has had the tension cranked up another notch, when
two-time Oscar winner-turned-would-be-sitcom-comedienne Ellen Merlow jetted
back to her Connecticut horse farm during the middle of taping, placing the
show in jeopardy of making its series debut September 9th. This latest flare-up
follows last month's standoff between Merlow and co-star Garrison Lanham (who
played Weezix, the alien butler), that resulted in Lanham's replacement by
Bronson Pinchot, and by last week's mass crew walkout, protesting their
treatment by Merlow and her entourage. The Dish hears that Merlow's latest act
might have placed her in violation of her $20 million contract, giving
exasperated producers Jan and Steven White the excuse they need to bounce her
from the show....
*****
Daily Variety, June 16
MILESTONES
Tom Stein, 29, of La Canada married Miranda Escalon,
28, of Manhattan Beach, on Saturday, June 14th at the Vivian Webb Chapel in
Claremont. He is an agent at Lupo Associates. She is also an agent,
newly-promoted, at the same firm. Stein's best man was Lupo boss Carl Lupo;
Escalon's maid of honor was Michelle Beck, who flew in from the Czech Republic
for the wedding.....
*****
Ad in Daily Variety and Hollywood Reporter, July 10
Lanois Productions
and
Century Films
Are proud to announce the completion of principal
photography on
HARD MEMORIES
Starring Michelle Beck and David Grunwald
Written by Connie Reiser & Larry Card
Directed and Produced by Roland Lanois
LIMITED RELEASE: DECEMBER 19 IN NEW YORK AND LOS
ANGELES
WIDE RELEASE JANUARY 23
*****
Entertainment Weekly, August 8
Stingless 'Scorpion'
Mindless Summer Explode-Fest Rings Hollow
......Inquiring minds want to know: in this utter loss
of a movie, does anything work? Well, the explosions are pretty. Apologists may
note the presence of Michelle Beck, whose upcoming performance Hard Memories is
one of the most intensely awaited of the Oscar season. Maybe some of that
alleged intensity rubs off here? No such luck. This Michelle Beck, at least, is
scene decoration, hardly onscreen before her helicopter is blown out of the sky
by a preposterous string of coincidences. Don't worry, this revelation won't
ruin the plot for you: there'd have to have been a plot at all for that to
happen.
Rating: D
*****
Daily Variety, August 11
'SCORPION' VENOMOUS TO COMPETITION
$19.7M takes tops BO report; 'Gold Master' takes
silver at $6.2M
Scorpion's Tail proves that some films are
critic-proof; the widely panned action flick stung the competition with a $19.7
million take, injecting a boost in the severely lagging summer box office......
*****
Entertainment Weekly, September 22nd
OSCAR WATCH
....Oscar-nominated director-producer Roland Lanois
(The Green Fields) may have another contender on his hands with Hard Memories.
Insiders at a Century Pictures rough cut screening say the film caused
notoriously thick-skinned Century head Lewis Schon to cry into his trademark
Goobers. Of special note is Michelle Beck's performance, which those at the
screening labeled "revelatory". Century's marketing department is
already getting in high gear for the Award season....
*****
The Arizona Republic, September 25th
Obituaries
Sarah Rosenthal, of Scottsdale, of complications from
a stroke, at 3:15 pm, September 23rd. Mrs. Rosenthal born in Hamburg, Germany
on April 3, 1911 and emigrated to the United States in December of 1945. She is
survived by daughter Elaine Stein, also of Scottsdale, and grandson Thomas
Stein, of La Canada, Ca.
*****
The Chicago Sun-Times, October 8
Hollywood Star, Agents to Endow U of C Chair
CHICAGO -- The University of Chicago, normally the
most staid of places, received a little Hollywood sparkle on Tuesday as
Michelle Beck, star of the smash hit Summertime Blues, and the upcoming Hard
Memories, arrived on campus to announce a $3 million gift to endow a chair in
Holocaust Studies.
Speaking in the University's cavernous Mandel Hall,
Beck alluded to her experience working on the Holocaust drama Hard Memories as
a motivating factor in the gift.
