Falling Stars Read online

Page 27


  When the door was completely open, we waited a moment to see if anyone-- Ms. Fairchild, especially-- had heard anything. There were no sounds coming from below. The house held its breath as tightly as we held ours. Howard smiled, nodded, and continued into the room.

  We filed past the costumes and reached the door. Howard lifted the dresses away from it and turned the key in the lock to open the first door. He looked at Cinnamon, who shook her head as one final appeal to him to retreat. Smirking. Howard opened the second door, which took us into the living room of Gerta's apartment. Howard closed the door behind us and we all stood for a moment. Gerta wasn't in the living room.

  "That's her bedroom?" he asked, nodding at the door.

  "Yes," Cinnamon said. "She might be asleep."

  He moved slowly, quietly to the door, looked in, and then turned to us and shook his head.

  "What?" Cinnamon asked in a loud whisper.

  "She's not there," he said, and we all moved up beside him and looked at the empty bed.

  We all wondered the same thing. Was she gone? Had they decided to take her away?

  "Try the door to the hall," Cinnamon told Ice. "Maybe it was left unlocked and she went down to her mother's residence.'"

  Ice tried the door and found it locked.

  "The window." Cinnamon thought aloud and went to it herself, but found that locked as well. She turned and shrugged. "She's gone."

  Howard looked from her to the rest of us, skepticism writing lines along his forehead and pulling his lips in at the corners of his mouth.

  "This was all a lot of bull, wasn't it?" he charged. "You thought you'd have some fun with me, is that it?"

  "Don't be completely stupid. Howard," Cinnamon told him.

  "You've got something else going on and you tried to pull this on me. I want you to know I never really fell for it," he said, folding his arms across his chest. "That's why I insisted on coming up here. If you really thought I had swallowed this fantastic story about a disturbed daughter practically kept a prisoner just so Madame Senetsky wouldn't be embarrassed, well, you've all got another think..."

  Gerta was so quiet, stepping out from behind the closet door, we almost didn't see her. She wore a wig of long black hair that trailed over her shoulders. She was dressed in an ankle-length nightgown. She didn't seem to see us, but instead looked past us. Then she smiled.

  " 'My mother had a maid called Barbary: She was in love, and he she loved proved mad, and did forsake her. She had a song of "Willow," an old thing 'twas, but it express'd her fortune, and she died singing it.' "

  "What is she saying?" Ice asked with a grimace.

  Howard shook his head in awe.

  "Those are Desdemona's lines in Othello before she is murdered by him. Cinnamon, what is this? Have you been working with her, teaching it to her?"

  "Of course not," Cinnamon replied.

  "But..." He looked at us. "It's part of what Cinnamon and I are preparing for our next

  Performance Night,"

  I turned quickly to Cinnamon. Had Gerta somehow been listening in on their rehearsals? For a moment her eves twinkled with the same suspicion. Then she shook it out of her thoughts.

  "Just coincidence," she muttered for my benefit. Gerta stepped forward.

  " 'The song tonight will not go from my mind; I have much to do but to go hang my head all at one side and sing it like poor Barbary,' " she continued.

  She paused and lowered her head.

  "That's very good," Howard told her. He looked skeptically at Cinnamon. "Too good to be any sort of coincidence."

  "I told you, Howard. I've had nothing to do with it. She just knows lines from plays."

  Gerta lifted her head, her face back to the face we had seen before, that childlike smile of trust on her lips.

  "Hello," Howard said to her.

  She ignored him and turned to us.

  "Are you all here for the show?" she asked excitedly. "What show is that. Gerta?" I asked.

  "My mother's new show. We're supposed to be very quiet, you know. Not a peep. Sit and pay attention and smile at people who smile at you, but not a peep," she warned. "This way, please," she said and walked into the living room.

  Howard turned to us astounded. "Is she for real?"

  "Well, have you had enough, Howard?" Cinnamon asked him. "You see for yourself we were not lying to you. Are you satisfied? Do you want to apologize?"

