Read Catch a Falling Star Online
Authors: Unknown
being about how good I was. That summer, I
hated
dancing.”
“So you turned down the scholarship.”
“Yes.”
“And proved that jerk right.”
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Tears started to spill down my cheeks, blurring his face.
“Oh, don’t do that. Don’t cry.” He hurried to brush them from
my face.
His sweetness startled me enough to slow my tears. “I’m sorry.
It’s just . . .” I fished for the words that clouded my brain. “I just,
mostly, don’t think I’m right for that sort of world. For that world
of winners and losers and
pushing
through
. I’m not sure I’m built for
that, don’t even know if I
believe
in that sort of world. Not when I
think about that family last Saturday who was just trying to find a
home, think about Bob who just wanted to get a job —
any
job—
and how hard that is for him. And I have so much already: my
family, my home, my job. I like my life here. It might seem boring
and small, but I like it. I have so much, so who am I to spend time
pushing for more? It’s just greedy.”
Adam leaned into the front seat, dug around in the glove box,
and returned with a tissue. “Listen, if you’re happy teaching dance
to those old people, if that’s enough for you, and you don’t want to
go to New York and be some big-shot dancer, that’s fine; it’s sweet,
actually. So you want to make the world better, devote yourself to
those families on Saturdays — that’s a beautiful thing. I just don’t
understand why you can’t do both. Why didn’t you just keep danc-
ing here? Don’t let some jerk with a spray-on tan be the reason you
gave up the thing you used to love the most.”
I dabbed my eyes with the tissue, watching the night sky bloom
into violet. “What frustrates me is that there was so much weight
given to one choice over the other. If I had taken the scholarship,
left Little, then I’m brave or amazing or whatever. But people
didn’t want to just let me stay here. Wouldn’t stop telling me what
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a mistake I’d made. They said I was scared or letting myself down
or not expanding my horizons. I hate that expression, by the way.
What if I like my horizons? What if staying means I’m loyal and
care about my life here? But people didn’t see it like that. So I quit.
It was just easier than listening to them.”
“People always have advice when it has no impact on their own
lives,” Adam said quietly.
“Yeah, true.” I wiped at my eyes, embarrassed. I wanted to roll
down the window, to escape the heat starting to build, to put an
end to this conversation. I didn’t really want to be having this talk.
It felt like scraping my heart on a cheese grater. “I just feel like
other people are always encouraging me to take all these big risks
or whatever because they mostly never did. They were hanging out
at the river or taking a nap. But, hey, they want
me
to go make
something of myself.”
“Having talent has its own sort of responsibility.” Adam pushed
open the door, letting the cooling pine air into the car.
I studied him. “I don’t want to sound like a quitter or a whiner
or whatever, but the truth is that I don’t like to compete. I don’t
like it when people up the stakes on me. It’s like the higher up you
go, the crazier the people get who show up alongside you. Anytime
the stakes are too high, I just don’t like the company around me.
It’s like there’s some sort of fast pass for narcissists that exists when
there’s a winner on the line.”
When he took my hand, he was chuckling.
My stomach twisted. “Don’t laugh at me. Not all of us are cut
out to be superstars like you.”
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He shook his head. “It’s not that. I’m not laughing at you.
You’re just bringing up all these things that came up in rehab for
me. It’s kind of scary, actually, how you just sounded like me two
months ago.”
My heart squeezed. Was it possible that our worlds might not
be on separate sides of the galaxy after all?
His hand let go of mine, and its absence felt like the dark parts
of space. He took a low, quiet breath. “Sometimes, I regret not
having a regular life. A regular childhood. You know, baseball
teams and pizza parties. People think it’s so amazing to be in the
movies. And it is. It’s great, but it’s hard not to wonder what it
would be like to be . . . normal. To have just chosen my own path
rather than had it all decided already.”
I opened my car door, too, so we could catch a cross breeze.
The sky darkened even more and I thought of all those little stars,
all the ones we couldn’t see, hidden out there in the dark, spar-
kling without anyone seeing them at all. I didn’t mind being that
sort of star, the kind no one saw but still held its own small part of
the sky.
Watching him, I wanted to say something to him about regret,
about how I didn’t really believe in the idea of regret because it was
always based on what
might
have happened. People always held up
the now, the concrete now, and compared it to what might have
been, and that wasn’t a fair comparison.
Instead, I told him, “I’m just trying to make the best choice I
can, with all the information I have at the time, and then, if it doesn’t
work out, I’ll figure out something else. That’s the best I can do.”
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“I get that. More than you know.” He smiled at me, but his face
was already retreating behind its curtain and, before I could
respond, he was out of the car, leaning in. “I’m sorry to do this,
but I’ve got to run. I’ll get Mik to drive you back to your car, okay?
I have an epic shoot tomorrow, but the Fourth is going to be great,
I promise.” He gave me a sort of half smile, not really meeting my
eyes, and then disappeared into his trailer.
I just emptied my heart and he’s
got to run
?!
What just happened?
Feeling foolish as Mik drove me back to Snow Ridge, I realized
that after all of that, we hadn’t even talked about Beckett Ray or
reporters or the script or anything else. I was getting distracted
and trusting him. I needed to stick to the plan.
No more improvising.