"We must not be so worried about history
repeating itself as simply rubbing itself out of existence," she said.
"Each year that passes rubs off a little more of the memory. This is a way
to keep the memories fresh, and to refresh the story for each generation of
students that walks through these halls."
The chair, formally known as the Sarah Rosenthal and
Daniel Stein Chair for Holocaust Studies and Jewish History, will be filled in
the next year, following a nationwide search. The chair is named for Sarah
Rosenthal, a survivor of the Holocaust, and her son-in-law Daniel Stein, who
graduated from the University of Chicago in 1962.
Besides Beck, other endowers of the chair include Carl
Lupo, CEO of Lupo Associates, a talent agency in Los Angeles, and Tom and
Miranda Stein, also agents at Lupo Associates. Tom Stein is the son of Daniel
Stein.
*****
Entertainment Weekly, November 17
WINTER MOVIE PREVIEW
December -- Hard Memories
What a difference a year can make. Last year at this
time, no one would have predicted that Michelle Beck, of all people, would be
whispered as the front runner for the Best Actress Oscar. Best Beach Bunny,
maybe. Best Actress, no way.
One year later, though, Beck's performance in Hard
Memories is the talk of the town -- even with those who haven't seen the
performance yet. They talk of the protests when Beck was cast in the role. They
talk of the now-mythologized reading at the Fine Arts theater which quelled all
complaint. They talk about Century Pictures prez Lewis Schon blubbering
uncontrollably into his snack food. Some theorize her miraculous recovery from
her coma earlier this year did something unexpected -- kicked her acting
centers into gear, perhaps......
*****
Premiere Magazine, December
Michelle Beck, Resurrected
Michelle Beck nearly died in February when a freak
accident during the ramp-up to Earth Resurrected sent her spiraling into a
coma. Since then she's been in the center of the Hollywood storm with her new
film Hard Memories. Beck just doesn't know how not to get in trouble.
To begin, Michelle Beck sympathized with the people
who hated her getting Hard Memories.
"Who are we kidding?" she says. "The
woman is an icon, Jewish, older, and intellectual. I'm not any of those things.
I don't think I would have cast me, and if I had, I'd probably have claimed
temporary insanity afterwards."
But a funny thing happened on the way to the flogging:
Michelle Beck stood up to the critics and turned them around. Now the actress,
just turned 26, looks like the closest thing to a lock in the Best Actress
race. All it took was one reading.
"Arrrgh, the reading." Beck says, and
scrunches up her face. "It's becoming like Woodstock, you know. Everybody
who was actually physically in Los Angeles says they were there that night. I
mean, come on! What does the Fine Arts sit? 300? 400 at most."
Beck leans forward as if to confide. "The fact
was I was terrible that night. I was nervous as hell -- I just about spotted my
panties in fright. I would have been happy just to get out of there
alive."
Instead, she got a thunderous ovation. Not bad for a
woman who a month earlier was in a coma, hooked up to life support.
"Yes, yes, yes," Beck waves off the coma
story. "You want to know what the coma was like? It was dark, mostly.
That's it. I didn't see God when I was in my coma. I didn't even see Elvis. And
when I came out of it, nothing had changed -- most people forget that I had
read for Hard Memories before I went into the coma. It wasn't like I came out
of it with a gift. I was just following the plan I had set for myself long
before."......
*****
Daily Variety, December 16
Review: Hard Memories
It's been a rumor for so long it's become almost
mythical -- Michelle Beck's transformation from beach blonde to serious actress
with her role in Hard Memories. Her performance has been so built up for so
long that it's finally a relief to have seen it, and to be able to say that
it's everything it has been claimed to be -- and even more, if that's possible.
Guided by Roland Lanois' sure directorial hand, Beck hands in a performance
that not only rockets her to the top of the Oscar nomination list, but perhaps
also into the first rank of our nation's actresses. Following what is sure to
be a record-breaking limited engagement, this picture should do solid business
in wide release, possibly flirting with the $100 million mark if public opinion
gets behind it....
