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And Playing the Role of Herself K.E. Lane Contents Chapter One Chapter Two Chapter ree Chapter Four Chapter Five Chapter Six Chapter Seven Chapter Eight Chapter Nine A P H Chapter Ten Chapter Eleven Chapter Twelve Chapter irteen Chapter Fourteen Chapter Fieen Chapter Sixteen Chapter Seventeen Chapter Eighteen Chapter Nineteen Chapter Twenty Chapter TwentyOne Chapter TwentyTwo Chapter Twentyree Chapter TwentyFour .E. L Chapter TwentyFive Chapter TwentySix Chapter One e boy cowered, shrinking back as I crouched down and reached out a hand towards his face. “It’s ok,” I said quietly, stilling my hand, waiting. Huge, brown eyes looked up at me hesitantly through long, dark lashes. “It’s ok, Samuel.” I smiled reassuringly. “I’m not going to hurt you.” I reached out again and his eyes widened in fear, but he let me touch his chin and gently turn his head to the side. I froze for a moment, staring at the swollen bruise that ran along the le side of his face, and then gripped him by the shoulders, harder than I intended, allowing the anger I was feeling to show in my face. “Who did this to you, Samuel?” I hissed. “Who did this?” “Cut!” .E. L e voice sliced across the silent set like a pistol shot, and I could feel the small shoulders under my hands jump in reaion. I sighed and dropped my hands to my thighs as noise and chaer erupted on the set around me. e camera looming to my right moved back and I pushed myself to my feet. “Crap.” e boy giggled and wiped at his runny nose, leaving a shiny trail of mucus across his upper lip. Lovely. “Becca?” I called over to one of the hovering assistants. “Can we get a kleenex or something over here?” I was all for realism in television, but there was no way I was going to hug this kid with all that snot on him, regard less of what the script called for. While Becca, a tiny redhead in a tight, limegreen top, hurried over and began fussing over the boy, I turned to wards the sound of approaching footsteps, schooling my face into polite deference that I did not feel. “What’s wrong, Adam? I thought that was going well.” I didn’t, really – I had been too aggressive, stemming from not enough sleep, a very long week and a vicious headache – but I sure as hell wasn’t going to admit that to this asshole. Adam reizeck was short, obnoxious and sweaty; I had disliked him on sight, and it had become quite obvious over the last week of shooting that the feeling was definitely mu tual. A P H “at’s why I’m the direor, Miss Harris, and you are not.” You’re the direor because you’re married to the pro ducer’s niece, jackass. I forced a noncommial smile, and kept my thoughts to myself. I hated guest direors. ey threw off everyone’s game, screwed around with the normal pace of shooting, and were generally a pain in the ass. reizeck’s stint as direor had resulted in hour days, multiple scenes having to be reshot, and the killer headache that I’d had for what seemed like the last hours. “Let’s try this again,” sweatyman continued, “with a lit tle more compassion and a lile less ambo. You’re trying to help the boy, Miss Harris, not assault him.” e fa that he was corre in this particular case an noyed me even more than his arrogant smile. I nodded curtly, resisting the urge to slap him. He snapped his fingers impatiently, bringing produion assistants scurrying to his side. “And someone please tell Miss Stokley we’ll be ready for her soon.” “Miss Stokley,” a rich, very feminine voice drawled, “is already here.” e effe of the voice on reizeck was instantaneous. He spun towards the sound with more athleticism than I’d given him credit for and praically sprinted to the front of the set where Elizabeth Ann Stokley was regally seling herself into her chair. .E. L “Miss Stokley!” “Hello Adam,” she murmured. “Sorry if I’m a lile late. I got held up in wardrobe.” I looked at her outfit – the same one she had worn for walkthrus hours before – and thought her tardiness was more likely due to a certain musclebound intern named Chad, Liz’s flavor of the week, than any type of wardrobe problem. Not that it would have maered what her excuse was. Hell, she could have told him she was blowing the head of the network in the men’s room, and I doubt he would have baed an eye or changed his panting eagerness one bit. “Oh, not a problem, not a problem. Wonderful. You look great, just great.” I rolled my eyes, torn between annoyance and amuse ment as Liz worked her magic and reizeck was reduced to a pool of drooling, fawning jello. And who could blame him? Elizabeth Ann Stokley was certainly easy on the eye. Blonde hair, blue eyes, a dazzling smile, a body that curved in all the right places and a southern belle charm that could wrap even the biggest of assholes, male or female, around her perfe lile finger. An araive package, no doubt. She was also a temperamental, moody perfeionist, one hell of an aor, and since the very first day I started work on the set of ʰ Precin, a good friend. A P H It still amazed me, when I thought about it. An unknown from nowhere – me – aing opposite an established televi sion personality like Liz Stokley. From beer commercials to the big time in the blink of an eye. ʰ Precin, or P as the cast and crew called it, was a po lice drama showcasing the lives of six deteives in a Homi cide unit in Los Angeles. Liz played the series’ main charac ter, en Hastings; a young, optimistic deteive with a five year old daughter, a mortgage, and extremely bad taste in husbands, while I played ita Stone, her rather caustic, in tense, and cynical partner. When they were casting for the part of ita, they were looking for a woman who was ba sically the polar opposite of Liz. My dark hair, square jaw and rangy ′″ frame was lucky enough to be in the right place at the right time; I got the part, and my life since then had been quite the rollercoaster ride. reizeck’s snapping fingers brought me out of my thoughts; I guess he’d finished his fawning and wanted to get back to work. “Miss Harris, can we try this again?” I met Liz’s amused gaze above the direor’s head – that’s how short the lile prick was – and smiled slightly. “Sure, Adam. I’m ready when you are.” “Okay people!” More snapping. “Places!” I rolled my shoulders, blew out a long breath, and