Little Known Facts A Novel

Little Known Facts A Novel - By Christine Sneed



Chapter 1

Relations


More times than he would care to count, Will has witnessed his father’s ability to silence a room merely by entering it. He has seen his father’s expression change in an instant from utter exhaustion to the bright, sometimes false pleasure of being the center of attention, the person on whom every pair of eyes is fastened, some with desire, others with envy. His father has won coveted annual awards and routinely earned millions of dollars for a few months’ work in front of a camera and has attracted the admiring, sometimes slavish attention of some of the world’s most powerful men and beautiful women. Despite his own early marriage, he has achieved the goals that many men set for themselves in adolescence but abandon when they marry young and begin to produce children and acquire mortgages and jobs they aren’t thrilled with and wives who, after a few years, can barely tolerate their bullying insipidity and dispiriting lack of imagination. Will’s father, Renn Ivins, is in his early fifties and divorced from two women who did not tire of him before he tired of them. Will is shorter than his father by two inches and at twenty-six already witnessing his hairline’s recession, whereas his father still has a full head of movie-star hair. Will believes that even his name is less interesting than his father’s: Billy, though he has asked people to call him Will since his second year of college, and now it is only family—his parents and his sister Anna, and a few childhood friends—who still call him Billy.

His mother was the first woman to marry and be left by his father. She is a pediatrician and for a long time was furious to have been discarded for a younger woman with no obvious merits other than her witless adoration of Renn and the supposed ability to suffer more gracefully the sex scenes that he has pretended since the beginning of his career to dislike—his claim has always been that he submits to them only to avoid an argument with the director. Sex scenes, he has said, are his least favorite scenes to film because they aren’t at all sexy. If you actually paused for a moment to consider it, how could you believe that the actors are enjoying themselves while choreographing intimate acts in front of a film crew, most of them little better than strangers? How many people, in any case, want to be studied and critiqued while making love?

The first Mrs. Ivins has told her children that she was too smart for him, that from the beginning, she saw through his selfishness and self-obsession. Behind it, there was a simple message scribbled on a dingy wall: Pig. Over the intervening years, Will’s sister has tried to defend their father by telling their mother that she thought he was the nicest man she knew, that she missed him when he was gone, that she thought he was more fun than anyone else. Twelve years old when the divorce went through, Will kept his opinions about their father mostly to himself. They weren’t as generous as his sister’s, but they weren’t as unkind as their mother’s either.

Despite his easy access to casting agents and directors, Will has not followed his father into a career in film. Four years postcollege and he still has not come across anything that fills him with suspense or a sense of purpose for more than a few weeks at a time. He has everything he needs materially, and on some mornings when he wakes in his three-bedroom condominium that sits within view of an imposing hilltop museum, a home that he paid for with one check drawn on his trust account, he feels restless and out of sorts. The unearned spoils of his comfortable life, the European stereo system, the nearly weightless down comforter, the copper cooking pots he almost never uses, all seem incidental, as if he has awakened in a privileged stranger’s home. He has used his father’s money but has not wanted to use his influence to sign with an agent and begin the process of auditioning for roles he would never previously have imagined himself pursuing. He is not interested in gaining weight to play a paunchy stoner or an unshaven flunky in a biker movie. He does not want to be cast as the waiter with two lines who serves the film’s stars their lunches. As a witness to and a sometimes-grudging admirer of the great roles his father has played—the noble statesman, the tragic 1920s film star, the human rights worker murdered for his ideals in a deadly, faraway land—Will understands that he would want immediately to be cast as the hero.

“I thought you were going to start applying to law schools,” his sister says when they meet for dinner to celebrate her twenty-fifth birthday. It is mid-October, the weather perfectly mild, the famous southern California smog less dense than usual because of winds off the Pacific. Their mother is in New York attending a convention on new pediatric allergy treatments, their father in New Orleans filming a script he co-wrote with a friend about the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Anna is unmarried and boyfriendless. Will has a girlfriend, but she is in Hawaii for a week with two college girlfriends to celebrate their thirtieth birthdays. Danielle is four years older than he is, already divorced. He has never been married and wonders if he will ever want to be.

