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Authors: Bruce Wagner

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The beachhead was stormed: squadrons of physicians rallied by Rear Admiral Trott, round-the-clock nurses, major and minor domos, ensigns and assholes, commodores, captains and petty officers first class; guerrillas and partisans; shock troops, domestic and culinary; nutrition and therapy corps; cadres physical, emotional and respiratory; voice coaches and snipers, channelers and chanters, WACS and wackos, dune-crawlers, bush-fighters, gossip-mongers and mercenaries; engineers of kitchen, pets, pool and bath; astrologists and masseurs, mediators and meditators and just plain groupies; paraplegic cheerleaders (a sexy stuntgirl among them) and sundry tear-streaked Big Star pre-approved dropovers. Visiting Oberon Mall had become anecdotally correct.

All this against the ceaseless crashing of waves. Bernie thought that was probably calming to the Big Star, in the amniotic sense. It was to him, anyway—he never slept this well in town. The air, the mood, the everything was better. He even cut back on Halcion. Edie invited him to stay in a guest room for long weekends. Edie was in love: so be it.

CK FOR EXHAUST NOISES
. REPLACE STUDS FOR BOTH EXHAUST SECURING CLAMPS W/DAMAGED THREDS, REPLACE MUFFLER CENTER MOUNT

CUSTOMER REQUESTS THE “ROYAL CROWN” SERVIC. PERFORM SERVICE AS REQUESTED

THANK YOU FOR ALLOWING US TO SERVICE YOUR VEHICLE

The producer anchored the Rover printout with a gin glass, squinted over the water and stood. He set out with his huaraches and Dunhill, a crusty pioneer.

Gulls hung in the wind like mobiles. The old man walked barefoot to the water, sand warm as memory. A sweet, unclassifiable scent cudgeled his being. The scent became a feeling, the feeling an image: a Baltimore yard, nineteen thirty-two. White-hot and wickedly bright. He was seven years old, younger than his rich first cousins, whose house looked like a bank—the property took up a full city block. Aunt Janine built them a two-story playhouse that rivaled the apartment Bernie and his mother lived in downtown. June hated her sister for that. The boy had only visited a handful of times; this would be his last, during a short period when the feuding sisters attempted rapprochement. (Their animosities sprang from money, of course. Janine wouldn't give them any.) The aunt, in black taffeta and pink parasol, served cookies and cider and he remembered with a shudder June's embarrassment when she called from the sidewalk for him to come, Bernie clinging catastrophically to Janine's traumatic skirts, miserable and blind, cousins laughing at first, then queerly gawking as a servant pinched the boy's neck to get him off, like a crazed, distraught pet. Poverty didn't become him, even then.

What would he do with Edith-Esther Gershon? he pondered, luxuriously rhetorical, even jaunty, amused and heartened by the strange and generally positive turn of events, for it wasn't a
bad
thing that she loved him, no love could ever be, even if—He sidestepped a frothy, impetuous little wave that rushed at him with the pep of a Pekingese. As Bernie bent to scoop a sodden card, a cantering Labrador spattered the cuffs of his shorts.

Just then, three shirtless, wiseass men were upon him.

“Hey! Aren't you Donny Ribkin's father?”

Bernie blinked. “I certainly am.”

“Pierre Rubidoux. We met at the bar in the Peninsula.” The tall blond extended a hand. “Showtime.”

“My watering hole,” said the old man. “I hope I was civil.”

Pierre introduced the others, whose names the producer didn't catch. The bald one had a massive shoulder tattoo; the other was around six-five, with a half-dozen studs in each ear. He was smoking a joint. Bernie tucked the bottleless
Artists Rights
message into a pocket.

“Your son's a helluv'n agent,” said Pierre. The bald one belched, then laughed indiscriminately.

“Taught him everything I don't know. Say, you and Donny didn't go to school together, did you?”

“No, we didn't.”

“He grew up with a Rubidoux—Jesus, I think it might have been a Pierre!”

“I know two other Pierre Rubidouxes. We get each other's mail.”

“The mother was Clara,” he said, irresolute. “You're not related?”

“Not that I know of. Were they from Toronto?”

Bernie shrugged and turned to the others. “Are you fellas also with Showtime?”

“We were, but now we're homeless,” said the bald one.

