“O, I Dream!” she said.
“Huh?”
“The line, Marty. Got you.”
The letters rearranged themselves automatically in her mind. It was child’s play. She had almost expected him to come up with it first. They had kept the game going since her first day at AmiDex, when she pointed out that his full name was an anagram for Marty licks on me. It got his attention.
“You can stop with the word shit,” he said.
He sounded irritated, which surprised her. “I thought you liked it.”
“What’s up with that, anyway?”
“It’s a reflex,” she said. “I can’t help it. My father taught me when I was little.”
“Well, it’s getting old.”
She turned to his profile in the semidarkness, his pale, cleanshaven face and short, neat hair as two-dimensional as a cartoon cutout from the back of a cereal box.
“You know, Marty, I was thinking. Could you show me the War Room sometime?” She moved her leg closer to his. “Just you and me, when everybody’s gone. So I could see how it works.”
“How what works?”
She let her hand brush his knee. “Everything. The really big secrets.”
“Such as?”
“I don’t know.” Had she said too much? “But if I’m going to work here, I should know more about the company. What makes a hit, for example. Maybe you could tell me. You explain things so well.”
“Why did you come here?”
The question caught her offguard. “I needed a job.”
“Plenty of jobs out there,” he snapped. “What is it, you got a script to sell?”
The room was cold and her feet were numb. Now she wanted to be out of here. The other chairs were dim, bulky shapes, like half-reclining corpses, as if she and Marty were not alone in the room.
“Sorry,” she said.
“I told you to stay home today.”
No, he hadn’t. “You want me to take the day off?”
He did not answer.
“Do you think I need it? Or is there something special about today?”
The door in the back of the room opened. It connected to the hall that led to the other sections of the building and the War Room itself, where even now the audience response was being recorded and analyzed by a team of market researchers. A hulking figure stood there in silhouette. She could not see his features. He hesitated for a moment, then came all the way in, plunging the room into darkness again, and then there were only the test subjects and their flickering faces opposite her through the smoked glass. The man took a seat at the other end of the row.
“That you, Mickleson?”
At the sound of his voice Marty sat up straight.
“Yes, sir.”
“I thought so. Who’s she?”
“One of the girls — Annalise. She was just leaving.”
Then Marty leaned close to her and whispered:
“Will you get out?”
She was not supposed to be here. The shape at the end of the row must have been the big boss. Marty had known he was coming; that was why he wanted her gone. This was the first time anyone had joined them in the booth. It meant the show was important. The executives listened up when a hit came along.
“Excuse me,” she said, and left the observation booth.
She wanted very much to see the rest of the show. Now she would have to wait till it hit the airwaves. Was there a way for her to eavesdrop on the discussion later, after the screening?
In the hall, she listened for the audience reaction. Just now there must have been a lull in the action, with blank tape inserted to represent a commercial break, because there was dead silence from the theater.
She was all the way to the reception area before she realized what he had called her.
Annalise.
It was an anagram for Lisa Anne, the name she had put on her application — and, incredibly, it was the right one. Somehow he had hit it. Had he done so naturally, without thinking, as in their word games? Or did he know?
Busted, she thought.
She crossed to the glass doors, ready to make her break.
Then she thought, So he knows my first name. So what? It’s not like it would mean anything to him, even if he were to figure out the rest of it.
She decided that she had been paranoid to use a pseudonym in the first place. If she had told the truth, would anybody care? Technically AmiDex could disqualify her, but the family connection was so many years ago that the name had probably been forgotten by now. In fact she was sure it had. That was the point. That was why she was here.
Outside, the rain had let up. A few of the next hour’s subjects were already wandering this way across the courtyard. Only one, a woman with a shopping bag and a multi-colored scarf over her hair, bothered to raise her head to look at the statues.
It was disturbing to see the greats treated with such disrespect.
All day long volunteers gathered outside at the appointed hour, smoking and drinking sodas and eating food they had brought with them, and when they went in they left the remains scattered among the statues, as if the history of the medium and its stars meant nothing to them. Dinah Shore and Carol Burnett and Red Skelton with his clown nose, all nothing more than a part of the landscape now, like the lampposts, like the trash cans that no one used. The sun fell on them, and the winds and the rains and the graffiti and the discarded wads of chewing gum and the pissing of dogs on the place where their feet should have been, and there was nothing for any of them to do but suffer these things with quiet dignity, like the fallen dead in a veterans’ cemetery. One day the burdens of their immortality, the birdshit and the cigarette butts and the McDonald’s wrappers, might become too much for them to bear and the ground would shake as giants walked the earth again, but for now they could only wait, because that day was not yet here.
“How was it?” said Angie.
“The show? Oh, it was great. Really.”
“Then why aren’t you in there?”
“It’s too cold.” She hugged her sides. “When does the grounds crew get here?”
“Uh, you lost me.”
“Maintenance. The gardeners. How often do they come?”
“You’re putting me on, right?”
She felt her face flush. “Then I’ll do it.”
“Do —?”
“Clean up. It’s a disgrace. Don’t you think so?”
“Sure, Lisa. Anything you say. ”
She started outside, and got only a few paces when the sirens began. She counted four squad cars with the name of a private security company stenciled on the doors. They screeched to a halt in the parking lot and several officers jumped out. Did one of them really have his gun drawn?
“Oh, God,” said Angie.
“What’s going on?”
“It’s the complex. They don’t like people taking pictures.”
Now she saw that the man in the dark trenchcoat had returned. This time he had brought a van with a remote broadcasting dish on top. The guards held him against the side, under the call letters for a local TV station and the words EYEBALL NEWS. When a cameraman climbed down from the back to object they handcuffed him.
“Who doesn’t like it?”
“AmiDex,” Angie said solemnly. “They own it all.” She waved her hand to include the building, the courtyard, the parking lot and the fenced-in apartments. “Somebody from Hard Copy tried to shoot here last month. They confiscated the film. It’s off-limits.”
“But why?”
“All I know is, there must be some very important people in those condos.”
“In this neighborhood?”
She couldn’t imagine why any VIP’s would want to live here. The complex was a lower-middle-class housing development, walled in and protected from the deteriorating streets nearby. It had probably been on this corner since the fifties. She could understand AmiDex buying real estate in the San Fernando Valley instead of the overpriced Westside, but why the aging apartments? The only reason might be so that they could expand their testing facility one day. Meanwhile, why not tear them down? With its spiked iron fences the complex looked like a fortress sealed off against the outside world. There was even barbed wire on top of the walls.