“I’m still thinking about it,” he says, meeting his sister’s clear green eyes. She is pretty and kind and could have a boyfriend right now if she wanted one, but claims she is too busy. “I took the LSAT two months ago.”

This news surprises her. “Seriously?”

He nods. He hadn’t told her that he was studying for it; he wasn’t sure how he would do. “How did it go?”

“All right. I got a one sixty-four, which is good enough for a lot of schools, but I think I want to go to Harvard or Yale.”

“You could get in,” she says, cutting a big piece from her steak. It is red in the center, shockingly so. He has always ordered his steaks medium well. They are both meat eaters, she more guilty about this than he is. She has tried vegetarianism several times since their teens. He has never tried it, knowing he would give up within a week.

She’s right; he could get in. It is because of their father. The Ivies like the offspring of the famous. Most everyone, especially the non-famous, do. But he wants to be admitted based on his own talents, not his father’s.

“I don’t know,” he says. “Maybe. I think I’m going to retake the LSAT anyway.”

“You’re sure you want to be a lawyer?” she says.

“I think so.”

“Why?”

“I just think it’d be interesting.” He likes the idea of understanding something arcane and potentially tricky, of being a person other people go to for answers.

“Do you want to stand in a courtroom and argue for murderers’ lives in front of a judge and jury?”

“Alleged murderers,” he says. “I don’t think I want to do criminal law.”

“But that’s where the action is.”

“I don’t need to be in on the action, Anna. Whatever that means.”

She looks at him for a few seconds. “You say that now, Billy, but—”

“But what?” he says, impatient.

“I just think you’d probably want to do something a little more interesting than sit in an office all day surrounded by affidavits and filing cabinets.”

She has always been the better student. She is in her last year of medical school at UCLA, very close to earning her diploma, as their mother did over twenty-five years earlier, but she does not want to practice pediatric medicine; instead, she intends to specialize in family medicine so that she can offer everyone primary care, particularly those who can’t afford it. She has told him that she might even go to Africa someday to volunteer in a clinic. She isn’t interested in the big paychecks that many of her classmates seem to be chasing, in part, Will supposes, because she already has money. Nothing is certain yet, but she will do her residency after she is placed in a good teaching hospital, and then she will decide where to go next. Will does not want her to go to Africa or some other place where he would not want to visit her. For a while it bothered him that she has done something so different with her life than anything he has ever considered doing, but over the years, his adolescent jealousy has turned to reticent admiration.

“Do you plan to start next fall?” she says.

“Probably. There’s still enough time to apply. Most of the deadlines aren’t until December or January.”

She cuts off another piece of her steak and looks at it on the end of her fork. “Dad’s flying back from New Orleans on Friday and staying until Sunday night,” she says quietly. “He probably told you. This is the only time he’ll be here until they’re done shooting Bourbon at Dusk.”

“I haven’t talked to him in a couple of weeks.”

“You should call him more often, Billy. He says you don’t unless you need something.”

He feels anger prickle his scalp. “That’s not true.”

She hesitates. “Don’t get mad. He was probably just in a bad mood when he said that.”

“I called him last week. He’s full of shit if he says that I only call when I need something.” It sometimes takes him a week or more to get through to his father. They are both in the habit of waiting two or three days to return each other’s calls. Anna always seems to have more success reaching him, but she also calls more often.

“He asked if we’d have dinner with him on Saturday. Can you?”

“I don’t know. I think I have something planned already.”

“Reschedule it. I bet you haven’t seen Dad since his birthday.”

She is right, but he doesn’t admit it. Their father’s birthday is in April. It has been almost six months since their last dinner together, at his favorite restaurant, an Italian place in Santa Monica where the ardent and merry owners refuse to let him pay for his meals and only ask permission to take his photo, to have him sign autographs for their relatives back in Salerno. It is their pleasure, their honor, to have him eat their humble lasagna, their minestrone and sweet cannoli. Their smiles split their handsome, aging faces, and Will can barely look at them, he feels such a painful mix of shame and pride.

“I’ll let you know, Anna.”

She purses her lips but doesn’t say anything.

