Frozen Face


“Here they are.” James slaps the stack of uneven papers on my desk. “Just fish out the credentials and pick out the pretty faces.”

     I let out a long breath. As James leaves the office I think about the discombobulated pile before me. I had written a script three years ago and barely got through the publishing process. On January 12th, two weeks prior to this very day, Mr. James Benet knocked on my apartment door. He physically came to my place of residence so that I could sign a sheet of paper. Most producers just send a fax to the nearest P.O. Box.

     I roll my eyes at the open door. James had wanted my full participation in the production, and he certainly receives it. He has been saying that the author is the only one with the right vision for a play. James won’t even hire a director until I hand-pick the cast; He is only hiring one at all because I refused to direct it myself.

     There is a grayscale photo peeking out of the manila folder in front of me. The file is labeled: “Miss Gloria Anderson” and the folder won’t stay shut without the green rubber band stretched around it. I pull the two-ton stack to arms’ reach after grappling across the table for it.

     Inside the tag board binding sit about fifty pairs of headshots and resumes. It is exciting, finding the faces of my characters, but I still brace myself for disappointment. I know that I cannot find absolutely perfect actors, but at least I’m presiding over auditions. “It’s your story,” James had said. “No one can change what came from your head.”

     I decide to dump out the jokers first. I don’t want to get hung up on a face and end up with a crummy actor. Within ten minutes I pull out twenty-four resumes, all of which have no prior acting experience. Not one of these contains a single reference, not even from high school. I cannot always keep myself from looking at pictures. At least none have looked priceless.

     Until now, I think. As much as I try not to look at any headshots first, one picture captures my gaze. The man in it wears a turtleneck sweater and gentle eyebrows. Stubble extends from behind the crown of his head to cover his chin and the edge of his lips. His shining eyes give me an urge to kiss his nose, like a brother who has been gone for too many Christmases. Dimitri.

     I have seen this man before. Every time I wrote a scene containing the lead, there was this face. The same face is laid in literal black and white before me now. I had dreams of what he would sound like on stage, and if his voice could show the audience what each song feels. At this point credentials could not matter less to me. I have found my Dimitri Moyer.

     I stare at the headshot for what must be many minutes. Most actors have their photo taken so that it reflects their personality; photographers use different angles and show different lengths of their subjects’ bodies to be creative and catch the eye. This picture only shows the face, head-on. If it were my own I would not have paid the photographer, but for this actor, it works. It is more than perfect. The lips show a small smile which is made honest by the eyes. It may not be an interesting headshot, but the face is wondrous.

     I almost run to find James. I’m halfway out of my chair with the picture in focused hand when the flapping paper attached to it is noticed. James will never call if the resume is incomplete. I sit back down and pray agnostically that he has at least one prior role on the sheet.

      Oh God. The font is tiny. With small margins, all the references barely fit on the single page. Aside from the list of ten directors there are over six years of recorded acting and tech classes as well as over twenty roles. Yet, his name holds no history in my memory.

     Jeremy Sanders spent his entire career in community theatres across Iowa with only one performance in New York. His character experience includes Doctor Manette from “A Tale of Two Cities,” Egeus from “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” and Algernon from “The Importance of Being Earnest.” While all but one production listed are classics and fully spoken, the single Broadway show proves his flexibility. Mr. Sanders held a small role in Avenue Q, a highly provocative musical done totally with hand puppets, during the summer of 2004; the peculiarity was how short of a time he stayed with it. The show is still running now, in the year 2008. At least there is plenty to satisfy James.

     I race out of the door of James’s office, then the lamp at the end of the hall, looking in all directions. I don’t normally get to any state that approaches visible excitement, but now I fell ready to spring out of my skin and fly. I can’t even fell frustration for spending two minutes ducking in and out of rooms, dropping curt apologies to any occupants, without finding James. Finally, with a slower gait and much heavier breath, I turn into the doorway marked “Mr. Benet” and nearly knock over the devil himself.

     “Jesus, Gloria.” James barely manages to save a falling bun from his hamburger plate. I have never found him with coffee or muffins, but often with energy drinks and full meals. Does he ever eat outside of this place?

