[Writer's note:
"Invisible Threads - Prologue" should be read before reading
the following.]
CHAPTER
ONE
Ten years, two
psychiatrists, five therapists, and twenty-four prescriptions later,
Gary was standing in the rain. He thought he had arrived early to
audition for Superstar, a poor man's cable TV version of America's
Got Talent. But, when he arrived a full 24 hours before the
advertised time, he found at least a thousand people already waiting
in line.
He had not checked
the weather forecast before arriving and it rained through the night.
No one offered to share a tent or umbrella. Multiple failed efforts
by other contestants at drawing him into conversations resulted in
his being christened the weird guy. This was not the first time he
had been given the nickname.
To make matters
worse, he was bored. Boredom was his ultimate nemesis. He could not
tolerate it for more than a few moments. He spent the first part of
the night crawled up inside his own mind, mentally working through
equations, but had reached the saturation point. Besides,
transcribing notes into his phone had made his thumb muscles sore.
In desperation, he
called his mother.
"Hello?" Her
voice sounded sleepy.
"Hi Mom. It's
me."
A note of urgency
hit her voice, "Are you okay?"
"Yeah. Just
bored."
An icy pause
preceded her response. "It's three o'clock in the morning!"
He hadn't checked
the time. That probably would have been a good idea. "Sorry. I'm
sitting out in the rain." He didn't notice the non-sequitur. Nor
did his mother.
"Why?"
"I'm in line for
the talent show."
"Oh, that's
right. You're in Kentucky."
"Tennessee...
Nashville."
"Are you making
any friends?"
He looked around at
the hundreds of people in line around him. "Why would I do that?"
"Because you
should have more friends. Your only friend is that oriental boy."
The usual edge crept
into his voice, "Mom, he's from Ohio and of Vietnamese descent.
Please don't say 'oriental'. It's considered rude." If he
had said 'racist', she would have gone on a rant. 'Rude' hit
her where it hurt.
"I'll try to
remember that." The tone of voice was unrepentant. She would say
what she wanted to say. The rest of the world be damned.
Now he was bored and
annoyed. "I'm going to try and get some sleep now. Good night."
He waited to hear
her 'good night' in response and then hung up. He wasn't
sleepy.
Four hours later, a
Superstar
intern was working her way down the line. When she reached him, she
handed him two pieces of paper, a pencil, and a manilla folder. "This
is your number. Wear it at all times. When you hear it called, go
forward. On this second piece of paper, there are five questions, you
must answer them all before going in. The folder contains a packet of
information that you have to read over and sign. Don't sign it
until you are with the interviewer in Phase Three. Do you
understand?"
He nodded and looked
at the materials. His number was 847. It had a safety pin which he
used to attach it to his shirt. The folder was a filled with a bunch
of legalese that he ignored. The last item was the list of questions.
He filled them out.
Name:
Gary
Richardson
Talent:
Magician
Age:
26
Present
Profession: Graduate
Student - Physics
Tell
us something interesting about yourself
He thought about
number 5 for a moment and left it blank.
***
After a week of
training, this was Cherie Chandler's first day of actual work. She
sat in cubicle B5. She had a small folding table that served as her
desk. Her job was to interview magicians - all day long.
Her twelfth
interview of the morning had just left. She was required to grade
each contestant on personality and talent. The scale was one to ten.
Her computer screen was demanding that she input the grades for
contestant 794. She lolled her head back and sighed.
"It's not
exactly what your professors at the Northwestern
Theater School described as a glamorous career in the entertainment
field, is it?" The voice belonged to Lacy Birkland, the assistant
director. She had appeared in the doorway to the cubicle. She put a
very slight sarcastic tone to the word 'Northwestern'. Cherie
knew her well enough to know that it was meant in good humor. Lacy
had graduated from Winona State University in Minnesota and poked fun
at the more well-known school whenever she was around Cherie.
Cherie's head
snapped forward. "I sat through some lectures in school that make
this edge-of-your-seat exciting by comparison."
Lacy laughed. At 25,
she was just four years older than Cherie. "You and me both. Are
the interviews beginning to blend together yet?"
Cherie returned the
smile. "They're not completely blending together but the lines
are getting blurry."
"Use that. Don't
put a lot of effort into differentiating between a five and a six.
Give all the ones that blur together fives. The talent management
team will understand. Use nines or tens for the best and ones or twos
for the worst. That's all you need. It makes it simpler."
"Thanks. I'll do
that."
With Cherie being a
first-year unpaid intern and Lacy being a full-time paid employee,
they were on completely different strata within the show's
hierarchy, but Lacy always seemed to have an uplifting word. Maybe it
was because she had been an unpaid intern herself just two years
before.
Lacy checked her
tablet. "You're on schedule, so take a break if you need it."