After he drops her off at her house in Silver Lake, he calls his friend Luca, who was supposed to have returned two days earlier from several weeks in Australia. Luca is his closest friend from high school and prone to devising practical jokes that involve convincing impersonations of celebrities and politicians. He has almost perfected Will’s father’s voice and sometimes calls pretending to confess to a fetish for lawn mowers and athletic girls wearing men’s underwear. To Will’s mind, Luca fits the stereotype the rest of the world seems to have of southern Californians—happy, never anxious, half stoned. When he calls Luca’s cell number, he is routed directly to voice mail and his friend’s lazy voice declares that he’s “hanging in the land down under until November 1.” Will is disappointed that he has decided to stay on the other side of the world for another month. It is likely that he has found a girlfriend, which a year earlier kept him in Paris at his father’s place for two extra months.

Will knows that he could do the same thing—disappear overseas for months at a time—but the idea has never appealed to him. He likes California, his apartment, his sister and mother’s proximity. He spent a semester in Scotland during college and drank too much and slept with girls who liked him because his father was Renn Ivins. Luca once asked him, “Wouldn’t it be worse if you had a famous brother? Your dad at least is twice your age. It’s not like you can go on a double date with him.”

“Why couldn’t I?” Will had said.

“I guess you could, but why would you? He’s your dad, you freak.”

He dials his father’s number now and is surprised when he answers. Renn sounds tired and deflated for a few seconds before his voice rises to its usual breezy conversational pitch. “I just talked to Anna,” he says. “She said you took her out for her birthday. That was nice of you.”

The compliment makes him feel shy. “It wasn’t a big deal. She went out with Jill and Celestine for lunch, so it was just us at the steak place she likes in Pasadena. Mom’s in New York. Anna might have told you.” He is the dutiful son, filling in the blanks for his absent father. He can’t help it. He has always wanted to be good, to be applauded too for this goodness. But Anna’s comment that their father thinks he only calls when he wants something rankles. Still, he can’t find the nerve to confront him, not so soon.

“How’s Danielle?” his father asks.

“She’s in Hawaii with a couple of friends.”

“Why aren’t you with her?”

“She didn’t invite me.”

His father hesitates. “I want to ask you something.”

Will feels his stomach sink. “Okay.”

“We’ve had a couple of people quit down here, and my assistant is taking a leave of absence. Her mother just found out she has cancer, and she asked Trina to come home for a while. I wondered if you’d be interested in flying down here to fill in for her until we’re done shooting. You’d be making phone calls and running errands for me. We’ve got about a month left. Unless you’re busy.”

It has been several years, since his second year of college, that he has worked on a set doing odd jobs for his father. The last time was for a film that had an enormous cast of extras, which Will had been hired to assist with, and was shot partially in Kenya, partially in Kashmir. He developed digestive problems in India and had to be sent home early. His father had asked him two years later to help with a shoot in Romania and Russia, but Will had declined. This is the first time since then that Renn has offered him work. “I don’t know, Dad. Can we talk about it when you’re here? Aren’t you coming home on Friday?”

“No, not anymore. There’s too much going on right now.”

“Can I at least think it over for a day or two?”

“No, I need to know tonight. If you can’t do it, I have to make other arrangements.”

“Can you give me an hour?”

He sighs. “All right. One hour. That’s all I can afford.”

Before they hang up, Will says, “I thought I was the one who called only when I wanted something.”

His father laughs softly. “You called me, Billy.”

“I don’t call you only when I need something.”

“Did I say that you did?”

“That’s what Anna told me.”

“I don’t remember saying that. I’m sorry if I did. I must not have meant it.”

After they hang up, Will sees that his sister has sent him a text message: Dad not coming. No dinner Sat. Ur off the hook.


In the morning he catches a flight from LAX to New Orleans. His ticket is waiting at the airport, the machinery of his father’s life well lubricated by his fame and large bank account.

His sister says she’s happy that he’ll be helping their father again, but asks in the same breath about his plans to retake the LSAT.

“I can still do it when I get back,” he says.

“Don’t you have to study?”

“I will.”

She laughs. “In New Orleans?”

“Why not? If I don’t apply this fall, I can always do it next year.”

It takes her a long time to reply. “Yes, you could,” she finally says. “If you still feel like it.”


