Geekerella

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Geekerella Page 9

by Ashley Poston


  If I fall now, I’ll land flatter than a pancake. At least my only consolation is that the camera guy filming me is coming along.

  “You know, maybe we should take a break. Who’s hungry? You hungry?” I ask the camera guy.

  He pops on his chewing gum, giving me a bored no-bullshit gaze. Am I the only one who thinks this is nuts?

  “Can it, hero.” My stunt coordinator tugs on the wires of my harness, triple-checking that I won’t in fact hit the ground flatter than a pancake.

  “We—we haven’t established a safe word yet,” I say. Stall for time, my mind chants. Stall for life. “I mean, you’ve got me into his compromising position, and I barely know you!”

  She rolls her eyes and radios to the assistant director. “I told you we should’ve let Luis do the stunt.”

  “Luis?”

  “Your double.”

  “Wait, he wanted to?”

  “Want me to get him, hero?” She drawls out the last word.

  Yes. “Nope,” I squeak.

  “Good.” The stunt coordinator turns back to the cameraman and begins checking his harness too. He keeps messing with the settings on his camera as they talk about the scene.

  I tug on my collar, staring down, down, down at all the people below me. I’m beginning to regret my decision to do most of my own stunts.

  The scene sounds simple enough. Carmindor’s running for safety. In this part of the movie, the Nox lay siege to a council hearing, and the entire building on Andromeda Earth—the homeworld of the Federation—goes up in flames. Carmindor (me) rushes down a hallway, pursued by seven Nox knights. He’s heading toward a dead end, but because Carmindor is genetically enhanced, he can bust through the window at the end of the hall, hurtling himself to the next building’s rooftop to escape.

  That’s where I find myself now. Running away from the Nox, busting through the glass window, and letting the cables take me fifty feet down onto a landing pad. Fifty feet doesn’t sound that high until you’re looking down at where you’re supposed to land. But I must’ve failed to realize that I’m not the Federation Prince, and my bones are not made of titanium, and I will break just as easily as the next guy.

  I swallow the bile rising in my throat.

  Run, spin, knee, wall, I keep reminding myself, remembering the rehearsal for this shot. Run, elbow, back-step, jump. Run, kiss ass goodbye, jump—

  Suddenly, I feel something buzz in my tattered uniform. It’s been made to look singed at the edges and caked in soot, like I’ve just—you now—been through a siege.

  I reach into my jacket.

  Unknown 3:47 PM

  —So, about your question yesterday…

  —Where would YOU go?

  —Anywhere, any time, in the history of you?

  “Hey, hero, you ready to rock and roll?” Ms. Scary Eyes calls to me.

  God bless my poor unfortunate soul. “Do I have a choice?”

  Down below, Amon, the director, barks a laugh. “We got the paramedics standing by. You’ve got brass balls, Darien! I respect you!”

  I follow the stunt coordinator back down the hallway specially built for this fight scene. It’s one continuous camera shot, so no mistakes.

  Run, spin, knee, wall. Run, elbow, back-step, jump. Run, kiss ass goodbye, jump.

  I’ve practiced this. I can do this.

  3:48 PM

  —I honestly don’t know.

  —I wouldn’t go anywhere alone—it’s a big universe out there.

  —I’d need a buddy system.

  Unknown 3:48 PM

  —LOL scaredy-cat. Then where would WE go?

  “Quit texting your girlfriend, hero! Get ready.”

  3:49 PM

  —The frozen tundra of the Arteysa Galaxy is supposed to be nice.

  Unknown 3:49 PM

  —Brisk! I like it.

  “Loverboy!” the stunt coordinator snaps. “Can someone take the kid’s phone away?”

  Kid. I try not to let the word sting as Gail rushes up and snatches the phone out of my hand. “I was just making sure my will was in place. And my insurance,” I add under my breath.

  The cameraman moves his hundred-thousand-dollar equipment closer, bracing to follow me down the hallway. Is it too late to opt out? I’m not good at this. I should probably just—

  “Get ready,” Ms. Scary Eyes says, and radios down to Amon. “We’re set!”

  “Three, two…,” the AD says. I turn around, rocking back and forth on my feet.

