Read All That Lies Within Online
Authors: Lynn Ames
Dara put her hand over her heart. “Full.”
Carolyn reached across the table and took Dara’s other hand. “It’s a pretty special feeling, isn’t it?”
“It is.”
“I’m not going to tell you that opening your heart to love isn’t scary as all get out. It is. Love involves risk. So does living. You’ve been simply existing for so long now, you’ve forgotten how to live. You have to learn how to do that now.”
“What if…”
Dara didn’t need to finish the sentence for Carolyn to know where it was going. “Rebecca is not Sheilah. Don’t make the mistake of comparing the two. Only time will tell, but I believe with all my heart that Rebecca really does see all of you. Maybe more clearly than you see yourself. She’s very astute.”
“I know. She’s blown me away more than once. And you should’ve heard her on the set standing up to Cal. She was polite, but she didn’t give an inch. It was really impressive. Her first day, facing off against a seasoned screenwriter and an Oscar-winning director. Spectacular.”
“I wish I’d been there.”
“You’d have loved it. The thing is, she wasn’t doing it from her ego. She was arguing because she believed in Constance Darrow’s vision of Harold and she wanted that reflected in the movie. She was fighting for me, Car, even after what I did to her.” Dara choked up. “Who does that?”
“Someone genuine. Someone very special.”
Dara nodded and blew her nose. “What do I do now? I’ve screwed this up so badly.”
“No, you haven’t. We need a game plan.”
Before Carolyn could say another word, her cell phone rang. “Hello?”
“Hi, Carolyn. This is Rebecca Minton.”
Carolyn almost laughed out loud. Rebecca’s ears must have been burning. “What can I do for you, Rebecca?”
When she said the name, Dara nearly jumped out of her seat. Carolyn put up a hand to stop her.
“Um…I hate to bother you.”
“It’s no bother. What’s up?” Dara motioned for Carolyn to put her on speaker, and Carolyn waved her away.
“I know this is silly, but I can’t seem to find an e-mail address for Dara.”
“An e-mail address for Dara?”
“Yes. I-I want to send her the pages I revised for tomorrow and I want to be sure she’s okay with how I interpreted the interaction before I send them to the director and assistant director.”
“I see. Can I ask you a question?”
“Sure.”
“Why aren’t you two working together on the changes in the same place tonight? I thought that was how you were planning to get it done?”
“Oh, uh, it was just that my condo came available earlier than expected and I got tied up with getting all that squared away and I still don’t have a car, so by the time I could get over to Dara’s, it would be pretty late and everyone is waiting on these pages. I don’t want to let anyone see them before Dara has a look, so…”
Carolyn shook her head in wonder.
Oh, my God. You’re a horrible liar. And that’s a really good thing.
“Sure. I can give you Dara’s e-mail. She probably checks [email protected] more often than any other e-mail address. That’s your best bet.”
“Thanks. You’re a lifesaver.”
“Do you want her phone num—”
“No.” Rebecca got the word out before Carolyn had even finished asking the question. “I mean, that won’t be necessary, and I’m pretty sure that’s not something Dara gives out, right? I mean, that’s about her privacy. If she wanted me to have it, she would’ve given it to me.”
“Maybe she forgot.”
“Well, if she did, she can give it to me next time I talk to her.”
“Okay. Do you need anything else?”
“No. Nope, I’m good.”
“How’d your first day go?”
Rebecca chuckled. “It was…interesting.”
“Is that ‘interesting’ in the Chinese sense?”
“The director fired the screenwriter right in front of me. Is that the sort of thing that happens around here every day?”
Carolyn’s eyebrows disappeared into her hairline. “No. I think it’s pretty safe to say that’s a really, really rare occurrence. What happened?”
“I don’t want to go into it, really. Let’s call it creative differences and leave it at that.”
“How very diplomatic of you.”
“Well, I’ll let you go. I’m sure you’re busy and I really want to get these pages to Dara before it gets any later.”
“Okay. Hey, Rebecca?”
“Hmm?”
“How are you planning to get to the studio in the morning if you don’t have a car?”
“Oh, I’ll catch a cab.”
“Don’t do that.”
“No, it’s okay. Really.”
“Let me send a car to pick you up.”
“Like I said—”
“Please? I’ll feel better.”
“Okay. If you’re sure.”
“I’m sure. What time do you need to be on set?”
“I have to teach a class at 5:00 a.m. our time, so I need to be at my trailer before then. Which royally sucks since the cast isn’t going to have be on set until eleven.”
“Eww.” Carolyn’s wheels were spinning. “I’ll have a car get you at 4:15. Will that be enough time?”
“Plenty. Thanks. Tomorrow, I’ll work on the car issue.”
“Sounds like a plan. Let me know if you need any help, and good luck with the script changes tonight.”
“Thanks. Carolyn?”
“Yes?”
“Thanks for everything. You’ve been really great to me.”
“You’re very welcome. Goodbye, Rebecca.”
“Good night.”
When she disconnected the call, Dara practically was in Carolyn’s lap. “Well? What did she say?”
“My God. You’re worse than a teenager.” Carolyn put the phone down on the table. “You should be getting an e-mail momentarily with Rebecca’s revisions. She didn’t want to send them to the powers that be without your approval first.”
“Wow. She doesn’t have to do that. I mean, I told her last night that I trusted her judgment, she should just do what she thought was right.”
“Well, I guess she still wants to include you in the process and make sure you’re on board.”
“That’s generous.”
“From what you told me, it certainly is,” Carolyn said.
“Please don’t make me feel worse than I already do. What else?”
“She was very circumspect about the reasons why you two aren’t working together in person tonight. She completely covered for you, and you’ll be happy to know, she’s a really, really bad liar.” Carolyn smiled. “I’m pretty sure you’ll never have to worry about whether or not she’s being straight with you about anything. You’ll know.”
