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Authors: Leslie Glass

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BOOK: Burning Time
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“No. I haven’t. What’s the big deal? What’s the matter with it?”

Jason took a deep breath. “It’s a porno film.”

“Jesus.” Charles’s mouth dropped open. “Emma in a porno film?”

“Well, it’s not a
porno
film. It’s an
art
film. But she—” Jason sniffed. “She plays the part of a young woman in therapy. With this guy who’s a creep. And there’s no sound in their sessions.”

“Jesus.” Charles shook his head as if he had water in his ears.

“It’s a really disturbing film. It makes therapy look … evil.”

“And there’s—sex in it?”

“Yeah. Emma fucks this hoodlum. She’s—really nude.
And she really does it. Well, it looks like it. You don’t see penetration. We’ve seen penetration on the screen.”

They both pushed a little air out of their noses, remembering the sex clinic training, the films for doctors showing sex between all kinds of people—Very fat. Old. People with colostomies. Paraplegics. They had seen a number of films made to teach doctors and staff at hospitals that the desire for love and sex didn’t politely go away when people were old or ill, disfigured or disabled.

“Ahh.” Charles scratched his chin. “I’m stunned.”

“Yeah. Well, so was I.”

“She didn’t tell you about it?”

“No, she didn’t tell me. I don’t know what happened. I don’t understand how she could do it. I just don’t understand. If I could understand …” He shook his head again. “It’s a horrible thing to see your wife … I’m a
doctor.”

“It’s upsetting.” Charles sat there with his mouth open. “But it’s—just a film. It’s not all bad. You can find your way together.” He murmured consoling words, hardly knowing what he was saying. He heard terrible, distressing things from his patients all the time, but personally he lived in a world where cheating a little on one’s spouse was about as bad as a person could get.

“But it
is
so bad. She got great reviews. This horrid film where this poor girl ends up getting herself tattooed—”

“She’s tattooed? Jesus,” Charles interrupted.

“That’s how it ends.”

“Jesus, is she really tattooed?”

“Of course not, it’s a movie.”

“Jason, this is amazing.”

“Yeah, well, it’s taken over our lives. She’s being pursued by these big-shot agents. She’s got movie offers.”

“Jesus,” Charles said a fifth time.

“She’s fucked her way into the big time, Charles, and I’m just—” Jason turned away.

“Afraid you’re going to lose her? Of course you are, but you know you love each other.”

“Oh, man, if she could do this, I lost her a long time ago.” Jason covered his face with his hands.

Charles put his arm around him again. “God, this is—I don’t know what to say.”

“And the worst thing is nothing will stop her. Not the letters. Not anything—” Jason stopped.

“What letters?”

“Ah, well, it’s not your problem. Forget it.”

“Come on, Jason, look at me. We’ve been through a lot together. What letters? Maybe I can help.”

“Not this time, old buddy.” Abruptly, Jason stood up. “Come on. We’ve left the girls alone together long enough.”

19
 

“They want us,” Ronnie said excitedly on the phone.

“Who does?” Emma asked. She had been in the shower when the phone rang.

“I don’t know. Jack does, and Albert. They want us. You.”

“Oh, right,” Emma said. Jack and Albert. Sure. She cocked her head. A flash of light was reflected off the mirror. “Jason?” she called.

“What?” Ronnie demanded. “Emma? Are you there?”

“Sorry. I thought there was—”

“Did you hear what I said? We got a callback on
Wind,”
Ronnie said.

“Yeah, I heard you, but it can’t
be
, Ronnie. I told you I was awful, really awful. And gorgeous, famous Bill North was awful, too. His breath stank. It was the
worst
audition I ever had.” Emma grimaced, thinking about it. “It was
bad.”

“Well, Elinor said Jack said you were a delight.”

Jack? Ronnie was calling the producer, whom she had
never met, Jack. And the director Albert? What a business.

“Jack was so delighted he never took the corned beef sandwich out of his mouth,” Emma said.

“Jack’s a
great
producer.” Ronnie bristled. “What’s the matter with you? I thought you’d be thrilled.”

“I’m thrilled,” Emma said. “What time do I have to be there?”

