or a bike, maybe a scooter. Why didnât you drive your cute little car?â
âThereâs no parking here. Ever. I shouldnât have bothered bringing my car down.â
âYouâll need it for the commercial castings. Casting directors ainât all on the beach.â She lifted a pair of Rollerblades out of her bag and started lacing one on. No wonder her bag looked so bulky.
Brynn was down on the sidewalk, squinting out at Ocean Drive, as if searching for somebody. âDonât pay her no nevermind,â Summer said. âYou donât have a big butt. Sheâs just playing. Truth is, Brynn ainât bad, really, once you get to know her. Aw, sugar and spice!â
âWhatâs wrong?â
âForgot my sunglasses. Wait here for me, âkay?â Summer clumped carefully up the steps in her blades, gliding past the NO ROLLERBLADES sign and on into the hotel. Iâd noticed she was very spacey, always leaving something after castings and having to go back in and get it. I took out Wuthering Heights and started to read.
A ridiculously loud Harley pulled up, breaking my concentration. The driver had cornrows and a T-shirt with the sleeves cut off, probably to show off his tattoos. Brynn hoisted up the hem of her dress and climbed onto the back. She took the apple he handed her over his shoulder, and I heard him say, âHereâs your lunch, biatch,â just before they roared away.
That had to be Loco Luca, Brynnâs party promoter boyfriend. Miguel had warned me about him. Heâs one slim shady. Stay away, Allee girl. Luca never came to the apartment. Brynn always met him out somewhere. What was she doing with that dirtbag? He was right about her being a biatch, but she was so hot she could have anybody. This guy, with his hooded eyes and that nose that looked like it had been broken a few times, looked like a lizard.
And that apple couldnât be her whole lunch. Come to think of it, I never saw Brynn eating. Hmmm.
The thought of that apple made my stomach bark (it was way past the growling stage). Iâd only had a fat-free blueberry muffin, a cup of coffee, two Nutri-Grain bars, and a water bottle all day, and it was three oâclock. I was exhausted. And hungry. And irritated, which is what I get when Iâm exhausted and hungry.
âAllee!â It was Summer, bursting out of the hotel doors on her Rollerblades. She made it down the steps, BlackBerry in hand. âGuess what? I just heard some girls from Irene Marie talking about a casting for Dietra magazine this afternoon, so I called the agency and theyâre gonna go ahead and try to get us in on it.â
Another casting? I didnât think so. It wasnât on my to-do list for today, and besides, my feet insisted I get off this insane casting train. âYou go. I canât deal with another casting.â
She gave me her youâve-lost-your-cotton-pickinâ-mind look. âAllee. This is Dietra ! Uta Scholes is shooting it.â
âOkay, I donât know what or who that is, but Iâm tired, Iâm hungry, and Iâm finished. Besides, my buttâs too big, apparently.â
âItâs a German magazine, high fashion, real big over there, like Moda is in Italy. I reckon itâll pay beans, but the tear sheetsâll be great for our books. And you need tears real bad. And itâs Uta Scholes. Sheâs the hottest photographer around right now. Been hearinâ her name a lot.â
âNot happening.â I yawned. âStick a fork in me. Iâm done.â
Now Summer was yawning. Yawns are always contagious. âI hear ya. I didnât leave the club till three last night. Iâm dawg-tired too, but I ainât missinâ a Dietra casting. Might be for the cover. Oh, and Uta Scholes is a woman.â She waited for me to stand up and cheer. Which I would have done if I wasnât so wiped. âBeen wantinâ to meet
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