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Wesson’s was in one of those faux-Spanish buildings that had a courtyard in the back, done up in a plastic Italian vineyard style. Very comfortable, and I’d heard the pasta was good.
Vance was still lost in his look at me but don’t look at me mode. Meaning people looked at him while trying not to look like they were looking. A crowd was waiting to get in but we were ushered straight to a table. Lots of irritated stares from them.
He slid into a chair across from me, his face still half-hidden by a thousand-dollar hoodie and he took such a casual pose, I knew something more than a writing job was up.
“Rett, it’s been months,” he purred. “What’ve you been doing with yourself?”
Chit-chat? From Vance? This was a big deal.
“Working on a new script,” I said. It’s the expected response from a screenwriter. No details needed. “Doing research. You?”
“You ready for this? I’m associate producer on a new project that’s going to use AI renditions of Clark Gable and Vivien Leigh to do an honest sequel to Gone With the Wind. Unlike that made-for-TV thing with...what was his name? Timothy Dalton as Rhett? No Timothy should EVER be a Clark Gable character.”
Is that what he wanted me to work on? “Is that even legal? What about copyrights? Trademarks?”
“The lawyers have an okay from those who matter. Script was worked up by ChatGPT and made semi-believable by some real writers. It’s not Shakespeare, but what is, anymore? They have it storyboarded out and I’m picking clips from their films to generate from.”
I huffed. “But you want me to rewrite the script?”
“Rett, Rett, Rett, please, you’re too modern to make the story suit its time.”
“Ouch. So was that the reason for this tete-a-tete?”
“Tete-a-tete? Oh, my God, you’re reading the dictionary, again.”
“What the fuck, Vance!?”
“Now, Rett, don’t get too loud. You’ll get thrown out and embarrassed and you can’t do that at Wesson’s; no one will ever hire you again.”
Fortunately, a waiter came up and cut me off before I said anything stupid. Give me a chance to remind myself that while Van could be a dick, he also had those connections that mattered. And when he said no one would ever hire me, again, he meant he’d see to it. So shut the fuck up, Rett.
I ordered a Caprese Salad and Pasta Pomodoro while he did an antipasti and eggplant parmigiana with a nice Chianti. I almost asked for fava beans, but I don’t think the joke would have played well, here. If at all.
I stayed quiet till we had our wine, as did Vance. Making me a bit nervous. Which was his intent, I’m sure.
Finally, as we began our salads, he said, “Okay, the job I’m referring to is a reality program I helped produce. The script is kind of clunky, and what we need is a smoother through line. Not merely bouncing back and forth between events we recorded and talking heads. Sort of a filmic touch.”
“I’ve never done that.”
He shrugged. “You’re a writer, Rett. I’d like you to look over the program as it’s currently done. See the footage we excluded. Make it into more of a story than just boring facts and actions.”
“Give it a film feel? Really?”
He nodded. “I have a lot invested in this project, and not just money. In fact, no money. If it flops, I lose nothing...well...maybe a hit to my untarnished reputation. But it’s an important work, and I really, really cannot emphasize enough that it must succeed. I think you can help with that. You have a fairly good understanding of one part of it.”
I was actually getting intrigued. “What is it?”
He took a sip of wine, looked me dead in the eye and said, “It’s the story of a skater boi who wound up being misused by an older man, but who built a reputation as a skateboard designer, and who is unashamed of who he once was.”
The way he looked at me, with that Don’t trying try fucking with me, baby, I’ll fuck you up, expression he had. Making it obvious who he was referring to.
The son-of-a-bitch knew about my interest in Smoke.
You see, Instagram had been my friend, about him. His actual name was Stephen Marlon Kratorski. He’d done the pro-sk8ter circuit and made it to the top ten. Been at it since he was eleven. Fifteen years. Now he was just a weekender and made his living designing specialty skateboards in Culver City.
Sk8ter to the stars...
An image from a few weeks ago showed he’d beefed up a little, which actually looked really good on him. He still had those lovely pecs, partially hidden by a cut-out t-shirt, and fine legs, made even lovelier by cargo shorts that were a size too small for him, now. His face filled in some, but with scruff on it he was almost beautiful...especially now that I got a good look at his eyes and mouth. He’d also added another tattoo to his left arm...a sk8ter boy on his sled, probably him from an earlier time.
The next thing I found was podcasts he was doing on YouTube and other platforms about making specialty skateboards. The why this way was better than that sort of thing...and he had a lovely screen presence. Open and warm and a bit jokey, with a smile that promised heaven. During those clips, he wore an old LA Rams cap, backward, holding his longish russet hair out of his face.
I had to check a previous video and saw that his hair had been a plain brown, so he'd colored it. Or washed it. Whichever. I’d been close to falling in more than lust for him and his best buddy looks, which would make him a serious rival to my need for sleek little Nicky.
There was little more than a vague mention of his wife and kids on the web; just that they were part of his life. I got a bit more info about his current career. There’d been chatter about one of the cable networks bringing him on board as another of their reality shows.
But I’d thought that would only be so long as no one connected him to the molestation clips I’d seen. Enough of his face was hidden by the blindfold and gag, and his body was different enough now, so that he had plausible deniability. And there was also the additional tattoo...and it looked like he’d altered the one he already had. With Georgie dead and the documents vanished...at least, I think they were vanished...then he would have been safe.
But it sounded like that was not even a consideration, since Vance was involved. It was time to up my game.
I swallowed what I’d been eating, took a sip of wine to chase it down, and looked straight back at Vance.
“Oh? You mean Georgie?” I can fake ignorance really well.
Vance leaned forward, still very casually, and I think I saw a hint of a smirk on his face. “I hear you found his editing suite. Copies of his DVDs.”
Okay, we were now in battle...and I was outmanned, since Ben and Liam were obviously on his side.
“People don’t do DVDs, anymore,” I said. “Porn’s all online.”
He nodded. “Yet still he burned some. Over a hundred.”
“Do you have his paperwork?” I asked. “Title 18 section 2257 shit?”
Vance leaned forward like a cat eyeing its prey. “I have everything. I was executor of his estate.”
Oh, fuck...paranoid writer kicked in and the only reason I didn't run screaming out of Wesson's was...my Pasta Pomodoro was killer.









