Part 14 (1/2)

Breisi took an affable, one-hand-on-one-hip stance. ”You were referred to us by Mrs. Pennybaker. We check all recent contacts, but it took us a while to find you.”

”My cell got turned off and I was out of state. But I'm all paid up now.” Klara embarked on her diction exercises, stretching open her mouth, as if chewing on a really big piece of taffy. Then she paused. ”Maybe what I have to contribute won't matter, but at least I'll have it off my conscience.”

A crewmember carrying props-oversized stuffed animals-hustled by. The aging actress waited for him to pa.s.s.

Then she slowly eased into it. ”When I first met Robby, during the read-through for the movie we did together-his final one-he was such a little doll, so scrubbed-up and huggable. He could've been Theodore Cleaver, don't you know. 'Can I get you any food from the service table, Miss Monaghan?' 'I really loved you inBenji Goes to the Dogs, Miss Monaghan.' Sweet.” Klara looked off into the distance, smiling. ”Charming as the d.i.c.kens. But”-the smile disappeared-”his dad was enough to make you forget about that. Mr. Pennybaker was the biggest stage parent I've ever seen. He drove the director nuts with his suggestions about how to put Robby into more scenes or how to compose a shot so it would flatter him. Once, I caught him watching the kid act as the cameras were going. Nathan was saying every line along with his son-just like he was Robby.” A failed child actor, Dawn thought. It made sad sense.

She'd seen stage parents on set before. Nightmares. More often than not they were living vicariously through their children, and it sounded like Nathan wasn't any different. Sure, he'd put on some great waterworks last night-losing Robby had probably been as traumatic as losing his own career.

But what about the rest of the story, like the pimping part that Kiko had mentioned? And how would all this lead to Frank?

Before Dawn could ask, Klara continued. ”About two weeks into production, things started getting...I guess you'd say,icky. Me and Robby had become friends. I was just starting out, fresh-faced and all that.” She had a faraway glow, a glory-day melancholy about her. ”Robby liked to get close to you physically, hold your hand, the like. I was his big sister-don't you know how relations.h.i.+ps form on the set? You become a family, because nothing much exists outside of the production most times. Besides, I heard he ran around with older friends; he related to adults better than kids. But then...”

Breisi and Kiko waited her out, probably because they had trained to be effective listeners, tuning in to body language as well as what was being said out loud.

But Dawn's balled anger made her impatient. ”Then what?”

Her question took Klara Monaghan out of her reverie. A sea breeze huffed at her vivid beehive as she focused on Dawn, almost as if just realizing that she existed.

Kiko pinched her, and she took the hint. Shut up and allow the well-oiled machine that was Kiko and Breisi to perform.

Couldn't they hurry it up?

”You were saying?” Breisi asked, giving Dawn her own chiding pinch of a stare.

The cotton candyhaired actress blinked, her hand going to the looser skin of her neck. It clashed with the surgery-enhanced tightness of her face.

”This is a little embarra.s.sing,” Klara said.

Breisi put her hand on the older woman's arm. ”We appreciate your honesty. Marla will appreciate it.”

That did the trick. Klara rested a palm against her throat, covered her chest with the other arm, coc.o.o.ning herself.

”One day, when we were waiting around for our next scene, Robby leaned against me. He...” Klara's fingers fluttered against her skin, finding the proper way to say this. ”...he put his cheek against my arm. At first. But, well, then he moved over just a touch, putting his lips on my...” She motioned to her breast. ”He started nuzzling me, looking up at me with this...this kind of come- hither invitation. He wastwelve.”

Although Dawn tried not to change expression, something inside of her cracked. s.h.i.+t like this was par for the course on a movie set; ent.i.tled behavior, even from a kid, wasn't a big shocker. Good public relations work and a delusional need to put movie stars on a pedestal kept the general public in the dark about the real Hollywood, but that didn't make it right.

It didn't make it easier to stomach, either.

”Do you think you misinterpreted his actions?” Breisi asked, undetered. ”Maybe he accidentally brushed you and that look he gave you wasn't what you thought it was?”

”If it'd happened once, yes. And if I hadn't seen Nathan nearby, watching, I probably would've been less disturbed. Kids his age get experimental, don't you know? They start wondering what s.e.x is all about. But Robby got more persistent day by day, and his dad started inching closer and closer to us while it was happening, sort of like he was coaching Robby or...G.o.d...even getting off on the sight of it, I suppose. You could tell that little kid was going to grow up to be a lady killer, I tell you, and I wonder if Nathan Pennybaker lived through Robby in that way, too...If he liked to see how off balance it made me, if he felt like he was dominating me through Robby.”