A minute later she dialed Jason’s number. His office was two walls away in what used to be a wing of the apartment. He had a separate entrance. He couldn’t get into the apartment from his office without going out into the hall. He had deliberately designed it that way.

He picked up. “Dr. Frank,” he said.

“Jason, were you just here?”

“What?”

“I think someone was here a minute ago. Was it you?” Emma demanded.

“Are you sure?”

“Yes, I’m sure.” She hesitated. “Well, no, not really. I just thought …” What did she think? That her own husband was trying to scare her? That was crazy.

“I’m with someone,” he said.

“Oh, sorry.” She hung up. That’s what they always said:
I’m with someone
. “Never need a shrink,” she muttered. “They’re always
with
someone.”

She felt like a fool for bothering him. She dried her hair, then went out to do the shopping. The old resentment, that he was always busy, always involved with someone else, gnawed at her, making her feel both hurt and lonely at the same time. She often wondered if other doctors’ wives, particularly the wives of psychiatrists, felt as isolated and cut off from their husbands as she did. Or if her loneliness had nothing to do with him and was a
throwback from her childhood when help and reassurance were out of the question.

Jason came home as the hallway clock was chiming eight-fifteen.

“Come here, darling,” he said. He hugged her and took her hands. He examined them carefully, as if searching for disease. The backs of her hands were still young and smooth. Her fingers were slender and flawless. He turned them over and kissed the palms.

“You shouldn’t have hung up,” he murmured. “You were upset. I could have taken a minute.”

“What could I have said in a minute?” she asked.

“Whatever you wanted. I know these letters are getting you down. There was another one today, wasn’t there?”

“They’re not getting me down,” Emma said, dismissing the subject.

She picked up the script Ronnie had sent her for the next day’s audition.

“Well, you’re very tense for someone who says she’s not upset. Maybe you should take some medicine.” Jason looked at her intently. She didn’t put the script down.

“It’s not
getting to me
, Jason. I’m not going to fall apart because of a few weird letters. I’m not built that way.”

Jason got up and left the room.

“That’s right,” she muttered. “Walk away.”

He came back in a minute and handed her a drink.

“What’s in this?” she said suspiciously.

“Nice things, what do you think?” Jason looked hurt.

“I think you’re trying to scare me so I won’t be in any more films,” she said, getting back to his view of the letters that were now yet another issue between them.

“Why would I want to scare you? That doesn’t make any sense, Emma. Don’t you see it’s transference? You’re feeling guilty about the whole movie thing: the way you
went about it, not telling me the whole story about what you were doing in it. And now you’re feeling guilty because you’re a big success.”

She didn’t take the drink he made for her, so he took a sip of it himself.

“My feelings about your career and these letters you’re getting are two separate things. I’m dealing with them in two different ways. Trust me on this. I’m the doctor,” Jason said.

“That’s a lie. You went crazy and slept in the other room,” she said.

“Look, I said I was sorry about that. You caught me by surprise. I had no idea you could hurt me that way.” He drank the rest of the drink and set the glass down.

“And now you’re writing me letters,” she said, angrily. “I know it’s you, Jason.”

“Why would I do that, Emma?” Jason looked shocked.

“Because if I got the part in
Wind on the Water
, I’d make a lot of money and be more famous than you. I don’t think you could take that.”

Jason shook his head, appalled. “That’s a pretty big indictment. Is that what you really think—that I’m petty and childish, that I would hurt you because you hurt me?”

Emma looked away.

“Is that what you really think?”

She couldn’t answer the question.

“Look, Emma, I trusted you; I loved you. I still love you. If you get the part, then you’ll have to decide if you want to take it. It’s up to you, but you have to face the fact that there’s more to being a film star than what I think about it. It’s a
public thing
. There are crazy people out there who don’t think it’s a character on the screen. They think it’s
you.”

“Thank you, Doctor.” She looked back at the script.

“You have to be careful and think about what you’re doing.”

She
was
thinking about what she was doing, and she still thought it had to be him, writing those letters. No one else knew those things about her. She watched him go into the kitchen for another drink.

Emma was still annoyed by the way the conversation ended as she cabbed down to the same place the first audition had been: 1351 Avenue of the Americas, thirty-third floor. Then she tried not to think about it as she watched the numbers on the elevator as it went up. She tried to concentrate on the job.

