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Authors: Jonathan Tropper

BOOK: Plan B
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“Definitely, man,” Chuck said. “Leaves the nasal passages very raw.”

“Not heroin?”

“Could be,” Chuck answered. “But his behavior is much more consistent with a cocaine habit.”

“Shit, Jack,” I said, instantly depressed. “Coke?”

He was spared the necessity of a reply because at that moment the manager arrived, accompanied by two burly kitchen workers, to kick us out of the restaurant.

That was when we first thought Jack might be in serious trouble.

Of course, it wasn’t the first time it had crossed our minds that Jack might be something other than drug free, but how do you distinguish a genuine addiction from standard celebrity behavior?
What major Hollywood star didn’t trash the occasional Plaza suite, or get snapped by the paparazzi outside the Viper Room looking dazed and unkempt? If the warning flag went up every time a movie star cut a little too loose they’d have to install revolving doors at the Betty Ford Clinic. Still, in retrospect, Jack had seemed somewhat withdrawn over the last few months, hurried and antsy on the phone, speaking the way you do when you’ve got a long distance call on the other line or you’d just stepped out of the shower when the phone rang. He was distracted and tense, not at all like the Jack we knew. But an asking price of twelve million per film is bound to come with some pressure. The tabloid vultures had been circling for months now, searching (read: yearning) for any sign of a meltdown, but as Jack’s friends we felt duty-bound to ignore the reports. No one wants to believe they need the mass media to stay in touch with a friend.

The irony was that Jack had never been interested in acting. For him, stardom came with the same serendipitous ease that everything else did. In college he would wander aimlessly into a party on his way home from a late evening jog, unshaven, his hair plastered to his scalp with sweat, visible pit stains on his ratty NYU sweatshirt, and he’d leave an hour later with any one of the multitude of girls who practically climbed over each other to make themselves available to him. He didn’t plan it; he never planned anything. Things just happened for Jack. If he ever thought about it, he would have assumed that it was the same for everyone. But he never thought about it. You wanted to resent him, or even hate him a little, but how could you begrudge someone his innate gifts when he wasn’t even aware of them? He lived in complete oblivion to his own charms, which, of course, made him all the more charming.

In our senior year Jack took a part-time job waiting tables in the Violet Cafe. His financial aid agreement stipulated that he work twenty hours a week. One day he served a frappacchino to
some guy who was on the fast track at one of the major studios. The guy knew someone who knew someone, and within a few weeks he’d arranged a screen test. It was almost inevitable. Right after Thanksgiving Jack got a S.A.G. card and a walk-on part in a Harrison Ford thriller. Some on-site rewrites gave him three additional lines and a twelve-second gunfight sequence in which he blew away a Chinese body-builder before getting shot himself. It took three weeks in LA for Jack to shoot his scenes, and he came back disappointed that he didn’t get to meet Harrison Ford. “He wasn’t even there,” Jack said bitterly. “He’s already working on another movie.”

A casting agent working on a modestly budgeted action movie for Miramax called
Blue Angel
saw the Ford movie when it came out a few months later and liked the way Jack held a fake gun. Jack was cast in the lead role for
Blue Angel
for which he was paid scale, and he flew out to Hollywood to begin preproduction.
Blue Angel
was the sleeper hit of the year and the trades anointed Jack Hollywood’s next great action star. None of us was greatly surprised when he didn’t come home to graduate.

I once asked Jack what he’d been planning to do before he was discovered. “What do you mean?” he asked.

“You were majoring in sociology, which is pretty much the equivalent of majoring in unemployment,” I said. “What did you plan on doing after college?”

He frowned at me, clearly perplexed by the question. “I don’t know,” he said, running his fingers through his perfect hair. “I would have thought of something.”

“Don’t you ever worry about the future?” I asked.

Jack shrugged. “This is the future,” he said.

