‘I’ll tell you why,’ she said, dropping her voice a little, as though she was about to share something of real significance with Tammy. ‘He’s got a secret project in the works.’
‘Oh?’ Tammy said. She didn’t sound persuaded. ‘This isn’t Warrior, is it? I read that script, and –’
‘No, it isn’t Warrior. It’s a very personal piece, which Todd is writing himself.’
‘He’s writing it? Todd is writing something? He said in an interview with People last July he hated writing. It was too much like hard work.’
‘Well, I lied a little,’ Maxine said. ‘He’s not doing the actual writing. He’s working with somebody on the project. A very well-respected screenwriter, actually. But he’s pouring out his heart, so it’ll be a very personal project.’ There was a silence. Maxine waited. Had Tammy taken the bait or not?
‘So this is autobiographical, this movie?’
‘I didn’t say it was a movie,’ Maxine said, taking some petty pleasure in catching Tammy out. ‘It may end up on the screen, but right now he’s just working hard to get his feelings down. He and the writer, that is.’
‘Who is the writer?’
‘I can’t say.’
‘You know it would make all this very much more believable if you gave me some more details,’ Tammy said.
That was it. Maxine lost her composure. How dare this little bitch suggest her lies weren’t believable?
‘You know I’ve really said more than I should already, Tammy,’ she snapped. ‘And I’ve got six calls waiting. So if you’ll excuse me –’
‘Wait – What am I going to tell the members?’
‘What I just told you.’
‘You swear Todd’s fine?’
‘Good God, how many times? Yes. Todd is perfectly fine. In fact, he’s never been better.’ She drew a deep breath, and attempted to calm herself a little before she ended up saying something she regretted. ‘Look, Tammy, I really wish I could tell you more. But this is a matter of Todd’s privacy, as I’m sure you understand. He needs a little time away from the pressure of being a celebrity, so he can work on this project, and when he’s finished I’m sure you’ll be one of the first to hear about it. Now really, I’ve got to go.’
‘One more question,’ Tammy said.
‘Yes.’
‘What’s it called?’
‘What’s what called?’ Maxine replied, playing for time.
‘The script. Or the book. Or whatever it’s going to be. What’s it called?’
Oh shit, Maxine thought. Now she was in deep. Well, why the hell not give the damn woman a title? She’d lied herself into a hole as it was, one more shovelful wouldn’t hurt. She pictured Todd in an image now indelibly inscribed in her mind’s eye, sitting waiting for Burrows to start cutting away the bandages. And the title came:
‘The Blind Leading the Blind,’ she said.
‘I don’t like that,’ Tammy said, already proprietorial.
‘Neither do I,’ Maxine replied, thinking not just of the title, but of this whole, sprawling, exhausting mess. ‘Trust me, Tammy. Neither do I.’
Tammy Jayne Lauper lived on Elverta Road in Rio Linda, Sacramento, in a one-storey ranch-style house fifteen minutes from the Sacramento International Airport, where her husband had worked for eight years as a baggage handler. They had no kids, nor any hope of having any, this side of a miracle of Biblical proportions. Arnie had a zero sperm count. Tammy didn’t mind much. Just because God had given her breasts the size of watermelons didn’t mean she was born for motherhood. And of course the absence of children left plenty of space in the house for all the files relating to what Arnie sneeringly called ‘Tammy’s little fan club’.
‘It isn’t a fan club,’ Tammy had pointed out countless times, ‘it’s an Appreciation Society.’ Arnie said Tammy wasn’t no appreciator, she was a fan, plain and simple, and he knew every time they’d used to sleep together and she closed her eyes it was that dickhead Pickett she’d been imagining on top of her fat ass, and that was the whole unvarnished truth of it. When Arnie got to talking like that, Tammy would just tune him out. He’d stop eventually, when he knew she wasn’t listening; go back to sitting in front of the TV with a beer.
The main centre of the Todd Pickett Appreciation Society’s operations was the front bedroom. The room she and Arnie slept in was considerably smaller, but as she’d pointed out to him, it didn’t really matter since all they did was sleep in it. They still had a double bed, though God knows why; he never touched her; and a couple of years back she’d stopped wanting him to. The third bedroom (and all the closets), were used for storage: files of clippings, issues of the fanzine (quarterly for the first year, then monthly, now quarterly again), photographs and biographies to be distributed to new members, copies of press kits from every film Todd had ever made, in twenty-six languages. Downstairs, in what would have been the family room, she kept the Collection. This was made up of items related to Todd and his career, all of them relatively rare, some one-of-a-kind items. Hanging in zipped-up plastic laundry bags were articles of clothing made for the cast and crew of his pictures. On the mantelpiece, still sealed in their boxes were six Todd Pickett dolls that had been the hot thing to own during his teen-idol period, the boxes signed by Todd. Preserved in a vacuum pack were several unused latex makeup pieces for his Oscar-nominated performance as the maimed firefighter in The Burning Year. She didn’t ever look at those. She’d been warned that they deteriorated when they were exposed to sunlight.
The collection also contained a comprehensive library of scripts for his movies, with all their addenda, including one marked up in Todd’s handwriting, along with a complete set of novelizations of the movies, leather-bound with gilt lettering. There were also credit-listings on all the crews who worked with him, costume sketches and call-sheets, and of course, posters of every size and nationality. If the Smithsonian ever wanted to open a wing dedicated to the life and career of Todd Pickett, Tammy had once boasted, they need look no further than her front room. Once, she’d attempted to enumerate the items she owned. It was something in the region of seventeen thousand three hundred, not including those pieces of which she had more than one copy.
It was to this shrine that Tammy had come after her frustrating exchange with Maxine Frizelle. She closed and locked the door (though Arnie would not be back from work and his after-hours carousing for some time), and sat down to think. After a few minutes, turning over the conversation she’d just had, she went to the very back of the room, and took from its place amongst the treasure-trove a box of photographs. These were her special pride and joy: pictures of Todd (fourteen of them in all) which she’d managed to buy from somebody who’d known the still photographer on Todd’s third picture, Life Lessons. This was Todd’s coming-of-age picture: the one in which he’d changed from being a Boy to being a Man. Of course, his smile would always be a boy’s smile, that was part of its magic, but after Life Lessons he went on to play tougher roles: a homecoming soldier, a firefighter,a man wrongfully accused of his own wife’s murder. Here then, caught in the moment before his cinematic adulthood, was the boy-man of Tammy’s dreams. She had even purchased the negatives from which the series of pictures had been printed, and along with them the assurance from the person she’d got them from that they had been ‘lost’in the production offices before they were ever seen by the director, the producer or by Todd himself. In short, she had the only copies.
Their rarity wasn’t the reason she valued them so highly however. What made them her special treasure – the quality that made