Read Catch a Falling Star Online
Authors: Unknown
just kept prepping for tomorrow. Adam, though, gave a small jolt
when he saw Jones, probably because Jones had more tattoos than
half the NBA and a face that looked like it had been used as an
ashtray. In truth, he was a huge softy and taught yoga at Juvenile
Hall every Thursday, but Adam wouldn’t know that. On our way
out, I gave Jones’s arm a little squeeze, and his smile softened the
rough edges of his unshaven face.
Outside, small crowds were forming — on the patio, in the
two parking spots just outside the back door — mostly familiar
faces, but also some clones of Stan and George. Raggedy guys,
cameras dangling over stained T-shirts. My heart felt tight. How
had it all happened so quickly?
The black Range Rover zipped into one of our two parking
spots, nearly missing a squat photographer. In the driver’s side sat
an enormous wrecking ball of a man who could only be described
as some sort of Nordic god. He hopped out, surprisingly agile, to
open the doors for Parker, Adam, and me.
As Adam slipped into the backseat with me, he gave me a
nudge. “You ready for this?”
Something told me, suddenly, I was not.
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The Nordic god dropped me off at home a few moments later,
jumping out to open my door for me. Adam leaned over. “We’ll
pick you up in the morning. Parker will text you the time.” The
door slammed, and the Range Rover pulled away as quickly as it
had arrived.
Dazed, I looked around my neighborhood. My neighbor
trimmed his roses in the warm evening light, a lawn mower buzzed
somewhere in the distance, the smell of barbecue tinged the air.
Nothing had changed.
And everything had changed.
For the next few weeks, I would be a self-absorbed movie star’s
girlfriend. I sat down on the front steps of my house, my head spin-
ning. A few minutes passed before I became aware of footsteps
padding up the hill, the huffing sound of someone walking quickly
in my direction.
Chloe.
“See, this is what I’m talking about,” she gasped before even
reaching me, her short brown hair sticking out in tufts. She must
have closed the café in record time. Either that, or Dad had let her
go. Probably the latter. She stood in front of me, her hands on her
hips. “One of those times a text is in order? Oh, guess what, Chloe?
I’M DATING ADAM JAKES!!! All CAPS!”
I smiled weakly up at her. “Nothing so far real y cal s for all caps.”
“Not the point.”
“It happened sort of fast.” From the angle where I was sitting,
Chloe’s whole head was highlighted by sky, the sun just starting to
color the stretch of clouds pink behind her.
“
How
did it happen? is what I want to know.” She blinked at me,
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waiting. “How did you go from
It’s just ice, Chloe
to, oh, um —
I’m
going out with Adam Jakes
?!”
“Now I can get you Adam ice whenever you want,” I tried
brightly.
“Spill it.”
“The ice?”
She narrowed her eyes at me. “You’re stalling.”
“Okay.” I practiced what Parker had told me to say. “After we
made those salads for the crew, he asked to meet me.”
She shook her head, confused. “Salads? He wanted to meet you
because of salads? That’s the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard.”
“You asked!”
Her eyes were now slits. “And . . . ,” she prompted.
“And so we hung out and got to talking.” The stain of clouds
deepened behind her. I took a long breath, trying to steady the
dizzy spin of my head, the jolt of guilt at lying to her.
Chloe tapped her foot, impatient with me. “What did you
talk
about?”
“Um.” I licked my lips. I couldn’t tell her that we talked about
the script that would be dictating the next few weeks of my life.
“Just stuff. Movies. My dog.”
She crossed her arms. “Extra Pickles?”
I improvised. “He likes dogs. He wondered about his name,
and I told him our first dog was named Pickles so this one was
Extra Pickles.”
“That,” she sniffed, “doesn’t sound interesting at all.”
I shrugged, knowing Chloe didn’t mean it how it sounded.
“It’s the truth.”
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Only it wasn’t.