When we left the restaurant Jack, one of
People
magazine’s Fifty Most Beautiful People of 1999, puked all over himself, so Alison
got him into his limo to take him back to his hotel, insisting, as he climbed in on all fours, that we didn’t have to come along. Lindsey, Chuck, and I went to Moe’s, a bar Chuck knew on the Upper East Side, one of those places that carefully spreads sawdust across the floor every night so as to seem like a genuine dive. For a surgeon, Chuck certainly got out a lot. He seemed to know the majority of the women in the place, and got a kiss hello from the bartender, who looked like a supermodel fallen on harder times. Jack may have been the movie star, but Chuck’s life was a movie. Or at least a beer commercial.

While Chuck hit on some barely legal girls at the bar, Lindsey and I took a table in the back and ordered some kamikazes and a pitcher of Sam Adams to chase. “How’s Alison?” I asked. I had to shout above the jukebox, which was playing one of those annoyingly catchy novelty songs that have slowly been replacing real music on the radio. The fact that I occasionally discovered myself humming along only intensified my dislike for the music.

“Still loves him, for all the good that does either one of them,” she said, pouring beer into the plastic cups. “She thinks he’s reaching the breaking point.”

“What do you think?”

“I don’t know. That was a pretty ugly display, even by movie star standards.”

I nodded in agreement. “He’s seriously messed up.”

We drank in silence for a minute. “How’s Sarah?” she asked.

“Are you inquiring into her health?”

“Forget it. I’m sorry.”

I looked over to the bar, where Chuck was laughing it up with a brunette in a sleeveless blouse so tight I could make out the outline of her navel from where I was sitting. The light was causing a gleam on Chuck’s head just above the point where his hairline continued to defy the daily assaults of Rogaine. He was in a desperate
race with his hair, determined to bed as many women as possible before it disappeared altogether.

A few weeks earlier Chuck and I had gone down to Atlantic City for the weekend and I’d come into our room at the Trump Casino Hotel to find him standing in front of the bathroom mirror in a towel, using an eyedropper to apply Rogaine across his scalp. It was like inadvertently stumbling upon a deeply private ritual, like that scene in
The Empire Strikes Back
when the officer walks in on Darth Vader with his mask off. Chuck’s hair, still wet from the shower, was standing up in jagged spikes, his pink scalp visible through the pithy strands like exposed tissue. He turned to me with an embarrassed grin, the eyedropper still poised over his head like a conductor’s baton and said, “What have I got to lose?”

“It must be nice,” Lindsey said, indicating Chuck. “He’s able to find someone to hit on everywhere he goes.”

“To a man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail,” I said. Her eyes smiled at me from over the rim of her beer glass.

“What do you think he’s after?” she asked me, putting down the glass. I shot her a look. “Other than the obvious,” she said, correcting herself. “I mean, why do you think he’s so determined to sleep around so much? In college, okay. It’s an acceptable rite of passage, but at thirty it’s a tad . . .”

“Juvenile?”

“More like pathetic,” she said.

“I don’t know,” I said wearily. I took a sip of beer and held it in my mouth, letting the microscopic air bubbles tickle my tongue as they popped. “Maybe Chuck just hasn’t found the right person.”

“How would he know? He’s gone before the sheets dry. He’s got more of a Peter Pan complex than you do. His actually includes flying out the window before daybreak.”

I laughed. “First of all, shut up,” I said. “Second of all, I think
it’s more of a James Bond complex. He’s not doing it to keep feeling young. I think he does it to feel like a real man.”

Unlike Lindsey and Alison, who only met him in college, I knew that it hadn’t always been this way for Chuck, which was probably why I cut him more slack than they did. We’d grown up together, gone through elementary school and high school together, where things had been anything but easy for him. From early childhood through our junior year of high school, Chuck was easily the most overweight kid in the class. Not grotesquely fat, but comically plump in a way that always made him look somewhat unkempt. He wasn’t singled out for persecution the way it happens in those John Hughes movies, but he still suffered, especially when it came to girls. His wit made him popular with them to a point, but when it came to pushing for a girlfriend, he got the “just friends” speech every time. In high school he finally experienced some growth spurts, which, combined with some brutally disciplined dieting, brought his weight down into the normal range. But by then it was too late. He’d been a blimp for the first two years of high school, and that’s how he was universally perceived for the last two. At sixteen, perception is nine-tenths of the law.