She smiled again. "And count your blessings. Your theater
background got you in Phase 3. The jobs in Phases One and Two are
brutal. But don't tell anyone I said that."
"My lips are
sealed."
Lacv left and Cherie
heard her starting a similar conversation with the intern in the next
cubicle.
At Northwestern,
Cherie's professors and fellow students had made it clear in the
polite, caring, and wholly condescending way unique to the industry
that she did not have what it took to be in front of the cameras or
on the stage. So, she focused on a career behind the cameras. That
led her to take a semester off to wade through the seemingly endless
on-line interviews that ultimately led to this payless job working on
Superstar
in Nashville. But it was a resume-builder.
As for contestant
794, she put a "5" under talent and a "5" under personality.
His magic trick was adequate but the worn tuxedo and drawn-on
pencil-thin moustache was purely the stuff of a kid's backyard
birthday party.
After marking the
grades, she hit the 'send' button at the bottom of the screen.
The screen told her Successfully
Submitted. Next contestant 847.
Please hit 'Ready' when you are ready for contestant 847.
She took a swig of water and hit 'Ready'.
***
Gary followed the
stairs to the battery of doors and entered. The warm interior
temperature was comfortable after the cold of being outdoors but the
large open hallway was crowded. Immediately in front of him, an older
woman in wildly inappropriate garb suddenly stopped dead in her
tracks and burst out singing. People had stopped to watch and they
blocked his way. His anxiety began to mount and he took a moment to
attempt to calm himself. She finished her song and the spontaneous
crowd applauded and yelled approval. He began to move again.
"This must be what
hell is like." Gary realized that he had spoken aloud and looked
around to see if anyone had heard him. No one had or cared if they
did.
He found the Phase
Two waiting area and then understood that the hallway had just been
purgatory.
The Phase Two
waiting area was a huge, open room filled with wall-to-wall chaos and
noise. He found a chair as close to a corner of the room as possible,
sat down, pulled his knees to his chest, and closed his eyes. His
chest moved in and out as he started taking deep breaths and trying
to push the cacophony away.
"Are you okay?"
The voice was feminine but he didn't open his eyes to get more
information.
His answer came out
haltingly. "I don't... do well... in places... like this."
He felt a hand
softly come to rest on his shoulder and he jerked away from the
touch.
The feminine voice
resumed, "I'm sorry. Do you want me to get someone to help?"
He still didn't
open his eyes. "No. Thank you. I'll be fine." He forced himself
to add, "I appreciate your efforts." It sounded stilted and he
knew it sounded stilted. His therapists and his mother told him that
he needed to work on his conversational ability. Maybe he would. Some
other time.
The unseen Florence
Nightingale wandered away into the eddies and pools of humanity and
Gary kept his eyes tightly shut and gutted it out.
The sound system
blared, "Contestant 847. Please report to Phase Three. Contestant
847."
He now had a task
and grabbed at it like a lifeline. Opening his eyes and surveying the
room, he saw the marked exit and forced his adrenaline-fueled body to
rise and head that way. Frustration continued building within him as
he was continually slowed by the throngs of people. Someone grabbed
him and yelled "Break a leg, man!"
He contained the
flash of anger and muttered, "Thank you."
After the frenzy of
the Phase Two room, the hallway was a relief. Lightly occupied and
orderly, there were clear signs which he followed to Phase Three. At
the Phase Three door, there was a monitor hanging on the wall with a
list of contestant numbers and what appeared to be a simple matrix.
His number was associated with position B5.
Gary entered the
large room and was again buffeted by noise. But at least here there
was some combination of order and disorder. The organized matrix of
the cubicles coexisted with a variety of cacophonous sounds. He found
cubicle B5 without difficulty and paused for a moment just outside.
He mentally reminded
himself to look up and make eye contact before tentatively poking his
head around the opening. The cubicle held a desk with a laptop, that
had a camera attached to it pointed at him. There was one file
cabinet and two chairs - one on either side of the desk. Finally,
there was a hard-wired internal phone on the desk behind which sat a
woman slightly younger than himself.
He opened, "I'm
847."
"Papers." The
young woman reached out her hand and Gary handed her the papers which
were now spotted with raindrops and sweat. "Thank you. Have a seat.
My name is Cherie and 847, in the real world you are known as... Gary
Richardson. Is that correct?"
"Yes."
"Questions one
through four look good, but you left question 5 blank. We'll return
to that. The primary issue that I want to point out to you is that
everything you do or say on this site with the exception of restrooms
is being video recorded and anything and everything that you do or
say at any time can be used in mass media. Got that?"
He nodded.
"Are you ready to
sign?"
She laid the papers
in front of him to sign after which she put them in a manila folder
and placed the folder in a file cabinet.
"Now, back to
Question 5. You left it blank which means that there is absolutely
nothing special about you."
