Breaking Hollywood (3 page)

Read Breaking Hollywood Online

Authors: Shari King

BOOK: Breaking Hollywood
7.98Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘Please welcome the stars of the sexiest cop show on TV, my beautiful ex-wife, Jenny Rico, and her gorgeous partner, on and off screen, Darcy Jay!’

With flair, elan and a beaming smile, he stepped to the side, right arm stretched to welcome his first guests. He could see Jenny, just off stage, smoothing down the front of her leather
trousers and adjusting her cleavage to the point of voluminous perfection. Darcy was dressed in a more tailored style, in black crêpe pencil trousers and a tuxedo jacket that fastened with
one button over what looked like a naked torso. He could absolutely see why this chick turned his wife on. As they walked towards him, he felt a definite stirring in that area himself.

The roar of the audience escalated to fever pitch as the three of them met and hugged like one big happy family.

Which they were.

One big happy, bitchy, malicious, back-biting family.

The truth was, he wanted them on the show premiere, but they needed it as much as he did. Since they’d gone public with their relationship, the reaction had been lukewarm, and ratings had
wobbled on
Streets of Power.

Puritanical Middle America, the God-fearing lot who kept a Bible on the nightstand and a rifle under the bed, didn’t approve. So tonight was about softening the backlash and letting the
world see that all parties were cool with the new arrangement.

Sure, it was also for killer ratings, but in truth, he’d been equally as crap in their ten-year marriage as Jenny, so he owed her this favour. And even if he didn’t, she had him by
the balls over access to the kids, so right now he’d strut across the stage wearing bells dangling from his naked cock if it was part of the deal.

Darcy and Jenny waved at the audience, then settled on the cream leather sofa, close enough to suggest intimacy for the voyeurs, but conscious to ensure their body language towards Davie was
open and friendly.

It was a consummate performance. An onlooker would never guess that his ex-wife thought he was a dickhead and her partner didn’t disagree.

In reality, relations between them were about as taut as the faces in a Beverly Hills post-surgery recovery room. He was the first to admit he’d been a poor father to their twins, Bella
and Bray, eight-year-old stars of the weekly sitcom
Family Three.
When they’d all lived under one roof, he’d made no time for them, was barely part of their lives. But he was
trying to make it up to them now.

‘Welcome, welcome!’ he gushed, inciting another rousing cheer from the audience.

He cut right to the chase. ‘So shall we clear up a few of the details about the journey to this point?’ He had to make a conscious effort not to roll his eyes.

Why did everything have to be a bloody journey? It wasn’t a two-day road trip, with a stop off at a spa. The truth was that their perfect Hollywood marriage had been a sham for years.

But instead of saying any of this, he found himself nodding as Jenny and Darcy gave the world an elaborate, agreed version of events. Jenny’s marriage to Davie had been wonderful, but when
she found herself attracted to Darcy, her co-star on
Streets of Power
, they’d all sat down, discussed it maturely and decided to follow their hearts. No, there had never been a
moment of animosity; yes, the children had fully adapted to their new life, and of course they were going to be co-parents and best friends forever.

That one earned more enthusiastic audience approval.

‘Jesus, Davie, can you stop this Mills and Boon shit before I vomit?’ Mellie said in his ear. For a split second Davie considered telling the truth. Yep, that would send
tomorrow’s catchup figures into the fricking stratosphere. Here were Darcy and Jenny, flaunting their new-found devotion and carefully omitting the fact that they’d first hooked up more
than seven years ago, when the three of them got wasted on the opening night of
Streets of Power
and then went on to spend a night of three-way hedonism at Chateau Marmont. Between
orgasms, he thought he’d died and gone to porn heaven that night. Instead, he’d boarded the train to Splitsville.

But hey, he wasn’t bitter.

He’d kept the $40-million Bel Air home, the cars, more money than he could spend in a lifetime and . . . His eyes drifted to the deep-auburn-haired babe right beside camera 2. Sarah
McKenzie. A Scottish journalist. A fierce brain. And his official ‘monogamous friends with benefits’ relationship.

‘OK, Davie, wind it up. Two minutes to ad break, and we’ll have to bring Jizzo on while were off air. The fucker is so wasted he can barely walk straight.’

The audience took Davie’s smile to be just a warm, tender reaction to Jenny and Darcy’s well-rehearsed bullshit. Their benevolence might waver if they knew he was actually close to
punching the air with delight. Yes! Jizzo plus wasted equalled TV sensation. Look, he’d never professed to own a space on the moral high ground.