     I only offer him a winded, “James, finally.” I breathe several times while he bends to retrieve the bun and sets his food on the table. He brushes a crumb from his shirt and I impulsively wipe a fleck from his cheek. He smiles, having grown accustomed to the motherly tendencies of his childless client.

     “So,” James starts in, “are you finished already? I had expected the process to take at least an hour.”

     I readjust the headshot in my hand. The paper under the staple had torn somewhat from my fruitless chase around the fourth floor. “Not yet,” I replied. “But there is a winner. This,” I say, holding the now-disconnected photo before his eyes, “is our Dimitri.”

     James raises his right eyebrow at me, and then studies the picture. It takes him more than a second to remove it from my fingers; my brain doesn’t want to lose that face. He gives me one last look before sitting with the photo in his hand, the other hand reaching out.

     I’m so preoccupied with the sight of the greasy burger being near the headshot that James ends up simply grabbing the resume out of my hand. I stand staring at him, hoping than his eyebrows will not furrow. I have yet to see a look of rejection from James that was directed towards me, but every other who has received it could not sway him with negotiation. I am not sure I would have a better chance.

     “Well,” James began before looking up, “he certainly has experience in theatre. The lack of real musical experience, however, could prove to be a threat in the long run. Gloria, what made you so sure?”

     “It’s him, James.” I pull out a rolling chair to be at his eye level. “It’s the character I see in every scene I write. This,” I snatch the photo from his food-stained fingers, “is my Dimitri Moyer.”

     James taps the table as he studies the resume.What is the problem? I wonder impatiently. Where does he get off questioning my character? I am not an aggressive person, and yet these thoughts barely blip on my careful offense radar. I wanted him to call, to set up the audition. As compromising as I could be, I would not settle after seeing that headshot.

     “Then,” he said, face still to the page, “I’ll have to call him. His residency is in Queens, so I’m not going all the way out there.” He looks up at me with the smile in his eyes. I’m beaming. “Good to see you’re sticking to your vision.”

     I pull James halfway out of his chair and send my own rolling backwards with the hug I give him. James isn’t one to laugh, but I take his gasp for air as enough of a chuckle to allow the hug to hold. “You will be happy,” I assure him. Pulling back, I steal a fry from his plate. “I’ll get the rest of the cast picked out and,” adapting a joyous French accent, “la vision will be complete.”

 

    *     *     *     *

 

     After a week and a half James has arranged auditions with the cast that I selected, having found a few actors that could work for each role. The only one without competition is Jeremy Sanders, but he is also the only actor without an audition. James and I have both called the number listed on his resume several times, as well as every director on the list. All had given the same information that we already have. No one seems to have heard from him for over a month.

     I watch James hang up his cell phone as he exits the building. “That’s it,” he calls to me. “Either he answers the door or you will have to find a new Dimitri.” We pull open the side doors to his BMW after hearing the signaling click. I sigh with dread.

     I am silent for the entire trip. It takes us ten minutes to clear the parking lot and reach the first red light, and then another half hour passes by before we are on the bridge to Queens. James looks over to me every once in a while, more often asking, “You gonna be alright?” I always nod and smile a little hopeless smile at him. I have to believe he will answer. I have to trust that Mr. Sanders sent us his resume on the last week of January because he wanted a role. I need to believe that.

     James has to tell me when we arrive. There are multiple doors entering the brick building before us and we pass several before parking on the north side. A beep from the car brings my head up to the door. The way the complex is arranged each numbered doorway only leads to one apartment; fire escape stairs in the ally are the only access to the second floor balcony. The tin mailbox attached to the dark bricks has “J. Sanders” printed in stick-on letters. James raps on the door, his usual four-beat knock. His last tap, though, is left out. I turn not to face him, but the door.

     A sun-faded 8x11 sheet of paper is stapled to the door of the pretend brownstone. Below the words, “For Rent” is a description of the apartment’s interior. The sentence that stops my eyes is, “Furniture included.” It is followed by, “Auction to be held March 1st for remaining property.”

     James takes me by the shoulders and turns me around. He leads me back to the BMW and clicks the doors open. The engine engages and my seatbelt is in place before I feel the tears leave the corners of my eyes.

Open Eyes

         You look a little sad. Your eyes have hope, though; hope that something can make them smile. For they are alight, oh, so full of light.

