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Creative Spirit with Screenplay Page 11
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“I was saying, ‘What a lot of bother,’” he said.
He saw her now, sitting on a stump beside a sycamore. She had a sketch pad in her lap and a charcoal stick clutched between her fingers. Roth eyed her long legs, appreciating that the day was warm enough for her to wear shorts.
“You taking pictures?” she asked.
Pictures. Gawps and ninnies took pictures. Roth framed the vital, captured the essential, immortalized the utterly proper.
Stupid bird. Still, in his experience, the emptier the space upstairs, the tighter the compartment below.
He was getting frustrated with his work anyway. Maybe the time was right to line up an evening’s companion. “Yes, my dear,” he said, raising the camera and pointing it at the woman.
She looked away.
“Don’t be shy, love. Make my camera happy. I won’t even make you say ‘cheese’ or anything of that sort.” He zoomed in on her cleavage without her noticing.
She looked up and smiled, he clicked the shutter, and then he put the camera away. “Say, didn’t I see you at Miss Mamie’s little after-dinner last night?”
“Yeah. I saw you. You’re William Roth, right?”
Roth loved it when they pretended not to be impressed by his celebrity, but she couldn’t hide the small sparkle in her eyes. Maybe he wasn’t a famous movie star, but name recognition definitely came in handy for bedding the birds. “I’m every inch of him,” Roth said. “And to whom do I have the pleasure?”
“Cris Whitfield. Cris without the h.” She held out her hand in greeting, realized it was smudged by the charcoal, and put it back in her lap.
“Charmed.” He arched his neck as if to look at her drawing, but was actually peeking down her halter top. “What are you drawing?”
“The house,” she said, nodding toward it.
“Mind if I’ve a look?”
She shrugged and turned the sketch pad toward him. He took the opportunity to stand over her.
“I’m not very good,” Cris said.
Looked quite good from the little peek I got.
“The house isn’t an easy subject,” he said, reaching for the pad. “I can hardly get a decent framing for it. I can’t imagine how frightfully awful drawing the thing would—”
He’d expected a stick-house drawing, something that the Big Bad Wolf could blow over with a half a breath. But not this . .. this asylum the woman had sketched. Not coming from this little ponytailed girl who looked like a Malibu beach bunny, who probably studied EST or reiki or whatever New Age pap was all the rage now.
Because the drawing was definitely of the manor, but was of much more than that.
It was all droopy and dark and pessimistic, a cross between Dali and that Spanish artist, Goya. They’d found some of Goya’s paintings after he’d died, hidden away in his house because no one could bear to look at them. Roth fought a sudden urge to touch the sketch.
The charcoal was as thick as fur on the paper. The shadows of the portico were sharp and steep, and Roth could almost imagine winged creatures fluttering in that darkness. The windows of the gables were leering eyes, the large front door a ravenous maw. He glanced from the drawing to the house, and for just a second, so short a time that he could convince himself that it was a trick of suggestion, the house looked the way she had drawn it, swaying and throbbing like a live, growling beast.
“Bloody hell, girl,” he finally managed. “Where did that come from?”
She looked shyly down at the tips of her hiking boots. When she shrugged, he only half noticed her jiggling breasts. “I don’t know,” she said. “It just sort of happened.”
Roth shook his head.
“I’ve never done anything that good,” she said. “I mean, I’m not that good at all.”
“Looks ace to me.”
“Not this picture. I know it’s good. But it’s not because of me. It’s because of the house.”
“The house?” Roth thought about how he couldn’t manage to make himself photograph anything but the house. And how he’d felt a little queasy when he’d been walking down the road toward the bridge. At least until he got back within sight of the house.
“It’s like it’s got this . . . energy,” Cris said. “When I was drawing, the charcoal almost seemed to be moving by itself.”
“Like hypnotic suggestion and that rot?” he snorted, then regretted it. Scorn wasn’t the way into a woman’s heart, or any of the other warm parts, either.
Cris’s lip curled. She slapped the sketch pad closed. The haunting, warped drawing still lingered in Roth’s mind.
“Everybody’s a critic,” she said. “Why don’t you just go back to pushing your silly little buttons?”
She stormed past him, kicking up leaves. Roth watched her walk onto the wagon road and toward the house. He shifted the strap that was digging into his neck, then checked the camera that was perched on the tripod.
Blew a go at her, he thought. What do I care about any two-pence line drawing, anyway? Artists are a pack of fools, going on about “meaning” and “creative spirit” and such nonsense. All it comes down to is money, power, and sex, and how to secure more of each.
He peered through his viewfinder at the manor. Cris bounced up the wide steps leading to the porch. As she disappeared through the front door, Roth couldn’t shake the feeling that the house had swallowed her whole.
CHAPTER 20
The forest looked different in the daytime. Its edges were blunter, the branches less menacing, the shadows under the canopy less solid and suffocating. Anna took in the afternoon air, feeling alive, fresh, renewed. Korban Manor and the mountains were bringing back her appetite, making her forget the long darkness that the cancer pushed her toward.
