Название: The Editor
Автор: Стивен Роули
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Контркультура
isbn: 9780008333256
isbn:
Inside, Daniel is lying on the couch.
“I was hoping that was you. I thought we were being burgled.” Daniel is the type of person who says “burgled” instead of “robbed,” and he’s not even a writer—or a lawyer. He directs theater. I stare at him, his maddeningly thick hair and dark features, unsure of what to say. Not what to say so much as how to begin to say it. Also because my heart is pounding from my sprint up the stairs and I taste something coppery and I may be having a stroke. “You’re not going to believe this.” He gestures toward our nineteen-inch television. “There’s another one.”
I start to catch my breath. “Another one what?”
“Another bimbo. It was just on CNN.”
“Another one?” Strike that. I don’t want to get engaged in conversation about politics, something I don’t particularly care about at this moment.
“I think this is the end of his campaign.” Daniel looks up at me and notices my chest heaving. “Jesus. Did you run up the stairs?”
And that’s when I break into a huge, cat-who-ate-the-canary kind of grin.
“What?” Daniel has this look on his face that I love. I remember he made it on our first date, maybe even in response to my smiling devilishly at him. Brown eyes wide, lips slightly parted, hinting at the whitest teeth behind them, one of his pronounced Latin eyebrows slightly higher than the other. Five years later, that look still slays me.
I shrug and grin more. I must look like the Joker. Or at least Jack Nicholson.
“You’re not going to defend him, I hope.”
“Clinton? Nope.” Then I burst out laughing. It’s orgasmic, like a release for the whole day.
“What, then?”
Daniel and I met when we were both trying to get rush tickets to the Broadway revival of Cabaret. I made a crack about Joel Grey getting top billing for playing the emcee. I mean, he had won an Oscar for the role, but he was still the emcee. Daniel overheard me gripe and said it was like reviving Grease as a starring vehicle for Doody and I laughed. I had noticed him earlier on line for the box office and wanted to sleep with him the moment I laid eyes on him. It was the way he jumped up and down while pleading for a ticket, any ticket, like a dog on its hind legs, begging for scraps. We were unsuccessful that day but left far from empty-handed.
I snap off the TV.
“I was watching that,” he protests.
“It’s CNN. It’s on all day.” I take off my gloves and my coat and throw them on the chair. “I think I sold my book.”
Daniel stares at the blank TV screen until that sinks in. “Wait, you what?”
“Well, the offer will go to my agent and I’m sure there will be some back-and-forth and we’ll have to come to some agreement on terms. He may be on the phone with them now. Did Allen call? And there’s work to be done on it still. Hard work, she called it. On the ending, mostly.” I bite my lip. “But … yeah. I think I sold my book.”
Daniel’s legs swing around and his feet plant firmly on the ground. He pushes himself up with his fists and hovers just over the couch, preparing to leap up if necessary. “To a publisher?”
“To a doorstop salesman.” If it’s going to take him so long to catch on to this bit of the news, the rest of it will be a Sisyphean task of explanation on my part.
“Obviously to a publisher. To a good publisher?” Daniel doesn’t leap, but at least he stands. “Who?”
The grin is back. This is going to knock his socks off. “I sold it to a giant.”
“A giant,” he says skeptically.
“That’s right.”
“A literary giant?”
“A GIANT giant.”
Daniel crosses over to me and puts his hands on my shoulders, concerned. I peripherally glance down at his hands. “Wait, I’ve heard this before,” he says. “You sold your book for a handful of magic beans.”
Daniel is going off the deep end. “What?”
“And we no longer have a cow. But I shouldn’t worry, because you’re going to grow a beanstalk!”
“No. Stop it. Not a giant. An icon. But I’m sure she hates that word. She’s a really big person.”
“Like, obese?”
This is coming out all wrong. “Okay, I’m ready to move on from this part. Jackie. I sold my book to Jackie!”
Daniel thinks on this for a minute. “Karen’s friend? The lesbian who works at Reader’s Digest?”
“KENNEDY. Jackie. Kennedy.”
He freezes. Finally. The reaction I was looking for. “Oh,” he says, quietly. But he’s still not quite there.
“Oh …” I repeat. And then I coax, “Na-ssis.”
Finally, magic happens. In unison: “Jackie … Kennedy … Onassis.”
It’s just like out of a movie, us saying it together: a scene that would strain credulity but would still be an audience favorite and get high marks in test screenings.
“Get out!” Daniel removes his hands from my shoulders and pushes me in the chest. Hard.
“Ow.”
“You’re kidding.”
“You just punched me in the sternum.”
“Jackie fucking Kennedy.”
“Onassis. Except I don’t think that’s her middle name. And she says Jacqueline, but like in the French pronunciation.”
“You’re joking.”
“Non, non,” I say, mustering my best French. “Je ne …” I can’t think of the word. “Joke pas.”
He looks at me, scrutinizing my face, just as he did the first time I told him I loved him, to see if I am recklessly toying with his emotions or if I’m indeed telling the truth. He scans my eyes, perhaps to check if my pupils are dilated in the throes of some drug-fueled hallucination. At last he smiles, a recognition that I am of sound mind, just as he did upon I love you.
“Oh СКАЧАТЬ