All That Glitters Is Not Gucci

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All That Glitters Is Not Gucci Page 8

by Compai


  “Could you repeat the question, my dear sir?” Teddy rejoined, fluttering his short silver lashes perplexedly.

  “Well, take our daughter Petra for example,” Robert explained. “She says you are giving her—what is it?—fifteen grand to produce this purse? And that concerns me, concerned parent that I am, because I know my daughter is not responsible enough to cart around that kind of dough.”

  “You don’t trust your own daughter?” Wendy inquired.

  “Not particularly, no. And even if I did, I still think that us parents deserve a slice of the pie here, right? No, I’m kidding. But seriously, between the private school and the ballet lessons, that kid has practically sucked us dry.”

  “Robert,” Heather whispered, “Petra has not taken ballet since—”

  “I just think,” Robert interrupted, “that it makes a hell of a lot more sense for us responsible adults to handle the money stuff ourselves. Let the kids focus on the sewing.” (The self-proclaimed “responsible adult” did not go on to mention that he had invested—and lost—half his family’s assets in a Ponzi scheme earlier that year.)

  “No disrespect, Mr. Greene,” Seedy began, “but nobody in this room is touching a dime of my girl’s share. Melissa may be a teenager, but she is also a savvy businesswoman, and I intend to treat her like one.”

  “I think I agree with Mr. Moon,” nodded Wendy. “The girls were responsible enough to create a product that is actually being produced and sold in stores. Surely they are responsible enough to handle the profits that product brings in.”

  “I think there’s been a misunderstanding here,” offered Heather. “Sometimes it’s hard to tell when Robert is kidding. The man has quite the poker face. I assure you he’s just teasing when he talks about controlling Petra’s share.”

  “The hell I am,” mumbled Robert.

  Bud Beverwil’s iPhone belted out an emotive Puccini aria and he leaped up from his velvet chair. “Tell me something good, Marty,” he barked, walking into the hallway and leaving the heavy polished door wide open.

  “Listen,” Robert began, trying in some small way to repair his rapidly dwindling image in the eyes of the other parents. “I’m sure your kids are different. Especially you,” he assured Seedy. (Hello, Robert was a jerk, but he wasn’t stupid. He’d heard Seedy’s new song about throwing that lady in the L.A. River.) “But Petra just isn’t responsible enough to handle that kind of cash flow. She’d just roll it up and smoke it.”

  “Is that a metaphor?” Wendy pursed her lips.

  “Well, no. I mean, yes, I guess technically it’s a metaphor because she won’t roll the money itself up and smoke it, right? But no, ’cause it’s not a metaphor for something other than smoking—” Robert was confusing himself now. “She’ll spend it on drugs,” he clarified. Then he shrugged. “Look, we’ve got a bad seed on our hands.”

  “Bad seed. Sad seed. Glad seed. Fab seed,” Ted Pelligan mused, making a tiny tower with his chubby pink fingers and affecting an air of pensiveness. He did this often during meetings when he wanted to change the subject, repeated somebody else’s statement over and over until it lost all meaning and then went on to talk about whatever he wanted to talk about. Which, in this case, was the girls’ image.

  “These little lovelies are each so different. Each so original. Each so unique,” Ted began. “This is becoming an issue. I invited you all here today so that you could sign off on the project, of course, but also because I wanted to get a look at the people who spawned these delicious creatures, so I might better assess the best direction to take their collective image in the months to come. And I am learning a lot.” Ted inspected the lady in the horrific Juicy suit, as glassy-eyed and sylphlike as her daughter; Seedy Moon’s commanding presence was perfectly replicated in Melissa; and the chlorine-eyed model was as fabulously unimpressible as her pocket-size daughter, Charlotte. As for that lady with the glasses, she exuded a wry, perceptive quality that was the essence of her daughter.

  “Jesus, not again!” bellowed Bud Beverwil from the hall. “What the hell do you mean, she’s been hospitalized for dehydration? You’re busting my balls, Jerry! You’re busting my… Yeah? Well, you tell Gabrielle if she’s not on set in the next hour I am replacing her today. (Pause.) Nobody is irreplaceable! (Pause.) I don’t care if we’re over budget on reshoots. This is art! This is not business, you pea brain, this is art!”