She tightened her arms around herself. ”I ended up shutting myself in my trailer to avoid them, but I still had to work with Robby. I still had look at him and get creeped out about what he and his dad were up to.”

Dawn couldn't hold back. ”Did you report the hara.s.sment?”

”No, no. I wanted a career, not a reputation for making trouble. Not that it mattered though. The jobs dried up during the next few years anyway.”

Steam whistled in Dawn's head. When Darrin Ryder had felt her up duringherlast gig, she hadn't done dip officially. She was no idiot. Initiating s.e.xual hara.s.sment charges against a powerful star would only result in him trotting out twenty witnesses who'd say Dawn was lying. Better to give the pervert a banzai smash in the groin and hope that he a.s.sociated the pain with making the same mistake in the future. Better to take a chance on securing justice herself than to be ridiculed and, as Klara had said, banned from this small entertainment community.

Yup, Dawn's way had merit, because there were stunt coordinators and directors out there who would choose skill over hard- a.s.sedness any day. There were friends of friends who might admire a tough-as-nails stuntwoman and appreciate that she could discreetly solve her own problems-as long as she was good enough for them to take the risk of hiring her.

In fact, she knew that there were a few maverick directors who would name a holiday after her for quietly going vigilante on Darrin Ryder.

All they had to do was look at her headshot and resume....

Klara was talking again. ”Unfortunately, Robby's advances didn't stop there.” Her fingers worked at her throat, long, lacquered red nails like clamps. ”With a week left on the shoot, Nathan Pennybaker began asking me strange questions. What kind of men did I like? Older ones? Young ones? He was saying it like he was joking around, but I got the feeling he wasn't, so I told him to bug off. Later, after we wrapped, I found out that some other actresses-andactors-had gone through the same treatment with Robby and Nathan.”

Breisi looked miffed. ”Why was this never made public?”

”Are you kidding?” Klara said, her hand dropping. ”Robby was a big star. Teflon. A crazy story like mine wouldn't stick to him.

A child commodity with a Golden Globe who had the world at his fingertips. No one would believe even a hint of what was really going on.”

”The Hollywood code of silence,” Dawn added.

Klara nodded at her, her gaze catching Dawn's in understanding. ”But that's not the worst of it. Rumor has it that a few women and older men-studio heads and producers-with a certain fetish had taken Nathan up on his offers.”

Holy c.r.a.p. ”Do you know that for sure?”

Now n.o.body was shutting her up.

”You bet I believe what I heard,” Klara said. ”And from what I went through, I can't say I'm stunned.”

”d.a.m.n,” Kiko finally said.

He wandered closer to Klara, shaking his head in consolation, then put his hand on her lower arm.

The action was twofold. First, Dawn knew he was reading the woman, seeking the veracity of her claims. Second, he was playing a psychological game, too. She'd seen that clear enough with Mrs. Pennybaker's reaction to Kiko last night. He had the power and appearance to act childlike, evoking trust, recalling what Robby's career was built on: innocence.

When Klara's gaze settled on his hand, Dawn was pretty sure she was picturing and reliving Robby just like Mrs. Pennybaker had done, that she was taking Kiko back on a mind journey to what had happened during his final film.

After a moment, Kiko let go, stepped back to his place next to Dawn. He nodded at her.

Klara Monaghan was on the up-and-up.

”There's something else,” the older actress said, suddenly shy and probably even slightly confused by what had just happened.

”Word was that Nathan Pennybaker made a habit of encouraging Robby to be aggressive, with females and movie bosses alike.

That kid knew more about the biz than people twice his age, and he knew how to act, that one. He was so good. Good enough to take everything he wanted, whether it was a meaty part or a starlet. I shudder to think what Robby would be like today.”

Right. Maybe Robby would've grown up to be another Nathan. Maybe itwasbest that the world remember the lie of Robby Pennybaker as a cute, lovable boy and not as the ugly truth.

Yet that was impossible after his scandalous death, after this new image of him had come out inDiaper Derby. Now, to the public, Robby was a drugged-out recluse, a freak of the media who made the ma.s.ses long for the return of the sweet-faced, perfect child he'd once been.

Klara had started running through a slew of tongue twisters in preparation for her dialogue.

”One more thing,” Breisi said. ”Mrs. Pennybaker doesn't seem to know anything about these rumors.”