Sighing, she plopped down beside me, deflating like a balloon.
“I can’t believe it. He asked to meet you?
You?!
”
“Now you’re just hurting my feelings.”
She gave me a withering look. “You know that’s not what I
mean.” But it kind of was what she meant. And in her defense, it
was basically true. I’m not the type of girl guys notice. In my entire
high school career, I’d had one date junior year with Tad Ballard,
a lunch at Subway and a matinee of a superhero movie. He was nice
enough, told me he liked my eyes, but he never called me again. A
week later, I saw him making out with Stacy Merchant next to the
girls’ locker room. Subway Tad and that lame kiss with Alien
Drake in eighth grade. Not exactly the ideal setup for dating Adam
Jakes. It was like asking a fourth-grade swimmer to suddenly take
a shot at the hundred-meter freestyle at the Olympics.
My phone buzzed in my hand.
Chloe’s eyes widened. “Is that
him
?!”
I showed her the screen:
8:30.
“What’s that mean?”
“That’s what time he’s picking me up tomorrow morning. We’re,
uh, hanging out again. Before he starts shooting.” I couldn’t actual y
remember what we were doing and didn’t have the script to tell me.
Sighing as if I’d told her we were flying to Hawaii in a private
jet, she sank down onto the steps next to me, her chin falling into
her hands. “You are the luckiest girl in the world.”
She was right. It was luck. Only not at all how she meant it.
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Later that night, someone tapped on the door to my room. I looked
up from the book I was reading. “Yeah?”
Chloe poked her head in. “It’s me.”
“You knocked?” Chloe never knocked.
“Well, you might be making out with Adam Jakes,” she told
me, coming into the room with a red shoe box and, after pushing
Extra Pickles out of the way, sitting next to me on the bed.
“I’m not.” I smiled, tossing the book aside.
“So I was kind of a spaz earlier and I’m sorry. You know I adore
you for a billion reasons and Adam Jakes will, too. So, to show you
I’m sorry times infinity, I brought you something.” She set the box
in front of me.
“A present?”
“Sort of.” She opened the lid. “It’s a Celebrity Survival Pack.”
She pulled out a pair of Audrey Hepburn
Breakfast at Tiffany’s
–style
black sunglasses. “You’ll need these, trust me.”
I tried them on; they felt like wearing a couple of salad plates
on my face. “They’re huge.”
She studied me. “They look awesome.”
I slipped them off, setting them on my nightstand.
She pulled other items out of the box: a flowered cell phone
case for my Adam iPhone, a bottle of “smoothing” conditioner for
my hair, some lipstick, a picture frame — deep blue and spotted
with stars (“for a picture of you two!”) — and a pale pink silk scarf.
I held up the scarf, my face questioning. A breeze came through
the open window of my room, carrying the smell of night —
barbecue, wet grass — and fluttering the scarf, just slightly, in
my hand.
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She grinned. “In case you ride in a convertible, so you won’t
mess up your hair.”
Guilt welled up in me, finding small channels I didn’t know I
had. But I couldn’t tell her, I couldn’t. I’d promised Parker that
only my parents would know. Too many potential leaks, he’d said.
It couldn’t get out or it would ruin everything. I reached over and
hugged her. “Thanks, Chloe. You’re amazing.”
“It’s nothing, really,” she said, pulling away and fiddling with
the items, packing them back into the box, before letting her eyes
rest on me. “I’m so excited for you, Carter. This is huge.” She
pushed the box toward me on the bed, half the scarf lolling like a
tongue out the side.
I picked carefully through it again, examining each item
closely, mostly so I didn’t have to meet her gaze, hoping she
couldn’t sense my apprehension. Folding the scarf neatly into the
box, I tried to sound light and hopeful when I said, “We’ll see.”
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seven
the next morning, the Range Rover pulled up to my house at 8:35.