  After one of Bud Beverwil’s infamous on-set tirades was caught on tape and released to TMZ a few weeks earlier, his publicist had insisted he stay away from the set of reshoots for his new film Dead on the Vine until he completed anger management. But Bud had been away from the set for two days and he was already eating himself alive. A guy drops the f-bomb once or twice, and now he’s sentenced to spending the remainder of his days in some creepy library talking about his daughter’s sewing class? No thank you. Bud loved Charlotte and all, but this meeting was taking the whole “father” thing a bit too far.

  “I’m on my way,” barked Bud, “and you tell Gabrielle Good that if she is not on set by the time I get there, not to bother coming back. (Pause.) Then get her some water! I’ll see you in ten.”

  Teddy’s office had gone quiet. It was difficult to talk over all that yelling. After a few beats it was clear that Bud was not coming back.

  “Well, then, let’s continue?” Georgina Malta Beverwil offered finally, affecting breezy unawareness of her husband’s outburst.

  “Certainly,” Ted agreed. “Giddy!”

  Ted Pelligan’s deliriously somber right-hand man, Gideon Peck, appeared soundlessly in the doorway. “The contract, sir,” Gideon announced, head bowed, his tone as weighty and apologetic as a doctor telling a patient he has two weeks left to live.

  “Splendid, bring it here,” Ted intoned.

  Gideon crossed the room in long slow strides, keeping his eyes trained on the Persian rug all the while. He presented a document to his gourd-shaped superior and then produced a gold Montblanc from the pocket of his Dolce & Gabbana tuxedo jacket. Then, with an even deeper bow of his already bowed head, Gideon made his exit.

  “So,” Ted began, “the last step in our little powwow today is for you all to put your John Hancocks on this here slip of tree, so we can get those Trick-or-Treaters into select stores as soon as possible. It’s a rare thing indeed for this sort of contract to be signed by the parents, and not the designers themselves, but quel can I do? Your precious saplings are ahead of the curve. Just think,” he sighed, clasping his small hands. “To have all your dreams fulfilled at such a young age! To be famous!”

  The lady in the peculiar glasses met his exclamation with a strange and fretful expression. Mr. Pelligan laughed, extending his Montblanc.

  “Madam?”

  The Girl: Melissa Moon

  The Getup: Current/Elliot Love Destroyed boyfriend jeans, white Splendid V-neck t-shirt, black lace La Perla push-up bra, white gold Rolex, pink Uggs, Glow by JLO perfume

  “What are you doing over there, baby?” Marco Duvall called from across Melissa Moon’s high-ceilinged birdcage-shaped bedroom. It was halftime, and Marco had finally turned away from the Lakers versus Celtics game to find his girlfriend still hunched over her gold-trimmed princess desk, poring over a stack of documents.

  “Lissa!” Marco repeated, chucking a frilly, corn dog–shaped pillow at his annoyingly studious girlfriend.

  It hit her square in the ponytailed head—he had great aim—and landed at her pink Ugg-clad feet, causing Emilio Poochie, the toy Pomeranian who’d been slumbering there, to leap up, clearly annoyed. And E-Poo wasn’t the only one.

  “Marco! Can you not see that I am working?”

  “Okay, okay, chill,” mumbled Marco, from his nest on the overstuffed bed. “I just thought we were gonna watch the game together.”

  “Well, the game is on, and we’re together.”

  “Yeah, baby, whatever you say,” answered Marco, stretching so his Winston Falcons jersey lifted to reveal his flawless, b-ba
ll-toned abs. Melissa didn’t even look his way. Damn. He couldn’t stretch forever. He tried a different tack.

  “I’m starving. You want to take a break and make me some of Melissa’s famous mac ’n’ cheese?”

  “No, Marco, I do not,” Melissa snipped. “I have a lot of homework and I really don’t have time to take a break.”

  “A’ight,” shrugged Marco. “It’s cool. I’ll just starve.” He eyed Melissa for a response—anything—but her espresso brown eyes remained trained to the pages in front of her and showed no signs of budging.

  “You can’t take one day off?” Marco whined.

  “Nope,” Melissa snapped back. “Not unless it’s Christmas, New Year’s, or Usher’s birthday.”

  Marco gave up and headed downstairs to fashion some sort of crude snack himself. He was perpetually starving; Marco ate every hour, and he could kill a quart of milk in a single sitting, but he never gained a pound.