  Get into the moment. Slip on Carmindor like a Halloween mask that still smells like rubber. Breathe in. Breathe out.

  “Start running. Go!” the AD directs, and then shouts “Action!” A horn blares.

  I take off down the hall. A Nox comes out of the first doorway. I spin on my heels, ducking his punch. A piece of stucco wall pops over my head—fake gunshot—and three more go off down the hallway. I grab the Nox by the collar and send his face into the fake wall.

  “And BOOM!” the AD shouts.

  I stumble on command, feet slipping out from under me. Another Nox emerges from the next doorway and slams the tip of his rifle against my forehead. Fires.

  I dodge, grabbing the gun, and elbow him in the side. I back-step, aim, fire. The Nox is blown backward on ripcords.

  “FINAL CUE!” roars the AD.

  Tossing the gun to the side I hurtle the downed Nox, dodging another knight trying to grapple onto me. I can feel the harness digging into me. My heart’s in my throat.

  I can almost see the fire, the taste of fake blood in my mouth, the stucco falling from the ceiling, the screams of people trapped in the Federation building as it goes up in flames, the titanium in my bones hurting—because for Carmindor they never stop hurting, never will, his humanity rebelling against the unnatural inside of him—and for a moment, I look at the window and I’m not afraid.

  Run, kiss ass goodbye, and—

  I launch myself out the window, arms pin-wheeling, air rushing around me faster and faster. The green-screen floor comes so close so fast, between one heartbeat and the next, my life flashes before my eyes. I don’t regret most of it—except one minor, inconsequential thing.

  I never asked my mystery friend’s name.

  The harness tightens, pressing against my chest, squeezing the breath out of me. I land, feet spread like I’ve been practicing on the green-screen ground. Right where they want me.

  Nailed it.

  I hold the landing for one second—two—

  “And CUT!” Amon yells from the ground. He runs up to me and slaps me on the back. “Amazing! Great job. That was sick.”

  “Thanks,” I wheeze, tugging at the harness. I relish my feet planted on sweet, sweet ground. My hands are shaking; I push my thumbs into the harness so the director doesn’t notice.

  From the window the stunt coordinator applauds. “Perfect! You could be a stunt man,” she adds. I feel the ropes on my harness begin to tighten again. As if they’re about to hoist me up. “Except next time, try not to scream like a girl.”

  “That’s not very PC,” I yell up, my voice shaking, before I realize what she’s said. “Wait—next time?”

  Amon claps me on the shoulder. “Word of advice? Don’t grimace like the harness is pinching those pretty brass balls. You don’t wanna have to record sound for this scene in post, right? That’d be embarrassing.” He motions for my stunt coordinator to set me down again, and one of the assistants comes to unharness me. “Okay, five-minute recess!”

  Thank the gods of special effects. The moment the assistant unstraps me, I make a break for the restroom in the corner of the building, because all the jostling has not been kind to my bladder. But as I sidle through the crowd of PAs loitering around the snack bar, I get this weird déjà vu, like I’ve passed someone familiar. When I look again there’s no one I recognize—no one besides all the lucky PAs cramming doughnuts in their faces.

  I duck into the bathroom and do my business, but my hands are still shaking f
rom the stunt. It’s the adrenaline messing with my eyes, my brain, making me hallucinate that I’m seeing people.

  “Shake it off, Darien,” I tell myself. I would splash water on my face but it’ll ruin the special-effects makeup on my forehead: a shard of glass embedded into my hairline, a line of blood curving down my temple. I’m just being paranoid. No one’s here trying to snap pictures of me. I mean, I don’t even have any friends left to sell me out.

  The longer I spend in this oasis of conflicting aromas—one of the PAs stationed bowls of mango potpourri everywhere—the longer I prolong going back out there and doing it again. Mark told me that doing my own stunts would be good press—and I did most of my own stunts on Seaside Cove—but this is different.

  Just another way I’m not the Federation Prince. He isn’t scared of heights, or firefights, or flying through space with a 0.1 percent possibility of landing his target.

  Darien Freeman? He’s scared of it all.