New Orleans is much warmer than he expects when he steps out of the terminal and into the town car his father has sent for him. The outlying areas of the city have a stunned look, the effects of the hurricane still visible, despite the years that have already passed. He feels both guilty and relieved to have been living so ignorantly elsewhere, unaware of the scope of the city’s troubles. His father’s interest in it, his research and his four visits in the years since the storm, had until now only seemed to be a businessman’s pragmatism: here was a beleaguered region that could enhance his reputation and earn him more money if he managed to fashion something cinematic out of the ruins.

He is taken directly to the Omni Hotel on St. Louis and Chartres by a silent driver, an older, completely bald man in a dark gray suit. His father and a few of the film’s actors are also staying at the hotel, his unit production manager having negotiated a good rate on a block of rooms, but no one is in the reception area to greet him. The Quarter looks as he remembers it, largely unscathed by the storm, its black wrought-iron balconies glistening in the sun, their hanging ferns and flowering potted plants as effusive as he remembers them from a trip during his junior-year spring break, several months before the hurricane. His father’s film is being shot in the Quarter as well as in Metairie and on a shrimp boat in the Gulf. Will read the script early in the morning before he got on the plane; his father had given him a copy months earlier, but he had only glanced at it then. It is genuinely good, a story about a brother and sister trying to recover their livelihood after the storm and to keep their mother’s health from failing.

It is two in the afternoon, and he is struggling to stay awake. He didn’t sleep well the previous night and couldn’t sleep on the plane either, but after hanging up the few pairs of pants and the nicer shirts he has packed, he lies down and drops off immediately.

Fifteen minutes later, he is awakened by the hotel phone’s strident ring. His father’s voice is on the other end of the line. “You didn’t pick up your cell, Billy,” he says, not bothering with hello.

“I must not have heard it,” he says, his voice cracking.

“You sound like you were sleeping.”

“I was.”

His father hesitates. “I’d really like you to be down in the lobby in five minutes. George will be there, and he’ll take you over to the set. We’re almost done setting up the street scene outside the Ursulines, and we’ll start shooting in the next half hour. I’d like you to be here before we do.”

“Who’s George?”

“The same person who picked you up at the airport. Didn’t you introduce yourselves?”

“We shook hands, but he didn’t tell me his name.”

“You might have asked him.”

Will is silent.

“Five minutes,” his father says again. “Can you be ready?”

“Yes.”


George is sitting on a sofa reading the newspaper when Will appears in the lobby ten minutes later. The driver stands up and folds his newspaper when he sees Will. His father’s reprimand still stings, and he doesn’t ask the older man his name when they face each other for a moment before George directs him outside to the car. He sits in the front instead of the back seat this time, guessing that the driver finds this preference strange, but neither of them says a word. There are dozens of tourists in the streets, some moving slowly in the heat with their heavy bodies and melting frozen drinks in plastic souvenir glasses shaped like a naked woman’s torso, but the drive takes only a few minutes, the convent only eight or nine short blocks from the hotel. He could easily have walked but knows that his father told his driver to take him so that he wouldn’t dawdle in his room.

Before he gets out of the car, George looks at him and says, “I think your dad’s grateful that you could be here right now.”

Will stares at him. He would sooner have expected the driver to reveal a humiliating affliction than to comment on his effect on his father’s well-being. “He is?”

“Yes.”

He falters. “Okay, well, thanks for telling me.”

George nods. “You’re welcome.”

He wonders if the driver is his father’s confidant. His father’s friends, for the most part, are other actors, but Will wonders how close most of these friendships really are, if jealousy keeps them from confiding in each other.

There is a small crowd of spectators near the set, several of them members of a sunburned family dressed in New Orleans Saints T-shirts and ill-fitting shorts. They stand squinting on the sunbaked sidewalk near the white utility trucks that have been transporting the movie equipment from one end of the city to the other for the past four weeks. The catering van is surrounded by a half dozen crew members, each sweaty and tired-looking and holding a bottle of water or Diet Pepsi. His father isn’t in plain sight, but Will’s phone rings as he walks toward the crew.

“I’m here, Dad,” he says. “By the catering van.”

“Can you come around to the west side of the convent? I’m over here with Marek and Elise, getting ready to start shooting.”

“Okay, I’ll be—” But his father has already hung up.

