Read Catch a Falling Star Online
Authors: Unknown
Yeah, this is how I look when I wake up. The last time I’d seen one
of his movies, he’d been playing some sort of teenage James-Bond-
goes-to-high-school. The plot escaped me. Still, seeing him there
in the window, I felt a strange ribbon of nerves move through my
stomach.
He reached out the window, dumped a cup of ice, and then the
window slid closed again, its tint reflecting our astonishment
before the Range Rover moved away up the street.
Chloe shrieked, “Get me a cup!”
I shook my head. “Oh, you are not going to —” But before I
could finish, a woman with a blond bob tossed the remains of her
iced tea into a shrub and thrust her glass into Chloe’s outstretched
hand. As if she’d unearthed a treasure of gold, Chloe hurried to
scoop up the fallen ice.
The door of our café banged open, and my dad emerged with
two plates of mango chicken salad for the women sitting near the
small fountain in front, the dinner plates like saucers in his large
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hands. He checked to make sure they didn’t need anything else
before noticing that one of his employees was in the gutter scoop-
ing up dirty ice cubes.
He frowned and glanced at me. “Do I want to know?”
I grinned. “Nope.”
He disappeared back inside.
Chloe held up the glass, triumphant, the melted bits of ice
glimmering in the afternoon light. She blew a strand of dark hair
from her face. “Take a picture.”
Shaking my head, I clicked a picture with my phone and sent it
to her. “You’re ridiculous. Now get back to work before I have you
fired.” I nodded toward her empty busing tray. “You can start with
the glass you’re holding.”
Her look suggested I’d asked her to move to Yemen. “I’m not
throwing this out.” She placed it gently on a nearby table. “I’m
keeping it.”
“It’ll melt, brainiac.”
Chloe plopped her nearly empty busing tray back on the rack.
“I love you, Carter, but I worry about you. This ice belonged to
Adam Jakes.
Adam Jakes
. That’s going in my freezer. I don’t care if
your dad makes me pay for this glass, too.”
I laughed, picking up the pieces of the broken cup Chloe had
abandoned earlier, knowing Dad wouldn’t make her pay for either
of them. “You’re a highly disturbed individual.”
She squinted after the departed car, wiping absently at a coffee
spill on one of the empty two-top marbled tables near the fence.
“Did you see the guy in front? That was Parker Hill, Adam Jakes’s
manager. He’s thirty-two, British, and a Pisces.”
4
I tossed the broken cup into the garbage. “Why do you know
that?” I pulled my long brown hair away from my neck. We’d only
been outside a few minutes, but already the heat was getting to me.
Chloe handed me a hair tie. “I know things. And how can you
not think that was exciting? Adam Jakes just drove right by us.
Adam Jakes just dumped his ice on
our street
.” She pointed at the
small pool of wet his ice had left, now quickly drying in the sun.
I frowned. “Kind of rude, if you ask me. When Crazy Jay
dumps his ice on our sidewalk, you think he’s disgusting.”
She frowned at me. “You’re hopeless.”
“I know.” I grinned, clearing a stack of dishes. “But that’s why
you love me.”
Shaking her head, she leaned against the fence, the tables
behind her forgotten.
The café door banged open again, and Dad emerged with two
more salads for a different table. Pausing, he caught Chloe idling
against the fence. “Funny thing, Chlo — those dishes still haven’t
learned how to wash themselves.”
She pushed away from the fence. “I’m on it, Mr. Moon.”
“I’ll be inside, not holding my breath.” Dad disappeared back
through the front door, wiping his hands on the burgundy half-
apron I almost never saw him without.
I filled the rest of my busing tray with the remaining dishes
(sans Chloe’s celebrity ice) and checked to make sure one of our
regulars, Mr. Michaels, was okay on coffee. He smiled at me from
his roost at the farthest table tucked back against the side of the
café, his wrinkled face even more dappled with the afternoon light
coming through the leaves of the old maple that made umbrellas
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unnecessary for most of our patio seats. He raised his coffee cup,
so I scooted over with a pot of decaf.
