Let's Stay Together
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Synopsis
Lauren Short dumped her cheating mega-star fiancé amid major viral media fallout. That was the easy part. Restarting her stalled career as a thirty-something actress. . .not so much. What she needs is advice from someone non-Hollywood. Someone like her surprising new online pen pal. He's a Brooklyn handyman who's understanding, honest--and daring Lauren to do one risky, sizzling reboot of her glamorous life. . . Lauren is the one woman Patrick Esposito has crushed on forever. He never dreamed they'd meet--much less that she could use his help. Or that she would be even more down-to-earth in person. But now their offline romance is making them the hot new celebrity couple. And between the secrets they didn't expect and the trouble they didn't see coming, Patrick and Lauren will need all the right moves to stay real, keep it together, and script their own happily-ever-after. . .
Release date: April 28, 2015
Publisher: Kensington Books
Print pages: 352
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Let's Stay Together
J.J. Murray
Chazz was fake, Lauren thought. Both in the movies and in real life. Patrick nailed that one. If Patrick really knew how fake Chazz was. What’s worse than calling someone fake? Calling Chazz “bogus,” “phony,” and “counterfeit” isn’t enough. Chazz was more than that. He was the fakest person I have ever known.
She sighed and sank deeper into her rented love seat, her feet propped up on a rented coffee table in her newly rented studio apartment in North Hollywood.
“I don’t know what I deserve these days, Patrick, old friend,” she whispered, “but I certainly didn’t deserve to be two-, three-, and five-timed by a man who was with me and with a series of men behind my back.”
She tried to shake the image of her fiancé, action movie icon Chazz Jackson, and those two men in Chazz’s house overlooking the Pacific only seven nights ago.
She failed.
“In our house, Patrick!” she shouted. “In my house! Okay, he paid for it, but I lived there for seven years. And oh how I have paid.”
I may have paid with my life.
But I’m not going to think about that right now. Think positive thoughts. Think positive thoughts....
But I kept that place looking good! she thought. I kept that place spotless! I made that place shine! But why does it matter so much to me where he messed with men? He was evidently messing with them in all sorts of places while I waited for three years, with a ridiculously huge engagement ring on my finger, to become “Mrs. Lauren Short-Jackson.” And then I came home to see the man I gave up my acting career for acting the fool with two men on the Lorraine black leather sofa I bought for him for his birthday!
“I’m surprised the three of them didn’t collapse it, Patrick!” she shouted.
And now I’m talking to a man who isn’t here, Lauren thought.
“I wish they had broken that sofa,” she whispered. “Chazz should be feeling some kind of pain.”
She had just finished watching Chazz play off their disengagement on Entertainment Tonight on the rented TV in front of her. “Telling them that he broke it off with me,” she mumbled, “telling them that we didn’t see eye to eye anymore, telling them that he would always have a soft spot in his heart for me, a woman who he still called ‘his favorite leading lady.’ ” She looked again at her iPhone. “He even tweeted that he was ‘single and looking for another future star,’ Patrick! What kind of man does that only a week after a breakup?”
She shook her head. Chazz’s publicist is certainly earning his keep these days. I’ll bet Chazz is messing with him, too.
She shuddered.
She looked at the TV, the Rent-A-Center tag still attached to the base. I’ve gone from a ninety-inch flat-screen TV to a twenty-seven-inch antique.
That about sums up my life.
“You know, Patrick, maybe I should go on Entertainment Tonight and tell them how I broke the picture window looking out over the Pacific Ocean with my fists and a well-placed elbow. I shattered that huge window into a million pieces. Maybe I should tell them what I saw Chazz doing—and having done to him—with my own two eyes. Maybe I should tell them how fast those other two men were—both of them high-profile actors with wives and children, Patrick—about how they ran out of there with their pants on backward. I wish I had taken pictures. Those pictures could make me a millionaire overnight. Maybe I should tell ET that Hollywood’s highest-paid he-man love interest has really been acting in those love scenes with women over the years.”
She bowed her head. “But if I tell them all that, Patrick, they may give Chazz several retroactive Academy Awards for his excellent movie deceptions.” She opened her eyes and laughed. “That’s what the media does for fun in this town. They turn cowards into heroes and give the fakest people the most praise.”
She sighed heavily. But if I tell them all that, then I’d have to explain how I didn’t know that the man I was engaged to for three years was gay or bisexual and heavy on the man love—whatever that confused man was.
