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The Doctor's Command

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by Loki Renard




  Table of Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Similar Books by Loki Renard

  Additional Stormy Night Books by Loki Renard

  Loki Renard Links

  The Doctor’s Command

  By

  Loki Renard

  Copyright © 2017 by Stormy Night Publications and Loki Renard

  Copyright © 2017 by Stormy Night Publications and Loki Renard

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

  Published by Stormy Night Publications and Design, LLC.

  www.StormyNightPublications.com

  Renard, Loki

  The Doctor’s Command

  Cover Design by Korey Mae Johnson

  Images by Bigstock/kenkistler, 123RF/Tatiana Popova, and 123RF/Andrei Bandarchyk

  This book is intended for adults only. Spanking and other sexual activities represented in this book are fantasies only, intended for adults.

  Chapter One

  “You’ve embarrassed yourself, Chloe. You’ve embarrassed me. Hell, you’ve embarrassed America! You’re an embarrassment! A total embarrassment!”

  The embarrassment in question, Chloe Smyth, was very pretty in a girl next door sort of way. She had built her career on a wholesome sort of beauty that reminded the people who saw her in movies and on television of the notion of the good old days. She had full cheeks and a bright smile and the sort of complexion that evoked apple pie and fields of grain and flags flying in freedom’s breezes.

  Chloe was known for her big melting brown eyes that spoke to innocence, cascading blond waves of hair and perfect skin—well, skin that looked perfect under layers of foundation and powder and the right kind of lighting. At that moment her eyes were hidden behind big sunglasses. She had been up all night crying, but it would not have done to show that. That would have been like blood in the water to the cameras and paparazzi that were lurking in every corner of the world.

  After a gritty climb up Hollywood’s hardest ladders to fame, becoming a household name, a role model, and for some, a beacon of hope that traditional, elegant femininity had not been lost in a mess of girls wearing meat dresses and riding bits of construction equipment, America’s sweetheart had fallen from her pedestal. Hard.

  Her agent was pacing back and forth in front of her, his elegantly coiffured hair bouncing and tossing in agitation. Being lectured by Chase was much like being lectured by a fabulous pony of some kind, snorting and stamping included.

  Chloe would normally have had something snappy to say back to him, but loops of her drunken Periscope had been playing on Entertainment Television Today over and over all morning. Chloe didn’t really remember saying half the things she’d said, but there was no saying that her Twitter account had been hacked this time. This time it was her face, and her words coming out of her mouth.

  “Look at this!” He turned the television on, staring at her, not the TV. He didn’t need to watch. Nobody did. The entertainment channels had been playing nothing else for the better part of twenty four hours.

  “Chloe Smyth melts down over Hollywood!” A high-pitched woman whose face was pinched with disapproval practically screamed the headline down the camera. She lowered her volume slightly, but only very slightly as she unloaded the biggest story in celebrity news since an heiress went to jail. “In a twenty-minute rant against the most influential people in Hollywood, Chloe Smyth elevated her stardom to infamy, insulting everyone from her fellow starlets to the directors, producers, and studio heads who gave her her start. Actors and actresses from A to D list are condemning her statements as ungrateful and…”

  Chloe reached over and snapped the television off with the remote. It didn’t stop the tirade.

  “We had three studios with offers for you,” Chase said, flailing his hands skyward. “They were bidding against one another. Do you know how many are bidding for you now?”

  “Five?” she said hopefully.

  “Zero,” Chase growled. “None. You’re a liability, Chloe. How many times have I told you, America’s girl next door can’t get away with being messy? You’re supposed to be a role model.”

  “Well, I’m sorry I’m not perfect!” Chloe huffed.

  “You don’t have to be perfect, but you have to at least pretend to be and let other people think you are,” Chase said. “We’re selling an image, Chloe. Don’t you understand?”

  She did understand. Maybe that’s why she’d done it. Maybe she was tired of being America’s sweetheart. Maybe she wanted to be bad. Maybe she wanted to make people gasp in shock. Or maybe, just maybe, every asshole she’d had something to say about deserved it. Maybe it was time people heard what it was really like to work in Hollywood and to put up with sleazy studio heads and even grosser directors.

  She sat there with her arms folded over her chest, sullen and silent under Chase’s angry glare.

  “Fuck it,” she said finally. “I’m getting a donut.”

  * * *

  Meanwhile, in a small Hollywood studio…

  “We’ve got a new option for the lead actress.” A man with dirty blond hair and glasses practically tapped his heels together with glee as he burst into a darkened room where another man paying even less attention to his attire was staring at several screens, adjusting minute details with his mouse and keyboard.

  “Yeah? Who?”

  “Chloe Smyth.”

  “Mark, we can’t afford Chloe Smyth,” the man with the keyboard sighed. “Her fee is bigger than our entire budget. Besides, we’re making a film about war. Not a feel-good teen drama where some girl realizes she’s been in love with her best friend all along.”

  “If you’d said that yesterday, you’d be right,” Mark replied. “Today, she’s well within budget.”