  "Yes, yes," he said, waving his hand at her. "I'm sorry, I'm sorry. You're all as honest as the day is long." He looked after Gerta. "She's like an idiot savant, rattling off those lines. You said you have heard her recite others?"

  "So what?" Ice asked him.

  "So what? That's not exactly a television commercial jingle, you know, and she performed it rather well. I thought, Maybe even better than you do." he told Cinnamon.

  "That doesn't bother me. Howard. This is just all very sad to us. Can we go now?"

  "Let me just see what else she knows," he said, and followed her into the living room.

  "He's a piece of work, our Howard Rockwell," Cinnamon muttered. We all trailed after him.

  Gerta was on the sofa. She picked up some needlework she had been doing and continued as if none of us were there. Howard watched her, fascinated, for a moment.

  "Gerta?"

  She didn't look up at him.

  " 'I do believe 't'was he.' " he said.

  Gerta looked up at him.

  " 'How now, my lord? I have been talking with a suitor here, a man that languishes in your

  displeasure.' "

  "Holy cow." Howard said, turning back to us. "She knows the whole thing. Desdemona's part." He stared at her a moment, "I wonder... 'How now?' " he cried in a loud, angry voice,

  " 'What do you here alone?' "

  Gerta's face changed, her body stiffened.

  " 'Do not you chide; I have a thing for you.' "

  Howard's eyes looked like they would pop out of his head. "That's Emila's line. She knows the whole play by heart!"

  "Howard," I said. "Maybe that's enough, okay?"

  "No, wait a minute. Let's try... Macbeth." He turned back to Gerta and in a loud whisper said. 'If we should fail?' "

  She gazed at him, her face now turning angry.

  " 'We fail? But screw your courage to the sticking place, and well not fail.' "

  She leaned forward to whisper.

  " 'When Duncan is asleep, whereto the rather shall his day's hard journey soundly invite him, his two chamberlains will I with wine and wassail so convince, that memory, the warder of the brain, shall be a fume and the receipt of reason a limbeck only. When in swinish sleep their drenched natures lies as in a death, what cannot you and I perform upon the unguarded Duncan? What not put upon his spungy officers who shall bear the guilt of our great quell?...' "

  "That's it!" Howard cried. "Lady Macbeth's planning of the murder of the king, She knows it all by heart."

  Gerta returned to her needlework,

  "Can we go now. Howard? Are you satisfied?"

  "No. How did she get like this? How come I never read or heard anything about her? What's her name. Gerta, Berta? What?"

  Gerta's head snapped up.

  "No Gerta Berta. No!" she cried, her face in a

  "Huh?" said Howard, stepping back quickly and turning to Cinnamon.

  "Now you've done it. You've riled her up." "What did I do?"

  "It's all right. Gerta," I told her and put my hand on her shoulder. "You're Gerta. You're all right now. You're safe. Don't worry."

  She stared up at me. Her eves calmed and she returned to her needlework.

  "What is goin' on?" Howard muttered. "Why did that disturb her?"

  "Let's get out of here before we're discovered," Rose pleaded.

  We started toward the door to the costume room. Howard lingered, watching Gerta work until Cinnamon gabbed his arm and turned him.

  "All right," he said."I'll leave. But I want to know what this is all about."

&nbs
p; "She was abused by her father, who called her Gerta Berta. if you have to know."

  "Abused?" He looked back at her, his eyes arowing smaller. "You mean. sexually?"

  "That's what we think. yes. Can we get out of here. please?"

  Reluctantly, he joined us at the door. We gazed back at Gerta and then we closed the first door, stepped into the costume room and closed and relocked the second. As quietly as xre could, we trailed back through the room, closed the door behind us, shuddering at the squeaks, and then hurried down the stairway.

  "Let's all go to sleep now," Cinnamon ordered

  Howard stood there. thinking. I didn't like the way he was behaving and neither did the others.

  "Howard?"

  "What? Oh. yeah. Thanks. Good night." he said and went to his room. We watched him until he closed his door.

