High Fall

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Authors: Susan Dunlap

BOOK: High Fall
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High Fall
A Kiernan O’Shaughnessy Mystery
Susan Dunlap

For Mary and Judy Reardon,

warm friends,

women who make a difference

A book like this requires a great deal of research, and I am indebted to:

Chief Deputy Coroner Bob Siebe of the Sonoma County, California, Sheriff-Coroner’s Department, for his expertise and ability to see what was needed.

Producer Mae Woods, for her knowledge, precision, and unfailing generosity.

Stunt woman Cheryl Wheeler Dixon, who answered my questions in the beginning when they were unclear—the hardest time.

Stunt coordinator Mic Rodgers, for giving me an insider’s look. And to stunt doubles Sonia Davis, Jamie Jo Medearis, Steve Davison, John Meier, and Michael Runyard.

Chemist Ira Katz of Triess Sciences, Inc., for his patience, knowledge, and enthusiasm.

Writer Phyllis Miller, for her help and support all along.

Phyllis Brown and Lewis Berger of Grounds for Murder Mystery Bookstore, and Ron Lynn, for their knowledge of San Diego.

Bob Greber, for his introduction to movies and money.

I am especially indebted to the late Dirk Petersmann, producer of
Heart and Souls,
who went out of his way to make sure I was comfortable on the set and got the information I needed. He was a gracious man who is missed.

And to my editor, Jackie Cantor, who has always been there for me with patience, enthusiasm, and insight.

Contents

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

Chapter 34

Chapter 35

Chapter 36

CHAPTER 1

I
T WAS A PICKUP
shot. The rest of the crew was already back in the studio in L.A. Film for every other scene was in the can. Yesterday there had been a hundred people racing around the set at Torrey Pines—the whole first unit, the stars, the director, production assistants up the wazoo, and media pushing through the wall of fans, cameras ready for a last shot of the Big Names.

Lark Sondervoil glanced around the cliffside parking lot at the crowd. Five hundred people? This was awesome. Normally a new-girl stunt woman doing a gag would draw no one besides the grips packing up the cameras and cables, right? And Production—those guys were sweating bullets, panicked about the crowd getting in the shot, tripping over the cordon, and suing the studio, or one camera-happy tourist with a flash ruining the scene or spooking her in the middle of her first big gag. Worried that they’d have to do another take and throw everything one more day behind schedule.

The electronic press kit had gone only to the media outlets, to get them to come to the press conference afterward. She’d never dreamed the shot would draw a crowd like this, even with the footage of Greg Gaige doing the Move, and the teaser:

THE GREAT GREG GAIGE IS DEAD, BUT HIS SENSATIONAL GYMNASTIC MOVE LIVES!

NO STUNT
MAN
HAS EVER DUPLICATED GAIGE’S ARTISTRY.

BUT A SPECTACULAR NEW STUNT
WOMAN
HAS BURST ON THE SCENE.

LARK SONDERVOIL WILL DO WHAT THEY SAID NO WOMAN COULD: THE GAIGE MOVE!

Lark had read it in The
San Diego Union-Tribune
and
The La Jolla Light,
and the words were set in her memory like hard metal type:

Nineteen-year-old Lark Sondervoil has recaptured the elusive Move that made Gaige the best stunt double of his time. But not even Gaige, once an Olympic hopeful, ever attempted the Move at a wild spot like Gliderport! Lark Sondervoil will perform the spectacular spiral flip Move and come to a stop at the edge of the bluff, nearly 400 feet above the beach!

“Even
he
”! Well, she’d set them straight about that at the press conference. After she wowed them with the Move. And the high fall gag that followed it.

The teaser ran on every TV station, in all the papers. The press loved all the connections—the film about a stunt woman, ending up with the Move a stunt man created for his Olympic gymnastic tryout years earlier, performed by the new girl in the business.

Now the set was mobbed. It was all Security could do to keep the crowds behind the ropes. Half of San Diego was here—with deck chairs, coolers, kids, and dogs—calling to friends, tossing balls, kicking up dirt, and gunning motorcycle and pickup engines. Whiffs of sweat and suntan lotion, garlic from the catering truck, and exhaust fumes cut the air. The production assistants were going crazy trying to keep enough quiet to shoot. Christ, they’d done twelve takes on scene 484! The Gaige Move, in 485, was next. But the whole schedule was so far behind, it’d be a miracle if they got to 485 and 486—the high fall—before the sun went down. Still, that wasn’t her worry. She couldn’t let this extraneous stuff spook her, not when she was going to do back-to-back the most important gags of her life.