I have been the world’s biggest fool, Patrick, I really have.
And I don’t want anyone to know it.
Ever.
She looked at the e-mail, amazed she was still getting any fan mail at all. Before she started dating Chazz, fan mail used to flood into her in-box in droves, but except for the last seven days of people wishing her well, there had been only a trickle of fan mail ever since she became engaged to Chazz.
“It’s painful now,” she whispered. “You said it, Patrick. It physically hurts. My chest, back, and neck ache. My head and my eyes pound every time I think about what happened. Whenever I close my eyes, I see Chazz and those men. . . .”
She looked at her left ring finger, at the lighter band of brown skin. “I kind of miss the ring, Patrick. It was a rock and a half. I could have pawned it and bought a small country.” It cost more than, well, I’m evidently worth. I’m sure some golden seal is now swimming around it and admiring its beauty. I’m surprised I was able to throw it so far. I hope some surfer doesn’t step on it. Maybe it will end up on some beach in Hawaii. I would so love to be there.
Anywhere but here.
She glanced at the full name in the e-mail address. Patrick Alan Esposito. Okay, Patrick Alan Esposito, I will do my best to try to keep smiling.
That’s about all I can do now.
“It isn’t as if I’m going to get any movie or TV offers now, Patrick,” she whispered. “I’ve been out of practice for seven years, and the biggest movie star on earth just dumped me. Therefore, I must be used up and burned out.”
I must be old news.
I have been old news for seven years, and I’m only now realizing it.
I may even be an obituary. I’m sure some journalist has already written it.
She typed a quick reply:
At eleven p.m. that evening in the Boerum Hill section of Brooklyn, New York, Patrick Alan Esposito blinked rapidly at his Acer laptop screen, duct tape holding its CD drive closed.
“I don’t believe it,” he whispered. “She wrote back. Lauren Short actually wrote back.”
This is amazing.
He wiped dust from the screen with his sleeve. Her e-mail is still there. I’m not seeing things. Lauren Short wrote back to me, and it isn’t a form letter. She actually answered my e-mail, despite Chazz breaking off her engagement. She called me by name, and she included a smiley face!
And she wants me to keep smiling, too!
I’m smiling!
I can’t remember the last time I smiled.
It almost hurts my face to smile.
Though he was amazed at Lauren’s response, Patrick was more amazed that he had written to her in the first place. He had had a crush on Lauren Short ever since he saw her in Crisp and Popp, a TV show that debuted and then disappeared after only six episodes in the fall of 2001.
But that was fourteen years ago. How can I still have a crush on her?
He shot both his arms to the ceiling and shouted, “Yes!”
A Hollywood star, a TV actress, and a certified beauty wrote back to me. I wish I had someone to tell. He ran his hands through his floppy mass of thick black hair and scratched at his coarse beard. But who would believe me if I did?
I’m glad she can’t see me now.
I can barely stand to see me now.
Patrick lived frugally, some would say “barely,” in Boerum Hill, a thirty-six-block section south of downtown Brooklyn east of Cobble Hill and west of Prospect Heights. A handyman and jack-of-all-trades, Patrick was the go-to guy to fix problems at five Salthead rental properties in Boerum Hill. He imagined that most tenants had his cell phone number memorized by now.
Mrs. Moczydlowska probably chants my number in her sleep. It took me a month to say her name correctly: Mot-chid-LOVE-ska. I know I see her in my sleep, all four foot, seven inches and two hundred pounds of her. She’s so chubby, I can barely see her eyes. “I call your boss,” she says. “You do not fix, I call your boss. You not come, I call your boss. You are not here by eight sharp, I call your boss. . . .”
Even I don’t call my boss.
Patrick wasn’t even sure who his boss was.
For working up to sixteen-hour days, Patrick received a meager salary and half rent (eleven hundred dollars a month and all utilities) in one of the Salthead rentals on State Street. He had seven hundred square feet of less-than-spacious living in a nineteenth-century house that had been carved into eight apartments. A lumpy brown cloth couch canted slightly on faux wood linoleum in the main room, in front of an antique coffee table holding a thirty-five-inch television. A queen bed swallowed most of the blue-walled bedroom, glass double doors to the only closet showcasing five pairs of coveralls, assorted stained jeans, hooded sweatshirts, and scuffed and discolored work boots. A light tan window shade on the bedroom window allowed the morning sun to streak across to the bathroom, the only “modern” room in the apartment with a double-bowl sink, postage-stamp green tile, and recessed lighting, all of which he had installed himself. Under the counter in the skinny kitchen were a dishwasher he never used and a washing machine he used once a week, thick red brick walls providing the only vibrant color.