Marek and Elise are Bourbon at Dusk’s stars, the brother and sister trying not to self-destruct. Will has met Marek once or twice, but not Elise, who is just beginning her career and is two years younger than he is. She is from Dallas and has a southern accent that she only reveals in interviews. He doesn’t think that she has been allowed to use it for this film either; if so, Marek would also have to speak with an accent. Elise is beautiful, tall and slender with strawberry blond hair and hands that gesture animatedly when she talks. Will watches entertainment news shows and other junk TV that his sister doesn’t have time for and his mother says that she has no interest in, though he knows she follows his father’s career closely. She sees his movies in their first week of release, but rarely has anything good to say about them. After fourteen years, it bothers him that she is still bitter about the divorce, but Anna sees it differently. “I think she feels like she failed him. She would never admit it, but I do think it’s true.”

He didn’t call his mother before he left for New Orleans, not wanting to bother her in New York with news that was likely to annoy her. He could imagine her pretending not to mind Renn’s offer and Will’s acceptance of it, but she would mind. She has never remarried but has had male companions. None have lasted for more than a year. It must be hard on them, Anna once mused, to feel like they could never measure up to Dad.

His father is standing on the sidewalk in shirtsleeves and khaki shorts, sweating in the afternoon heat as he talks to Marek and Elise. His chest hair is visible in the V of his green cotton shirt, and he wears sunglasses, Ray-Bans that look like the ones Will gave him for his birthday the previous April. The cameraman is several feet away, making adjustments to his complicated and expensive device. Two sound guys with the boom mic that they’ll hold above the actors’ heads, just out of range of the camera, stand a yard or two away. There is also an electrician inspecting one of several cords snaking out of a power strip, a makeup artist powdering Marek’s face and neck, and a couple of older men, one heavyset, the other tall and almost gaunt. Will guesses they are the film’s producers. He sees Elise staring up at his father, her tanned, perfect face rapt, and his breath catches. It looks like she is in love with him, a man who is probably older than her own father. Perhaps she is already his girlfriend.

His father glances away from Elise and spots him. He smiles and motions for Will to come closer, hugging him briefly and hard before introducing him to Marek, then Elise. The actor has professionally mussed hair and three days’ worth of whiskers. Elise’s hair is in uneven braids, and there are dirt smudges on her chin and right cheek. Her hand is damp in his when he shakes it. She smiles and says, “You look just like your father.”

He doesn’t think that he does, but feels his heart leap at her words. Maybe to her they do look alike. Or else she is a canny liar. “Thanks,” he says. “It’s very nice to meet you. I’m a fan.”

Her smile widens. “You’re so nice to say that.”

“We’re getting ready to do the scene with the argument about the money Tim lost in the card game,” his father says. “Tim is Marek’s character.”

“I remember,” says Will, feeling his face flush. “I reread the script this morning.”

“Let me talk to them for a couple of minutes, and then I’ll tell you what I need you to do.”

Will smiles at the ground, incensed that he was ordered to rush over to the set in spite of his exhaustion. He goes back around the corner to get a drink from the catering truck, feeling his father’s eyes on him, but he doesn’t turn to say he’s not going far. He thinks that he has made a poor choice, that he would have been better off staying in L.A. and waiting for Danielle to come back and do what they usually do together—eat in restaurants and shop and see movies and the occasional play. He knows that he should be studying for the LSAT and researching law schools, making plans for his future that are more solid than any others he has made in the past. But he isn’t sure if he wants to be a lawyer. He doesn’t know what he wants to do tomorrow, or the next day either. It is a problem that has plagued him since childhood—there have always seemed to be so many choices, a fact that strikes him as more oppressive than having no choices at all.

He takes a bottle of Gatorade from the ice chest at the foot of the folding table, where a scattering of apples and plums lie on a bed of rapidly melting ice. A few of the crew members smile at him, but no one tries to talk to him. He doesn’t want to talk to anyone either. He can feel the approach of a headache, and the heat is a heavy sheet that sticks to him like a suffocating second skin.