looked down at my snoy costar. Despite the kleenex, he was still oozing mucus. “Aion!” It was going to be a long, long day. .E. L * * * Some lastminute rearranging of the day’s shooting sched ule had turned my long day into a relatively short one, and by two that aernoon I was done with my scenes for the day and not due back on the set until an : call time the fol lowing morning. Pleasant thoughts of comfortable clothes, spring sunshine, and a good book in the hammock in my backyard were dancing in my head as I opened the door to my trailer, and I didn’t realize I had company until I kicked the door shut behind me and the tall, lean woman on my couch jerked awake, blinked in confusion for a moment, and smiled at me sleepily. “Caidence… hey.” e voice was low, rough and husky – whiskeysoaked, I’d heard someone in the media call it – and I felt it, and that smile, all the way down to my toes. She stretched luxuriously, like a big, satisfied cat, mak ing a lile mewling sound that turned into a long, satisfied groan. With effort, I tore my eyes away from the flash of skin above the waist of her jeans, and the way her breasts – Jesus, is she even wearing a bra? Christ, Caid, stop looking at her breasts! – strained against the fabric of her shirt. “obyn. Shit, you scared me.” I sat down heavily in the chair in front of the mirror, glad to have an excuse for sud denly weak legs. You’d think I would be used to it by now. We’d worked together several times, and I saw her if not daily, at least one or two times a week for the last eighteen months, whether on the set of ʰ Precin or In eir Defense, [...]... here.” She stepped into the trailer and handed a stapled set of papers to me, then shuffled through a stack of papers she was carrying and pulled out another set, handing them to obyn “osiah’s dad was hospitalized this aernoon with chest pains, and he le as soon as he heard… Adam doesn’t want to wait for him to get back, so he had the writers rework some of the remaining scenes, using the people we had ese... unsure of my self with the press e majority of questions, though, were aimed at Liz, and soon I relaxed, enjoying the show that was Elizabeth Ann Stokley e woman was truly a master at handling the press; defleing questions with a charm that le the reporters smiling, serious one moment and flirting the next, controlling the room without leing them know they were being controlled Finally, aer and hour and. .. trailer with the toe of my boot the next morning at :, sipping from a large paper coffee cup in one hand and dangling a cardboard carrier containing two more steaming cups from the other e door opened and Liz’s assistant, Paula, motioned me in I grunted in greeting and entered the trailer, holding up the carrier and gesturing with my chin at the one closest to Paula “White mocha somethingorother With... group of people wait ing in the lobby and then climbed back into the limo, the two men from P wisely eleing to take a cab As soon as the car door had closed, Liz turned to me and gripped my arm “What the fuck was all of that about? People think I’m a lesbian, and they’re writing about it on the internet? at’s illegal! Can I sue them or something? Shit, I need to call Woody and see if I can sue Paula,... man eating out of her hand Her only complaint should be that he drools a lile too much I, on the other hand, would have to agree with Danny e guy’s a prick.” is was probably the longest statement I had ever man aged to string together in front of her, and I was quite proud of myself e nervousness I’d felt minutes before had faded into a kind of heady euphoria to just be in her presence and have her... took the indicated cup out of the carrier, murmur ing, “You’re a doll ank you.” As I moved past her, she touched my arm And I don’t believe a word of it.” I frowned “A word of what?” “What they’re saying About you and that extra and the goat.” .E L Goat, monkey… not much difference when you’re sup posedly fucking them I smiled politely “ank you Paula, I’m flaered you think so highly of me.”... on the couch, still glaring And for god sakes, Paula, I told you that thing about the goat was just a stupid rumor Honestly, I don’t know how that crap gets started.” “Amazing, isn’t it?” I commented dryly, and held the car rier up as a peace offering “e most caffeinated, sugary thing they had.” Her eyes soened a lile and she reached out her hands “Ohhhh Gimme.” I set the carrier down and handed her the. .. pounded on the trailer door “Car here for Stokley and Harris!” I reached out a hand and hauled Liz to her feet “Let’s get this over with,” I said, with obvious trepidation “It’s not that bad, Caid,” Liz cooed, and paed my cheek “You need to work on your people skills, anyway.” I scowled and she laughed, leading us out of the trailer and stopping on the top step with a lile squeak of dismay when the bright... the back of the couch and was regarding me with a look she’d begun to favor me with recently – a secretive lile smile that was a mixture of amusement, curiosity, and taunting I was starting to think that perhaps Ms Ward was quite aware of the effe she had on me, and enjoyed watching me make an idiot of myself “Uh, sorry Spaced out there for a second.” I smiled weakly, took a last swipe at my face, and. .. and a half, the moderator called for last questions “is question is for both Ms Stokley and Ms Harris,” A short, stocky woman in the back said “Are you aware that over the past two years there has been an explosion of online stories depiing the two of you in homosexual re lationships, with each other and various other ʰ Precin cast members? Has this affeed your working relationship at all, and what do . across the silent set like a pistol shot, and I could feel the small shoulders under my hands jump in reaion. I sighed and dropped my hands to my thighs as noise and chaer erupted on the set. caustic, in tense, and cynical partner. When they were casting for the part of ita, they were looking for a woman who was ba sically the polar opposite of Liz. My dark hair, square jaw and rangy ′″. away from the flash of skin above the waist of her jeans, and the way her breasts – Jesus, is she even wearing a bra? Christ, Caid, stop looking at her breasts! – strained against the fabric of her shirt. “obyn.