I slipped into the backseat with Adam, who was once again lost in
his phone. Seriously, if any girl in this world wanted to trade places
with me, she should really wish to be Adam’s iPhone. That would
be a deep, meaningful relationship. Parker sat in the passenger seat,
also in iPhoneLand. “Morning,” Parker mumbled, not looking up.
Adam said nothing.
I decided to go for cheerful. “Good morning, Adam. Good
morning, various iPhones.” No reaction. I eyed the Nordic God in
the front seat who’d driven me home yesterday. “Good morning,
um, guy driving us.”
“That’s Mik.” Adam typed away. “My bodyguard.”
“Good morning, Mik.” I smoothed my skirt over my knees.
Mik nodded but didn’t take his eyes from the road. We headed
toward town in silence, and I snuck a glance at the movie star sit-
ting next to me.
Adam Jakes had been a childhood sitcom star since he was
five on a successful family ensemble show called
All of Us
that ran
for eight years. Sitting next to him in the plush backseat of the
Range Rover, it struck me that he’d been raised a bit like a goldfish,
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swimming through his childhood in the same bowl, alongside a tank
of bigger, flashier fish. I’d only seen some of the show, but it streamed
on Netflix, so I’d tried to watch a few episodes last night. Adam’s
role was the typical cute but pesky little brother who said precocious
things and fell into sticky situations the older characters were forced
to get him out of. (In one, he spent the entire episode locked in a
toolshed talking to an initial y scary but ultimately epiphany-inducing
spider.) Overall, he was good at his part, sweet and convincing,
had won some awards, and was noticed for small roles in movies by
the time he was ten. In the last couple of years, he’d ditched the
goldfish bowl and now swam freely in the ocean of stardom.
Until recently.
Over the last year or so, he’d had a stormy relationship with the
Disney star Ashayla Wimm that ended in an ugly public breakup. In
most of the recent candid photos I’d found online, he’d either been
scowling or staring sadly away from the camera much like in some
of the photos on Chloe’s wall. Watching him now, I had to push back
the impulse to ask him how he was feeling, to put my hand on his
designer denim–clad leg and just say,
How are you?
It seemed like he
might need someone to ask him that and actually listen, not just fish
for a sound bite. As if reading my thoughts, he glanced at me, barely
disguised a sigh, and returned to his staring out the window.
My throat started to close up and, blinking into the morning
sun, I tried to imagine myself through Adam’s eyes. Small-town
girl in an old thrift-store skirt and a messy ponytail. He must be
wondering how he got stuck with some hick barista. I liked who I
was, liked where I was from, but it was incredible how suddenly
dull I felt being flung into Adam’s sparkly waters.
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Mik turned the Range Rover onto Old Greenway, the road that
snaked away from downtown, but twisted abruptly into the empty,
fenced McKenzie property. A two-minute drive from downtown,
the McKenzie property felt a million miles away. Rumor was, Mr.
McKenzie was former CIA. He’d been kind of a sight around town,
in his dark glasses and vests with too many pockets. The people
who didn’t believe the CIA story thought he must be some sort of
journalist or adventure photographer, always leaving town for
months at a time, never really talking to anyone. Whatever he was,
he’d been a total security nut. His five-acre property was com-
pletely fenced with sleek boards topped with barbed wire. Prison
chic. Over the years, many a teenager had been busted for trying to
sneak over that fence and past Mr. McKenzie’s cameras. He didn’t
even have a house, just a gleaming Airstream and five dogs that
looked bred to eat people. When he left town last year, pulling that
gleaming trailer behind his massive truck, most people assumed
he’d been sent on some sort of government assignment. Dad said
that was way more fun than admitting he’d probably just decided to
live out the remainder of his years on a golf course in Florida.
After punching in the code for the main gate and passing
through it, Mik bumped the car along a dirt road secluded by thick
pines on either side. Finally, he pulled into a clearing where a
series of trailers sat in filtered sunlight.
“What is this?” I gazed through the windows. The trailers were