She took a right at the fork in the trail, remembering that Robert Frost poem about the road less traveled, because the right fork was little more than an animal path. But the trail led to an opening on a knoll, a soft rounded skull of earth wearing a cap of grass. In the middle of the opening stood a square section of iron fence, and white and gray gravestones protruded from the dirt within it.
“So this is where you keep your dead,” she said to the sky.
Anna made her way to the fence. She looked around, but the forest was still and silent. This wouldn’t be the first cemetery she’d committed trespass against. She heaved herself over, gripping the wrought floral design and scrollwork of the fence to keep from spearing herself on the sharp-tipped ends.
Two large marble monuments, beautiful though worn with age, dominated the graveyard. The first read Ephram Elijah Korban, 1859-1918. Too Soon Summoned.
The one beside it, slightly less ornate, said simply Margaret. Anna knelt and pressed her palm to the soil above Ephram’s final resting place.
“Anybody home, Miss Galloway?”
Anna looked up. Miss Mamie stood by the fence, somehow having crossed fifty feet of open field without Anna noticing.
“I was just out for a walk, and I got curious.”
“You know what they say about curiosity and the cat. Most of our guests respect fences.”
“Do you mean the guests who walk, or the ones who float?”
Miss Mamie’s giggle echoed off the monuments. “Ah, those ghost stories. I couldn’t resist approving your application, you know. Paranormal researcher. That’s too perfect.”
“It’s just as much an art form as painting and writing. It’s all about seeking, isn’t it?”
“Clever. And just what are you seeking, Anna?”
“I suppose I’ll know it when I find it.”
“One can only hope. Or perhaps you won’t have to search. Perhaps it will find you.”
“Then you don’t mind if I prowl in your graveyard?”
Miss Mamie looked at Korban’s monument. “Make yourself at home.”
“Thanks.”
“Don’t be late for dinner, though. And be careful if you’re caught out after dark.” Miss Mamie started to leave, then added. “You’re on
e of those, aren’t you?”
“One of what?”
“What the mountain people around here call ‘gifted.’ Second Sight. The power to see things other people can’t.”
“I’m not so special.”
“Those ghost stories are so delightful. And good for business, too. What artist who fancies himself living on the edge could possibly pass up an opportunity to come here? If you see anything, you’ll tell me, won’t you?”
“Cross my heart and hope to die.”
“Don’t hope too hard. Not yet, anyway.”
Anna watched the woman cross the grass and enter the forest, then she headed toward the rest of the grave markers that stippled the slope. She explored them, reading the names. Hartley, Streater, Aldridge, McFall. Then the names gave way to simple flagstone markers, in some cases chunks of rough granite propped toward the heavens as a forlorn memento of a long-forgotten life.
Would her own death be so little noted? Would her mark be as insignificant? Did it even matter?
At the edge of the scattered stones, where the rear of the fence met the woods, a pale carved tombstone stood in the shade of an old cedar. Anna went to it, read “Rachel Faye Hartley” etched in the marble. An ornate bouquet of flowers was engraved above the name.
“Rachel Faye, Rachel Faye,” Anna said. “Someone must have loved you.”
And though Rachel Faye Hartley was now dust, Anna envied her just a little.
CHAPTER 21
Sylva watched from the forest until Miss Mamie left. Anna looked small and lost in the graveyard, talking to the stones, looking for ghosts among the blades of grass. The girl had the Sight, that much was plain. And something else was plain, that dark aura around her, hanging around her flesh like a rainbow of midnight.
Anna was fixing to die.
Sylva drew her shawl close together, holding it with one knotted hand. The other held her walking stick, which she leaned on to rest for the trip back to Beechy Gap. She didn’t get out much these days, especially now that Korban’s fetches were walking loose. Things were mighty stirred up, and part of that had to do with the coming blue moon.
The other part had to do with that girl in the graveyard, the one who stared a little too long at the grave of Rachel Faye Hartley.
“You’ll be joining her soon enough,” Sylva whispered to the laurel thicket around her. “If Ephram will let you, that is.”
The sun was sinking by the time Anna climbed back over the fence, full of vinegar for such a sick person. Anna didn’t know the old ways, was weak in the power of charms and such. The girl wouldn’t understand the power of the healing roots, bone powder, and special ways of spelling. But maybe the talent was only buried in her, not lost forever. Because blood ran thick, thicker than water. And magic ran through tunnels of the soul, Ephram always said.
But Ephram was a liar.
Both before and after he died.
A screech owl hooted, a sound as lonely as a night winter wind. Sign of death, for one to hoot during daylight. But lately signs of death were everywhere, coming at all hours. Sylva said a spell of safe passage and slipped into the woods, hurrying home as best she could before the sun kissed the edge of the mountains.
CHAPTER 22
“Honey?”
Spence pounded on the typewriter keys, pretending not to hear her.
“Jeff?” Bridget put a hand on his shoulder.
He stopped typing and looked up. “You know not to bother me when I’m working.”
“But you didn’t even come to bed last night.”
He hated the plaintive note in her voice, her eagerness to please. He despised her concern. Mostly, he was annoyed by the distraction.
“I hope the typewriter didn’t keep you awake.” He didn’t really care whether it had or not. He was making progress, chasing the elusive Muse, and that was all that mattered.