He signalled to Jenny that it was time to go for the big ending and she caught it immediately. They may have hated each other’s guts by the end of the marriage, but they could always read
what the other one was thinking.

‘I just want to thank Davie,’ Jenny was saying now, facing the audience while gesturing in his direction. He’d specifically insisted that the front row be filled with gorgeous
creatures, and two of them cooed, ‘Aaaaah,’ as Jenny spoke. Davie really hoped Jenny was watching them, and not noticing Sarah making retching gestures twenty feet to the left.

‘He absolutely accepted my decision and my sexuality . . .’ Oh dear God, she was turning on the tears, the movie-star sobs that made her utterly mesmerizing as a single drop ran down
her ski-slope cheekbone. ‘And he’s just been the best friend and the best father ever.’ She looked at Darcy, then back at her ex-husband. ‘We love him. And we know he loves
us too.’

What a pile of crap. Davie leaned over, putting his hand on hers as he nodded. ‘I always will, babe. We’re family. All three of us. And on that happy note –’ he looked
straight down camera 2 ‘– stay with us. We’ll be right back, with the incomparable Jizzo Stacks and Carmella Cass.’

Cain and his band burst into song, the lights went up, and – always aware that someone might have smuggled a phone past security – the star ex-couple kept huge grins on their faces
as they hugged goodbye.

Only when Jenny was in close did she whisper in his ear, ‘Your girlfriend’s a bitch.’ Ah, so she’d seen Sarah’s nauseated verdict on proceedings.

Gently, he broke away, his smile still beaming. ‘We always did have so much in common.’ Then turning to Darcy, ‘Bye, honey. It’s been a blast.’

His mischievous gloat was cut short by a commotion in the wings. Jizzo Stacks was singing ‘Delilah’ as he careered off the set partition, a song that gave a better reflection of his
age than his much-lifted face.

Over twenty visits to the cosmetic surgeon’s table, daily gym workouts and a 1980s rock weave had left him looking slightly weird, but a good two decades younger than his sixty-year-old
self. And then there were the vitamin shots, the only legal drugs in a cocktail of steroids (for his workouts), weed (to relax), amphetamines (to get his rocks off) and coke (to get high). The man
was a walking pharmacy, but at least he was walking with a supermodel by his side. Carmella Cass, six foot tall, tumbling blonde waves,
Sports Illustrated
cover girl three years in a row
and the owner of the best pair of natural tits in North America. The woman was glorious, the Elle Macpherson of the new millennium, with a beach body that somehow developed despite the fact she
grew up on Cheetos in a trailer park in Detroit. Davie was never sure if their coupling was real or just a great premise for a TV show. The nation was split in its opinion on the romance-showmance
debate, but millions still tuned in weekly to watch an incredibly wealthy man who should be counting down to retirement drink tequila shots from a glass wedged in his twenty-five-year-old
girlfriend’s cleavage.

‘Davie baby!’ Jizzo roared when he set eyes on the man who was technically his boss. Lurching forward, he was saved only from performing a Jack Daniel’s touchdown by the quick
reflexes of two floor managers and Mellie, who was currently holding him up by the weave.

‘If this comes off, I swear to God I’ll have nightmares for life,’ she muttered. ‘OK, get him on the sofa.’

The liquor had been removed, and the founding member of Leather Pants Anonymous had been parked, cowhide first, on the sofa, when Carmella wandered on to join him.

‘Sorry – had to pee,’ she announced, immediately drawing everyone within earshot’s attention to the white denim Daisy Dukes that barely covered her butt cheeks. Making
eye contact, Davie could see she was pretty wasted too, but Carmella covered it well – her speech was lucid, her eyes bright, and she was only slightly on the bipolar-high side of
animated.

Perfect. He and Mellie had already discussed the subjects he planned to cover tonight – Jizzo and Carmella’s relationship, sex and, of course, their show. He also had a dozen
questions prepared in his mind if the interview dried up, but with the two of them this well oiled, there was no chance of that happening.

He just wanted them to be their normal wild selves, and let a couple of bombshells slip, and they’d be viral on social network within the hour. #heresdaviejohnston #insane
#itakemyteethoutbeforesex

The ludicrous thought made Davie smile . . . then peer at Jizzo’s teeth.

Mellie was making her way back to the gallery now, while cueing up the second half of the show. ‘OK, people, ten seconds to the kind of carnage that could end our careers. Five, four . .
.’

