Fame, Fate, and the First Kiss Page 13

“Oh, right. What did Leah say?”

“Something about how math nearly ruined your life.”

“It’s true. Math is a jerk.”

He smiled, and I felt guilty. Math wasn’t a jerk, but I certainly had been. Donavan was just trying to do his job, and even though he was better than my past tutors at not letting me get away with things, I was still making it very difficult for him with my completely negative attitude.

“I feel like we got off on the wrong foot,” I said. “I’m sorry. I’ve been under a lot of pressure, and homework has been an added stress. Plus, my dad . . .” I trailed off. He didn’t need to know that my dad didn’t care if I succeeded or failed at this job.

“We can try a new foot today,” Donavan said.

I raised a fist in the air. “Yes, to new feet.”

“Yes, to finishing this packet so your dad stops texting me for updates.”

“I’m sorry.” So I wasn’t the only one he was bugging. A new wave of frustration hit me. I needed to have a real talk with my dad . . . eventually.

Eight


Ninety minutes later packet two was finished, and Donavan was now explaining an equation in packet three.

“And then,” he said, “the numbers decided to stop trying to solve each other and just get along.”

“Uh-huh,” I said, picking at a loose piece of latex on my cheek. I had managed to quickly change out of my costume, not wanting to mess it up, but this was the third day in a row I hadn’t taken off my makeup right away.

“Did you hear what I said?”

“What?”

“You are distracted.”

“I’m thinking about something my friend Abby said earlier.”

“Was it about math?”

“It wasn’t. It was about this thing I used to do to help me get out of a rut.” It was something I hadn’t done at all since I’d been here. And I knew I needed to loosen up, to get out of my own head. It would hopefully help me project chemistry on set. We’d always called them perspective outings. I wished I could call Kara and Abby and beg them to go on one with me. But they were four hours away. I’d have to make do with who I had—Grant and Amanda. I wondered if they’d go along with it. There was only one way to find out.

“Can we take a break?” I asked. “After an hour and a half my brain can’t process new info anyway.”

He shoved his notebook and pencil in his open backpack. “Sure.”

“You don’t have to stick around, if you need to go.”

“You don’t want to finish your last packet after this break?”

“Not really.” I offered him my best smile.

He seemed disappointed in my lack of motivation. But I had just done ninety minutes’ worth of homework. That had to count for something.

I sighed. “Fine. Maybe. If this plan doesn’t work out. Follow me.”

Surprisingly, he did. I led him through the large parking lot where the set was being packed away into vans and trailers. The sun was on its way down and had turned the clouds that streaked the sky pink and orange like paints on a canvas.

We stopped by Amanda’s trailer first. She answered the door.

“Hey, want to go on a trip with us?” I asked.

“Who is us?” She looked Donavan up and down.

“This is Donavan. Donavan, Amanda,” I said.

They exchanged hellos.

“Already working on the assignment I gave you?” she said with a smirk. “You’re fast.”

“What?” I returned, genuinely confused. Then, all at once, I remembered her telling me that in order to have chemistry on set I needed to imagine someone I liked off set.

“No! Really. No.” Even if I had been trying to form a connection with someone (which I wasn’t), it wouldn’t be with Donavan. He was too uptight and serious and . . . boring.

Amanda just shrugged, then held up some pages. “I can’t go anywhere, I have to work on my scene for tomorrow, I’m not ready. Faith gave me some notes.”

“Faith gave you notes? Like actual, handwritten notes? She never gives me notes.” She only ever brought me dialogue changes.

“Because you’re already perfect.”

“Ha. Yeah, right.”

“You have your phone on you?”

“Um . . . yes, why?” I asked.

She held out her hand. I unlocked it and placed my phone in her upturned palm. She typed something into it, then handed it back. I looked at the screen. She had entered her phone number under the name Amanda the beautiful one Roth.

“That’s for a report later. You two have fun,” she said with a look like this was more than it was. “And you’re welcome.”

I just sighed as she shut the door.

“What was that all about?” Donavan asked.

“Nothing,” I said. “Absolutely nothing.” I led him toward Grant’s trailer.

Donavan looked out over the cemetery. “Is it scary to sleep here at night?”

“I don’t sleep here. I have to go home every night.”

“Why?”

“I’m under eighteen. I could sleep here if my dad stayed with me, or signed the waiver, but . . . he won’t.”

“You actually want to sleep here?” He was still taking in the expanse of the headstones.

“Absolutely.”

In the distance behind a chain-link fence I could see Grant’s fans still holding big signs. I wondered if one of those sign holders was the one who had taken my makeup-less picture and labeled me as undead.

“No Lacey Barnes signs today?” Donavan said, noticing them as well.

“You can come be my fanboy tomorrow. Bring a bright-colored sign. Or maybe a big cutout of my head. That seems more productive than this homework stuff,” I said.

“Don’t tempt me.”

A new set of security guards stood at the barricades to Grant’s trailer. “Hi,” I said, stopping in front of them. “Where are Duncan and Phil?”

“Their shift starts at eight.”

“Oh. I . . . we . . . need to see Grant.”

“I told you I didn’t need to meet him,” Donavan mumbled beside me. I lowered my brow. He had been serious about that? He really didn’t want to meet Grant? Apparently he wasn’t swayed by fame at all. That was new. And interesting.

“He asked not to be disturbed,” one of the guards said.

“But he didn’t mean me,” I said.

“He meant everyone, Ms. Barnes.”

“Okay . . . fine. Can you at least give him a message for me?”

“Sure.”

“Will you tell him that I need to go on an outing with him to look for my muse.”

The guard leveled me with a hard stare as if I had just spoken a foreign language and he was waiting for me to translate.

“That’s all,” I said. “He’ll get it.”

“Okay.”

“Oh, and tell him I’ll be in my trailer.” I started to back away. “No, actually, give him my cell number.” I patted my pockets and then looked around on the ground as if a piece of paper would magically materialize because I wished for it.

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