  He opened a video on his tablet and the pretty all-American face of every teen rom-com of the last five years began to speak:

  “First of all, whore,” Chloe slurred angrily, a cigarette held between two fingers, her signature cascade of blond hair messed up and flat even under a ball cap. “Ish not my fault if all these whores are… you know who…”

  “It goes on like that for the better part of an hour,” Mark said. “She calls every director and studio head in this town out for… well… everything. The news is going nuts on it. You have to start watching the news, Roger.”

  “I’m a director. I direct,” Roger said with a sneer. “I don’t… watch news. I don’t need some corporation engineering their agenda down my throat. I’ve got my own eyes to see the world. That’s why we’re making this picture. Real stories. About real people. Not some snotty Hollywood brat who throws tantrums to get attention.”

  “This film needs a big name lead actress,” Mark replied. “You know it does. We’ve got a unique script, we’ve got a real life hero who actually looks good on film, and we have a story that people will remember forever. But without a name, we’re fucked. Chloe Smyth just fell into our lap. She’s hot and she can actually act. Let’s get her.”

  * * *

  It had been way too long since Chloe had had a donut. It had been way too long since more than twenty grams of carbs had been allowed past her lips. It tasted like sugar and freedom, and as miserable as she was about making everyone in the world angry at her, the donut was making her feel as if it sort of might have been worth
it.

  The door slammed as Chase came back from pacing around the house. “Put the donut down,” he snapped at her. “An offer just came in. And you’re going to take it.”

  Chloe dusted sugar off her fingers and shrugged. “What’s it for?”

  “Who cares what it’s for? If it’s for ass cream, you’ll take it right now.”

  “I have money, Chase,” she reminded him. “I’m rich and famous.”

  “You’re famous. You blew all your cash on this house in the hills, five Ferraris, and a pony. You’re living on credit, Chloe.”

  “Well, at least I won’t be homeless,” she smirked. “Or horseless.”

  “You’ve got debts out your ass,” Chase fumed. “So do I! We were banking on these big budget roles keeping steady for another year or two at least. Now you’ve made yourself totally untouchable, anything is going to have to do.”

  “So it’s an ass cream ad?”

  “It’s a movie.”

  “Oh,” she brightened. “That’s not so bad.”

  “An indie movie about…”

  “Indie?” She rolled her eyes and picked the donut up again. “I’d rather do the ass cream ad…”

  “There is no ass cream ad!” Chase fumed. “Ass cream won’t have you! Do you know how much you’ve fucked up, Chloe? You’ve fucked up big time! This is the biggest fuck-up I’ve ever seen in the history of fuck-ups.”

  “Okay, easy,” she said. “You don’t need to freak out.”

  “I do need to freak out,” Chase snapped, flailing his hands flamboyantly. “I need to freak out because you freaked out and now everybody is fucking freaking out!”

  “Fine. I’ll do the movie,” she said. “How much does it pay?”

  “Five hundred thousand.”

  “Five hundred thousand?” She scrunched up her nose. “That’s not even money, Chase. I don’t get out of bed for less than a million.”

  “That was before you flushed your career down the toilet,” Chase frowned. “We’re going to have a hard time fixing this fuck-up of yours, Chloe. And it’s going to start with you taking serious, mature, art-driven roles.”

  She rolled her eyes. Mature and art-driven didn’t sound like a whole lot of fun. When she heard those words, she immediately translated them in her head to ‘pretentious’ and ‘boring.’

  “At least tell me the lead is hot.”

  “It’s a biopic,” Chase said. “The lead is being played by the subject.”

  “So I’m going to act with someone who isn’t even an actor and get paid next to nothing to do it,” she frowned. “And my trailer is probably going to suck. And you think this is better than ass cream?”

  “They’ve asked us if we can meet them today,” Chase said, ignoring her snotty remarks. “I said yes. So put something sober on and let’s go.”

  “My clothes aren’t drunk,” she said, smirking. She knew what he meant. He meant dress nice and wholesomely.

  Chloe wandered to her room, pulled on some jeans and a slouchy sweater, and grabbed a big wide-brimmed hat to go with her large sunglasses. Going out was going to be a mission.

  Sure enough, five minutes later Chase drove her out of her house and into a sea of paparazzi clogging the sidewalk.

  “The neighbors are going to be pissed,” she said, applying lip gloss as the camera flashes bounced off the tinted windows. “They’re going to complain. You know they will.”

  “You’ve got more to worry about than annoyed neighbors,” Chase growled. “You better be on your best behavior with this production team. They’re throwing you a lifeline, you understand? You smile, you be polite, you tell them you can’t wait to work on their movie, and you sign the contract.”

  “God! Settle down!” Chloe was not used to Chase talking to her in quite this fashion. He usually had a lot more suave charm about his manner, but the stress was obviously taking its toll and his charm had disappeared completely. Gone was the flamboyant manner and the cheerfully lisped compliments. In its place was a bitter, bossy manager.

  “I’ll settle down when you get a job.”

