sidewalk. âIâve got to get to work; this girlâs on the verge of stardom. Get yourself home, all right?â
âScott, you have got to be kidding.â I cling to the seat. âI donât even know where you live yet. Just take me along. I'll help you be the blackness in her universe. Come on, I can suck up. Remember?â
âCanât do that.â He scribbles on a pad thatâs mounted on his dash. âThe address.â He rips off the paper and pulls a twenty from his ashtray. âGo get yourself some dinner, and go home and prepare for tomorrow. Read that manual from cover to cover. And lose the furrowed brow; youâre going to need Botox before youâre thirty. You want to look like your mother?â
âPlease, Scott.â I try to keep the desperate pleading from my voice, but to no avail. âCanât you just take me home first? Or I can go with you. Youâll never know I'm there.â
âIâll never make it with traffic, and Iâm not showing up to work with a woman on my arm. I have enough needy women in my life where that isnât smart business.â
âFine. Maybe if you had fewer women on your arm, your problems might be fewer. Did you ever think of that?â
He pushes the door wider. âGo shopping before you get home, Sarah. Iâm not going to baby-sit you, and I hardly think you need me to dress you. Youâve had a subscription to Vogue, Iâm assuming, and this is your business too. Show me you know what youâre doing.â
âYes, but the magazine is the only part of it I can afford. Unless you count rubbing the perfume-sample pages on my wrists.â
âGo vintage, Sarah. Thereâs a shop up the street. Do your best and accentuate your tiny waist and your booty. Hollywood loves a good booty.â
âSomehow, that doesnât provide me with any motivation.â
âBooty sells in Hollywood.â
Why do I suddenly feel like something ordered at Kentucky Fried Chicken? âWhat is wrong with you?â
âGo. Before I lose this client.â
I slink out of the car, and he quickly pulls the door shut and peels away from the curb amid a few annoyed honks.
I canât even be the blackness in someoneâs universe.
I asked for this. I have to remind myself this is not Scottâs fault. Enjoy the moment, right? Iâm in Hollywood, California. Swimming pools. Movie stars. And currently, Iâm as Clampett as they comeâwithout the bank account but certainly rivaling Ellie May with my new âdo. I wish I had enough hair for pigtails.
Itâs a mind-clarifying thing, being dumped on a bustling city street. I almost feel invisible, and itâs actually sort of freeing. No oneâs expecting me. No one will get drunker if I donât show up when Iâm supposed to. I could break out into dance, and not one person would care. Sure, they might stare a bit, but not one person would call the church and tattle on me. I donât even have a church yet!
âCary Grantâs star is at Hollywood and Vine!â I say out loud. Two guys in jeans and tight t-shirts stare me down, but they just keep moving. See? Being crazy here is no big deal. I am invincible!
âHollywood and Vine!â I yell after them. âIâm going to see greatness!â
They just shake their heads at me. I feel powerful and mighty. I can be anything I want to be here! I feel like seeing Cary Grantâs star, Clark Gableâs, William Holdenâs!
âExcuse me,â I ask a passerby, a woman of about fifty. âDo you know where Hollywood Boulevard is?â
âTo the left up there. Toward the hills. Take North Highlands until you reach the Boulevard.â She clicks her tongue. âTourists.â
My heart starts to pound in my ears as I get closer to the infamous Walk of Fame. Sure, I know itâs just a bunch of starsâ names on a sidewalk, but to me
Caroline B. Cooney
Lani Diane Rich
Roxanne Lee
Suzanne Tyrpak
A. Meredith Walters
Griff Hosker
Medora Sale
Sarah O'Rourke
Kimberley Strassel