Read Starlet's Web (The Starlet Series, #1) Online
Authors: Carla Hanna
He begged. “Please, Marie.”
I opened the door, not caring that I was in my bathrobe. Everyone could hear him pleading outside. They would make much more of this than there was. I gestured to him to come inside. He came in and hugged me.
“Get off me,” I reacted.
He backed off from me immediately, frustrated and confused. “Marie, I'm so sorry about being an ass. We need to be friends. What the hell is going on?”
I admitted, “Working with you is frustrating. You forget your lines. You mouth the words to my lines. You don't focus. You're late for work. We have to do so many takes. You drink and smoke too much. You sleep with everyone. You move too fast. I just can't deal with it.”
My words flung out faster than I could self-edit. The words stung. I scrunched up my face. I continued, “I don't want to have a relationship with my co-star. I want it to be professional.”
“Well I didn't ask for any of this life and can't handle it. I need your help. You ground me, Marie. You get me, right?”
“I don't know. When I'm around you I forget that you're a playboy.”
“But that's not who I really am. It's just this place. I'm talented as a singer but I suck as an actor. I was so happy when I won the show for my songs. I did an album that's now selling well back home, but I'm in this contract that ships me off here to be some loser pop star dancer/vocalist. Then I sign something to be an actor. I don't have any idea about what I'm supposed to do. I got this part after auditioning for a few months during the time that they're working me non-stop. I haven't really slept for about a yearâwhen the craziness started. I can memorize a song, sing anything, but I can't do scripts. I get so flustered. It's unnatural, fake! Honestly, I wish I never tried out for that damn show. I don't think I'm set up for this business but I've got these contracts so I might as well live it up, right?”
I decided to explain myself to him. “Byron, I'm sorry I've confused you and you had to be part of this nasty industry without knowing what you were getting into. You're gorgeous. You should know that you don't suck as an actor. You're remarkable at getting into your character. But you need to stay in character and learn those lines. Remember our night. You learned them great. And about our night, I appreciate that you stopped right away, but I don't like that you pressured me so much. I botched how I handled everything with you and am embarrassed, and sorry.”
“Shit, Marie. I'm sorry, too. I just want you so much, need you to keep me sane. I would have done so much more for you if you had let me.”
“Byron, it bugs me every moment I see you that I didn't speak up. I know that I could have. When you said you loved me, I believed you for a half-second and felt I should go for it when you got naked. But I just froze. I didn't want to be a tease. Then I had to see you every day. These last weeks have been really awkward, painful.”
“I didn't lie to get you to sleep with me. You're amazing.” Byron peered at me soulfully. “Marie, I need to know something. Please tell me the truth. I promise I won't tell. Were you raped?”
I learned that I could not tell anyone who promised not to tell my secrets because they always told. He studied my expressions carefully. “Byron, my sexual past has not been great. I wasn't raped but could have been. But I don't want to talk about that. You ignored the twenty times I asked you to back off. You annoyed me when we had to do so many takes. I was annoyed with myself that I kept kissing you. That was the tension I felt.”
My words were clearly a blow to his ego. But they were true. That was how I felt.
“Where does that leave us for the events, the premiere? You know we'll have to kiss and hug for the cameras. It will hurt me if that is all acting, knowing that you hate me the whole time.”
I sat down on the couch next to him. “I don't hate you. I like you. I just don't want to have a relationship with you. I also mix up the emotions from on screen and off. It's hard for me to keep it straight in my head. I'm sorry I acted so mental.”
Byron put his arm around me again. I let him. “Please tell me what you feel right away when we work together, do the events. There's something about you. I don't know: your soft skin, the way you move, your child-like sexy face, your unbelievable lips and eyes. You turn me on like no other girl.” He shook the thoughts away. “You're the most amazing actress I have met and the best person I've met in Hollywood. I want you to be in my life. We'll work through this weirdness together. Friends? Please?”
“Yes, friends.” I was uncomfortable with how he described me. I did not see myself that way. I looked like a kid, not some sexy woman.
We both got up from the couch. I walked to the door but stopped when he didn't follow. My body shivered when I saw his smiling eyes. In an instant, Byron walked to me and pulled at my robe. I wobbled as he slowly hugged me and then kissed my lips. I put my arms around him under his shirt and returned the kiss. He put his hands under my robe, stopped the kiss, smiled at me, and covered my body. I huffed, bewildered. He kissed my forehead as he re-tied my robe.
“See, we're just friends. I have self-control. Please call me when you change your mind about your boyfriend.” He winked as he left my trailer.
Shocked that I kissed him and sure I would have done much more, I finished getting dressed. I'm a whore, I thought as I did my makeup and hair. Shame and disbelief gutted me.
I filled my Marcia Sherrill backpack with the pictures of Manuel from my nightstand, running clothes and shoes, my wallet, iPhone and keys. Before I stepped out, I perused my trailer one last time. Goodbye home, I thought. See you in a few months on some other location for Muse III. I hoped I would be stronger then.
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I was home. I made myself a smoothie after I returned from my training session that morning with Elise and was outside ever since. We did the Santa Monica stairs down to the canyon and back up ten times with intervals, planks, sit-ups and push-ups in between. Those stairs required complete concentration because they were steep and insanely crowded.