His phone rings. His father again. He walks back around the corner without answering. Marek and Elise have taken up positions on the sidewalk a few yards from where they were standing earlier. The makeup artist, a ponytailed woman wearing a jean skirt and red Converse hi-tops, is now dabbing at the smudges on Elise’s face. Will’s father hands him a piece of paper with several names scrawled on it. Underneath each one is the name of a periodical. “Can you call Fran and ask her to call these people and try to schedule phone interviews for me for Saturday from seven to ten p.m.? I can give them each fifteen or twenty minutes. She knows that I’ve talked to them all about past projects. They’ll do some advance press for Bourbon.”

Will blinks. “Fran?”

“My publicist. Her number’s at the bottom of the sheet.”

“I thought your publicist was named Barbara.”

“No, I had to hire a new one last year. Barbara retired with all the money I’ve paid her over the years and moved to Florence.” He pauses, smiling. “After that, I want you to have George take you to buy me ten pairs of white running socks. The short ones, ankle-length, and a dozen white V-neck T-shirts, a hundred percent cotton, extra large. Nothing fancy. He knows where there’s a Target. I need some sunblock too, sixty SPF or more. Four or five bottles should do it. Neutrogena, not Coppertone. I can give you some cash right now.” He reaches into his front pocket and removes a small wad of folded bills. “Here,” he says, pulling loose three fifties. “This should be enough. If you need anything, you can use whatever’s left over.” He also hands Will one of his two cell phones. “Use this to call Fran. She won’t pick up if she doesn’t recognize the number. If you get any calls on this phone too, let me know. Someone at Sony called me twice yesterday from a general line but he wouldn’t say who he was or what he wanted before he hung up. I don’t think I gave anyone there this number either. Maybe he’ll tell you what he wants if he calls again.”

“Okay,” says Will. “I guess I can try to get him to talk to me.”

“He probably won’t call, but just in case,” his father says.

On the way to the store, Will dozes instead of calling the publicist. George doesn’t try to talk to him as they drive out of the city toward the commercial sprawl on the outskirts, but when they arrive at the store’s bustling entrance, Will asks him a question that he abruptly wishes he could withdraw. “Is my dad dating Elise Connor?”

The driver doesn’t turn to look at him. “I don’t know,” he says.

Will studies the back of the older man’s gleaming, hairless head, feeling his face turn hot. “Sorry if I put you on the spot.”

“You don’t have to apologize. She is beautiful. She’s a nice lady too.”

“Yes, I guess she is.”

George hesitates. “You’ll have to ask him if they’re dating. I really don’t know.”


The store is crowded, its fluorescent lights overly bright. Parents of whining children listlessly push carts filled with boxes of cookies and chips and diapers. He finds the things his father wants and picks up some Oreos and cashews for himself. For what feels like the hundredth time that day, his phone rings. His father’s, however, has been silent.

“You’re in New Orleans, aren’t you,” says his mother.

“Yes. As of a few hours ago.”

He hears her sigh. “I hope you won’t let him boss you around too much.”

“Lucy, I’m supposed to be working for him.” He knows that she dislikes it when he uses her first name, but he can’t keep himself from goading her.

“Yes, child,” she says. “I know that, but don’t let him take advantage of you.”

He looks down at the bag of Oreos in his basket and sees that he has gotten double-stuffed instead of regular. “When are you coming back from New York?”

“Tonight. I was hoping you or your sister would be able to pick me up from the airport.”

“Anna’s probably working.”

“She is. I’ll take a cab.” She pauses. “How’s your father?”

“He’s fine. Maybe a little stressed, but since this is only his second time directing, I guess it’s—”

“I remember The Zoologist, Billy. Maybe he’ll have better luck with this one.”

“I didn’t think The Zoologist was that bad.” It wasn’t bad. His father had wanted it to be better, but he wanted all his films to be better, even the ones that had won awards. His last two films, which he had acted in but had had no part in the direction or screenwriting of, had not done as well as expected. Will knew that this was one of the main reasons why there was such an air of urgency surrounding Bourbon. If it didn’t do very well either, he would be very curious to see how his father reacted.

“You can say hello to him for me if you think of it,” his mother says. “How long are you going to be out there? Your sister said a month.”

“That’s probably about right.”

“I’ll miss you.”

“You could come visit.”

She laughs. “No, not in a million years. Who’s he dating now?”