  Melissa pushed her pound cake–colored Chanel reading glasses up the bridge of her smooth straight nose and reread the page in front of her for the gazillionth time. Nikki Pellegrini had done her research. She had found out every possible detail about the founder of Schizo Montana. From his name (Ariel Berkowitz), to his shoe size (7), to his Bar Mitzvah venue (the FOX lot), Nikki had left nothing out.

  So why wasn’t she satisfied?

  She opened her MacAir and clicked on SchizoMontana.com, which she’d added to her favorites yesterday for easy viewing. More like least favorites. There he was on the home page, that Ariel Berkowitz punk, grinning this dopey smug smile from beneath his lame ironic mullet. His multicolored fluorescent clothing was garish against his pale, scrawny body, and black-rimmed geek glasses framed his eyes.

  Melissa clicked on the “About Schizo Montana” link, even though she’d read it so many times she could recite it by heart:

  Schizo Montana is a clothing line that celebrates a true Santa Monica original. If you’ve spent any time on Montana Avenue, you have experienced the unique charms of Ms. Schizo Montana, a homeless woman who traverses the Avenue, alternately cawing like a bird and cursing George Bush. (Yeah, we tried to tell her there’s a whole new White House regime, but yo: she won’t listen.) Our line is a celebration of this L.A. mainstay, with each limited edition tee featuring one of Schizo Montana’s many personalities. And no, this isn’t exploitation, so don’t bother asking! We are totally tight with Ms. Montana. We love her and she loves us too.

  Melissa clicked on the “Shop Now” tab and zoomed in on a wife beater silk-screened with a photo of a homeless woman wearing a petticoat over her pants. She was seated alone at a table outside the Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf, talking to herself. The words “The more, the merrier!” were printed across the bottom. Melissa felt physically ill. Poseur had not just lost the Nylon cover to a t-shirt brand. Poseur had lost the Nylon cover to the single stupidest t-shirt brand in the history of fashion.

  Melissa couldn’t contain her hatred any longer. She clicked on the “Contact Info” tab, cut and pasted Ariel’s e-mail handle, and then clicked over to her own e-mail account—[email protected]—and immediately started typing.

  Dear Mr. Berkowitz,

  Congratulations! You have created the single most offensive clothing line in the history of clothing lines. And no, I don’t mean offensive in some cool, Eminem/Howard Stern kind of way. I mean offensive as in offensive to my eyes because it is so empirically ugly. So, good job! Thanks for making L.A. an uglier place to live in with your lame-ass merchandise.

  Toods,

  Divalish16

  Melissa hit send. She was pulsing with anger; high on it almost. She clicked back to the home page and stared at Ariel’s smug smile again. Puke. She couldn’t see his eyes well enough though, so she dragged the photo to her desktop and blew it up using Photoshop. Magnified a hundred times, Ariel’s eyes were warm and alluring. Just like Satan’s, Melissa thought.

  She clicked over to her Gmail account to reread her clever e-mail, and found, to her surprise, a response from the fluorescent Satan himself.

  Divalish, Wow:

  You really are pathetic. Seriously, do you have a life at all? Or do you just troll around the Internet looking for things to comment on all day? I bet you’re a forty-year-old woman with nineteen cats and no boyfriend, and you just finished your box of Franzia wine and John Mayer is playing in the background at your tiny apartment right now and you’re desperately lonely and sad because John isn’t singing about you so you go online and send hate letters to people like me. People who have real lives and do cool stuff and actually leave their houses and go out into the world once in a while. Okay, go make out with your John-Mayer-shaped pillow!

  Peace out, biatch,

  Ariel

  Oh. No. He. Did. Not.

  In a single pulse, Melissa read the entire e-mail again, managing to get even more pissed off the second time. She sat up stick-straight in her champagne velvet upholstered office chair, cracked her knuckles, and furiously started typing.

  Oh hey, Ariel,

  That is such a cool-ass name, yo. Are you, like, the Little Mermaid, or something? Are you totally in a bad mood ‘cause your stinky-ass va-jay-jay’s stuck inside a flipper? Well, you can chillax, baby girl! Prince Eric saves you in the end and then you get to go on land and trade in your seashell bra (which I’m sure you fill in nicely by the way) for one of your hideously moronic t-shirts.

  Say hi to your crab(s) for me!!

