Read Catch a Falling Star Online
Authors: Unknown
the size of small houses, each with the bright green words
Star
Shacks
scripted across their sides.
Parker gave a general wave toward the trailers. “Base camp.
Cast trailers. The director, producers’ trailers —”
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Adam interrupted him. “Stop showing off your big Hollywood
terms, Park. She doesn’t care that it’s called base camp.”
Parker’s shoulders tensed.
Mik stopped the Range Rover next to the largest of the trail-
ers. I nodded at it. “This is where you’re living?”
Adam shook his head. “This is just where we hang out during
shooting.” He quickly pushed his door open. “Come on. I’ll show
you. It’s got a gym and a milkshake maker.”
Every kid loves a good fort. I begged my parents for years and,
when I was nine, finally got a pretty respectable tree house in the
low limbs of the old maple in our backyard. It had smooth plywood
walls and floor, a real ceiling, a rope ladder, even some curtains
Mom made from a green tablecloth hanging on the one wide
window. I had a rug in there, bookshelves full of found treasures
like river rocks and smooth acorns with their little hats, and a
white plastic table where I could set a vase with a rosebud or maybe
a slim branch of dogwood blooming. I didn’t use it as much as I had
when I was younger, but I still liked to sit up there sometimes,
especially at night, and watch the stars emerge through the large
window.
Adam’s trailer was nothing like my tree house.
His fort was on steroids. In fact, I knew quite a few families in
Little who could move in and live out the rest of their years in a
place like this. Hardwood flooring gleamed, a sprawling dark blue
suede couch faced a flat-screen TV, and off to one side was a mini-
gym, complete with treadmill and weights. The kitchen had a
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microwave, cherry cabinets, a fridge, and, as promised, a stainless
contraption that clearly made milkshakes.
“You want one?” Adam motioned toward it. “I can send out for
fresh strawberries.”
I shook my head, wondering who would get that job —
strawberry fetcher. “I’m okay, thanks.” The whole place smelled
too good, something muted and spicy. Boys rooms weren’t sup-
posed to smell this good. Alien Drake’s room always smelled like
Doritos and stale pizza. Which was better than how my brother’s
room used to smell — old sponges and, inexplicably, rotting limes.
Parker plopped down on the couch with his phone, kicking his
feet onto the coffee table. After scrolling his thumb along the
screen, he told Adam, “You don’t shoot until noon, but you wanted
to run one of the hospital scenes.”
“Oh, right.” Adam opened the fridge and pulled out a blue
glass bottle of water. He kicked his flip-flops in the direction of
what appeared to be a bedroom. They thudded against the cherry-
wood door frame, leaving scuffs, and landing splayed out in the
hallway. “Carter can read Cheryl.”
“Who’s Cheryl?” I sat on the edge of the couch, and Parker
handed me a script much thicker than the one detailing my fake
relationship with Adam.
Adam leaned against the kitchen counter, sipping from the
blue bottle. “She’s sort of the Tiny Tim figure in the movie.” He
went on to explain that the movie was a retelling of
A Christmas
Carol
. He played Scott, the Scrooge character, who was the teen-
age son of the largest donor of a small-town hospital. Cheryl was a
teen girl with cancer. Her father, the Bob Cratchit figure, worked
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for Scott’s father. When he talked about the film, Adam’s face lost
its usual sullen haze; it brightened the room. “I need to run the
scene where I come to her hospital room. The one before she gets
to go home.”
“Page 102,” Parker added.
I flipped to it. “Wow, you guys are already near the end?”
“We’re at the hospital tomorrow so we shoot all the scenes
there,” Parker told me.
“Out of order?” I scanned Cheryl’s lines. Mostly, she said
things like, “You can be my first Christmas present,” which made
me cringe but probably sounded better in context and would
make me sob like a baby when I saw it in the final version of the
movie, with all the music and lighting.
“You shoot based on location,” Parker told me, pushing him-
self off the couch and helping himself to some blue bottled water
from the fridge. “We have the hospital for only two days.”
Adam cleared his throat. “Let’s run it.” He motioned to the
script.
I frowned. “I’m not an actor.” My mouth felt dry, like I was
about to give a speech at school. “Maybe Parker could do it.”
“I’d rather run it with a girl.” Adam plopped down next to me
on the couch. “Don’t think too much about it. Just read it.” He
cleared his throat again.
“I brought the music box, Cheryl.”
“Don’t you need a script?”
He shook his head. “No, I know it. Go ahead. Say the line.” He
leaned forward, saying his line again.
I swallowed, wishing I’d asked for one of those bottles of
water. The script said (whispering), so I tried to whisper
“Scott? Is
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that you?”
but I sounded creepy, like an old woman in a horror
movie. Adam and Parker exchanged a look.
“You’re thinking about it too much,” Adam said, giving me a
flicker of a smile. “Just read it.” Morning light filtered through the
trailer window, tiny dust motes catching in the air around us.
Outside, I could hear other people coming and going, trailer doors
opening, closing. A dog barked.
Licking my lips, I tried the line again.
Adam nodded, his eyes locked to my face.
“It’s me. I’m sorry,
Cheryl. I’m sorry for all of it.”
I forgot to look at my script. “All of what?”
He frowned. “That’s not the line.”
“Sorry.” Scanning the page, I read, still whispering, trying for
my best sick voice.
“I didn’t think you’d come.”
“I’ve changed.”
I had a question. “How can you be Scrooge if it’s not your
money? It’s your dad’s money.”
He shook his head, letting his earnest face drop away, replaced
with a wash of annoyance. “It’s a
retelling
. We’re turning the story
on its ear. It’s a teen version. I’m the
son
of the wealthiest man in
town, and I’m the one who has let money dictate my life. My dad’s
not the jerk in the story.