Even Patrick’s apartment was barely an apartment.
Patrick maintained, rebuilt, painted, and even overhauled five-thousand-dollar-a-month apartments in buildings on Atlantic, State, Dean, Bergen, and Baltic. He carried a heavy tool bag slung over his shoulder wherever he went, roaming daily past Boerum Hill’s million-dollar “row houses” to unclog sink drains, replace chipped tile, seal drafty windows, remove former rodents from traps, set off bug bombs, rewire overworked electrical outlets, plunge toilets, swap out aging water heaters, clean shower traps, free blocked sewage drains, and anything else the tenants demanded that he do.
He had finished Mrs. Moczydlowska’s daily “Do it today, or I call your boss!” list over on Bergen only half an hour before he had read Lauren’s e-mail. I’ll bet Mrs. Moczydlowska is busy thinking up more for me to do tomorrow. There’s always something wrong. “What is this bug, and what is it doing here? Why does the toilet take so long to flush? Why does the floor make so much noise?”
Patrick had learned to save Mrs. Moczydlowska’s apartment for last after she had once called him back six times in one day to “Fix the fridge!” or “Get me the hot water!” or “Make the sound go away!”
Patrick led an anonymous life in stained coveralls, but he wore his stains with pride, mainly because the stains held his coveralls together.
He hit the REPLY button, then warmed his massive hands and flexed his rough fingers. How does a nobody like me write back to a movie star? Writing to her the first time was easy. I was only a fan then. Now I’m . . .
I don’t know what I am now.
A friend? A confidant? What should I say this time? Should I even write back? What if I do and she doesn’t write back this time? Maybe she was just being nice. That’s the kind of person I think she is. Yeah. She was being nice.
He sat back from the laptop. But I don’t want to leave this alone. It’s not as if we’re going to have a long “conversation.” I just want her to know that someone cares about her, even if that someone is a nobody handyman who lives in Boerum Hill, Brooklyn. There’s no harm in that. I care, and I want her to know that I care.
I have to do this.
Well, I am, he thought. But I’m sure she knows that I would be surprised. She is a star, after all, and I am not a star. He backspaced until he had a blank screen.
I am glad, aren’t I? Why tell her the obvious? And calling her “Miss” might remind her that she’s still a “Miss” and isn’t married after being engaged to that jerk for three years. He highlighted and deleted everything.
He sighed. Am I being too bold? I am actually assuming that this wonderful person doesn’t have anyone to talk to. Of course she has someone to talk to! I’m sure she has plenty of friends to see her through this mess with Chazz. She doesn’t need me. He sighed again. And what if she thinks I’m some reporter trolling for information? I’m sure that’s how some reporters operate. They get in nice and friendly with a seemingly innocent e-mail and then air the dirt they uncover on television or in magazines.
He scratched his hair, a few dots of white paint floating to the coffee table. What does it matter, anyway? She’s not writing back.
He signed it “Patrick” this time before adding a postscript :
He hit SEND.
I am here if you need me, Lauren, he thought. He shook his head. Maybe it’s really me who needs someone to talk to. I am so tired of talking to myself. He shut down his laptop.
As he was walking all of ten feet to his bedroom, his cell phone buzzed. Mrs. Moczydlowska. It figures. Doesn’t she ever sleep?
He flipped open his antiquated cell phone, one Salthead had provided for his use. “Yes, Mrs. Moczydlowska?”
“Oh, you are up,” she said.
We handymen never really sleep. We only recharge our batteries. “What may I do for you?” Patrick asked.
“It is the refrigerator again,” she said. “It does not keep the food cold again and it makes the noise again and I hear the rats in the walls again and what you painted today does not match anything after it is dry and . . .”
See you tomorrow, Mrs. Moczydlowska, Patrick thought as she droned on and on and listed something wrong in every room. I wonder if she would care that I just received and answered an e-mail from Lauren Short, Hollywood actress. She probably doesn’t even know who Lauren Short is.
“Yes, Mrs. Moczydlowska,” he said absently.
“You are writing this down, yes?” she asked.
“Yes, Mrs. Moczydlowska,” he said, writing random letters in the air.
“There is much to be done!” she shouted. “When you come? You come first thing in the morning, yes? You must come here first thing.”