College, though, was a clean slate and Chuck was like a horse right out of the gate. Maybe it was compensation, or revenge on all women for past rejections, or maybe it was just the store of repressed sexual urges that he could finally have gratified with someone else after years of flying solo, what he shamelessly referred to as “roping one off.” However you wanted to explain it, Chuck couldn’t believe how easy it suddenly was to get laid, and he went about it with reckless abandon, as if he’d been granted a free shopping spree.

At some point toward the end of college, Chuck began losing his hair, and in his mind it was as if a giant clock had started ticking. It must have seemed terribly unfair to him that he’d
worked so hard to shed one physical obstacle only to inherit what he perceived as another, completely beyond his control.

Lindsey and I watched as Chuck drew the girl closer to him and whispered something to her. She laughed with her entire body and gave him a quick kiss on the cheek. “Well, he’s got some skills,” Lindsey said. “I guess you have to give him that.”

“If only we could get him to use his powers for good,” I said distractedly and drank another swallow of my Sam Adams.

“You look sad,” she said.

“I’m just pensive.”

“What are you thinking about?”

“Whether or not to be sad.”

“Same old Ben.”

We drank in silence for a while.

“We’re getting divorced,” I finally said.

“Oh!” She seemed genuinely surprised. “I knew you were separated, but I thought it was just a temporary glitch. That you’d worked it out.”

“I don’t know,” I said, even though I did. “I think maybe the working it out was the temporary glitch.”

“I’m sorry,” she said, truly meaning it.

“Subject change, please,” I said.

“How’s your writing going?” she asked. Wrong subject.

“At
Esquire
?” I said. “Fine.”

“You writing any features yet?”

“Nope. I’m still the list-maker.”
Esquire
was big on lists.
7 Crucial Stomach Exercises. 10 Little Grooming Tips For a Big Night. 30 Things You Should Know About Your Money
. Before they let you graduate to real articles, you had to put in your time on the lists.

“And your novel?”

“Haven’t touched it in months.”

“What’s the problem?”

“I have a tendency to procrastinate, but let’s talk about that some other time.”

“Ha.”

“I don’t know,” I said, grinding an ice cube between my teeth. “I think it’s the protagonist. He’s too autobiographical.”

“Meaning?”

“No motivation.”

“Poor Ben,” she offered.

“Poor Alison,” I returned.

“Poor me,” Lindsey said. “Thirty years old. Can you believe it?”

“I know,” I said. “I turned thirty last month.”

Her jaw dropped slightly in surprise, and then she turned to me with a sad smile, taking my head between her hands. “Oh shit, Benny. I totally forgot.” She leaned forward and kissed me softly on the lips. “Happy birthday, Benny.”

The kiss and the nickname brought me back six years, to when Lindsey and I were still together. It’s an axiom of group dynamics that no circle of friends can remain a truly cohesive unit unless a handful of them are in love with each other in some twisted fashion or other. Twisted because if it were simple they’d pair off and that would be the end of the group. There was Alison’s unflagging and unrequited love for Jack, conveniently disguised as maternal concern so as to keep things from getting uncomfortable. Chuck was happily in love with himself. And then there was my love for Lindsey, which started as simple lust when we first got friendly in college, but blossomed into a full-blown, hurts-so-good love that remained unspoken until after we had graduated. We both knew it was there, and we both knew that we both knew. It was evident in the way, when she kissed me hello or good-bye, that she always managed to get just the corner of my mouth. Or in the fact that whenever the five of us went out, Lindsey and I always seemed to
wind up sitting together. And I was the one who walked her home at night, even though Chuck’s dorm was closer. But still, despite all of the hints, neither one of us was willing to let it grow during college. I think we were afraid of not having each other anymore if it didn’t work out. Or at least, that was probably her rationale. I would have been willing to risk it, if I weren’t so sure of a gentle but firm rejection. I didn’t get laid in college as much as Chuck, and certainly not as much as Jack, who might as well have been listed as a course requirement for entering female students, no pun intended. But I did okay for a somewhat bookish, Clark-Kent-without-the-alter-ego type, and the reason for that, I think, was that all of the feelings I had for Lindsey that were being stirred to a slow boil inside me needed somewhere else to go in the meantime.

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