“No one that I know of.”

“I’m sure he’s with someone.”

“He might be. I haven’t asked him.”

“Well, never mind. Call me when you want to, Billy. Love you.”

“I love you too, Mom.”


They are in the middle of shooting the scene when Will gets back to the set. From where he stands on the periphery, he can see that his father’s shirt and hair are drenched. He stands next to the cameraman, watching the two leads confront each other over the money Tim has gambled away. Elise and Marek are very good, Will thinks, and seem at ease in front of the camera, but his father finds fault with their interaction many times, telling Marek to look at once more guilty and defiant as he apologizes to Elise. Another time he tells her to be more physical, to push at Marek’s chest, to raise her voice. He doesn’t call them by their characters’ names, which Will knows that some directors do. Despite the complaints that are often made against actors’ public personas, his father has not, to his knowledge, been called a phony, at least not with any frequency. Many people like him because he seems, despite his considerable fame, to be a person who is not overly impressed with himself.

It is six thirty when the company wraps, a two-minute scene that took three and a half hours to film to his father’s satisfaction, not including the four hours spent on setup. When they are done, his father pats Marek’s shoulder. Elise looks like she wants to kiss Renn when he tells her that he can see great, shining rewards in her future. Will guesses that he means an Oscar, but it’s bad luck to talk about the Oscars or the Golden Globes during a shoot. “What about me?” says Marek.

Will’s father turns to face him, opening his mouth, but before he can reply, Marek says, “I’m just giving you a hard time.”

“You too,” says Renn. “I’ll do what I can to help you both get your due.”


In the car on the way back to the hotel, his father is buoyant with the pleasure of the day’s work done well. Will listens to him and the driver talk about the catering company, one that was contracted for a reasonable price. “They make the best jambalaya I’ve had in years,” his father says, turning to look at him. “Did you try some?”

Will shakes his head. “I bought some nuts at Target. I had a few of those.” He doesn’t tell him about the Oreos. It seems a childish confession.

“Is everything good for Saturday?” his father asks. Will gives him a blank look.

“The interviews for the glossies. You called Fran, right? Has she gotten back to you yet? Where’s the phone I gave you?”

The phone is still in the side pocket of his cargo pants. He has not called Fran. In the excitement of watching the shoot, he has forgotten to take care of this task. When he confesses this, his father exhales loudly. In the rearview mirror, George’s eyes meet his boss’s for a second, but the driver keeps his face neutral. Will can feel himself sweating.

“Maybe you don’t really want to be here, Billy,” his father finally says. “Is that what this is about?”

“No,” he says, voice cracking. “That’s not it at all. I’m really sorry.”

His father closes his eyes and presses his fingertips to his eyebrows. “Then what are you doing?”

It is a question Will wants to be able to answer without sounding like an irritable child. Although he has never said it directly, he suspects that his father has thought of him as one for years. My son the leech, the slacker, the listless, the attention-deficit-disordered, the spoiled brat. The jobs he has had since college: day trader, entrepreneur (with two friends, he founded a dog-walking business and a personal-assistant service), health-club manager, and furniture salesman, all failed to hold his interest for more than six or seven months. Because he has not needed to work to eat, he has never felt the same urgency as his coworkers about keeping a job. He has wondered how much time people spend doing things they’d really rather not do, and he knows that there are two probable answers: (a) at least half of it, or, (b) most of it. But unlike him, they can claim that they are doing something with their lives every day. They are setting goals, and in some cases, achieving them. His parents and sister have all done this, whereas his main goal each day is to resist inertia.

“I was so tired earlier,” he says, not looking at his father, “that it slipped my mind. George and I went to Target, and I got sidetracked. I’m really sorry.”

His father emits a small, harsh laugh. “If this is going to work, you need to do everything I tell you as soon as I tell you to do it.”

“I’ll call Fran right now.”

“You can try,” he says gruffly. “She’s not going to like having to spend the evening making phone calls for me.”

“I’m sorry, Dad.”

“I was going to say that we should go out for dinner, but you’ve got work to do now. Ask Fran if you can help her contact the journalists. You can call room service for your dinner. The food at the Omni is all right.”

