Angels (18 page)

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Authors: Marian Keyes

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“Is he married?” I asked. “David Crowe?”

Emily fell silent, then said, “Please stop doing this to yourself.”

The Club House was noisy and full, almost entirely with quartets of men who were—incongrously—eating salads and drinking Evian.

Emily and I were ushered through the throngs of men to our table.

David Crowe hadn't arrived yet.

136 / MARIAN KEYES

I suddenly urgently wanted a glass of wine, but when I asked Emily if that was okay, she regretfully shook her head. “Sorry, Maggie, but you're supposed to be my assistant. Though, God knows, I could do with several myself. And twenty nonfiltered, super strengths.” Nervously she clacked her nails on the table until, in a frenzy of frayed nerves, I grabbed her hands. She looked at me in surprise.

“It'll be fine,” I said, pretending that I was holding her hands in reassurance.

“Thanks,” she said, extricating herself and giving the tabletop another good hammering. “Oh thank God, here's David.”

Thank God indeed
.

She pointed out a clean-cut young man who looked affable and sure of himself. This meant he was probably a neurotic mess who'd never had a meaningful relationship and who spent five hours a week in therapy. Such, I am told, is the Hollywood way.

He gave us a wave and a big, BIG smile. He was probably eight feet away from us, yet it took him ten minutes to cross the room, so busy was he stopping at tables, shaking hands, exclaiming with pleasure and generally bonhomie-ing.

Finally he arrived, held my hand between his two and stared into my eyes. “So happy to meet you, Maggie.”

He turned to Emily and said, “And how's my main girl?”

All smiles, down he sat and displayed what a regular at the Club House he was by not even looking at the menu. “Cobb salad, hold the avocado, dressing on the side,” he efficiently told the waiter.

Then he launched into gossipy and entertaining conversation about our fellow lunchers. He was almost like a tour guide.

“As you know, the hierarchy of power in this town shakes down every Monday morning,” he told me.

“Depending on the opening weekend grosses,” Emily said.

“Right! So see that guy over there, in the suspenders. Elmore Shinto. As of this morning, his career is over. Execu ANGELS / 137

tive producer of
Moonstone
, a ninety-million-dollar project. Word on the street said it sucked. They reshot the ending four times.

Opened this weekend and TANKED. Studio's going to take a huge hit on it.”

I was keen to get a look at him, more because I was interested in getting a gawk at a man who showed up in public wearing suspenders. As if the Club House was
The Rocky Horror Show
. Then to my disappointment I remembered that “suspenders” was American for “braces.” Also, from the way Elmore was chatting and laughing, he didn't
look
like a man whose career was over.

“That's the way they do things around here,” Emily remarked.

“Always dress it up with a brave face.

“Until you're found rocking in a corner, crazed with cocaine psychosis, and you're carted off to the farm,” she added, with a laugh. “
Then
there's no hiding anything.”

“Er, yeah,” David said a little uncertainly, then relaunched into movie gossip. “…saved the studio from takeover…brought in the original producer…three-picture deal…script picked off the slush pile…ten years to get a green light…”

The commentary continued through our unbelievably speedy meal: no appetizer, and
certainly
no dessert. Since I'd arrived in L.A. I hadn't ever once been offered anything other than coffee after my meal. I suspected that if I'd gotten a longing for a slice of cake they'd have to call the dessert chef and get him out of bed.

Over the lunch, David and Emily had discussed pitch tactics a little, but as we left the restaurant the real work began: David stopped at several tables and introduced Emily to meaty-handed moguls.

“Emily O'Keeffe. Hugely talented writer. Pitching her new movie
Plastic Money
to Hothouse on Wednesday. You wanna piece, you gotta get in there fast!”

I hovered in the background, smiling nervously. The response to Emily varied. Some of the men were patently disgruntled at having their Cobb salad and Evian water 138 / MARIAN KEYES

disturbed, but others seemed genuinely interested. But even with the ruder ones, David—and indeed Emily—smilingly stood their ground as if they were the hottest stars in town. There was something very exciting about the buzz that David was whipping up before our very eyes.

When we finally neared the door, David said quietly, “That last guy, Larry Savage, has already passed on the script, but betcha he calls.”