  Chapter Two

  They had to take a few back roads and spend an annoying amount of time in traffic to lose the paparazzi. It turned what would have been an hour or so drive into two and a bit more, and by the time Chloe finally arrived at the little warehouse that apparently passed for a studio, she was not in a good mood.

  There were none of the usual receptionists offering water and champagne. There was a dingy little waiting area at the end of a hall where Chloe sat and Chase paced. He refused to sit on the chairs, which had seen better days.

  They waited several minutes, each of which was a novel experience for Chloe.

  “They’re making me wait!?” Chloe’s voice reached a sharp whisper. “Don’t they know who I am?”

  “Shh.” Chase scowled at her. “Cut the attitude. You need this role, remember?”

  The sound of footfalls in the distance cut their whispered conversation off. They turned to see a tall figure making his way down the hall toward them. He was broad-shouldered and moved with purpose.

  “This must be your co-star, his name is Paul,” Chase whispered. “Be nice.”

  Chloe pulled her sunglasses off her face and forced a smile as the man came into earshot and then into arm’s length. She stood and offered her hand for shaking.

  “Hi,” she said. “Nice to meet you.”

  Her first impression of the man was that he was the most serious human being Chloe had ever laid eyes on. He had a solemn aura and mature bearing that belied his age. He was actually just over thirty years, according to Chase, but he had a look in his eye that made him seem much older.

  “Chloe.”

  She had never heard her name sound so good. His voice had a deep resonant quality that made little shivers of pleasure run through her. His hand was large, ensconcing hers in a grasp that was warm and strong but not overpowering.

  Suddenly she understood why the director wanted Paul to play himself in the movie. In addition to being a real life hero, he looked like one. He was handsome, but with enough character in his face to set him apart from the professionally handsome men. There was a flattening at the top of the bridge of his nose where it had obviously been broken at some point, and a noticeable scar running near the left side of his jaw. His hair was dark and rugged, a little longer and shaggier and messier than it would have been if it had been cut by a professional stylist, but it looked great and framed his features perfectly.

  “Hello,” she said, hating how her voice sounded so squeaky and high. Months of voice coaching had modulated her tone when acting, but her voice tended to head into the higher registers when she was nervous—and suddenly she was very nervous.

  He was looking at her. She wished she could look back at him, but a blush was rising up her neckline and lighting her face and she knew he could tell just how much of a mess she was. His eyes were a deep olive green, the searching, piercing, knowing kind. He’d probably seen her rant already, like the rest of the world. God. Up until that moment, she hadn’t really been embarrassed by the situation. She’d been pissed at Chase, and annoyed that there were such dire financial consequences, but she hadn’t felt the hot flame of humiliation until she looked at this man who was the subject of his own biopic at the age of thirty-something and realized he wasn’t impressed by her fame or her celebrity.

  Fans had an excited energy about them, a grinning expression that seemed common to most. This man was barely smiling. He wasn’t unfriendly. He just wasn’t impressed in the way most men were when they met her.

  “Chloe, Paul, you’re both here, good.” A wild-haired man with little round glasses, blue jeans, and a tweed jacket bounced out of a door and waved them in. He must be the director, Chloe figured. Directors were about the only people in Hollywood who dared to go out looking that bad.

  They were ushered into a meeting room, where Chloe found herself sitting next to Paul, Chase on her other side. The direct
or and producer and an assistant or two were on the other side of the table, all beaming with pleased expressions.

  “We’re really glad you’re interested in our movie, Chloe,” the wild-haired man said. “My name’s Roger Hamilton, and I’m the director.” He jabbed his thumb toward the more sedate-looking blond man next to him. “This is Mark Wright, he’s our producer.”

  “Hello,” Chloe smiled politely, giving them the sweet megawatt expression that had been plastered over every billboard in the city at one time or another. “It’s nice to meet you.”

  Out of the corner of her eye, she saw Chase relax a little. Clearly he’d forgotten that meltdowns aside, she was still a professional actress.

  “And this is Paul Reynolds,” Roger said by way of further introduction. “He’s the lead in the movie and in real life.”

  Chloe turned and smiled at Paul again, glad to have a reason to look at him. There was no doubt that he had star quality. She couldn’t take her eyes off the man. He’d barely said anything besides hello and she found herself wishing he’d say something else. He gave her a brief nod and her smile grew a little wider. Maybe this low budget indie movie wouldn’t be so bad after all.

  As the introductions continued, she kept glancing at him out of the corner of her eye, ignoring discussion of the script and the filming schedule and whatever else they were talking about in favor of her surreptitious inspection of her leading man. Chase was doing a lot of the talking. That was his job. He took care of the business side of things. She never worried overly much about details.

  “Are you familiar with the story, Chloe?” The director was talking to her.

  “I, uh, sure,” she lied. The truth was, she hadn’t looked at the script. Chase had given it to her, but she’d barely bothered to more than glance at it. What was the point? It wasn’t as if she had any choice in the project. She had to do it, so it didn’t really matter what it was about. Besides, she figured someone would tell her at some point.

 

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