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Authors: Todd Strasser

BOOK: Famous
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In the middle of that thought my cell phone vibrated. Trying not to be obvious, I checked and saw that it was Carla. I glanced over at Nasim, whose head was bent over
the keys, then slid off the windowsill. Nasim immediately glanced up and gave me a look of displeasure, but he continued playing. I went into the kitchen, closed the door, and called her back.

“What's up?” I asked.

“Are you sitting down?” she asked with the nearly breathless excitement that almost always signaled good news. “I just got a call from Roxanne Pena, Alicia Howard's publicist. Alicia's going to be in New York next week to tape the
Late Show
. She also wants to do some shopping and take a break from LA . . . and she wants you to shoot her.”

Goose bumps rose on my arms. “Why me?”

“According to Roxanne, Alicia saw you on the
Tonight Show
last fall and decided that you would ‘get' her. I think she meant you'd understand her. You know, because you're around the same age.”

“They want me to shadow her?” I asked.

“Not quite. They'll set up the times and places. You know the drill. ‘See Alicia shop. See Alicia at the zoo. See Alicia have a pillow fight.'”

“But what'll keep all the other photogs from taking those shots?”

“They'll be able to get some, but they're not going to be allowed in stores where she shops, and they're definitely
not
getting in on the pillow fight.”

“So these will be staged photos?”

Carla heard the disappointment in my voice. “Honey, if you want to be a celebrity photographer, you'll have to get used to staged photos.”

I knew that, of course. Celebrities posed for Annie Leibovitz. I just needed to get over the surprise. “You said next week?”

“She's scheduled to come in Tuesday night. The
Late Show
tapes Wednesday afternoon. My guess is, you'll be shooting from Wednesday night until Friday night. She's flying back early Saturday morning.”

“What about school?” I asked.

The phone line was silent. I wondered if Carla was considering how to answer that question. Or perhaps she was just trying to recover from the shock of being asked. Then she said, “My dear, you've just gone through a six-month dry spell. Now one of the hottest new stars on the planet has asked for
you.
She didn't ask for Annie. She didn't ask for Bruno or Howard. School, schmool. If this is what you want to do in life, make it happen.”

She was so totally right. What was I thinking? This was the kind of gig I'd been dreaming about!

“I'm sorry,” I stammered. “I don't know why I said that. I think I'm just so totally shocked that I don't know what to ask.”

“How about, how much are they paying you?”

“They're
paying
me?” I blurted.

Carla chuckled. “Yes, Jamie, that's what people do
when they hire photographers. They pay them.”

The phone call ended and I stood in Nasim's kitchen in a daze. It was a miracle! Just when I thought my career was on the autopsy table, someone had breathed life into the corpse! Had luck struck yet again, or was there some other explanation? I really didn't care. All I felt was relief. A weight had lifted. I was still in the ball game. This potential has-been had just been promoted to now-is.

That's when I noticed how quiet it had become. Nasim was no longer playing. I went back into the living room. He was sitting at the piano, staring at the sheet music. I had the feeling he was purposefully not looking at me. He said, “I was going to ask you what you thought.”

In the silence that followed, his words reverberated around the room like a crescendo.

“I'm sorry,” I began to say. “It was—”

“Business,” Nasim ended the sentence for me with the same sarcastic bite my mother used to put on the word “career.” For someone who hardly ever let his emotions show, it was obvious that he was fuming.

“Am I, like, being totally obnoxious?” I asked, hoping that he'd say no, that he understood how long it had been since I'd felt productive, and how important this was to me.

But he didn't say anything.

Nasim bid me a chilly farewell at his front door, standing just far enough away that I knew a good-bye kiss was out
of the question. I left with a queasy, foreboding sensation in my stomach, hoping this wasn't some kind of momentous turning point in our relationship from which there was no going back. I didn't think he was being completely fair. Not only did he not understand how important this was to me, but I doubted he was aware of how the stress of the upcoming recital affected him. I decided to wait and talk to him about it after some time had passed and he'd had a chance to calm down.

My thoughts turned to the Alicia Howard gig. How amazing was this? Once again, my star was on the rise. I was going to meet and shoot Alicia Howard when she came to New York. Wait till Avy and the rest of the school found out!

MARCH OF TENTH GRADE, SEVENTH DAY OF SPRING VACATION IN LA

“ARE YOU OKAY, MISS GORDON?” MARIA ASKS IN WILLOW'S
kitchen after Rex departs. Realizing that I've been staring at the camera display with my mouth agape, I jerk my head up, at the same time flipping the camera, display down, on the counter. Maria scowls.

“Oh, yes,” I stammer. “Fine, thanks.” But a second later I pick up the camera with both hands, pressing it against my stomach, and hurry out of the kitchen. I feel like a duck at the pond who gets a big piece of bread and scurries off before the other ducks can take it away. But then I realize that if anyone sees me hurrying around holding my camera like this, they'll know in an instant that something is up.