         You cannot see that, of course, even though water ripples before you. Its current is constant over tiled steps and is still at least six feet away. You treated it with chlorine that very morning, but enough sweat and spit have made the lights under the surface seem dim. Even if you were to stand up, adding a good three feet to your view, and walk over to kneel again and see yourself in that water, you would be unsuccessful. But your eyes are aglow all the same, and the pulse echoing behing them lets you know.

         You even know the cause for the heat spreading from the soles of your feet. Your eyes can see the reason that your hands sweat and your chest feels as if half a dozen hot dogs are undergoing digestion in your stomach, which remains unchurning and tightens rather than bloating. Your head tells you what, though not yet wherefor, brings out such muddled impulses from your body.

         It didn’t come upon you in a sudden wave, or, if it did, you were not aware. Each effect crept towards you from behind even while you were standing in the wake of the source. Your breath didn’t quite catch at first, but the rhythm of your breathing changed noticably. You feared that it would be noticed by th ears in front of you, though you could not see them under dark ripples of hair.

         This hair extended the full length of the back it layed against, and every strand swayed with the movement of the neck that was also hidden behind it. This hair had a scalp with skin that must have continued to a face, but it had yet to appear. The neck beneath that hair never turned enough to show it.

         You find you can still speak without your hands shaking. Your thoughts cannot wander for long into the past while the sight of that hair tempts your eyes in the present. That light shines naught for the water which you see, but you are careful not to let the beam blind that face. For of course the hair has a face, a face that could not be done justice by the twinkle in your eye, no matter the intensity of your gaze. The face has not shown fear, and your eyes refuse to absolve that fact. She may mistake the glow of your eyes for fire, making her butterfly form shrink and fly away. For that face belongs to her, a girl whose eyes can be felt looking at you.

         Her ears listen as her eyes gaze, and you can tell both are directed at you. Her interest seems genuine as long as your reactions are truthful. A skilled cat can induce euphoric trust, but still rarely fools your practiced mind. Your hands have quivered before in response to your eyes and her voice is not the first to take all the moisture from your throat. But even clever cats can’t keep their cresent eyes from glazing over at loss of interest.

         Your heart is not unscarred and you know to be careful when it beats this rapidly. But the butterfly is never devoured by feline annoyance, nor is it as timid as its kin. Her voice forms responses that close your airways but reignite your heart to allow a conversation.

         This conversation is not a dialogue of words, but a symphony of sounds and guestures. The bass of your heartbeat guides and conterbalances the cello of your intonated voice. The bugle from her lips brightens the tempo, time being ever-kept by your pulse. And when your brassy eyes share melody with her own, all else is silent.

         Your eyes are alight, and meet eyes that could almost be brighter. Through her butterfly gaze burns a wolfen understanding, but it does not falter the beam. There is no terror in those eyes, and the absence justifies the hope in yours. You smile and don’t look so sad anymore. I smile and wonder whether you see me behind her eyes.

Staying Connected

Katie was bent over her homework; concentrating, as if saving the life of a child. She may have believed she was saving her own. Another C in calculus would pull her out of honor roll. It wasn’t life or death, but it did matter.

Katie was a straight-A student. Until she hit high school, that is. She didn’t struggle, but great scores were not so easy anymore. She was lucky in that her mom never ridiculed her. It wasn’t until she met Sam that she learned to appreciate that.

            Sam had a lot in common with Katie. He had a job and worked hard in class as she did, as well as keeping current with the school debate team. Despite their closeness, they only ever saw each other as friends. There couldn’t be confusion; Katie was attached. Besides, Sam’s mother kept such close tabs on him that he barely had room to breath. Even as Seniors Sam and Katie could not hang out anywhere but at each other’s houses. They had used homework as an excuse to free Sam from his controlled environment.

            A particular problem had Katie so stumped that she nearly missed her phone ringing. It was lain on her bedside table but on vibrate; finally she heard the rattle on wood. The caller ID read “Sam-man”. Katie smiled as she answered.

            “Hey, Sam,” she beamed. “I needed a homework break. What are you up to?” Sam didn’t answer at first. Katie could hear shallow breathing-Sam usually breathed into the phone, but then it was heavy and irregular. She could hear the after-cough of a swallow and asked, “Sam, what’s wrong?” She had never heard him like this; it was almost as if he were nervous.