  WHEN MY PHONE PULSES WITH THE wake-up alarm at its usual ungodly hour, I reach for it, swiping clumsily for the UNLOCK button to shut the alarm up. But it’s not just the alarm. I have a message.

  From Carmindor.

  I roll over in my bed with my cell phone. The morning light peeks in through star-patterned blackout curtains, creating yellow ribbons across the carpet. In the distance someone is mowing the lawn at six-thirty a.m. Ah, summer.

  I tap the message icon and the text pulls up with a soft whoosh.

  Carmindor 11:23 PM

  —Hey, sorry I didn’t text back earlier. I had to save myself from an assassination attempt.

  —Twenty-three times.

  —Anyway, this might seem a bit late in the game but…

  —what’s your name?

  I bite the inside of my lip, trying not to smile.

  6:34 AM

  —You were busy saving the galaxy! No need to be sorry.

  —And I thought Carmindor knew everything?

  —ps - good morning

  Across the hallway, the twins’ alarm goes off, a screeching sound that Chloe will snooze off at least three times before they finally get up.

  I roll off the bed, sneaking a look underneath at the costume folded in a cardboard box. I still have to pinch myself. Dad’s costume. His actual costume. Here. I left Mom’s safely in the attic, where no one—not Chloe or Cal or the Nox King himself—will find it.

  I grab yesterday’s work clothes and a towel from the main closet and pause. I move slowly toward my computer and tap the space bar to wake it up. Rebelgunner has thirty thousand followers and climbing. Still not a dream.

  I should be wary because this universe never lets me be lucky, but I shove that thought to the back of my mind. I take a quick shower before Chloe or Cal can bully their way into the bathroom, and then wiggle into my day-old uniform. I’ll never get the smell of vegan fritters off me.

  Carmindor 6:41 AM

  —Ugh, there’s nothing good about this morning.

  —And we both know that I don’t know anything.

  6:41 AM

  —So I’m not in CLE-0’s files?

  —Man I feel left out, Carmindor…

  Carmindor 6:42 AM

  —OR you’re too important to be in her systems.

  —You might be classified.

  “Classified as a raging idiot,” I mutter, pulling my wet hair into a ponytail. I glance at the reflection in the mirror on the far wall—a girl with red hair from a box, her mom’s brown eyes, and a birthmark shaped like a starfish on her neck, wearing a frumpy TREAT YO PUMPKIN T-shirt and holey, greasy thrift-store jeans.

  I wonder what Carmindor thinks I look like. Probably better than I do.

  6:43 AM

  —Alas! You found my secret.

  —I am much too important for your trivialness!

  —You shall address me as Your Supreme Intergalactic Empress.

  Carmindor 6:44 AM

  —So you’re a girl.

  —Sorry—that came out weird.

  —It’s an observation. Casual-like.

  —You’re a girl.

  —Argh. I’m digging myself a hole, aren’t I?

  6:45 AM

  —Yes, yes you are.

  “Danielle!” Catherine’s voice calls up from the kitchen. I curse, stuffing the costume into a duffel bag and slinging it over my shoulder. It’s missing a few pieces. The starwings, for one, and the crown. I looked everywhere in that trunk, but they weren’t there. Catherine probably threw them away when she chucked everything up in the attic.

  I start down the stairs as Carmindor sends another text.

  Carmindor 6:48 AM

  —I’m really good at that. Digging myself into holes.

  —Making impossible promises. Groveling. Endangering my own mental sanity. More groveling. It’s part of the job.

  —So: I am worms, Your Supreme Intergalactic Empress

  I bite the inside of my cheek, trying not to laugh, then hear Chloe in the kitchen.

  “God, I know, okay?” she snaps. “I didn’t think it’d be so hard to find a stupid costume.”

  “I don’t think they’re just costumes,” Calliope replies hesitantly as I enter the kitchen. “Like, there’s a whole community of people who dress up for conventions.”

  “It’s called cosplay,” I say before I can stop myself.

  Chloe turns her dark-eyed glare at me. “We get it, Elle. You’re a huge nerd. But guess what? Everyone likes that star show now. It’s, like, retro chic or something.” She screws up her mouth. “You probably know where to get a costume, right?”