“She didn’t want my phone number?”
“Interestingly, no. She was very uncomfortable about it. Another plus in her favor. She didn’t want to violate your privacy and although she didn’t come out and say so, I could see that she didn’t think you’d want her to have the number, so she wouldn’t take it.”
“Wow. That’s…wow. I don’t know what to say.”
“Say that she’s unique and more principled than most people you’ll meet.”
“Definitely. What did she say about her day today?”
“Oh, that was interesting. Did you know George fired Cal? Right in front of Rebecca?”
“What? No. That didn’t happen in the conversation I overheard.”
“Well, I suspect you’ll get a memo about it soon. Rebecca chalked it up to ‘creative differences’ and asked me if things were always like this on a movie set.”
“Poor Rebecca. What a day.” Dara leaned forward in her chair. “That brings us back to the question we were solving when she called. We need a plan.”
“I think I just may have one. But you’re going to have to sacrifice some sleep to make it work.”
“I’m listening…”
Rebecca reread the same scene for the fourth time, saying the dialogue out loud to herself as she paced back and forth around the family room. Each time, she changed the emphasis on a word, giving the line a different spin. Finally, she marked up the page. She was working on her fourth scene of the night, trying to stay ahead of the curve. Dara had said they generally shot a scene a day or every two days, so Rebecca figured she was making good progress.
In her mind’s eye, Rebecca saw Dara as she was last night, sitting so close to her she practically could feel the warmth of her skin.
This was so much more fun when I was doing it with you.
Rebecca sighed miserably.
Suck it up. That’s never going to happen again.
Her computer chimed, letting her know she had an incoming e-mail, and Rebecca’s heart skipped. She sent the pages for tomorrow to Dara nearly forty-five minutes ago. She hustled over to the desk and clicked on her inbox.
Rebecca,
I really like the direction you’ve taken this scene. It’s far closer now to the original vibe. I appreciate all your efforts. You’re doing great. I made one minor adjustment to Celeste’s line on the third page, only because I have trouble saying the word ‘unequivocally’ in dialogue without screwing it up. Trust me when I tell you, changing that out will save George at least five takes! Otherwise, you’re good to go.
Thank you for sending the pages to me first for my input. That means a lot to me. Keep up the good work. See you tomorrow.
D.
Rebecca reviewed the e-mail three times trying to catch any hidden meaning, anything personal.
Sometimes a professional e-mail is just a professional e-mail.
Yet the tone was more casual than that, and Dara made a point of complimenting Rebecca’s work. That was something, wasn’t it? Plus, relating her issue with “unequivocally” to Rebecca was a friendly aside. Would she have revealed that to Cal? Rebecca didn’t think so.
“Oh, my God. Get over yourself. She sent you essentially a one-paragraph response. Don’t analyze it to death. Just take it at face value, make the correction, and send the damn e-mail to Audrey and George.”
When that was done, Rebecca reopened Dara’s e-mail. She should probably answer it, shouldn’t she? That would be proper etiquette, wouldn’t it?
“How old are you? Do what you would do for any other colleague and stop obsessing.”
Dara,
Of course I wanted you to see the changes first. A collaboration was the way we envisioned this process working all along.
I’m glad you’re okay with my treatment of the scene. I’m sure you’ll play it tomorrow with unequivocal aplomb.
See you on the set.
R.
She sat back and went over her words. “This is ridiculous. You’ve anguished more over word choice in these few lines than you did on your entire PhD dissertation. She allowed the pointer arrow to hover over the Send button for a second longer, then clicked on it.
“Let’s get back to more secure ground, shall we? Time to review the material for tomorrow’s classes.” She saved and closed the script file and opened up her notes for the eight o’clock lecture.
“Just breathe. Everything will be fine. Just breathe.” This sounded like such a good idea when Carolyn proposed it last night. Now, however…
Dara checked herself in the rearview mirror at a stoplight. Normally, she wouldn’t have applied any makeup, leaving the makeup artists with a blank slate on which to work. But nothing about this situation was normal. She fluffed her hair with one hand.
At this hour, traffic was fairly light and she made good time.
One block left to go. You still have time to pull out.
The light turned green and Dara saw a car approaching from behind. She stepped on the gas to pull through the intersection and tried to ignore the butterflies in her stomach.
Be casual.
“No,” she admonished herself, “be real.”
The sun was not up yet, and a light was on in the master bedroom as she pulled into the driveway. She checked her watch—fifteen minutes early. Dara rested her head on the steering wheel. Should she sit there? Should she ring the doorbell?
Maybe you should just go home and go back to bed and pretend you were never here.
A knock on her window startled her so badly that she almost hit her head on the roof. She put a hand to her chest, where her heart was beating wildly, and lowered the window.
“Dara?”
“Ah…hi.”
“What are you doing here at this hour? I’m waiting for a car Carolyn was sending to take me to the studio. I’ve got my eight a.m. class.”
“I know. I’m your ride.”
”You are?”
“If that’s okay with you, I mean. If not, I can call you a ca—”
“No. It’s fine. I’m just surprised, that’s all Just give me a second, I’ll get my things.”
Appreciating her curves and the way the slacks hugged her ass, Dara stared after Rebecca’s retreating form and swallowed hard. If she was nervous before, the desire welling up inside her only made her more so.
In short order, Rebecca was back with her briefcase, which she placed on the floor in the back. She settled in the passenger seat and put on her seatbelt, then turned sideways to look at Dara.
“What?”
“You know you’re not due on set until eleven, right?”
“Yes.”
“Did the ride Carolyn was getting me fall through and she needed backup?”
“No.” Dara looked over her shoulder for oncoming cars and pulled away from the curb.