To my left is a powder room, and I quickly slip inside and lock the door. I sit down and once again go through the shots that I didn't take. There are six altogether. Badly lit, awkwardly framed, and taken from odd angles—obviously candids taken by an amateur. But the subject matter more than makes up for the technical imperfections. These shots are what the media would call
explosive
and
ruinous
. If any of them ever gets out, Willow Twine's career is absolutely over. No questions asked. She couldn't possibly have known someone was taking them.

So now what? In my hands is the power to destroy one of the most famous celebrities on the planet. This is dynamite stuff. The ultimate money shot times ten. My
People
cover of Naomi Fine preggers would pale in comparison. I take a deep breath and try to convince myself that there is no rush. The pictures won't go anywhere without me. I have time to think. . . .

But all I do is stare down at the camera in my hands, questions racing through my head:
Are you making too much of this? Either erase or don't erase, right?

Erasing is easy. Simple. Damage control completed. After all, Willow is now a friend. But if it's so easy, why won't my fingers move? I gaze down at the screen again and know why. In my hands, at my fingertips, is everything a paparazzo works for: the Ginormous Money Shot. Even though their quality is poor and I didn't take them, these photos are in my camera and that makes them mine.

My hands tremble slightly. With these shots, I would not only
make
news, I would
be
news.

Again.

I would be famous.

Again.

JUNE OF TENTH GRADE, NYC

YOU WILL SIT ON THE BED WITH THE MACBOOK ON YOUR LAP,
gazing sadly at the last recorded images of your best friend. You've heard people say they hated their parents, but never with the vehemence with which Avy announces it.

You will dab the dampness from your cheeks and use the cuff of your shirt to blot the tears that have fallen onto the MacBook's keyboard. From the hall will come the sound of Alex's garbled voice, then a knock on your door. “Jamie?” your mother will say. “Can you come out here and help me with Alex?”

“In a minute, Mom.” You just need to watch a little more.

On the screen, several moments will pass while Avy sits there, silent, brooding as if once again experiencing all that anger toward his parents. Then he will shake his head as if trying to get out of that rut, and ask, “Did you ever have any doubts about a career as an actor?”

He will brighten and pause, as if pleased at having been asked this question. After taking a sip from a glass of water on a table beside the chair, he'll answer, “Of course I did. But that almost didn't matter, because all I ever wanted was to be famous. I don't mind admitting it. No one just accidentally stumbles into stardom, and anyone who says they did is just a big fat Botoxed liar. You fight, you sweat, you claw your way up. No one gets to the top without having the flesh of a thousand other actors under their fingernails. Dog eat dog, baby. And as hard as it is getting up there, staying up there is even harder. Everybody wants to take you down. Everybody wants to be the next you. The pressure is enormous.”

Having given this answer, he will purse his lips, furrow his forehead, and nod as if satisfied, then lean forward again and ask, “What do you think set you apart from the rest?”

You will feel a sad, wistful smile cross your lips. How poignantly ironic is this? On the MacBook screen, Avy will sit back and again prepare his answer. This time he will add gestures with his hands. “Honestly, it's hard to say. Everyone knows it takes hard work and persistence. You
always feel like the odds are against you. Luck definitely plays a part. You just have to be in the right place at the right time.”

Again, he will appear pleased with his answer and will lean forward to ask, “Does it ever get easier?”

He will answer, “Maybe when you go mega like Depp or Clooney. But for every Brad Pitt there are a ton of guys who had it in the palm of their hands and let it slip through their fingers. They had that one big hit. They made the cover of
People
. Maybe even an Oscar nomination for best supporting actor. But two flops later they were done. Gone. Not bankable. That's the scariest part.”

You will pause the interview and wonder who Avy was practicing this for. Clearly someone had prepared questions ahead of time for him. But why ask Avy these questions? How would he know if it ever got any easier?

MARCH OF TENTH GRADE, THIRD DAY OF SPRING VACATION IN LA

N,

So good to get a reply!!! You're right. You did tell me you'd be visiting friends of your parents' yesterday. Sorry I forgot. Too much going on! Glad you had a nice time with them.

So listen, what I'm going to tell you is top, Top, TOP secret. You can't tell anyone. I know you don't really care, which is why I can trust you ;-)

Yesterday Willow and I had breakfast (at 2 in the afternoon!). Just the two
of us at a table beside the pool with fresh fruit and croissants! Willow's totally jazzed about getting the role in
The Pretenders
. Everyone says it's a phenomenal script. There's going to be a soundtrack CD, but it's not another bunch of her bubble-gum songs. She'll sing three serious love ballads. The rest are songs from other bands. The movie is supposed to start shooting next month. Because of Willow's visit to rehab, the film's producers forced her manager, Aaron Ives, to renegotiate her deal. Any hint of drugs or alcohol and she's gone. No ifs, ands, or buts. The producers can't afford to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on this movie and then have Willow destroy it with bad publicity.