  "He was fascinated and amazed. I think it was pathetic and sad:. Rose said.

  "Me, too." Ice agreed.

  "He would have stayed up there for hours feeding her lines just for his own amusement," I said.

  Cinnamon nodded.

  "The only living thing more self-centered than our Howard Rockwell is an amoeba," she declared.

  It brought some smiles, but we were all emotionally exhausted.

  I was sure we all went to sleep that night with Gerta's dramatic recitations echoing in our thoughts and spinning webs of nightmares off the spindle of our dreams.

  Over the next few days, we actually thought Howard was going to let it all go. He had seen Gerta and the strange arrangements she had. He was satisfied that he was now sharing our great secret. Cinnamon said he was very energized in drama class. As we had learned, they were preparing cuts from Shakespeare's Othello, Tennessee Williams. The Glass Menagerie, and Strindberg's Miss Julie, under the heading Woman and Romantic Disappointments. In vocal class Howard's voice actually carried above Ice's at times, and he was even more enthusiastic about our dance lessons.

  The second Performance Night loomed in the very immediate future now. This one seemed to be more important. We were told that, because of the success of the first, more important managers, producers, and even performers were requesting seats. Howard lectured to us about it, saving some of it might just be good hype generated by Edmond Senetsky.

  "It takes a great deal of experience to be able to distinguish between what is just good public relations and what is reality," he declared.

  "But naturally you have an instinct for telling the difference. right. Howard?" Cinnamon asked him and he readily agreed.

  All we could do was shake our heads and smile. He was so arrogant about it that he missed her sarcasm or refused to see it. If self-confidence was like money in the bank. Howard would have enough to loan out sufficient amounts to all of us. I thought, I'd certainly line up to make such a request. although I was enjoying Mr. Bergman's enthusiasm for my work more and more these days. I was going to play a more difficult piece for the second Performance Night, and so was Steven.

  As the evening drew closer, our excitement built, especially for me because my parents were going to try to be here. Ice's father said he would come, too, but she had not yet heard from her mother. Cinnamon's father was feeling better, so he and her mother said they would attend. Only Rose remained in doubt about her mother and then, one afternoon, she received a post card with a picture of the Eiffel Tower on the front of it. All it said was:

  Dear Rose,

  I got married in Las Vegas today. Wish me luck.

  Mom

  We all gathered in her room to console her. She wagged her head to shake off her tears and then declared with conviction, "I don't care. You are my only family now, and the theater is my only home."

  No one spoke. but I felt that, despite our work and our talents, that would not be a good substitute for my family and home. Grease paint, costumes, props, and scenery were all part of the illusion. You could pretend to love someone on stage, embrace a family, have wonderful, close friends, but it wouldn't work when the curtain came down.

  Later that evening. I decided that before I went to bed, I would visit Rose once again to see if I could cheer her. Just as I stepped out into the hallway, I heard a loud creak and looked at the stairway that led up to the costume room. Howard Rockwell stopped midway. He looked very guiltv, shifting his eyes to avoid my shocked gaze.

  "Where were you?" I asked.

  "Costume room," he said quickly.

  Much too quickly, I thought. "Why?"

  "I wanted to check on my costume for Performance Night. Who do you think you are, crossexamining me like this, anyway?" he added and hurried down and to his room. I waited until his door was closed and then I hurried across the hall to Cinnamon's room instead of Rose's. I knocked and went in.

  She was in bed, reading her script.

  "What'swrong?" she asked. sitting up after taking one look at my face.

  "I just found Howard coming down the stairs. I think he might have gone into Gerta's apartment."

  "What? Why do you think that?"

  "Just the way he looked... very guilty." She threw off her covers.

  "I'm not positive," I added, seeing how enraged she was becoming. "He did claim he was checking his costume for the second Performance Night."

  "Is that what he told you? It's a downright lie. He knows his costume was sent out to be cleaned and pressed."