  Love,

  Miss Divalish to You

  Melissa hit send. Then she read her e-mail over, cackling aloud at every jab. Well, that was that. She closed her Mac and took her biology book out of her pink Juicy tote to do some real work. But when she tried to read a page of bio, she failed miserably. She stared at a diagram of the stages of mitosis, but fluorescent Satan’s crooked smile was all she could see. Melissa couldn’t handle it. She had to know if he’d responded. Melissa popped open the computer once again, and sure enough, he had already replied.

  Dear John Mayer lover,

  Uh, yeah. You need therapy.

  Ariel

  Melissa clicked the reply button.

  I need therapy? This from a dude who considers making fun of mentally ill homeless ladies the epitome of a good time?

  Send. Melissa drummed her tan hands on the gold-trimmed princess desk, jaw clenched. Then she hit refresh. Nothing. Then she hit refresh again. Nothing. Then the response came:

  You’re right. You’re obviously too cracked-out crazy for therapy. Maybe you’d like to be featured on our next t-shirt?

  “Eew, sick!” called a voice from the doorway. “I think this milk has gone bad.” Melissa turned to see Marco holding a quart of buttermilk in one massive mitt and a bag of Pirate’s Booty in the other.

  “Marco, that’s buttermilk!” Melissa scolded, slamming her computer shut again. “You are not supposed to drink that. It’s for Emilio Poochie! I give it to him as a treat when he’s good.”

  Marco ambled toward the princess desk, slow and sultry, trying his best to smolder, and knelt down in front of Melissa so they were face-to-face. “And what treat do I get when I’m good?”

  “Marco Duvall,” Melissa chided, “I do not walk onto the basketball court while you are in the middle of a game and try to get sexy with you, do I?”

  “No,” Marco replied with a sly smile, “but I wish you would.”

  “This!” Melissa continued, motioning to the space around her executive desk with her tan, smooth hands, “is my basketball court. I’ll let you know when it’s halftime.” As Melissa huffed and puffed, her perky double D’s jiggled and bounced inches from Marco’s still-smiling face. Well, that was something at least….

  She had told him long ago that she was “waiting for marriage,” and Marco respected her for that. He could wait. But weren’t there, ya know, other things they could do to pass the time till then? They’d been dating for four months, after all. Marco was one of the best athletes at Winston Prep, but
when it came to Melissa, he had yet to round second base.

  Marco sighed. “Kiss?”

  Melissa leaned forward so he could see straight down her V-neck to her black lace La Perla push-up bra and planted a quick peck on his lips. Marco rose, placated for the moment, and headed back to his nest on the overstuffed bed with his Pirate’s Booty and buttermilk. He unpaused the Tivo.

  “Li-ssa!” sang an approaching voice from the white marble staircase. “I got good ne-ews!” Seedy Moon appeared in the doorway beaming.

  “Yo, Mr. Moon, how goes it?” asked Marco.

  Seedy’s smile dissolved at the sight of Marco and his buttermilk mustache reclining against his daughter’s ornate cream and gold Louis XVI headboard. “Whattup, Cafeteria,” he muttered, before turning back to Melissa. “I said I have good news, baby.”

  “What is it, Dad?” sighed Melissa. “I am really busy right now.”

  “Well, you’re gonna want to hear this, trust me. I paid a little visit to Lena today, and with some excellent acting if I do say so myself, I managed to convince her to become your piano teacher. She’s agreed to move in!” Seedy chuckled proudly. “So you better start appreciating classical music, girl!”

  “That’s good, Dad. That’s really great!” Melissa chirped, happy but preoccupied.

  “‘That’s good, Dad. That’s really great?’” Seedy laughed. “I thought you’d be losin’ it you’d be so excited.”

  “No, I am, Daddy,” Melissa nodded, spastically tapping her pink-Uggs-clad foot.

  “At first,” Seedy recounted with theatrical flair, “she was all, ‘No! I cannot! My visa’s up soon and I must return to Russia!’ So I said—right on the spot! I thought of this right there!—I said, ‘But Melissa said she will only take piano lessons if they are with you!’” Somehow, Seedy managed to pull off both a very bad impression of Miss Paletsky’s Russian accent and a bad impression of his own accent. His Seedy Moon voice was actually worse than his Miss Paletsky voice.

 

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