N, she told me all of this herself! She really took me into her confidence! She said she hates going clubbing and not being able to have a drink, but all her friends have been totally supportive and won't drink in front of her. The movie company actually has spies! They'll know if she does anything she's not supposed to do. She said that in just about every
restaurant and club she goes to there's someone being paid by the movie company to keep an eye on her. And plenty of actresses praying that she messes up so they can get her role.

And the one she's the most worried about? Alicia Howard. N, the things she said about Alicia, and how she got this far in her career, would make your face burn! Willow made me swear not to tell anyone. It would look really bad if people found out she was spreading rumors (even though she swears they're true!) about Alicia.

N, I know she has lots of friends she's known much longer than me, but I wonder if they understand the “business” side of her life the way I do. I think that's why she confided in me.

She said she was glad I was there because I seemed like a nice person who wouldn't stick a knife in her back. Not like so many other people who only want to be her friend because they think they can gain from it. She told me the pressure on her is huge. If
The Pretenders
is a success, she'll be back
on top. If it's a flop, her career is toast. Then we talked about my photo assignment. She said it's really hard to be perfect for a whole week, and she hopes I'll understand. I guess she means that if I get a shot of her picking her nose or checking to make sure her pits don't smell, that I won't try to sell it on the side just to make a few extra bucks. I agreed, of course. It's not like selling a shot like that would further my career as a celebrity photographer, and it's not going to further her career as an actress, right? In the long term, neither of us would benefit.

After breakfast, Willow had all kinds of appointments, including costume fittings for
The Pretenders
and a script reading at the studio (I got to meet her co-star, Cody Patrick! He's gorgeous! Be very, very jealous, N!). So I took lots of shots for the exclusive.

Then guess where we had dinner? A cookout at Cody Patrick's beach house! Right on the Pacific Ocean! There were about fifty aspiring actresses and models there, and a bunch of Cody's guy friends.
(The female to male ratio was at least 3:1. The guys were loving it.)

But we didn't stay that long. Willow was tired. We came back, and she went to bed. In the guesthouse I stayed up and watched
Once
. Did you ever see it, N? OMG! It's the most romantic movie ever! We have to watch it together when I get back.

So here's the top secret. This morning I went into the kitchen, and the unfamiliar scent of cigarette smoke was in the air. Someone was sitting at the kitchen counter, a thin plume of smoke rising and spreading above him. He was bare-chested and had disheveled black hair, and on his back was a tattoo of a huge green dragon with a bright red tongue. On the other side of the kitchen, Maria wrinkled her nose disapprovingly. The smoke was pretty gross.

Can you guess who it was? Rex Dobro! In Willow's kitchen!!!! Bent over a coffee and cigarette. I froze until he turned, smiled soulfully at me, and said, “Hey.” N, I've never heard anyone stretch out a one-syllable word the way he can.
The word poured out of his throat so slowly, most people could have completed an entire sentence in the same time. He rubbed a puffy eye. “You're the kid photographer?”

Ouch! I felt a little like I'd just been dissed. I mean, maybe I am a kid photographer, but did he have to say it? Anyway, I came back with, “So I've been told.”

“Where's your camera?” he asked.

“It was amputated last night. You know those surgeons. They just love to cut.” (N, wasn't I, like, just sooooo clever? Kid photographer, my foot!)

“Hmm.” Rex took a drag and snorted on the exhale. “Funny,” he said without a smile.

Maria brought me a cup of coffee. She shot her eyes at Rex, then gave me a quick sour look. I had a feeling it was more than just the cigarette smoke that she disapproved of.

So guess who trudged in next? Willow! Wrapped in a black silk robe, her hair as disheveled as Rex's. She draped her arm over his shoulder and pressed her face
into his for a long kiss. Morning breath, cigarettes, and coffee didn't seem to bother her one bit.

She slid onto the stool between Rex and me. “No photos?”

“No camera.” I raised my hands to show that they were empty.

“You're the best.” Willow put her arm around my shoulder and gave me a hug, then turned back to Rex and gently nudged him with her elbow. “How you doin'?”

“Not bad, you?” Rex drawled.

“Happy, I think.”

Rex raised an eyebrow. “You
think
?”

“No, I know,” Willow corrected herself, and kissed him on the cheek.

It was definitely time to leave the love puppies alone, so I left. But N, you realize how amazing this is? Rexlow is back together! It's HUGE!

But don't forget. This is TOP SECRET!

XOXOXO!!! Hit me back!

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