  Fear twists in my stomach. I clutch the strap of my duffel bag.

  “No,” I say.

  “Darlings,” Catherine says. “You don’t have to click your heels just because everyone else does. You girls like what you like. Don’t be like Danielle.”

  Don’t be like Danielle.

  If ever I had a cue to leave, that was it. Ducking my head, I pull my duffel bag higher and quickly escape through the front door. I hurry toward the end of the street when, with a roar, the Pumpkin skids onto the pavement and comes to an exhausted stop. Sage leans over. “Get in, loser. We’re getting the good spot today!”

  I jump in and glance back at the house one last time with unease, remembering the twins’ conversation. I grip my bag tightly. It’ll be fine.

  Starfield is just a phase for them. Soon it’ll disappear like Princess Amara through the Black Nebula and never be spoken of again.

  “LOOK AT ME.”

  I glide Jessica to a stop. We’ve been waltzing through this ballroom for two hours, a herd of PAs following to sprinkle fresh ash and dirt over the map of my failed footprints.

  Focus. I cup Jessica’s cheeks and whisper, “You ignite me.”

  She presses her dark-red lips against mine and the world spins.

  It spins and spins and spins. I can hear the swell of music in my head, that moment in the TV show, the sweep of the wobbly camera around half-baked costumes with cardboard props. And for a moment I am Carmindor. I am—

  “And done!” Amon shouts.

  Reality drops on me like the Prospero out of the Mars Two skyline, straight and fast. Carmindor is ripped out of me so quickly I’m left breathless and hollow. Or as I like to call it: Darien Freeman everyday.

  Jessica steps away and rubs her lipstick off my lips with a thumb. She smiles. “And where did you learn how to kiss?”

  “Well, I’ve had about two hours of practice by now,” I reply—cheekily, I hope.

  “With the best kisser in Hollywood.” Her mouth twitches in amusement. Dark lipstick, the same on my mouth. Cherry and whatever was left of her lunch. She taps my chin—the scar—and floats past me off the set. I follow her out to the lot, unbuttoning my sweaty jacket. I need to tell the costume person to steam clean this thing before tomorrow. It’s going to start growing trees.

  “Thank god that’s over.” She unsnaps her curly hair extensions, tossing them at her assistant. �
�I thought my lips would—”

  “DARIEN!”

  Our heads turn toward the main gate. The security guard isn’t at his post, but then again it’s dinnertime and there’s a security camera. We see a whole gaggle of girls—not like I think a group of teenagers is a flock or anything, but there’s a whole…a group of them, and they’re all staring at me like they’re the ducks and I’ve got a piece of sorta moldy bread to feed them. Or I am the piece of moldy bread.

  “IT’S HIM! IT’S DARIEN!” another girl screams.

  They have their phones out, flashes sparking in the dusk as if they want to catch the whole moment on fire. And everyone—from the PAs to the cameramen to frakking Jessica Stone—is staring at them.

  “Your adoring fans?” Jess asks.

  “I…um. Yeah.” I rake a hand through my hair. “I should get Gail on it, or my, uh, my Lonny.” I cringe again. “I mean, bodyguard.”

  A couple of the PAs are pointing at the crowd and snickering.

  “Wow.” Jessica shakes her head. “Makes me glad I didn’t take that Vampire Diaries part.”

  Right. Because she’s a real actor and I’m just the dude from the soap opera.

  “They’re just fans,” I say. “Don’t you ever fangirl?”

  “Of course,” she replies, folding her arms over her chest. She juts her chin toward the fans. “But I’ve never stalked anyone.”

  “It’s part of fan culture,” I say, trying not to remember the other side of fan culture that is Fishmouth. Fans like that are one in a million. But the memory of that girl charging me creates a sick, sinking feeling in my gut. “They’re monsters, but they’re my monsters.”

  Jess lifts an eyebrow. “Monsters?”

  I spread my arms. “Come to rejoice at the great church of Darien Freeman.”

  Her perplexed look slowly devolves into a deviously white smile. She gives me a bracing pat on the shoulder. “Then we should go see your congregation.”

 

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