He yawned and stretched his back. “I come first thing,” he said, instantly regretting it.
“What time?” she asked.
The crack of dawn. “As soon as the sun rises.”
“I will be waiting. Do not be late, or I call your boss.”
Click.
He edged into his bedroom and fell back onto the bed. If I brought Mrs. Moczydlowska a new refrigerator or rid her walls of every rodent and bug, she would complain about how quiet it was. If everything was perfect, she’d worry that something was about to break.
He pulled up the window shade, and the room filled with the amber light from Downtown Gourmet Deli across the street. We’re both open for business twenty-fours a day, he thought. And people expect us to be open and available no matter what.
But it’s a living.
“Just not much of one,” he whispered.
At thirty-eight and now disengaged from the world’s premier blockbuster movie star, Lauren Short couldn’t afford to be choosy about getting work, especially since she had not been seen in movies or on television shows for seven years.
When her agent, Todd Mitchell, had sent her any script back in the good old days, she would begin reading it immediately, often finishing it before the envelope it came in hit the floor. The thicker scripts had excited her the most since they held the promise of extended projects and larger paychecks, and there were plenty of big paydays when she was in her twenties. She had starred or costarred in eight films over a four-year period, and while five were ensemble “sister” films, they had made her extremely visible to the moviegoing public. She had won half a dozen BET, Black Reel, and Image Awards for those movies, but once she’d started dating Chazz, the scripts stopped coming overnight.
Todd Mitchell, her agent, had tried to explain why. “Lauren, baby, Chazz is white, and that’s why, um, why you’re not getting any more, um, ethnic scripts.”
“But shouldn’t I be getting more mainstream roles, then?” Lauren had asked. “Shouldn’t I be ‘crossing over’ to multicultural movies? Sanaa Lathan has done it. So have Zoe Saldana and Kerry Washington.”
“I’ll look into it,” Todd had said.
Todd had looked into it.
Nothing had come of it.
As a result, Lauren quit acting to become Chazz’s arm candy at awards shows, premieres, and film festivals, spending stupid amounts of money on designer dresses she wore only once.
For seven years.
Today she held a script Todd had sent to her by express mail. She read Todd’s brief cover letter:
In 2001 Lauren had starred in Crisp and Popp, a TV crime drama. She played the sexy, wisecracking detective Shantelle Crisp, and Hayden Billings played the no-nonsense white detective Richard Popp. They solved crimes when they weren’t flirting, lusting, and sleeping together. The show received rave reviews, mainly for not being “overtly racial,” but NBC canceled it because the stand-up comedian and lead writer of the show, Will Weaver, had upset the world during a live HBO special just after 9/11. . . .
“Why is everyone blaming George Bush for all this?” Weaver had asked a packed audience in Los Angeles. “Sure, our president is a little short on intelligence, foresight, and knowledge of the English language, but terrorists have been on the warpath since the seventies. Didn’t we arm Saddam Hussein so he could fight the Iranians? And didn’t we give weapons to the Taliban to fight the Russians? Didn’t we know that this sort of thing was bound to happen eventually? If you give guns to pissed-off people, they tend to use them against whoever pisses them off at the time. Instead of pointing fingers, we should be pointing missiles . . . at Washington, D.C., and Langley, Virginia. . . .”
Lauren sighed. I miss doing that show. Crisp and Popp was a smart, well-written, groundbreaking show that didn’t deserve to die because Will Weaver told the truth. That show was funny in all the right places, sexy in even more right places, and looking back, just about everything Will Weaver said in his rant was the absolute truth. No one wanted to hear the truth back then, though. And no one’s heard from Will Weaver since. They’ve barely heard from me or seen me, either—unless I was with Chazz.
She nodded. “I need a job now,” she said. I need something that will show the world that I still have talent. I need something to show everyone that seven years with Chazz and our recent disengagement haven’t ruined me forever.
She returned her attention to the cover letter.
True, Lauren thought. Chazz who? I need this chance badly.
She settled into her love seat, flipped the cover page, and began to read:
Oh . . . no, Lauren thought. I don’t like the way this begins. Is this supposed to be comedy? The first two lines might alienate every white person in America!
This hoochie has a lawyer for a boyfriend? Lauren thought. Why? What lawyer—or man—in his right mind would hook up with this coarse, uncouth creature? Only on TV.