  She shoved her feet into her slippers and practically lunged for her robe on the way out of the room. The look on her face frightened me. She seemed capable of bludgeoning him to death. I hoped I wasn't making a mountain out of a molehill.

  "C'mon," she said.

  "Where?"

  "We'll go up to see Gerta and learn if he was there without us or not."

  "Should we get Ice and Rose?"

  "No," she said firmly. "It'll be quicker and less chance of being discovered."

  We moved quietly to the stairs, but they creaked just as they had under Howard's feet. No one came out of his or her room, and moments later. we were in the costume room. We could see where the dresses were moved to permit someone to open the door. Cinnamon looked at me knowingly. turned the key, and continued. My heart was beating like a hailstorm against a window.

  The lights were out in the living room, but there was some dim illumination coming from Gerta's bedroom, We walked quietly to the door and looked in to see her lying in bed, wearing the wig that had the long, gold pigtails.

  She turned to us.

  "Hi. Gerta, how are you?" Cinnamon asked her. Gerta's face began to crumble.

  "I was bad again."" she said. "I was Gerta Berta."

  Cinnamon hurried to her bedside. I followed.

  "What do you mean. Gerta?"

  "Daddy was here," she said. "I was bad,"

  "Daddy wasn't here," Cinnamon insisted, but she shook her head.

  "Yes, he was. He said he wanted to stop the nightmares. He was right here," she added, patting the large fluffy pillow beside her.

  Cinnamon looked at me. I shook my head. "What is she saying?"

  "Howard," Cinnamon replied.

  "What do you mean?"

  Cinnamon's eyes grew dark.

  "He came up here and did some role-playing with her. He must have been coming up here. Who knows how many times?"

  I shook my head.

  "What..."

  "Can't you see? She's naked under the blanket," Cinnamon pointed out. Her face was so full of rage, I thought her eyes might explode. The muscles in her cheeks and jaw were taut enough to outline the bone.

  The realization struck me like a punch in my stomach. "That's horrible," I said.

  She nodded.

  "Horrible's too soft a word for it."

  "Please tell me a story," Gerta said. "Tell me something nice. Tell me a happy story."

  Cinnamon looked at her and then muttered to me. "I'm flat out of happy endings."

  "Let me," I said, moving past her to take Gerta's hand and sit on the bed.

  "Let me tell you the story
of the little princess who got lost," I began.

  Cinnamon smiled but her thoughts clearly went back to Howard Rockwell. She stepped aside to wait for me to finish, fuming so intensely. I could almost feel the heat of her anger across the room.

  Gerta's eyes closed finally and I stood up. Cinnamon and I moved silently out of the apartment and through the costume room, locking the door behind us, and then went down the stairs, neither of us saving a word. Disgust and horror made us mute.

  "What are we going to do?" I asked her when we reached the bottom of the stairs.

  She glared at Howard's closed door. "Bring down the curtain," she vowed.

  "How?"

  "Get some sleep. We're all going to need it," she replied and went to her room.

  Get some sleep? I thought.

  She might as well have asked me to build a house or fly to the moon.

  15 The Play's the Thing

  If someone had asked me, after the first few weeks at the Senetsky School of Performing Arts, who among the four of you girls do you believe could most easily toss it all away. I think I would have chosen myself. I played the violin with love. but I was always torn between home and the places I knew my musical career would take me. I wasn't sure if I wanted to make all those sacrifices. I wasn't sure if I really was as ambitious as the others. Personal glory didn't seem as important to me. Going home would not be a defeat and a punishment.

  Ice wanted to succeed for her father even more than she wanted it for herself. During the times she and I were alone, she often spoke of him with deep affection, and made it clear to me that she believed she was his hope, the only thing that brought sunshine to his days and filled his heart with dreams anymore. She told me about his own longing to be a successful musician and how he had been forced to give up his pursuit. Like so many people, she said, he had to surrender his ambitions in order to provide for his family and himself. He moved through life now as if he were a shadow of a person, doing most things simply to survive, but the one thing that he didn't do out of any necessity was to get behind her

 

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