I’m
the jerk in the story. I don’t care about
the right things. I’ve lost sight of what matters. Partying all the
time. Sleeping around . . .”
“This is a family movie?”
“They don’t show any of that, really,” Parker interjected from
his perch by the fridge. “It’s backstory.”
Adam explained, “It’s Christmas Eve, and Scott’s just screwing
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around, making things hard for the working people at the hospital,
forgetting about what really matters in life. . . .”
“Which is what?” What could a guy hanging out in a decked-
out trailer with its own milk-shake machine and private gym know
about real “working people”? I thought of Mom, off somewhere
fighting for farm aid, while I declined a freshly made strawberry
milk shake in a tricked-out fort. Not a proud moment for the Moon
family.
Adam seemed caught off guard by my interruption. “Um,
well, like family and stuff, I guess. And love.”
“And he loves Cheryl?” I studied the pages as if they’d answer
for me.
“He doesn’t realize it until this scene.” I listened as he described
his part, the way he saw Scott as this lost soul, how this Christmas
Eve everything would change for him, and it struck me that he
really seemed invested in Scott’s story. Maybe it wasn’t just some
stupid blockbuster to him. Then it hit me. It wasn’t just having me
as a girlfriend that would try to change his public image. He
wanted to be seen as Scott. The guy who got emotionally body-
checked by three visiting ghosts and realized he’d been screwing
up his life.
Kind of like Adam.
It wasn’t subtle. Did they think the public was that gullible?
“And so he’s visited by three ghosts who teach him these
things.” I was ready to go back to the script, but I’d unleashed
something in Adam.
Adam stood, pacing the small room. “Sort of ghosts, but not
like in the original story. We’re not taking a paranormal angle
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with it. It’s different. Contemporary. I run into a kid from my
elementary school days, and he acts as sort of a reminder of
Christmases past.” It takes me a minute to register that when he
keeps saying “I,” he means his character, Scott.
“Then, I see my history teacher from school, who acts as a sort
of Ghost of Christmas Present, and finally, you see my future. Me
as an old guy — like thirty-five — who has lost the love of my life
because I was greedy and shallow. I get to wear old-guy makeup.”
I frown. “Won’t that be paranormal? You seeing a future ver-
sion of you?”
He shrugged, finishing the last of the water, tossing the bottle
into a blue trash bin. Everything in the trailer was polished wood.
Or blue. Like it had all been designed to match his eyes. Which
it probably had been. “I don’t know. They have people to figure
that out.”
I struggled to remember the story. “So the movie won’t show
your own death?”
He clutched his hand to his chest. “Just the death of my heart.
It’s ultimately a love story. It’s going to kill at the box office.”
“A love story?”
“A
Christmas
love story. With Cheryl. We’re going to crush.”
Parker stood up, brushing out some wrinkles in his linen
jacket. “He’s brilliant in it.”
“I’m sure.” Truth was, I’d watch pretty much anything if you
sprinkled some snow on it and lit up some twinkle lights — I
loved Christmas movies, loved the way they glowed — but I still
wondered how some rich movie star who’d spent his whole life in
L.A. could really understand a small town enough to convince us
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he’d gone through some big life awakening. What I’d seen of Adam
so far didn’t convince me he could look much beyond his own
nose. Still, they called it
acting
for a reason.
I’d read somewhere that actors often did research, studied a
character to get to know them, walked around in their shoes and
all that. And we happened to have a Scott right here in Little.
“Adam?”
“Yeah?”
“You want to see the guy you’re playing in the movie?”
From the open window of the Range Rover, Parker told us we had
about forty-five minutes and then we needed to get back to town.
“We have to make sure we get in a few more sightings of you two
today before Adam starts shooting.” He peered up at the hillside.
“This looks too private. No one will see you.” This was not in the
script, and I could tell it made Parker itch a little. Mik handed us
the picnic basket that had magically appeared in the back of the
Range Rover. “No more than forty-five minutes,” Parker reminded
us before he had Mik park the car in the shade of some trees.
“Is he your manager or your babysitter?” I smiled so Adam
would know I was kidding.
“What’s the difference?” Adam shrugged, looking suddenly
young, like a kid who’d been told, No, we won’t be stopping at the
pet store today.
He followed me up the narrow footpath that snaked its way
along the green hillside at a mellow angle. It was warm, and the
ankle-length grasses around us had browned on their tips. When
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we reached the top, Little High stretched out below us. Here, we
looked directly down on the new football stadium, its rubberized
track a black eye surrounding the expanse of green field. Stadium
bleachers rose in a metallic blossom all around it. Directly across
from us, a crisp white-and-blue sign read: BryCe FieLd.
“Zack Bryce,” I told Adam, “is who you are playing in this
movie of yours. Well, except so far he hasn’t had any ghosts smack
around his conscience.”
His hands in the pockets of his jeans, Adam stared at the sign.
“Zack Bryce, huh? That’s cool. I want my character to be relevant.”
His gaze drifted in the direction of the library, the clump of class-
room buildings near the cafeteria, and the theater, a sad, plain
building in need of a paint job.
I explained to him that Zack Bryce was the oldest son of Travis
Bryce, who was the son of Don Bryce — a chain of cash, at least
by Little’s standards. Adam could probably buy them all before
lunch and then fly a private jet back to L.A. “The Bryce family
owns a good chunk of this town. Travis Bryce donated the stadium
to the school. You know” — I shrugged — “so his kid didn’t have
to play on a crappy field.”
Adam nodded. “That was awesome of him.”
I frowned. Maybe he really wasn’t going to see the connection.