George pulls up to the front of the hotel, and his father thrusts open the car door and doesn’t wait for Will to climb out before he strides into the lobby. From the car’s floor, Will grabs the bags of socks and cookies and T-shirts and follows his father, feeling like he has just shown him a report card filled with Ds and Fs.

On the elevator up to their rooms, Renn looks at him and says, “If you don’t want to work for me, I won’t be angry with you. If you do want to work for me, I can’t have you f*cking up like this.”

“I’ll be better from now on. I didn’t sleep well last night,” he says, sheepish. “Who are you going to have dinner with?”

“Myself, probably. I don’t feel like making small talk tonight.”

Their rooms are on the same floor but at opposite ends of the hall. “Call me if you need anything,” his father says. “After I get something to eat, I’m going to look at the dailies in one of the conference rooms downstairs. I’d say you could join me, but maybe tomorrow would be better. Let me know when the interviews are set up.”

When they part ways outside the elevator, his father doesn’t say good-bye. “I’m sorry, Dad,” Will calls after him. “It won’t happen again.”

Renn doesn’t turn around. Instead, he raises his hand in a halfhearted wave.

Fran answers her phone on the second ring and sounds disappointed when she realizes it is the son, not the star, who has called her. It is only five in L.A., but he suspects that the work his father has for her will take a couple of hours. Even so, she doesn’t want his help. “It’s easier if I do it myself so there won’t be any overlap in the schedule,” she says briskly. “It’s fine, Will. I’ll get back to you as soon as everything’s firmed up. Because most of these people are in New York, I might not reach them until tomorrow. I wish you or your father had e-mailed me this list earlier. I don’t know why he’s so averse to computers.”

There is nothing more for him to do that evening, but he doesn’t dial his father’s room to say they could have dinner together after all, or that he wants to watch the dailies with him and the assistant director. He tries calling Danielle, but she doesn’t answer. He tries his sister next, and she doesn’t pick up either. She is probably working, making good use of her intelligence and energetic kindness. When they were kids, they used to play school, and because she was younger, he always made her be the student, but she sometimes had to remind him of the year of the first moon landing or the name of the man who had invented the lightbulb. The subtext to her corrections was always, “What are you doing at school each day if you’re not listening to the teacher?” Daydreaming, he supposed. Thinking about his toys that were sitting idle at home, or the after-school soccer game where he wanted to be a striker for once instead of a boring defender.

He wonders where Elise is staying. It is likely that she also has a room at the Omni. He doubts that he has a chance with her, but possibly they could become friends, and eventually he might become important to her, whether or not she ever lets him have sex with her.

But a little while later, he sees that it is unlikely he will ever matter to her very much. He is on his way out of the hotel in search of dinner when ahead of him in the lobby he spots her with his father. Renn’s hand lingers for a moment at her lower back as he guides her toward the doors that open onto Chartres Street, both of them dressed in black—she in a minidress, he in a short-sleeved shirt paired with khaki pants. People watch them leave, and within a step or two of the exit, Will can see that someone has stopped them on the sidewalk to ask for an autograph. His father signs what looks like a newspaper for two college students. Elise signs the same newspaper and smiles at the two boys in their oversize LSU T-shirts. Will feels his heartbeat accelerate, not sure if he should go out and try to insinuate himself into their plans, pretend to his father that he is not particularly impressed by the fact that Elise appears to have fallen for him. He could go out to the street and say that he only wants to give him back his phone, Fran having at last been contacted, and wait to see if Elise invites him along.

Despite his desire to be near her, he doesn’t want to be a hanger-on. He lets them walk out of view and hesitates for several seconds near the doors before he follows them into the humid night. But once in the street, he doesn’t see them. A taxi has spirited them away, or they have disappeared through a nearby door and entered a room filled with people who will remember their sighting of the two movie stars for years. If he were to join them at their table, no one would really notice him. He would feel as incidental as the salt and pepper shakers, part of the scenery and not even an important part.

He knows that he could do anything he wants to with his life. If he wanted to study oceanography or take photographs of gazelles in the Serengeti, no one would tell him that he should find a more practical career, one that would enable him to pay his bills and support the family he would surely want one day. Isn’t he lucky to have so much? He should be happy, they would say. In fact, he should be ecstatic.