I soaked up the sun while I ate lunch outside, breathed in the ocean breeze, and absorbed the colors from the trees and flowers. When I worked on a project, I avoided the sun at all cost so I didn't redden or darken my pigment. Franz used a yellow shellac under the foundation to hide my natural redness as it was. More redness would mean more shellac and many more unnerving itchy feelings that I'd have to control. Today I was free to be out in the sun. I watched a flock of bright green wild parrots fly from tree to tree below my terrace and a group of black crows relentlessly chase a hawk.Â
Most children of celebrities went to private schools but there were several of us that either went to the public Roosevelt or Franklin Elementary since both schools were fed by the homes north of Montana Avenue as well as those south of Montana, the socio-economic divide between the rich and well-off in Santa Monica. I lived in the posh part of Santa Monica, north of Montana Avenue, where people lived in detached single family homes with front and back yards. Only a few homes like mine, located north of Montana Avenue and north of San Vicente Boulevard had the luxury of a canyon view and ocean view. The area south of Montana Avenue was packed with retail spaces that lined each street and apartments or condos for twenty some blocks by fifteen blocks. It was very congested.
Parking was difficult south of Montana Avenue. All parking was permit parking, metered parking, or valet. Parking was free at the grocery and drug stores with most lots monitored by attendants. Validation was required at the monitored lots. On days Dad didn't bike with me to school and back, he often found parking tickets on his windshield if he parked on Montana Avenue. He used to get unglued when he was a few minutes over the meter time limit when he picked me up from school. He liked asking the teachers about my day and letting me play with friends in the playground after school. He thought it was healthy. He'd think he was getting back to the car in time. But then there'd be a parking ticket on his car and he'd cuss all the way home, saying that it was completely unacceptable that there was not enough free parking to allow a parent to get out of his car to meet his child at the end of her school day.
Dad wanted to raise me in Montana, but settled with the hand he had been dealt. Although it would have been socially easier for me to go to a private school, he was adamant that I go to public school. If he couldn't drive me or pick me up, he hired a driver. I was not allowed to walk or ride my bike to school alone. I went on to one of the public middle schools in Santa Monica, too. By then, my driver, Sashi, always took me and picked me up. I drove my junior year.Â
I actually have a “General Equivalency Diploma” from the state of California so that I could work longer hours on the set. Getting a GED was the way around the Child Labor Laws so I didn't have to go to school and was not limited to working a maximum eight hours on the set. During the filming of
Constantine's Muse
this past fall and spring, we found that it worked out great because we often had to go over-time with Byron's sloppy work.
Even with the GED, Dad begged the school to let me finish my senior year: go to class when I was in town, do the work, and take the tests for the classes. He insisted that it would help me feel normal and actually learn something. I liked school, having friends, and seeing Manuel so alright, whatever.
“Hey, Attila. Thanks for lunch.” I smiled coming in from the back patio. I got a glass of water and took my refill of Excedrin. I took two extra-strength pills when I woke up in the morning, two at lunch and two before bed to manage my joint and head pain. I had endured bad migraines for at least a year, maybe longer. My doctor gave me a bottle of Vicoden that I could take if they became unbearable, but I had only taken one pill since Januaryâthat time the headache was so bad that I couldn't see and couldn't think. Otherwise, I hadn't found them to be unbearable. Given my crazy schedule, eating too little and exercising too much, I figured headaches were inevitable.
Attila smiled back at me and continued working. The kitchen was clean. He was almost done preparing my food for the week.Â
Attila was Hungarian living with a Japanese-American second wife and two children from his African-American ex-wife. He was tall and muscular, and always wore a black cotton tee with camouflaged fatigue pants. He loved his kids and wife. I loved his go-with-the-flow, non-judgmental, treasure-each-day perspective on life. He was totally cool.
Attila was there all morning cooking my meals for the week, as he did every Saturday that I was in town. He cooked them and then stored them in the freezer and fridge with instructions on the containers for reheating and the type of meal and day I should eat it. It made life really easy to not have to think about my diet, nutritional requirements, or portion size. The prepared meals and the exercise kept me appropriately fit and too thinâthe perfect size for Hollywood.
“This week I have to make some more âraw' meals for you. Elise said you should ease up on the cardioâyou guys are strength training instead, I guess. If you hate the meals I'll change things next Saturday?” Attila almost asked apologetically when he told me. He knew I got so bored with salads and the “raw” food extreme that Elise was crazy about. The way he did “raw” was pretty clever but I could only handle it in small doses. I liked my meats and fish. His salmon with fennel in a butter cream sauce was my favorite dish. I wondered which day this week I would get to eat it.
“Honestly, I think you're too thin and don't agree with you eating âraw' so I threw in a salmon meal or two to look forward to, but don't tell Elise. I need this job.”
“Thank you for sneaking food for me. I felt like I was starving on the set. I hate eating âraw' food!” I smiled and laughed. “Attila, you're an amazing cook, and I'm always grateful for your hard work. Thanks for the warning. âRaw' it is.”
“Have a great time at prom,” he said. “Be sure to order a decadent dessert after dinner.”
“Thanks.” I said and then glanced at the clock. I was confusedâtime flew by fast. I needed to shower right away. I didn't hire anyone to do my hair or makeup. I wanted to do it myself. It was prom, not a big production. I was not on display.
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Before I did my hair, I checked out my prom dress.
Sage left a note on the outside of the garment bag, “Darling, you will look stunning as you always do. I thought this would be the most prom-like of your dresses and had it altered so you can laugh and dance and move freely. You shouldn't need to be taped and should be able to just slip it on easily! Enjoy your night! Love you!”
I laughed. Event dresses were impossible to get into and difficult to move in. It was a painful few hours. Sitting in the limo prior to the red carpet was pure torture. Walking gracefully in heels was nerve racking and required my complete focus. Posing for the cameras was embarrassing, and my mind was always on guard to make sure I didn't show any pain or nerves. I even tried to blink quickly so some weirdo picture didn't get published with my eyes closed and mouth frowning from the pain of not being able to breathe.Â