*****
New York Times, December 20
"Hard Memories", "Pocket Change"
Lead Golden Globe Nominations
Hard Memories, the story of Jewish civil rights
activist Rachel Spiegelman, lead the pack at the Golden Globe nominations
Friday, garnering seven nominations, including Best Picture (drama) and Best
Actress. The Tom Hanks comedy Pocket Change followed, with six nominations,
including Best Picture (Comedy or Musical) and Best Actor.
The Golden Globes, given by the Hollywood Foreign
Press Association, are less prestigious than the Academy Awards, but are often
viewed as a bellweather for that more prestigious award. The Academy Awards are
to be announced February 16th.
NBC-TV will broadcast the Golden Globes ceremony
January 18.
*****
Los Angeles Times, January 5
Hard Memories Takes Top Critics Prize
The Roland Lanois film narrowly beats Dust and the
Moon; Beck wins second Best Actress award
NEW YORK -- After a particularly contentious voting
process, Hard Memories beat the Vietnamese film Dust and the Moon to win the
best film award from the National Society of Film Critics on Sunday. The award
joins the Best Picture citation awarded by the Los Angeles Film Society; The
New York Film Circle gave its award to Dust and the Moon.
Michelle Beck, whose narrow loss to Eleni Natavsaya of
the Russian film Wolfhounds with the Los Angeles critics precluded an expected
sweep of the critics awards, nevertheless garnered her second Best Actress
award from the National Critics....
*****
Daily Variety, January 19
"HARD MEMORIES" COMPLETES NEAR-SWEEP AT
GOLDEN GLOBES
Biopic Wins Best Picture, Actress, Supporting Actor,
three others; 'Pocket Change' Wins Best Comedy
*****
Los Angeles Times, January 26
Hard Memories Rises to the Top
Buoyed by its Best Picture and Best Actress win at the
Golden Globes, Hard Memories opened strongly in its first weekend of wide
release, with $13.4 million at the box office. The week's other new release,
Walt Disney's Natty Bumppo, did poorly with its core children's audience,
grossing only $1.1 million...
*****
Daily Variety, February 17
"PROMISES" MAKES GOOD WITH EIGHT NOMINATIONS
Best Picture, Director, Actress and Screenplay nods;
Hanks nominated for 'Pocket Change'.
(inset)
Nominations for Hard Memories:
Best Picture (Roland Lanois, Avika Spiegelman,
producers)
Best Director: Roland Lanois
Best Actress: Michelle Beck
Best Screenplay (Adapted): Connie Reiser & Larry
Card, from the book Hard Memories by Rachel Spiegelman
Best Cinematography: Januz Kandisky
Best Score (Dramatic): Julian Ruiz
Best Editing: Roland Lanois, Cynthia Peal
Best Makeup: Nguyen Trinh
*****
Daily Variety, March 4
OSCAR NOTES
Best Actress Nominee Michelle Beck will join the Oscar
broadcast as an announcer, director Lars Giles said today. Ms. Beck will
introduce the fifth and final Best Picture clip, to be shown just after the
Best Actress award is to be announced. The Oscars will be broadcast on ABC-TV
March 23 starting at 6 pm Pacific......
*****
"Stop squirming," Miranda said.
"I can't help myself," I said.
"Michelle's my first client to get nominated for an Oscar. I'm
nervous."
"Is that the only reason?" Miranda said.
"Well, no," I said. "But that's the
reason I'm going public with. Also, my cummerbund itches."
Miranda and I were at the Academy Awards.
We weren't in the good seats, of course. The good
seats are saved for the nominees, their guests, other really big stars, and
studio heads. Carl Lupo had a good seat. Michelle had a good seat. Our seats
were in the back of the balcony. Miranda brought a pair of opera glasses. We
needed them. At least we weren't as bad off as Van Doren. He was stuck in the
press room. "It's like a cattle pen," he told me, "except that
instead of cows mooing next to you, you have Roger Ebert."