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yesterday’s sightings
Things Are Looking Up in Little, CA
Morning, sky watchers. Wel , tomorrow is the Fourth of July. All
hail the Stars and Stripes. We’ve been wondering why the
flag used stars to represent the fifty states. So, after poking
around a bit with our pal Google, we found mostly that they
are representative of the heavens, of the human need to
look up and feel inspired by all that dark, all that scattered
light. To aspire. One blogger we came across said he felt like
the stars give people a chance to imagine their own
possibilities; they provide a reminder that each of us has the
capacity to make our best future, to find our purpose. That
sounded pretty good to us. So, while you’re kicked back
tomorrow night, looking up at the fireworks, take a minute to
consider the stars, the ones always up there reminding us of
what might be.
See you tonight, under the sky.
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sixteen
parker was dressed for the river. I knew the look well. Between
the months of April and October, it came into the café
a lot
. He
hadn’t shaved and wore a pair of raggedy Bermuda shorts with his
T-shirt and flip-flops. He appeared almost normal, like some of
the Hollywood shine had dulled. As he perused the script, he
tugged at the bill of his faded blue ball cap; it was inscribed with
the name of a movie studio I’d seen pop up on movies usually fea-
tured at the Dream, a theater that showcased artier films than the
Vista. He hurried through our schedule for the day. I’d been in
dozens of dance shows over the years, starting with my first satin-
drenched, Bambi-eyed Bon Bon in
The Nutcracker
when I was four,
but nothing compared to the production Parker had just outlined
for me leading up to my fireworks kiss with Adam.
Sitting again at the iron table tucked away in the backyard of
The Hotel on Main, he must have recognized a certain look on my
face, a certain glazed overload, because he sat back in his chair, the
garden already warm at seven a.m. “You all right? You look a bit
peaked.” He took a sip of the orange juice Bonnie had brought us
fifteen minutes ago when we’d started. She’d looked a bit less
chipper than she had for our first meeting in her garden, the skin
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beneath her eyes bruised with fatigue. I knew firsthand that after a
while, Hollywood or not, work was work.
“What time do we report for the parade?” I asked.
“Ten thirty. You’re in the first car. A vintage Mustang.” He
held up a picture of a car, slick and shiny like a candy apple. I
thought of the pink scarf Chloe had given me, wondered if they’d
let me wear it. Parker tucked the picture back into a folder.
“Fabulous, yeah? But no lingering. We’re going to rush you in and
rush you out. For security reasons.” His phone buzzed. He eyed it,
then texted a quick reply. “Oh, and here’s your dress.” He handed
me a white eyelet sundress in a clear plastic bag. I noticed the label.
“Oh, wow. Um, I’m pretty sure I’ll get that dirty. And that I can’t
afford it.”
He blinked his river-green eyes at me and rubbed at his scruff
of beard. “You don’t have to pay for it, love. The designer sent it.”
“Sent it to me?” I held the dress as if it were made of glass.
He was checking his phone again. “You’ll look gorgeous in it.
With some sandals. Nothing tarty, yeah?”
“Um, have we met? I’m not even one of those girls who can
pull off ‘tarty’ kitty at Halloween. I always go as a baby. Or a
pirate.” I hooked the dress onto the back of my chair, careful not to
let it drag on the ground.
A smile softening his face, he reminded me to change out of
the dress for the lunchtime barbecue at the fairgrounds and then
put it back on for the afternoon barbecue at Snow Ridge Senior
Living.
Nodding, I said, “Thanks for letting me go to that. It
means a lot.”
193
“It’s a great publicity stop.” He scanned his phone, frowned at
something, and then added, “A shot of you with those geriatrics
you teach to dance. Priceless.”
Not amused, I sipped my orange juice.
He flipped through a few more pages of the script. “We want
you to arrive at the private party for tonight’s Fourth of July gath-
ering no later than six.” He paused to make sure I was keeping up.
“I’ll be there at four to make sure things are going smoothly, and
the guests will begin arriving at five. We want shots of you two
strolling the vineyard. It will be a perfect build for the fireworks
kiss shot.”
“So romantic,” I mumbled.
He flipped the script shut. “We
sell
romance, love. We don’t
necessarily live it.”
“We’re watching fireworks there?”
“You and Adam. And invited guests. And three hundred lucky
Little locals.”
There had been a contest running all week on our local radio
station to win tickets to the exclusive private Fourth of July party
being hosted in honor of Adam’s Little film shoot. I’d scored
some tickets for Dad, Chloe, and Alien Drake, but when they’d
announced yesterday that they’d given away the last ticket, I’d
suddenly had quite a few people trying to contact me. One more
reason I was glad I didn’t have a Facebook page.
I watched Parker start to rearrange things in a red backpack
that still had its tags. Inside, I noticed a thick book, a bottle of
water, and a white-paper-wrapped sandwich of some sort. Not one
of ours. “You’re not going to the parade?”
194
He shot me an almost apologetic look. “I’ll be back for the
party, but I have a rare day off, and you guys are so snotty about
your river I thought I’d see what the fuss was all about.”
“Here.” I pulled the script across the table and wrote out a
series of directions on the back of it. “Go here. You’ll avoid some
of the people up from Sacramento for the day. This spot’s pretty
much locals only. When you get to the sign where it says ‘no river
access’ keep going. A resident just put that up to try to keep people
out.”
“Cheers.” He stuffed the script into the backpack. As he swung
it over his shoulder, he opened his mouth to say something, but
then closed it again, his eyes settling on me. His look felt heavy,
searching.
I squirmed a bit. “What?”
“Nothing. See you tonight.”
I’d been to every Little Fourth of July parade since I was a kid but
never in a featured car. And, of course, never with a movie star.
It changed things.
Not only did Mik run alongside of us, but three other Mik look-
alikes joined him to ward off the masses. They sweated in the heavy
sun as they ran, their huge arms bulging in matching black T-shirts