“They hate the feeling they're missing out.” I tried to sound knowledgeable.

“They also hate their asses getting fired when Hothouse makes the movie into a big hit and their studio finds out they passed on it.”

Then I heard myself exclaim, “Oh, holy Christ!”

“What?” Emily asked.

“It's Shay Delaney.”

“Where?”

“There.” I indicated the man with the dark-blond hair, at a table with three other men.

“That's not Shay Delaney.”

“Yes it is! Oh no, you're right, it isn't.” The man had just turned to the room and for the first time I saw his profile.

“But it looked really like him,” I said defensively. “The back of his head was identical to Shay's.”

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

THAT AFTERNOON THERE
were two further phone calls from the sweet, squeaky girl at Mort Russell's office. First to know if Emily had any special requests for Wednesday's pitch.

“Like what?” I asked curiously.

“Audiovisual equipment. Herbal tea. A special chair.”

“Well, I'm afraid Emily is in a meeting right now.” She'd gone to her gyrotonic—whatever that was—trainer. Everyone in L.A.

seemed to have a constant parade of appointments with accountants, nutritionists, hairdressers, trainers of strange disciplines, and, top of the list, therapists. “I'll have her call you back.”

Then the girl rang again to give very complicated instructions for parking on Wednesday afternoon. Among other things, she needed the license-plate number and make of Emily's car.

“She made a right song and dance about it,” I told Emily on her return.

“That's because in movie studios, parking places are like sincerity,” she remarked.

“Huh?”

“Very, very rare. Anyone else call?”

“Just my parents. They say they're worried about me.”

“They're not the only ones.”

“I'm okay,” I sighed. At least my middle-of-the-night 140 / MARIAN KEYES

panic had abated. “And I called Donna and Sinead.” Once I'd known for sure that neither of them was Garv's girl, I'd felt okay about talking to them. Both of them sounded delighted to finally hear from me and neither knew a thing about Garv's affair. That was a relief—so at least all of Dublin wasn't discussing it.

“What are you going to wear tonight to Dan Gonzalez's party?”

Emily asked.

“Dunno.” I was glad we were going out. Constant activity was what I wanted, to keep ahead of myself and my thoughts. But there was something I had to ask.

“Will Shay Delaney be there?”

A pause. “He might be. If he's in town.”

Another pause. “Would you mind if he was?”

“Ah, no.”

“Okay.”

“Have you ever met his wife?”

“No, she doesn't come with him, I don't think. I suppose with the three children she wouldn't be able to.”

“Does he…you know…play around? Or is he faithful to her?”

“I don't know,” Emily said earnestly. “I don't see him that often or know him that well. Which would you prefer? That he's faithful or unfaithful?”

“Don't know. Neither.”

Emily nodded thoughtfully at this piece of illogical nonsense.

“Look,” she said slowly, “you've let him live rent-free in your head for a long time.” Then she stopped. “I'm sorry, forget I opened my mouth. I don't know…I suppose I
can't
know what you went through. Sorry,” she repeated.

“It's okay.”

Then she went to get ready and that was the end of that.

Half an hour later she reappeared in pink-and-black leopard-skin jeans, dominatrix stilettos, and some sort of jerkin top. But it wasn't just the clothes: there were bracelets and barrettes and shiny makeup…

“How do you do it?” My brow furrowed.

ANGELS / 141

“You look great too.”

I'd done my best, but I hadn't brought many glitzy clothes to L.A. (mostly because I didn't have them), and in my black “party”

dress I felt like a mourner next to Emily's exotic plumage.

“Oh why,” I berated myself, “do I have brick-shit-house tendencies, or else I could borrow your clothes. Curl my eyelashes, would you, with your magic eyelash curler?”

Emily could do better than that; she did my makeup so that I was nearly as shiny as she was, then gave me some spare barrettes and bracelets.

And then off we went.

The party, in a Spanish-style mansion in Bel Air, was one of those highly organized glamorous ones. Electronic gates with burly types checking your identity, ten Mexican men to park your car, and fairy lights winking and twinkling through the trees. In the house, good-looking, talkative people circulated in the high-ceilinged, airy rooms, and enormous vases overflowed with abundant arrangements of lilies. The light glinted off trays of champagne
and
—rather disappointingly, I thought—trays of mineral water. As it was a Hollywood party, I'd come expecting drugs, hookers, and general high jinks. Surely that ebony princess looking for the ladies' room was
really
off to snort a gram of cocaine? That alarmingly young-looking Hispanic girl
had
to be a prostitute.