“Now,” said the giant one, “we're PWAs.”

“Forgive my slightly fucked up friends,” said Pierre.

The bald one began to sing. “
We had fun, fun, fun till my daddy took our T cells away!

The giant exploded with laughter, then lit out after a Frisbee. The bald one overtook him but the Lab got there first.

“Do you live out here, Bernie?”

“No, I'm visiting with a friend,” he said, resisting the urge to name-drop. “But I'd
like
to—certainly on a day like today.” The others rejoined them, tailed by the foaming Frisbee-mouthed dog.

“Bernie produced all those
Undead
flix,” Pierre called out. “
The Waking Dead, The Walking Dead
—”

“The Mister Ed…” said the giant.

“I
loved
those movies,” said the bald one, circling back as the giant waded into the tiny swells.

The producer repositioned his extinct corona. “We had lots of fun.”

“You know,” said the bald one to Pierre, “you guys should remake those.”

“Love to do it for ya,” Bernie said.

Pierre scrunched his face. “They
did
that already—with those rock ‘n' roll zombie pictures.”

“That was, like, fifteen
years
ago,” said the bald one. Bernie was starting to like this guy.

“What do you
care
, Mr. Showtime?” said the giant. “Those were
bullshit
.”

“Maybe,” said Pierre.

“It'd be fucking
fantastic
,” spat the bald one, all marijuana breath and missionary zeal. The giant tore Frisbee from muzzle and threw it to sea. “Man, we fucking
loved
that shit. We used to go to midnight shows in Westwood—”

“At the Plaza,” said Pierre, warming to the concept.

“The days of Lew Alcindor.”

“Lew! Lew! Lew!”

“Who owns them now?” asked Pierre, donning his business affairs hat.

Bernie got a pang of heartburn. “Me, myself and I,” he said, rotating the cigar on the marbly mucous membrane of his mouth.

“No shit,” said the giant, indifferently.

“Didja make a bundle, Bernie?”

“I did fair-thee well, fair-thee well.”

“I'll bet. Donny Ribkin wasn't the son of no slouch.”

“How do you know Donny again?” asked the proud father.

“I was at ICM five years.”

“Well,” said Bernie, “it was nice meeting you boys.” Better not to pal around too long.

“Call me, at Showtime.” They shook hands while the others peeled off without saying goodbye. “I can rent those, right?
The Undead
—”

“Sure can. Blockbuster has 'em. You can get 'em anyplace.”

“Vaya con Dios,” said Pierre, flashing a peace sign.

“Don't you mean
Viacom
?” he bantered. The executive laughed, then ran ahead.

Bernie dreamed this and the dream had been delivered, lapping at his feet like so much mother-of-pearl. That was the omen. To hell with the Studio Shuffle, he would sell
The Undead
cycle to Showtime without lifting a finger: the world was still magical, vivid, ultramarine. The world still held treasures for the likes of Bernard Samuel Ribkin—now hopping wood steps, scrubbing sand from ungainly feet, the fragile, knobby creepers of a courtly old player who'd seen a few things. He was hungry and wondered about dinner. Then a shiver of the abstract washed over him, and for an instant the mysterious seaboard of his destiny was illumined; but Edie's second-story shout reeled him back to mundane shores and he lost what had been seen as quickly as the thread of a reverie.

“Old Man and the Sea!” she cried, leaning from the window of her room, smiling like there was no tomorrow. “Old Man and the Sea, do you love me?”