Bee-otch? Lauren thought. What in the world? What century am I in? And does this Lauren have to be so violent? I don’t have a violent bone in my body.
And now the script alienates black men, Lauren thought. Who is left to watch this show? Do they want anyone to watch this show?
The script just lost most of the southern United States, Lauren thought. This isn’t comedy. This is an extended racist joke! They would have to use a laugh track for this show because a live audience would be booing or growling. I wonder if a live audience has ever walked out on a taping. If it hasn’t happened yet, this show would guarantee it happening.
She forced herself to continue.
Lauren shook her head so much, her neck hurt. Todd said this script is a little over the top. He’s dead wrong. This script is over the abyss and falling like a cartoon anvil.
And now we’ve lost the white women, Lauren thought. This just has to be a joke now. Todd sent me this script to cheer me up in some twisted way. No one on earth would ever take this script seriously. She stared at the ceiling. No, Todd wouldn’t send me anything unless it was real. She looked back at the script and sighed. I just wish he hadn’t sent this piece of crap.
Girth? Lauren thought. Can they say girth on TV? This can’t be for regular TV. This has to be for some late-night show only the truly desperate would ever watch.
And now we’ve lost any church folks, not that they’d ever tune in to this filth, Lauren thought. If I were the writer, I’d go into the witness protection program.
She didn’t just say . . . Lauren closed her eyes. Oh, my goodness. How many foolish, untrue stereotypes can we squeeze into the first five minutes? This script is trying to set a record! She opened her eyes.
The offensive lines were still there.
Lauren squeezed the script so hard, it almost tore in half. “Wow,” she said. She felt like gouging out her eyes.
Wow, she thought.
She felt like rinsing her eyes with hydrochloric acid.
No . . . way. A human being wrote this?
She looked for and found the writer listed under the title: A. Smith. Only one human being wrote this and thought it was doable. I never want to meet this person. I do not hang out with ignorant people. But somehow a television studio executive passed this ignorant script up the chain, a producer put up the money for a pilot, and a director signed on to direct. Were any people thinking when they read this disaster of a script?
I’ve read some bad scripts, but this script really sucks a rusty hubcap.
Badly.
Worse than badly.
What’s worse than badly? “Abysmal” is close. “Appalling” is closer. This script is inexcusably abysmal and appalling.
She reread the script, and if anything, it got worse.
I believe the writer of this mess has never been in an interracial relationship because it contains every stereotype about white men ever created. And this is only the first scene!
She rolled the script up into a tight scroll. “If you stick into the ceiling, I’ll read for the part.”
She threw the script up at the ceiling. It bounced off and caromed into the kitchen.
She sighed deeply, falling back into the love seat. How can I make a comeback with this mess? I know it’s a paycheck, but do I really want to lower myself to this level for my first work in seven years? It’s not funny. It’s sad. I need something with some integrity here, not this . . . excretion.
Oh, I know why they want me. I’d be playing the desperate single black woman in search of a white man. I have been there and done that. First, there was a white guitarist back in college who introduced me to his “other” girlfriend, who said she would be “cool” with me joining them in their mostly sexual relationship. I wasn’t cool with either of them. I spent time with a premier athlete who worked out with performance-enhancing drugs more than he even spoke to me. And then I made the mistake of falling for Chazz, an actor who was, is, and shall always be more gay than straight. None of them were good to me or for me for very long, but at least I have some experience with interracial relationships. The writer of this script obviously doesn’t.
But . . .
She sighed.
But I need to do something to keep from going insane. I have to stay busy.
I didn’t leave D.C. for this.
Lauren had grown up near Martin Luther King, Jr. Avenue in Congress Heights, Southeast D.C.’s capital of car theft, robbery, and assault. While jets had screamed overhead to Bolling Air Force Base and Washington National Airport (since renamed Ronald Reagan Washington National), and cars had packed I-295, Lauren had tried valiantly to survive Ward 8. She missed going to Martin Luther King Elementary. She missed the barbecue chicken pizza from The Pizza Place. She missed the come-ons from the men at Fullers barbershop. She missed having her hair done at Styles Unlimited hair salon, where her first head shot still greeted customers as they entered the shop.
I can’t go back there, Lauren thought. That’s what Congress Heights expects to happen to anyone who escapes. They expect me to crawl back with my tail between my legs. I’m sure they’re all talking about me at Styles Unlimited. “Oh, that Lauren Short has the worst luck with men, doesn’t she? That’s what happens when you get uppity and mess with white men. . . .”