Emily went to pay a fealty visit to Dan Gonzalez, the host, and I stood sipping champagne and watching, hawkeyed, for signs of debauchery.

“Hi!” A burlyish, youngish man wearing a wing-tipped collar walked up to me. “Gary Fresher, executive producer.”

“Maggie Gar…Walsh.” They were certainly friendly here!

“And what do you do, Maggie?”

“I'm just taking some downtime right now.”

Then, so quickly that I could hardly take it in, he said curtly,

“Nice meeting you,” turned his back, and walked away.

142 / MARIAN KEYES

Whaa…at
?

I should have had a job. He wasn't interested in talking to me because I couldn't help him. The realization shocked and depressed me.

Party, my granny. More like a dreadful networking convention.

Next people would be exchanging business cards. Oh, hold on, they already were, and Emily O'Keeffe was one of them. There she was, in the thick of things, glossy, confident, talking the talk, walking the walk…

No sign anywhere of Shay Delaney. He must not be in town.

“Hi! I'm Leon Franchetti.”

A startlingly handsome man had materialized in front of me, his hand extended.

“Maggie Walsh.”

“And what do
you
do, Maggie?”

“I'm a pet groomer.” It was the first job to come into my head.

“How about you?”

“I'm an actor.”

I admit it, I was quite impressed. Not as much as I once would have been when my feelings were normal, but…“Cool.”

“Yeah, things have been going pretty good.” I was spellbound by his matinee idol smile.

I was about to ask what he'd been in, but he beat me to it. “I've just finished a pilot for ABC, should be screening in the fall, I've got a totally great character, with lots of room for growth, I could really stretch myself with it—”

“Excell—”

“Before that, I was in
Kaleidoscope
.” Another hypnotizing smile.

“Were you?” I'd seen it, but I didn't remember him from it.

“Not a huge role, but it got me noticed. Oh yeah, it got me noticed.” He flashed me another handsome-devil smile. Oddly, this one didn't affect me like the others had. “I've ANGELS / 143

also played Benjamin in the House of Pies commercial. ‘Where do I get my pie?’” He stuck out his bottom lip, suddenly looked woebegone, then delivered, with a beam, “In the House of Pies, stoopid!” It appeared to be the catchphrase from a very idiotic ad.

“It didn't screen in California, but it was totally HUGE in the Midwest. Even politicians were saying it. ‘Where do you see yourself in ten years' time?’‘In the House of Pies, stoopid!’”

It was around then that I realized how superfluous I was to the conversation. Emily rescued me, but within minutes I was boxed in by another walking resumé who gave me chapter and verse on his entire acting career. He asked me one question and one question only: did I work in “the business”?

When he'd finished with me, I stood alone and watched the room. All the glitter had rubbed off and the people moving and smiling and talking looked like sharks in a shark pool. It was true what Emily had said: it would be impossible to find love in this town. They were all too into their work. Within me a space opened up; there was nothing to distract me from my thoughts of Garv.

Depression began to circle and settle…

Then my heart thrilled at the sight of an old friend across the room: Troy, with his long face and implacable mouth. Okay, so I'd only known him since Friday, but compared to this awful crowd of humorless egomaniacs, he was one of the closest friends I'd ever had. I hurtled through the throng.

“Hey,” he exclaimed, looking as happy to see me as I was to see him. “Having a good time?”

“No.”

He turned my wrist to him. “Uh-oh. The emergency happen?”

I nodded. “I called him, he wasn't there. Thank you for the licorice lace.”

“Twizzler,” he corrected. “It help?”

“It sure did. I could have done with twenty more.”

“Buddhists say that everything is impermanent—that's a 144 / MARIAN KEYES

comfort. But not as much as refined sugar. So you're not having a good time?”

“No,” I said hotly. “I've been monologued at.”

“Acting is a savage profession,” Troy explained softly. “Every day you get told that your voice is wrong, that your look is over. You get so many blows to your ego that the only way to survive is to overdevelop it.”

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