Things were going well for Hard Memories; so far it
had won Best Makeup, Best Cinematography and Best Editing (the last of which
greatly relieved Roland -- at least he wouldn't be going home empty handed).
Best Score got away, which I thought was fair; Julian's score was good but not
all that good.
"It's time for the screenplay awards,"
Miranda said.
Best Original Screenplay first. Keanu Reeves read off
the nominations, which struck me as mildly ironic. The winner was Ted Fletcher,
who wrote Pocket Change. Ted, hyped up on too much caffeine and nicotine, started
on an extended riff about Nietzsche. The orchestra leader, clearly not
impressed, cut him off after thirty seconds.
"Good call," Miranda said, as Ted was
manhandled off the stage.
"Well, you know," I said. "It's
probably the only time he'll be in front of a billion people," I said.
"You can see why he might get a little excited."
"All the more reason to get him off the air
quickly," Miranda said. "I'd hate to go through life with people
pointing at me and saying, 'Hey, aren't you the idiot that made a fool of
yourself on the Oscar show?' Rob Lowe has never lived down that dance with Snow
White, you know."
Keanu was back, mangling names for the Best Adapted
Screenplay. He appeared to give himself a papercut opening the envelope.
Sucking on his finger, he announced the winners: Connie Reiser & Larry
Card, Hard Memories.
"Bingo," I said.
"Four for five," Miranda said. "We're
not doing too bad. I think Michelle actually has a chance."
"Oh, God," I said. "I wish you hadn't
said that, Miranda. My stomach just dropped down the Marianas trench."
Miranda patted my hand. "Relax, Tom," she
said. "It's been covered, remember. Even if she doesn't win Best Actress,
she'll be on stage right after to show the Hard Memories nomination clip. It'll
be fine."
"I know, I know," I said. "But it's not
optimal, you know. It would be better if she won."
"Duh," Miranda said. "But,
unfortunately, we couldn't bribe the accountants from Price, Waterhouse. We'll
just have to hope the voters don't decide to give it to Meryl Streep
again."
"Meryl Streep," I muttered. "She oughta
be disqualified from future nominations."
Miranda patted my hand again. "Tom, you're just
so cute when you're agitated."
Last year's Best Actor winner stepped on the stage to
announce the Best Actress award.
"He wears a wig," I said to Miranda. "I
hear it's one of those ones with the snap-on titanium screws."
"Oh, hush," Miranda said.
The usual lame patter, then he stared intently into
the teleprompter to read names. They started with Michelle's. They ended with
Meryl's. Alphabetical order works that way, I suppose.
Miranda's hand found mine again. She squeezed it so
tight I thought a bone might pop. I would have complained, but I was squeezing
hers just as hard. Our mutual pain was so intense that we barely heard our
former Best Actor begin and the Oscar goes to......
"Michelle Beck."
We heard that part.
The room erupted into applause and a standing ovation.
They loved her. It was her moment. They had no idea just how true it was.
Michelle stood up. She was sitting next to Carl Lupo.
Carl stood up with her, kissed her on the cheek. He was crying. Only four other
people in the building knew exactly why.
Michelle made her way to the podium like a queen. She
was wearing a golden dress of a design that no one had ever seen before. Joan
Rivers had asked her about it up out on the red carpet before the show.
Michelle responded that the designer was no one that anyone around here would
know. Joan remarked that it fit Michelle like a second skin. Others agreed.
They had no idea how true that was, either.
Michelle accepted her award and a peck from the former
Best Actor. Then she plopped the Oscar down on the podium and, beaming, waited
for the applause to die down. It took a while. Then she began to speak.
"Oh God," Miranda said. "This is really
it."
"Before I do anything else," Michelle said,
"I need to thank one person, my agent, Tom Stein. He's way up there in the
balcony. Hi Tom!" She waved enthusiastically, which got a big laugh. I
waved back.
"Shut up and get to it before the orchestra cuts
you off," I muttered under my breath.
"Tom's probably muttering at me to get to it
before the orchestra cuts me off," Michelle said. "He always did look
out for me.
