Writer's
Note: Please read the previous chapters and prologue of Invisible
Threads before reading this.
CHAPTER TEN
As they approached
the Illinois Traction Building in the morning, Gary felt cold and
unprepared - mostly unprepared.
The previous night,
Cherie said that Gary was ready for improvisation. Gary thought she
just didn't want to stay up all night forcing him to memorize
lines. He had a fridge full of Red Bull and was in favor of the
all-nighter. The debate lasted one withering glare.
And now, here he
was.
Cherie's hand wave
caught his peripheral vision, and he followed her gaze to Philip who
was standing with the cameraman and make-up artist in front of the
building. The sun was just rising, and he could see the fog of
everyone's breath as they were setting up.
Philip went through
his plan. "We have these two stools here. Cherie, you'll be in
the lower one facing the camera and Gary you'll be in the taller
one right behind her."
They both sat down
as directed.
Philip shook his
head. "No, Gary, you need to be facing right over Cherie's
shoulder. Straddle your legs around her."
Gary stood up and
reseated himself immediately behind her with his legs to either side.
Cherie looked up at
him and smiled. "Is that a comb in your pocket or are you just glad
to see me?"
Gary did not have a
comb in his pocket and was not sexually aroused. He improvised.
"Hubba. Hubba." It sounded stupid. A brief glower flitted across
Cherie's face and was replaced instantaneously with a smile as she
turned back toward the cameraman. They should have memorized lines.
Philip noticed but
ignored the interaction. "We're in a race here. The sun is just
rising, and the front of the building is in shade. After the sun gets
high enough to clear the shade, we won't have long before traffic
starts moving through and cars start parking over there. We'll have
just a few minutes to get something we can use."
He looked back and
forth between Cherie and Gary. They both nodded.
"Gary, we know
your motivation for why you're doing this. Proving some scientific
thingy."
Gary opened his
mouth to clarify the scientific
thingy
and immediately shut his mouth as Cherie's elbow dug into his
ribcage. Instead, he said "Okay."
"What we want you
to focus on here is how Cherie fits into all of this. By the time
America sees this piece, they will have already seen your first
performance. We're going to be able to cobble together, with
superhuman editing, some of the stuff we shot of Dr. Doom..."
"Professor Lecki."
"... We were lucky
enough that he did mention you, Cherie, so that will establish you."
Cherie tilted her
head quizzically. "What did he say about me?"
Philip smiled. "He
referred to you as that
pushy Northwestern girlfriend
of
Gary's.
Gary, after we do some editing on that, we'll probably sit you down
in Las Vegas for some scripted in-fill with Dr. Doom's stuff. If we
do it right, it could be pretty funny and work with your vibe."
Gary heard scripted,
"No problem."
"But right now,
Gary, this is all about Cherie. And Cherie, you are going to work in
reaction. Can you both do that?"
Gary said "No"
simultaneously with Cherie saying "Yes." It looked orchestrated.
Philip smiled. "Keep
doing stuff like that and this will be great. They love cheesy crap.
Okay, Tom, get the lights on and Claire hit them with make-up, and we
should have enough light to get started."
Five minutes later,
Philip looked at Gary and said, "Action."
Gary had been
thinking about what he would say for the last five minutes and had no
clue.
"Um, uh, Cherie
and I are very different. She likes drama and classics. I like
science fiction and adventure. No fantasy, though. Dragon riders and
sex-starved elves do nothing for me."
Cherie sighed. That
meant he was probably moving in a wrong direction.
"But, about
Cherie. Um... She knows the theatrical stuff. What to say and how to
say it. And... uh... how to use the word flourish
without it sounding stupid. I know how to apply previously unknown
physics to make what appears to be magic happen. Before she... Cherie
came to me, I could not get anyone to pay attention. She made my
experiments more interesting to watch.
Cherie interrupted:
"And in the process of working on this, we fell in love."
"Yes, we, uh, fell
in... we did that. Yes."
She rolled her eyes.
"Oh, dear Lord."
Philip tried to get
something going on camera that would look like chemistry. "What did
you see in Cherie when you first met her that attracted you to her?"
"Well," Gary
looked down at her face, "when I first saw her, I did not think she
was very attractive."
Cherie's eyes
rolled up. "You know, you really... really... REALLY... don't
have to say that any more... EVER. I got it. Okay?"
Philip interrupted:
"Okay Gary, talk about the thing you find the most attractive about
Cherie."
"Um..." He
looked down at her face again to see a facial expression that was
half expectant and half threatening. "Her nose."
"Oh. My. God!!!"
She threw her hands up and fell back into him. The back of her head
colliding with his sternum.
"Your nose is...
your nose is... good." Gary reached down for the point at which her
head had hit his sternum. It hurt. But her head was still resting
against it and, not knowing what to do with the hand, he laid it down
on her shoulder. That also felt awkward, but he didn't want to move
his hand anymore, so he left it there.
"My nose!" She
pulled her head away from his chest and craned around to look up at
him. "That is just what every girl wants to hear. Her best feature
is her nose."
"It's a good
nose. It angles just a little funny coming out of your face but..."
"Angles funny? I
don't have a response for that. The correct answer is eyes. It's
always eyes. That is what a girl wants to hear and expects to hear.
So, let's try again." She looked to Philip. "Can we do another
take? We'll give you something you can use."
Philip smiled. "You
just gave me something I can use."
"You can't use
that!"
He was grinning. "I
absolutely can."
"Look. Are you
still rolling?"
"Never stopped."
She turned back to
Gary. "If we don't give him something that sells us as a couple,
he is going to use the nose thing. So, tell him it's my eyes."
"Individually,
your eyes are very nice. But as a pair they're a little too far
apart."
"You are shitting
me!!!"
The cameraman began
to laugh. "Cut," Philip stood. "And that, folks, is a wrap. We
have what we need."
Cherie stood slowly
and looked down at Gary, "I have to kill you now. You understand
that."
She turned on her
heels and stormed away.
***
Al was on the
computer making her flight reservations for the reconnaissance trip
to the Las Vegas convention center facilities. Lacy would make the
drive over in a rental car with her luggage and the bulky cameras and
equipment that Al used to get a feel for a location. They would be
met in Vegas by some tech people from the local unions.
She remembered last
year's filming when she had wanted to strangle them all. But there
would be big smiles and double cheek kisses and other things people
thought Angelenos did with each other. But that was for tomorrow.
Today was more planning and paperwork.
Her phone rang. The
screen said, Ed
- TM.
She answered, "Hi
Ed."
"Good morning, Al.
I talked to our boy Harriman. He says he can do it."
"Can do it or has
done it?"
"Can do it."
"Well, that is
what it is, I suppose. We'll see in Vegas."
"Yep. I have
faith."
"Because you're
paid to. I'm paid to be a cynic."
"And you do it
well."
"Don't I though?
Thanks for the update."
"No problem.
Later."
And they rung off.
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