Davie adjusted his shirt collar again, thanked the make-up girl – what was her name? Zoe? Zane? Zelda? Christ, he was fairly sure they’d hooked up a few years ago when she’d
first arrived to work for him – and decided on his opening line. The key was to ask a perfectly innocent question, but one that he knew Jizzo would give an outrageous answer to.

He decided to ask Jizzo to share his favourite thing about Carmella.

Any other guy would look at his partner lovingly, before going for eyes, soul or heart. And that’s because any other guy would lie through his teeth. But not Jizzo. Davie knew he’d
had way too many drinks from the liquor bottle of truth.

Out of the corner of his eye, Davie saw the make-up girl – Zoe, Zelda, Zane? – glance at Jizzo and then root herself to the spot. The audience saw her reaction as well. Thankfully,
they were too far away to realize that the reason for it was the tiny ring of white powder round Jizzo’s right nostril.

Instantly, Davie was out of his chair, leaning over, disguising his actions as a man-hug while using the cuff of his shirt to dust off the evidence from the guest’s nasal cavity.

‘Davie, what the fuck?’ Mellie roared, before continuing, ‘Two, one . . . and we’re back. I think I’ve just aged ten fricking years.’

Davie zoned her out as he made the intros, with Jizzo leaning over to give him a high five and Carmella blowing him a kiss, before waving at the audience. Every guy out there sat a little higher
in his chair, puffed his chest out a little more and wished he’d stuck with that band he’d joined at school.

‘Guys, you know I love you two,’ Davie started, eliciting another kiss from Carmella. ‘And the show is great.’

‘Yeah!’ yelled Jizzo, punching the air, while nodding to an invisible beat from inside his head.

‘Oh my God, we, like, love doing it.’ Carmella leaned forward, her breasts threatening to escape the white tank she clearly wore with no bra.

‘I think the most fascinating thing for us viewers . . .’ Davie went on, completely ignoring the fact that he was more than just a ‘viewer’. As creator and producer, the
royalties from this month’s
Beauty and the Beats
alone would allow him to buy a new beach house in Hawaii. ‘. . . is the incredible connection and love between the two of you.
Jizzo, I know it’s a tough choice, but what do you adore most about the beautiful Carmella?’

Fist pump over, the rock god stared at the white crocodile cowboy boots – with disguised lifts – that protruded from the bottoms of his black leather jeans.

Davie paused to let him answer, aware that the substances coursing through his veins were probably causing the pharmaceutical equivalent of a satellite delay.

Only when the silence became uncomfortable did Davie cajole, ‘So come on, Jizzo, don’t be coy here.’

Still nothing.

Had he fallen asleep? Oh fuck, he had. He was actually sleeping.

In the gallery, Mellie spotted it too. ‘Holy shit, what’s with this guy? Cut to Carmella. Cut to Carmella! Davie, you have to pull this back!’ she barked.

Davie was about to do exactly as she asked when Jizzo’s head slumped to the side. Was this a wind-up? He wanted outrageous; he wanted wild; he wanted action that the whole world would be
talking about the next day.

At no point did he want to see a guest pass out on the sofa.

Aware that he was live and he’d be judged by the actions he took in the next moment, he ignored Mellie and instead leaned over and touched Jizzo’s arm. ‘Hey, man, are you
OK?’ That was it. Tender. Caring. Human. Real. If tomorrow’s press used any of those adjectives, he’d be happy. They were definitely preferable to ‘heartless
bastard’.

Jizzo didn’t move for a few seconds, not even a flicker; then events took a turn that Davie struggled to process.

Jizzo’s whole body sagged to the side; his mouth fell open; his eyes stayed shut.

‘Wake him up! Wake him up,’ Mellie was hissing now.

But Davie wasn’t listening. He’d seen this before, knew what it looked like, even though it was so out of context he just couldn’t absorb it.

‘I don’t think he’ll be waking up ever,’ he murmured.

3.

‘Wish You Were Here’ – Pink Floyd

Mirren

Mirren McLean glanced around the antique burr-walnut boardroom table and realized that all eyes were on her. It was the movie-industry equivalent of the Last Supper. Twelve
suits, at least half of them playing the role of Judas, all waiting expectantly for an answer to a question that she wasn’t even sure she remembered.

Other books

Dark Night by Stefany Rattles
Lace & Lead (novella) by Grant, M.A.
Finding My Way Home by Alina Man
Love in the Details by Becky Wade
The Spirit Room by Paul, Marschel
Shmucks by Seymour Blicker