"This award means more to me than you could ever
know," Michelle continued. "It's not just my award. It's the award of
Rachel Spiegelman, who saw hatred of the demonized 'Other' destroy her world,
and dedicated the rest of her life to making sure that we saw men, all men, as
brothers, regardless of their color or their creed.
"It belongs to Avika Spiegelman, who looked
beyond my physical appearance to allow me to take the role of a lifetime. It
belongs to those who initially protested my getting this role, because they
came and gave me a chance to perform it, and realized that while I did not
match Rachel's appearance, I did match her heart. Over and over again, I have
seen people of all stripes look beyond the appearance, look beyond the
otherness, and see what it was that truly connected us all.
"And now I'm wondering if you, all of you, every
one of the billion people worldwide who are watching this show, can take one
more step.
"You see," Michelle said, "I am not who
you think I am. I am not what you think I am. This face is a mask. This body is
a pose. Who I am and what I am is something you have never experienced
before."
At this point, people had begun to start whispering.
Some of them were worried that Michelle was about to launch into some odd New
Age screed about togetherness. Still others began to wonder if Michelle was
going to use this worldwide podium to announce she was a lesbian or a
Scientologist. But some noticed that the bottom of Michelle's dress had
suddenly gone crystal clear. And so, for that matter, had Michelle's legs.
"I'm wondering," Michelle said. "This
award tells me that you believe I have reached into myself and touched some
fundamental humanity, some common bond that ties us all together. But could I
reach into myself and find this fundamental humanity if I were not human?"
By now it was unmistakable; from toe to armpit,
Michelle had gone totally clear.
"What if I told you that that which makes you
fundamentally human is something that you share with another people, a people
so different from you that they might appear strange or frightening at first
glance. A people who might terrify you from appearance alone. Could you make
the jump, and understand that inside, they are not so different at all?"
Michelle was now completely clear. As if she had been
replaced by an indescribably delicate and beautiful figurine of hand-blown,
iridescent glass. She moved away from the podium and stood in full view of a
billion speechless members of the human race.
When she spoke again, her voice rang out, amplified
not by electronics but by her own crystalline body.
"Could you accept that another people, so unlike
you, and yet not unlike you at all, would offer you their hand in friendship?
Because, my friends, we are here."
We never did find out who won Best Picture that year.
Twenty Two
On the whole, people took it rather well. The only
place that rioted was North Korea.
The fact that an alien had managed to sneak past
humanity, pose as a superstar and win the Best Actress Oscar had the desired
affect of showing the world that the Yherajk were an essentially benign race --
after all, if they had been a warlike people, they could have overrun us with
their spaceships, or at the very least have fielded a football team and tried
to win the Superbowl instead. Winning the Best Actress Oscar was the most
non-threatening, yet high exposure, way to introduce one species to another.
The other point that came across was the point
Michelle made in her speech -- despite the differences, we were in many ways
just the same. Michelle wouldn't have been awarded the Oscar if she had not
been able to create such a believable performance as a woman and a human. It
was only afterwards, after all, that people realized she wasn't human.
Michelle made it easy for most of humanity by meeting
them halfway; although she remained transparent, she also retained Michelle's
body shape rather than reverting to the basic Yherajk shapelessness (or smell).
She did her job as a true bridge between our peoples -- clearly alien, and yet,
human enough for most people to accept her.
The only unpleasant thing about Michelle winning the
Oscar came later, when some Academy members petitioned to have Michelle
disqualified as the Best Actress winner. Their rationale was that not only was
she not really a human, there was no way to determine that she was, in fact,
female.
The Academy voted down the proposal in the interests
of interspecies peace. Michelle kept her Oscar.
Roland, who never discovered if he had won Best
Director or Best Picture, consoled himself with his Best Editing Oscar, and the
fact that Michelle's alien status gave Hard Memories the Oscar Bump of the
ages. By the end of its run, Hard Memories grossed half a billion domestic and
another billion and a half foreign. Before video and cable. Roland, whose gross
points were now worth $400 million, went on to make the Krysztof Kordus film
without Michelle's money. He paid for it himself out of petty cash.