“No, it’s not that,” Bridget said. “You just need your rest.”
“There will be plenty of time for rest after I’m dead. But at the moment, I’m feeling particularly and effusively alive. So be a dear and let me continue.”
“But you missed lunch. That’s not like you.”
Spence wondered if that was some kind of barb at his weight. But Bridget never criticized. She hadn’t the imagination to attack with words. Spence was the reigning master of that genre.
“It’s also unlike me to interrupt my work to have a little romantic chat,” he said, then stretched his vowels out in his Ashley Wilkes accent. “Now, why don’t ya’ll make like Scahlett and get yosef gone with the wind?”
“Don’t be mean, honey. I’m only trying to help. I want you to be happy. And I know you’re only happy when you’re working on something.”
“Then make me ecstatic,” he said. “Leave.”
A small sob caught in Bridget’s throat. Spence ignored it, already turning his attention back to the half-finished page and the thirty other pages stacked beside the Royal. He would do some revision, he knew, but it was excellent work. His best in many years. And he didn’t want it to end.
The door opened and he called to Bridget without looking. “I’ll see you at dinner,” he lied.
The door closed softly. Spence smiled to himself. She didn’t have enough self-esteem to slam the door in anger. She would be apologizing by this evening, thinking the little scene was all her fault.
She was by far the most enjoyable of Spence’s corruptions, out of all the English majors and married professors and young literary agents and assistant editors who thought they’d fallen in love with him. But, in the end, they were nothing, just meaningless stacks of bones, scaffolds to prop him up when the loneliness was unbearable. When he was working and working well, he needed no one’s love but his own.
“And yours, of course,” Spence said to the portrait of Korban, lest his creative benefactor frown.
Spence picked up the manuscript and began reading. The grace of the language, the tight sentence structure, the powerful description were all superb. He’d never been shy about patting himself on the back, but now he had topped even his own lofty literary standards. He would shame them all, from Chaucer to Keats to King.
He didn’t question the origin of the words. That was a mystery best left to those whose livelihood was derived from the scholarly vivisection of the humanities. But he’d never before written with such ease as he had last night and today.
Automatic writing. That’s what it felt like.
What Spence always called, during those few occasions when the ink flowed so freely, “ghostwriting.” As if the paper and typewriter themselves were sucking words out of the air. As if his fingers knew the next word before his brain did. As if he were not even there.
Appropriate to the manuscript, to call it ghostwritten, he thought. It had a Gothic feel, somewhat darker than the southern-flavored literature that had once made him the darling of New York. And then there was the protagonist, the handsome, bearded, and odd man whose name he still hadn’t decided upon. That was strange, to be so far along in the manuscript and not even know the main character’s name.
He caught himself looking, for the tenth time, at the painting of Korban that hung on the wall above the desk. Then he closed his eyes. After a moment, he resumed ghostwriting.
CHAPTER 23
“Did you hear that?”
“Hear what?”
“A thumping sound.”
Adam strained his ears. Paul was probably just being paranoid. He had slipped outside and smoked a joint after dinner. Paul was two things when he was stoned, paranoid and horny.
“Probably that fat writer banging his chippy in the room below us,” Adam said.
“If it is, they’re the most uncoordinated couple in the history of the human race. Quickest, too.”
“All I care about right now is us,” Adam said, resting his head on Paul’s shoulder. “Thanks for the good time.”
“No, thank you.”
And I promise not to bring up the subjec
t of adoption for at least a week.”
“You just brought it up.”
Paul. “Forget I said anything.”
Adam pulled the covers up to his chin and curled his body against Paul’s warmth. Adam was afraid he’d have trouble sleeping. The mountaintop estate was too quiet for a city boy, and Adam had never experienced such near-total darkness. He still missed the bright lights, traffic, and aggravation.
“Do you feel like getting out the radio?” he asked.
“Did you bring batteries?”
“Yeah. Figured we might need a little contact with the outside world. The radio’s in my bag.”
“I’d have to crawl over you to get it.”
“I won’t bite.”
“I’m too tired, anyway. ‘Fagged,’ as that phony-assed photographer would say.”
“You just drank too much wine, that’s all. And you know what pot does to you.”
“Tonight was for fun. Tomorrow, I’m going to be working again.”
Adam collected the radio, brought it back to bed, and switched it on. He twisted the dial, switched bands from FM to AM. Nothing but weird static. “I guess radio waves get blocked by the mountains.”
“Or else cool-freaky pop gets censored up here.”
They lay for a moment in the darkness. The house was still and hushed. The embers had grown low in the fireplace, and Adam didn’t feel like fumbling for a match to light the oil lamp on the bedside table.
“I’ve been thinking,” Paul said.
“News flash. Stop the presses.”
Paul elbowed Adam in the ribs. Adam tickled him in return.
“But seriously,” Paul said. “I’m thinking of doing a documentary on this place.”
“This place?”
“Korban Manor. It’s pretty unique, and I could get a lot of scenic footage. Ephram Korban’s history sounds pretty interesting, too. An industrialist with a God complex.”
“A historical documentary?”