Chapter 9 -- School's Out
Friday December 16
There was a whole different work ethic at Halle's movie from that at the J-drama. I was playing
Injustice: Gods Among Us
with Ben, and he was kicking my ass. My gaming skills were embarrassing for a teenage boy.
There was a knock on the door, then Lexi opened it and stuck her head through.
"There you are. You're supposed to be on set," she said, pointing at me, and turned to Ben. "And you're supposed to be in makeup."
"Damn, David. Your PA is a slave driver," Ben complained. "I was about to beat you again."
He smashed all the buttons on his controller, and I died spectacularly. That one hurt my pride because I thought I was doing better. Oh, well. Back to work.
"Lead on, Slave Driver," I said to tease Lexi.
She gave me one of those looks that promised bad things would happen to me but didn't say anything. As we walked to the set, Lexi handed me my phone.
"Call Lily," she said and then split off to give me privacy.
I saw by the time on the phone that Lily was probably finishing up lunch at school, so I took a chance and called her.
"Thanks for calling me back. Lexi said you were busy today. Do you have a minute?" Lily asked.
Lily and I had a history. It was because of my party that she'd almost died at the end of middle school. Since then, we'd become friends. I wasn't sure how it happened, but she was in charge of my social media and websites. The reason I let her do most of it was that it saved me from myself. Most young athletes or celebrities didn't have a filter on what they posted. My example was the alien baby bump I'd posted that featured Adrienne. That was why teenage me wasn't allowed to post very often. I didn't want to have my stuff come back and haunt me twenty years from now.
I know that it made almost no sense to allow a teenage girl to handle it. After all, they were prone to the same brain cramps boys were. The thing was that I trusted Lily. She took what she did seriously. That didn't mean that she didn't act goofy sometimes, or take on people who posted stuff about me. Frank Ingram, my PR guy and Lily's boss, said she had a knack for it. He observed that, unlike most of his employees, she came across as young and playful. Those were two qualities he wanted to push forward in creating my image. Frank said his twenty-somethings acted too old for what I needed. They had been to college and hammered with political correctness. Not that Lily got me in too much trouble, but she hadn't been beaten down to conform yet, either.
I stuck my head onto the set and saw they were still setting up. What I liked most about Mr. Otsuki was that he was always looking towards the next scene, and there was no messing around. That filming style fit my personality much better than, say,
Love Letters
. Not that Kitty Ellis, the director, was doing anything wrong; her crew simply took more time to get everything right before they would shoot a scene. It was a lot of hurry up and wait.
"They're working on setting a scene. I should have a few minutes," I assured her.
"I think I found my mom."
When she was younger, her mom had left without even saying goodbye. Lily had been devastated, to the point she had a complete meltdown. It still bothered her that her mother could just walk away from their family. No one seemed to know anything.
"I hadn't realized you were still looking for her."
"Yeah, I wasn't, but then I was. I got Megan to help me. I'm not sure what all she did, but she thinks she found her."
"Are you sure you want to do this? I only ask that because I care for you. If you decide to follow up, I'll do whatever you need to help," I said.
"I am. I'm debating whether I should go alone or bring my brother and dad with me," she said hesitantly.
"If it were me, I would want my family there."
"Could you loan me the money for airline tickets, hotels, and the like?"
"Do you want me to make the arrangements, or do you want to do it yourself?" I asked.
"Honestly, I would rather I do it. I think I need to be in control of that part since I feel so out of control with everything else about my mom."
"When I hang up, I'll call Megan and have her set you up with one of our corporate cards. I want you to use it and not worry about paying me back. Don't get goofy and think you have to scrimp, either. I want you to focus on what's important: your family," I said.
"Thank you, David. You keep saving me," she said, and I could hear the emotion in her voice.
"My pleasure," I said, and I looked up to see Kitty staring at me. "I have to go. Keep me up to date. If you need anything, and I mean
anything
, call me."
I had to hang up. Lexi was right behind me and held out her hand for my phone. I'd put her in charge of it because I didn't want to have it become a distraction on set.
"I'll let Megan know," Lexi said.
Then she shooed me toward where I needed to be.
I wasn't sure if it was good or not that she was so involved in my life. I mean, to the point she felt at ease eavesdropping on my conversations and then acting on what she heard.
---
After I finished my morning scenes, I was starved because we'd run late. Lexi was waiting for me.
"Call Brook," she said as she handed me my phone.
I looked at the time and saw that Brook had just gotten out of school. Today was the last day of classes before Christmas vacation. She would be here tomorrow, which made me smile. Coming with her were her parents and my mom. I knew Dad was as eager to see Mom as I was Brook.
I waited until I got to my trailer and found that Lexi had gotten me a salad and an iced tea. She was batting a thousand today, as far as being the perfect PA. I had a bad feeling she was up to something.
But I did as she said and called Brook; Cassidy answered.
"I have bad news," Cassidy said.
"Destiny took over while I was gone, she's now head cheerleader, and I'm dating her?" I asked.
"No!"
"What part did I get wrong? I am now dating Destiny, aren't I?" I asked.
"You better not be," she said and giggled.
"So, what's up, Bad Girl?"
"Daddy says that because I hurt Aaron, I can't come to California with Brook. Can you talk to him?" she asked.