Roland wasn't the only one raking in the fame and fortune.
The day after Michelle unveiled, Jim Van Doren walked into the offices of the
New York Times and plopped down a story about life on the Yherajk spaceship. It
was picked up by every newspaper on the planet; shortly thereafter, Van Doren
received a $6 million advance for a book on Human-Yherajk relations, which, as
it happened, he'd already co-written with Gwedif. It was rushed into print so
fast that the glue was still wet when the books hit the stores. It stayed at
the top of the bestseller lists for the rest of the year. It's still there now.
You wouldn't believe what he gets in speaking fees these days. I don't and I'm
his agent.
Beyond Michelle, however, the Yherajk decided it was
best if they stayed in their ship for a little longer. They realized the value
of having Michelle, for the short run, be the contact between our peoples. The
rest of the Yherajk went the go-slow route, answering e-mail from scientists,
politicians and common people alike, and communicating with the world through
their Web site and their AOL forum, letting leak, bit by bit, information about
the Yherajk's true nature and appearance. By the time the majority of the
Yherajk land on Earth, humanity will have had enough time to absorb the fact of
their differences.
Of course, humanity was still impatient. Fortunately,
patience is a Yherajk trait. Soon enough, they said, we will come visit your
planet, and you will be invited to our spaceship. And then our peoples will
truly learn all we can from each other.
Governments and self-appointed ambassadors sent e-mail
back towards the Ionar, saying When? When can we visit?
You'll have to check with our agent, the Yherajk
invariably signaled back.
Which leads back to me, sitting in my office, with my
headset on, lightly bouncing a blue racquetball off the pane of my office
window. Talking to my most important client, who was, and still is, and will
probably always be, Michelle.
"I don't see why I have go to Venezuela,"
Michelle was saying to me.
"Because you've been to Peru, Brazil, Chile and
Paraguay," I said. "The Venezuelans are a little touchy about their
place in the South American hierarchy of nations. Throw them a bone, Michelle.
Don't make them the only South American country on the block without a visit
from an Oscar-winning alien. They have enough troubles as it is."
"When are the rest of the Yherajk going to come
down?" Michelle wanted to know. "There's two thousand of us, you
know. Wouldn't hurt to have some of them pitch in."
"Jim says the human quarters are just about ready
on the Ionar," I said. "When they're ready, we'll start inviting
folks up and bringing other Yherajk down. It'll be soon, I promise."
"You said that a month ago, Tom."
"You can't rush these things, Michelle. These
things take as long as they take."
"Which reminds me," Michelle said. "How
long until Miranda pops?"
"If she hasn't gone into labor in about a week,
our doctor wants to induce," I said. "Miranda has her own opinions on
that one."
"I don't doubt that," Michelle said.
"Pick out any names yet?"
"We have," I said. "Michelle if it's a
girl, Joshua if it's a boy."
"Well, shucks," Michelle said. "I'm
touched. I may cry."
"You don't have tear ducts anymore," I said.
"I'll make them especially for this
purpose," Michelle said.
Brandon, my new assistant, popped his head through the
door. "It's him, on line three," he said.
I nodded and shooed him out of the room. "Listen,
Michelle, I have go. I have a three o'clock with Carl, but before I do that I
have to take this call I've got coming in. Where are you now, anyway?"
"I'm somewhere over the Midwest," Michelle
said. "I'll be in Chicago in about an hour. I can't believe you have me
going to a science fiction convention."
"Hey," I said. "It won't be so bad. Jim
is going to be there. And besides, these people are your core constituency.
Give 'em a thrill."
"Oh, I will," Michelle said. "Wait till
you see what I have planned for the costume ball." She clicked off.
I looked at my watch. 2:55. Five more minutes. If I
took this call, I ran the risk of being late to my meeting with Carl, which
would be bad.
Oh, what the hell, I thought. Might as well live
dangerously. I flicked the button on line three.
"Hello, Mr. President," I said.
The ball went thock as it hit the window.
The End
2 RTEXTR*ch
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