Zev Turtletaub

Taj sat in the bath and visualized the article from that day's
Reporter
, a front-page piece about the Turtletaub Company's “hefty slate”: a musical remake of a Spencer Tracy movie called
Dante's Inferno
, planned for Broadway; two films already in the can and soon to be released—a Robert Redford and a Martha Coolidge;
All Mimsy
, a sequel to
Mimsy
, a spin-off of the hugely successful
Jabberwocky
chronicles; an unnamed Holocaust project with Richard Dreyfuss, plus the potential filming of a yet-to-be-announced Dreyfuss stage
vehicle; an upcoming feature to be written and directed by David Mamet, with songs by Mamet and Sondheim;
Middlemarch
, to be adapted by A. S. Byatt and directed by Stephen Frears; three bestsellers—a romance, a policier (for Dustin Hoffman) and a dysfunctional-family drama—in active development; an animated film of a tale from the Brothers Grimm by the director of
A Nightmare Before Christmas
; a remake of
The Four Hundred Blows
, directed by David Koepp, the
Jurassic Park
scribe;
Charlotte's Web
, by the
Jabberwocky
writers; an unnamed story by Poe to be helmed by actor Anthony Hopkins; a remake of Pasolini's
Teorema
(with producer Phylliss Wolfe attached, Turtletaub serving as exec producer); and a teaser about
Uncle Wiggly in Connecticut
that vaguely implied J. D. Salinger might possibly have agreed to expand and adapt his original story. This, of course, was untrue. To his utter dismay and delight, the name Taj Wiedlin had been invoked as “associate producer” in the very last paragraph of page seven in connection with a “fast track” adaptation of Nikolai Gogol's
Dead Souls
, for which no writer or star had been set. Mr. Turtletaub called it “a priority project, a labor of love.”

The guest-house tub was empty. Taj wore a mask and gag, his wrists and ankles tied with leather. He could hear the voices of the party outside. The associate producer laughed through the gag as he imagined his mother stumbling in to find the toilet. She'd been visiting from Chicago and had only just left to see his sister, in Walnut Creek. He took her to City Walk and Rodeo Drive and the Ivy; Cybill Shepherd and Sarah Jessica Parker were there, but not together. His mother didn't like the way Taj was looking. He was too thin, she said, too “drawn.” They bought a ton of groceries at Gooch's and she packed them away while he sat at the kitchen table and smiled. When she asked if he was having “girl trouble,” his mind kinked up like a hose—for two seconds he thought she was hip to his errant faggotry. When Taj realized her earnestness he laughed so hard that if he screamed, he was certain the frequency would shatter her heart. Yes, he vamped, he had fallen in love but the girl wouldn't love him back.
Then it wasn't meant to be
. Do I not know my son?

He was cold. He went over the details of the
Reporter
article again. There it was on the mindscreen—Whole Document, Cursor here, Cursor there, Pg Up, Pg Dn—and it warmed him. What he really
needed was a tape of
Dante's Inferno
; as yet, Taj had only read a précis in
TimeOut
's movie guide. Spencer Tracy played a “ruthless manipulator” who opened a carnival featuring the eponymous ride. The nineteen thirty-five film was supposed to have a spectacular “vision of hell” sequence that was technically ahead of its time. It was all so drolly ironic—in college,
The Divine Comedy
happened to be Taj's favorite book; he even learned Italian to apprehend its beauty.

More voices outside as the party grew. Taj shivered. He thought about the Harvard years and hummed a little doggerel. Then it came back, inexorably. On the outskirts of Hell, the poets heard lamentations. Virgil tells him,

…
Questo misero modo
tegnon l'anime triste di coloro
che visser sanza 'nfamia e sanza lodo
.

“Such is the miserable condition of the sorry souls of those who lived without infamy and without praise.” In that snowy collegiate world—the dormitory of his own soul—Taj already heard his voice rise up unaccomplished to take its place in the infernal suburbs, a sad tenor among the meritless Dead, their complement unworthy of Hades proper.

A door opened. Voices. Men laughing. Splash of a Hockneyesque dive. Taj prepared to bolt—he hadn't agreed to this. If Zev was accompanied, the associate producer would thrash and bloody himself, make a ruckus…The door closed, separating them from the sounds of the world. Zev was alone. He made a few calls, but Taj couldn't hear. He hung up, rummaging in a drawer before coming to the bath. He smoked a cigar. His breathing was heavy, labored. The producer sat on the toilet and defecated. The air grew musty and fetid. Zev puttered in the other room, casually talking on the phone again. He came and stood over him, breathing calmer. Taj felt the mouth at his groin like a fish feeding on aquarium bottom. Then, mouth skirted nipple: hovered over belly while a stertorous groan scared Taj half to death: and gilded him with throw-up. The producer regurgitated a warm rhythmical hail of egesta that put the rookie in mind of Jeff Goldblum in
The Fly
. Zev finally off his knees, washing at the sink. Cigar relit. Dreamy party voices through the door as he leaves, locking it.

BOOK: I’m Losing You
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