She concentrated on her body, noting the hot southern California sun on her skin, the sharp afternoon wind scraping off the heat, snapping her hair in her face. She kicked at an outcropping of sunbaked sandstone and felt it hold momentarily, then crumple,
SHEER UNSTABLE CLIFFS STAY BACK,
the sign said. The cliffs she’d be falling off in scene 486. It must have taken centuries of wind to dig trenches that size in the bluff—like the spaces between a giant’s fingers. So easy to stumble off those gnarled fingers. No, don’t even think that! Worrying was a waste of time. You do your homework, then you’re in control. That’s how you survive in this business. There’s no need, no
point,
to hamstring yourself by worrying, right? Right?

She was in control. She’d routined both gags; she’d gone over the plans again and again looking for flaws that weren’t there; she knew what she was doing. For the high fall, she had checked out the sandstone; harnessed up, double-checked the harness attachment, then hooked onto the hundred-foot crane and rappelled herself over the cliff edge to check the catcher-trap that Cary Bleeker had constructed. Cary was compulsive about safety. He had to be, with his record. Still, she wasn’t about to trust her life to him. You have to check everything you do and everyone else’s work, too. Look at Brandon Lee, for chrissake; something goes wrong with the gun in a scene, and suddenly the blanks it’s supposed to be firing are live ammo. Who would check for that? It’s what you don’t even think of that kills you.

She hadn’t taken any chances; she’d lowered herself down, jumped into the catcher so hard, she thought she’d pull it off its moorings. Just as Cary had promised, it closed around her like a Venus’s-flytrap—no chance of bouncing back out and down the 335 feet to the beach!

The high fall itself would be fine; it was the Gaige Move she was concerned about.

The wind tossed her hair, icing the sweat on her neck. Had Greg Gaige sweated out the last minutes on a set before the Move? Nobody asked that. They didn’t care about Greg himself anymore. He was a legend now, and most of what was said about him was lies.

She had time for one more run-through on the Move, so the camera assistants could note where she touched down and put markers where they needed to focus. She strode to her start spot, three feet inside the inner cordon post, and stood, eyes closed, doing the Move in her mind step by step till she bounced to a stop and took the three stagger-steps back onto the camouflaged and well up-slanted cement slab three full yards from the bluff edge.

Now for the real run-through. She opened her eyes, looked neither right nor left, but took one breath and pushed off, running full out for the warning chain, leapt and cleared it, and landed easily on the ridge between two trenches. Two more steps near the fake ice plant that Special Effects had put down to cover the explosive charge that would “throw her” during the shoot. She jumped hard, pushed off into a double backflip away from the cliff edge, hit down on the balls of her feet, and flipped forward into a corkscrew twist—the Gaige Move. Feeling the hard ground under her feet, her arms grabbing air as if to catch herself, she did the three stagger-steps back to a stop, on the cement slab well clear of the bluff.

Perfect! She’d nailed the Gaige Move! The Move they said no woman would ever get! The sun blazed off the sandstone. Her heart beat so fast, she couldn’t think, only feel. She felt full, glowing, invincible.

Then it was gone. The gag was over; life was ordinary again. She realized the crowd was clapping like mad, as if they knew they were watching history—the woman about to become the hottest stunt double in town.

’Course, if she screwed up the Move when the cameras were rolling, she’d never work again. No! She’d be fine. She’d nail it in one take.

She glanced quickly at the crowd. Maybe they weren’t here to see the Gaige Move at all, but to be on the spot in case she muffed the high fall over the bluff and died in a broken heap on the beach below. Instantly, she shook off the thought. With the catcher on the side of the bluff and the wire she’d be wearing, the high fall would be almost a no-brainer. It was the Gaige Move that mattered.

“I’m going to miss it, Ez!” O’Shaughnessy grumbled to the Irish wolfhound in the back of the Jeep. “Okay, so it’s my own fault. As if
that
ever made things better.”

Gliderport was jammed with cars parked in double rows at the edges of the field and stashed every which way in the middle. People were pushing between them, rushing, half running toward the movie set at the end of the bluff. Half of San Diego is here for the high fall, Kiernan thought. Below, you probably can’t see the beach for the people.

But it wasn’t the high fall that Kiernan had raced to the bluff to watch. It was the Gaige Move that she couldn’t bear to see again—and yet couldn’t bear
not
to see. Her stomach roiled with the same churning she remembered from adolescence. It amazed her that Greg Gaige still had that effect on her. She had barely known him after all—had met him only twice, and the second time it had ended wrong. He’d been dead ten years now. But Greg Gaige had changed her life. In the gray of her childhood, with parents who spoke less and less, gymnastics had been her road back to the living; the road out. And he, who had been the star of Baltimore gymnasts ten years before she had, who had gone to Hollywood, had been the beacon. For years, her goal had been to match his gymnastic skill and share his Move.

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