He gave my arm a nice squeeze and nodded toward Chloe.
“What’s all the excitement about?” His voice had that whispery
sort of fatigue people got in their seventies, like they’d just gone
and talked themselves out over the years and didn’t have much left.
“That car that just passed there,” I told him, putting my hand
on his flannel-shirted shoulder; it was pushing ninety degrees out-
side, but Mr. Michaels was always in flannel. “It had a movie star in
it. Adam Jakes. The one who’s filming here for the next few weeks.”
Mr. Michaels swirled the remaining coffee in his cup. “I read
something about that in the paper. He’s filming a Christmas movie?”
I nodded. “Right. For the next few weeks, Hollywood will be
filming a Christmas movie. Even though it’s June. And Chloe’s
freaking out because she got to touch Adam Jakes’s ice.” I widened
my eyes, clasping the hand that wasn’t holding the coffee over my
heart. “His
ice
, Mr. Michaels!”
Chloe scrunched up her nose, a busing tray full of dishes against
her slim hip, her face a mask of disappointment at our sad lack of
pop culture appreciation. “You both should be freaking out. This is
a big deal.” She held up the sacred glass, the ice mostly melted now.
“That,” I told her, not bothering to hide my amusement, “is a
glass of water.”
Chloe stomped inside in a huff.
“He’s filming tomorrow downtown. We have to go.” Chloe
squinted at her laptop, tucking her short hair behind her ears.
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“I’m working tomorrow.” I sipped some iced peppermint tea
and waited for her to finish checking her various celebrity sites.
We were late to meet her boyfriend, Alien Drake, for stargazing,
but it was no use pushing her until she was done.
Chewing my straw, I stared at the pictures plastered on the
massive bulletin board above her desk, a layered collection that
spil ed off in all directions. Pinned amid magazine cutouts of swoon-
worthy actors, at least a dozen of the pictures featured seventeen-
year-old Adam Jakes, his six-foot frame always muscular and tan,
his hair with just the right amount of tousle, his eyes oceanic.
There were a few of him smiling, his face lit up, and one of him
obviously laughing. But in the more recent photos, he looked
gloomy and distant, his face showing the wear of his recent scandal.
Even
I
knew how much trouble he’d been in. You’d have to live
in a hole not to have noticed his face splashed all over
Star
and
Celebrity!
last November, documenting his reckless involvement
with an unknown twenty-two-year-old redhead, a fast car (also
red), and an amount of cocaine the tabloids kept referring to as
“substantial.” In one of the larger black-and-white photos Chloe
had pinned up, I thought he just looked sad.
She had some other pictures up there, too — pictures of Alien
Drake, some of me, and some of the three of us together, usual y at
one of our star-watching nights. These were my favorites, but it felt
strange to see them sandwiched in between all the celebrities, like we
could ever be part of the same galaxy. I squinted at a new one I hadn’t
seen before of me in profile tugging at the end of my ponytail, staring
off over the roofline of Alien Drake’s house, the sky darkening.
“When’d you take that?” I asked her, pointing to it.
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“Hmmmm.”
She wasn’t listening to me, still focused on the screen in front of
her. I scanned the rest of the wall, smiling at the glossy Adam Jakes’s
glass-of-ice print newly taped over an old picture of Adam Jakes at
a Lakers game. Chloe never took anything down. She just kept
pasting things over other things, papering her walls like some sort
of room-sized decoupage project. Every so often, a pale purple
wall peeked through, but only rarely. Many a roll of Scotch tape
had been sacrificed in the name of Chloe’s wall collages.