The first audition had gone terribly. She couldn’t believe she was called back. Emma took a deep breath and tried to calm down. She had auditioned for the soaps a number of times, but was never cast. Now she didn’t know if she was glad or sorry not to have had the experience of being on one.

What happens when a good woman goes wrong? Breaks a man’s heart like a wheel. Shatters everything he thought was good in the world. Knife in the water. Fire in the sand
.

What did it mean? What did those crazy letters mean? It didn’t make any sense.
Knife in the Water
was a Roman Polanski film. His first hit, if her memory served. Twelfth floor. Was this supposed to be some kind of a threat because of what happened to Roman Polanski?

Wind on the Water
also had a bad guy and a body. Was there a connection? It occurred to her that the first letter had come almost immediately after her audition for
Wind
. Or was it before? She couldn’t remember anymore. Until then, being in films seemed like a path opening up, a way made clear. It was something she could give to herself, something she could do on her way to being old.

It didn’t take a rocket scientist to understand that Jason was overcommitted; he was overstimulated by all the sorrows and conflicts of his patients. And slowly Emma had come to understand that it wasn’t enough for her to hang around the edge of his life, waiting for the rare moments when he could tolerate any more demands coming at him. Even if he didn’t want to, she knew that was how he experienced her love, her wish for more of him, for a family. And she knew that it didn’t work to ask for more than a person could joyfully give. Tears flooded into her eyes whenever she thought of growing old without ever having a child.

Eighteenth floor. She didn’t think it was some crazy out there writing letters about her going bad. There were things in those letters, things that happened to her, fears she had, that only Jason knew. Jason wanted to hypnotize her to see if he could dredge up something she had repressed, some person, some event from her past that could explain the letters. She didn’t like it when he said, “Trust me on this. I’m a doctor. My training has taught me to see the obsession, the threat behind the words.”

Okay, okay, forget the letters. This was serious. The movie was what she should be thinking about. Katie. What would Katie think, how would she move? What does she want?

It was difficult without the whole script. How could she do a movie if she didn’t have a script? Emma tried to concentrate on what she knew about the story. Not a lot. Katie’s been poor all her life. She’s the girlfriend of a rich Virginia lawyer who’s putting her through law school.

Katie wants to be a lawyer with all her heart. Well, Emma could relate to that. But then she has a brief fling with a gas station attendant who may or may not be a psychopathic killer. The lawyer she sleeps with likes kinky
sex. These two things were harder. If the girl has a character disorder, the fact that her professor in Jurisprudence is a really nice guy—the first decent man she’s ever met—will not matter a lot.

Bill North was the gas station attendant. What a sleaze. Why on earth would a heroine do such stupid things? Emma’s acting teachers always said she had to find the reasons, even when they weren’t in the text. The girl liked to live dangerously? Jesus, was that a reason? Emma didn’t like to live dangerously. She didn’t even want to take a pill to make her feel better. Her thoughts drifted back to Jason. Jason knew how to manipulate the mind. How far would he go to stop her from acting?

Emma’s heart beat faster past the twentieth floor. She breathed in for four counts, breathed out for eight. Oh, shit, this was awful. Ronnie had called her twice to tell her to wear a tight wrap blouse and a short skirt. The tighter the blouse, the more she sweat. She could feel the armpits sticking to her already. Good thing she wore a dark print that didn’t show the stains when wet.

Fire in the sand
, the last letter said. What the hell did that mean? The elevator door opened. Emma advanced to the reception desk.

“Emma Chapman,” Emma said, licking her lips nervously.

“Oh, yes, they’re waiting for you. Go right in.”

Blond hair tied in a knot. Rainbow ribbons. Feathers, yellow green red black
. Forget it. Forget the letters. Think Katie.

Emma opened the door and looked in. Three men and a tough-looking woman were in deep conversation around the conference table. Jack, the rude producer, who ate a corned beef sandwich during her first audition and belched loudly at the end of it. Albert, the director who had asked
her no questions about herself and given her no guidelines about playing the scene, but carefully described the way he wanted her legs crossed. Elinor Zing, the casting director with her stacks of glossies (Emma’s included) and legal pads covered with spidery notes. Yes, no, maybe so.

BOOK: Burning Time
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