I have to give them something better to talk about.
But not with this script.
She called Todd. “I read the script,” she said as soon as he picked up.
“And . . . ?”
“It’s a piece of rancid bat guano, Todd,” Lauren said. “It’s the cheesiest, most derivative, most clichéd, and ultimately most stereotypical and racist script I have ever read.”
“Well,” Todd said. “Say what you mean, Lauren.”
“I can’t see me doing this show,” Lauren said. “I can’t see any intelligent black woman doing this show. I can’t see any woman living or dead doing this show. Even the most desperate actress would have to be either crazy or brain dead to do this show.”
“Let’s see,” Todd said. “You haven’t worked in . . .”
He has to remind me. “Look, I know my career took a seven-year hiatus,” Lauren said, “but this show would end my career and tarnish my former career completely if I did it. Why did you think I would be interested?”
“You are desperate,” Todd said.
“I’m not that desperate,” Lauren said.
“Come on, Lauren,” Todd said. “It’s strictly for laughs. It’s a comedy. You do remember comedy, don’t you?”
“But it’s not funny, Todd,” Lauren said. “Comedy is supposed to be funny. It should at least be somewhat amusing, like Seinfeld. This show is demeaning and shameful and patronizing. It degrades just about every segment of American society.”
“Geez, Lauren,” Todd said, “don’t take it so seriously. It’s a job, and you need a job, right? Get back on your feet and all that, right? This is just the beginning of your comeback. All comebacks start small. We need to build you back up to the big time gradually. Some of the script was funny, wasn’t it?”
“I tried to laugh, Todd,” Lauren said, “but laughter shouldn’t give you gas and make you want to remove your eyes with an ice cream scoop. I mean, the premise may have promise, and there’s plenty of room for more interracial relationships on television, but the execution of the premise is horrific. Train wrecks have more class, dignity, and integrity. Horror films have more humor.”
“You’ve only read the first scene, Lauren,” Todd said. “I’m sure the rest of the script will improve.”
“I doubt it,” Lauren said. “My namesake is off to Hell’s Kitchen to find herself a white man. The only way this script will improve is if they fire A. Smith, whoever that is, and hire someone who has some sense. I don’t think the writer has ever even been in an interracial relationship. You know, I could write a better script than anyone else could.” I could base her love interest on Chazz. Yeah. That might actually be fun to write. “Why don’t I just write for the show? I have plenty of experience in interracial relationships.”
“You, a writer?” Todd said. “Lauren, with your track record with men, you could only write something called No Sex in the City.” Todd laughed. “Sorry. That was uncalled for.”
“It certainly was,” Lauren said.
I haven’t had sex since we got engaged, since Chazz said, “I want to wait until our honeymoon.” Why did I miss that obvious clue? I thought he was being sweet. And before that, it was all a performance. Chazz performed—but that’s all he did. Every sexual encounter I had with that man was a performance. He never truly made love to me. Why didn’t I notice?
“You knew Chazz was gay, didn’t you, Todd?” Lauren asked.
“I think the word is bisexual,” Todd said. “And you have to be the only woman in LA who didn’t know. And anyway, I thought you knew all along and didn’t care.”
“I really didn’t know, Todd,” Lauren said.
“Come on,” Todd said.
“Really.”
“You were engaged to him and living with him for three years, Lauren,” Todd said.
“I know, I know,” Lauren said. “I have always been too trusting, and look at the mess I’m in because of it.”
“Chazz doesn’t seem worse for wear,” Todd said. “In fact, his star may even be rising. I hear quite a few scripts went back into circulation the day he dumped you.”
“I dumped him,” Lauren said.
“That’s not what Entertainment Tonight said,” Todd said. “And without your rebuttal, his word is the truth now.”
“But you told me yesterday to ignore all that!” Lauren shouted. “You told me to rise above the foolishness, keep a low profile, and say nothing!”
“And you listened to me?” Todd said. “We have some serious damage control to do, Lauren. I can set up an interview.”
“I can’t even remember my last interview,” Lauren said. “It was at least eight years ago.”
“And that magazine has since gone out of business,” Todd said. “We can’t go print media with this. We have to go live. I’ll try to set up something with Fallon first, of course, and then The Today Show. NBC owes you for canceling Crisp and Popp. And then—”
“No, don’t bother,” Lauren interrupted. “I want it all to go away as soon as possible.”
“Or we can kee
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