One of the things I loved about Chloe was she’d always been a fan
girl, pure of heart and obsessed. Even though we’d only started hang-
ing out in ninth grade, her room still held fragments of the girl who’d
loved any book, movie, or game featuring fairies or superheroes. Every
concert ticket, every play, every actor crush of her past still existed
somewhere in the layers of those walls. If you started unpeeling,
you’d unearth Chloe’s seventeen years of life. Even if I didn’t share
her Hol ywood obsession, I admired her for loving it so completely.
My phone buzzed.
Where the asterisk! are you guys?
I texted Alien Drake back:
C’s drooling over Adam Jakes — in case you’ve been
living under a rock, he’s in town!!!?
Seconds later:
Gee, hadn’t heard. Tell her to bring a towel & get over here.
“Alien Drake’s waiting.” I picked up the quilt I knew she liked
from her bed. Alien Drake was Drake Masuda, my neighbor and
best friend of twelve years and Chloe’s boyfriend for the last six
months. My phone buzzed again.
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A cattle prod works nicely.
I laughed out loud. “Your boyfriend suggested I use a cattle
prod if you don’t get a move on. You ready? I’d prefer not to resort
to violence.”
“Almost.” Chloe frowned at something on the screen, mak-
ing no move to hurry. As usual. “He has an early call. I wonder
what that means?”
Annoyance bubbled up in me. I was trying to be patient but,
seriously, we were going to miss my favorite part of the night, when
the sky purpled and the stars suddenly jumped out from the velvet
dark. I sighed in a sort of overdramatic way I hoped she’d notice.
She didn’t.
As much as Chloe was obsessed with this stuff, I was the exact
opposite. Why should I care about actors? They just happened to be
good at acting, the way some people were good at fixing cars or building
bridges. Just because they were splashed all over magazines, television,
the Internet, did that mean I should listen to their opinions about the
world energy crisis or hear what they ate for dinner? It was so weird.
“I think early call means he has to show up to work early,” I told
her, hoping to move her along. No wonder Alien Drake had to
threaten farm equipment. This girl had her own time zone. “As do
I. As do you. So let’s go. This is getting ridiculous.” Nothing. “Chloe!”
“Fine.” She slammed her laptop shut, flashing me her own
trademark Hollywood smile, the one that usually came right before
she needed something from me. The one I could never refuse. “But
you’re coming with me tomorrow to see him, right?” There it was.
“Of course I am.” Anything to get her out of this room and up
on that roof.
9
yesterday’s sightings
Things Are Looking Up in Little, CA
Morning, sky watchers. Last night, we sat on the roof and
thought about nebulas.
No, that’s not dirty (get your mind out of the gutter and
into the sky).
A nebula is where a star is born. It’s all the junk that has to
come together — dust, helium, hydrogen, ionized gases —
to create the right conditions for a star. Think about it: There
are so many stars in the sky, we can’t even count them — it’d
be like counting every grain of sand on the beach. Stil , they
aren’t just up there. It takes something, the exact right sort
of condition, to make a star. It got us thinking about how
everything in life needs a nebula. If we don’t have the right
sort of conditions, what chance do we have?
See you tonight, under the sky.
10
two
the next morning, Hollywood descended on Little. We lived two
blocks from the café, but I could already hear the purr of genera-
tors the moment I stepped out onto the front porch of our house. I
studied the line of pines behind the Victorians across the street,
green but dry against a pale morning sky. The air already warm, I
took the steps two at a time, giving our black Lab, Extra Pickles, a
quick pat where he lay sprawled on our front walk.
My mom was packing our white VW van on the street in front
of our house.
“Need help?” I watched her heave a container full of what
looked like pretzels into the back. “Are those pretzels?”
“Snacks for the volunteers.” She wiped at a glisten of sweat on
her forehead and tightened her ponytail, a mirror version of mine.
Tall and athletic, her dark hair streaked from days in the sun, Mom
could pass for thirty even if that was how old she was when she had
me. She never wore makeup and mined all her clothes from the
local consignment shops. To me, she always looked pretty, even