She looked at him
expectantly. He could only come up with, "That's correct. Do most
people answer it?"
Novel answer but she
had a job to do. "Yes. I'm required to have something written in
that spot before I let you leave. What can we put there? Anything
personal that you feel might make you appealing to a television
audience?"
"Not really."
"What's the most
important thing that has ever happened to you?"
He didn't answer.
She leaned back in
her chair and cocked her head slightly, "We have to get something
written down here and we don't have much time."
He was panicking.
She would not let him leave without an answer. There was only one,
"My father died."
She nodded and
jotted a note into her laptop. He did not see the look of mock pity
that he had so grown to hate through the years.
She was all
business. "When did he die?"
"Nine years ago.
On October 5th."
There was something
about the specificity of the answer that made it seem more real to
her. "How about your mother?"
"She..." The
words faded. He was not making eye contact. He was looking straight
down into his lap. He forced himself to finish, "I'd rather not
talk about my mother."
"You two don't
get along?"
"We get along
fine."
This was going
nowhere, "What impact did losing your father have on you?"
He was shutting
down. His therapists would end the session at this point, but this
was not a session and he had to push through, "It impacted
everything." He was still looking down into his lap. He forced
himself to look up into her eyes.
She was startled
again when he looked up. The words were so full of emotion, but his
eyes were blank - showing nothing.
She smiled, "I
guess we can make do with that," When his eyes again dropped, she
continued, "Are you going to be able to do this?"
"I have to."
"I understand
that. But for you to have a chance, you're going to have to be
talkative and outgoing for up to five minutes. Do you think you can
do that?"
He shook his head,
"Doubtful."
"Then you are
going to spin, crash, and burn. Does that work for you?"
"No."
"Okay, I'm given
ten minutes to finish this interview. So, we need to get past this."
We need to get
past this
was a sentence he knew. It was an indicator that he was not
understanding something, and the other person was getting frustrated,
"What do you need?"
"Something
personal about yourself to finish Question 5."
He tried to force
something out of his gridlocked brain and finally boiled his raison
d'etre down to a sentence. "Magic is real."
"Bingo!" She
typed. "Magic
is
real?"
"Yes."
"Would you care to
elaborate?"
"You want more
words?"
"Yes, give me
words. I love words."
"Magic is real.
That is what I am coming on Superstar
to prove. I am going to spend my time on the show categorically
proving that magic is real."
"And that
fills in question five. Now, do you have a performance DVD?"
"No. I've never
performed. Do you need a demonstration?"
"Yes. You perform
a magic trick here and I'll create a video and send it forward. We
can do that. What's your trick?"
"I haven't
thought of a trick for this environment. I was picturing my first
trick on the stage that would have the four judges."
"Well, you have
l'il ole' me. Bring it."
He thought for a few
seconds. "Okay hold your hands like you're praying."
She put her hands
together.
"Good. Now say the
name of a playing card."
She said the first
one that came to mind, "Jack of Diamonds."
"Okay. Now open
your hands."
She opened her
hands, and a card was sitting on her lower palm face down. She turned
it over - the jack of diamonds.
"That's
impossible."
"Correct. Or it's
magic."
She rubbed the card
with her fingers to make sure it was real. "Okay. I guess that
concludes the interview. Go back to the Phase Two area and watch the
monitors." If you're selected for the next round, follow the
signs to Phase 4. In there, you'll be directed onto a stage, and
you'll be interviewed and asked to perform your act. This will not
include the final judges, but you will be graded on stage-presence,
so you need to start mentally rehearsing your five minutes of human
interaction. Got all that?"
She had helped him,
and he wanted to thank her. He tried to come up with appropriate
words, "I think I like you."
"Are you hitting
on me?" She smiled.
He re-played his
statement back over in his mind and it did sound inappropriate. She
was not completely unattractive but that was immaterial. He needed to
come up with something that would make things clear, "I don't
find you physically attractive."
It took her a few
seconds to recover, "I'm going to choose to pretend that you
never said that. When you're on stage, give me five minutes. Just
five human minutes."
"I'll try."
He nearly ran from
the cubicle.
Cherie clicked the
button on her screen that brought up the scoring. Under talent, she
quickly clicked on 10.
For personality, she muttered "One weird guy" to herself and
clicked 2.
The jack of diamonds card was on the desk and she now picked it up.
With the card on her palm, she put her hands together again and then
opened them. The card was still there. He had never touched her or
moved from his chair. As he had said, this was either impossible or
it was magic. Returning to Personality,
she changed the score from 2
to 8.
That should get him through.
Picking up the phone
on her desk, she dialed the 3-digit code for the group lead. "Hey
Helen, is there any way that I could follow the status of contestant
847? I would really like to see his Phase 4 if he gets one."
|