            “Katie, I can’t keep this a secret anymore.” Sam was speaking very quickly, as if afraid he wouldn’t finish. He went quiet for a moment. “I didn’t,” he began, “I didn’t want anyone to worry. I couldn’t stand causing anymore pain.” Katie could hear him sniff and choke back tears. “I wouldn’t have called, but someone has to know. And this is my last chance- my last chance to make things okay.”

            Katie had no idea what to say. She had seen Sam down before, but now he was in an absolute panic. She could only think to try comforting him. “Calm down, Sam,” she soothed. “Sam, it’s going to be all right.”

            “I wish you could understand.” Sam sounded desperate. Her heart tore. “I can only help anyone by ending it. By getting rid of what is hurting them: me.”

            Katie was horrified, almost angry. “No, Sam.” She made her voice cease shaking. “That would help no one. You have never hurt anyone, Sam. You never could. I need you, Sam. I would hate it if you were gone.”

            Sam was silent, almost as if he had given up. Still, Katie didn’t want to push him. Finally, he mumbled, “But that’s just it. I can’t help anyone anymore. I don’t do anyone any good. It’s not good for you to rely on someone so terrible, so ready to let you down. I can’t keep hurting you Katie.”

            Sam had never talked like this. Not to her, at least, and Katie was the closest friend he had. It sounded as if he had let this stew inside him for a while. Too long, as it sounded. Sam was hurt, and he seemed to think he was hurting others. Katie wanted to understand why.

            “Who makes you feel like this?” she asked after a short while. “Who tells you that you are terrible?”

            Sam hesitated. Katie’s whole body was stiff. She felt anger at the thought of anyone hurting her best friend this much. Finally, he answered, “You won’t believe me.”

            Katie held firm. “Sam, you know I’ll always believe you, especially now.”

            “There’s,” he sputtered, “this voice in my head. At first I thought it was me, but then I started to argue with it.” Sam seemed to be gaining strength. He was being heard. “It has to just be me though, doesn’t it? I’m not schizo. I hope I’m not. I just can’t make up my mind. I just- I always lose the argument.”

            He was losing her. Katie was getting confused, but she would not dismiss it. “Sam, how long have you been hearing the voice?” Questions were all she could muster now. Really they were all she had in her.

            “Ever since freshman year.” Katie nearly jumped. Three years he had dealt with this. He had kept silent the whole time. Why had he decided to tell her now? “I hate that you have to hear this, Katie,” Sam was crying now, “but someone had to know. I knew you would listen, and explain it to my mom. I couldn’t face her. She couldn’t understand.”

            She knew. Finally it clicked. “Sam,” she said, now frantic, “don’t do anything, Sam. Don’t make a move that you can’t think well about later. I can help.”

            “No,” he said, now calm. “No one can help me. If I can’t help myself I’m not worth helping.”

            “That’s not true, Sam.” Now Katie was desperate. “You know that you are worth so much.”

            “But I don’t know that, Katie.” She could almost see him shaking his head. “I know that I’m not worth anything.” Sam went silent. This was more terrifying than anything he had said.

            Katie panicked. “Sam? Sam!” Had he hung up? She looked at her phone. They were still connected. There was still a chance. “Sam, can you hear me? Only silence was on the other line.

            “Damn!” She wouldn’t hang up. She grabbed her car keys and raced down the hall. Her mom heard her and called from her bedroom.

            “Where are you going?” Katie did not want to stop to answer. “It’s after 11.” Katie looked at her phone; Sam was still on the line.

            She opened the front door as she said, “Sam’s house. I’ll explain later.” She didn’t wait to hear a reply. Within seconds Katie had backed out of the driveway and was heading down 5th Avenue at 30 mph. Every ten seconds she checked her phone. Occasionally she tried calling out for Sam. There was never an answer, but twice she heard movement. There was still a chance.

            She nearly ran over the curb turning onto James Street. She hit a red light on 10th Avenue and bruised her fist on the steering wheel. Katie checked her phone; the timer was still running. Katie spoke shakily in the receiver. “Sam? Sam, I’m here. I’m not letting go.”

            Katie heard sobs and nearly swerved into a parked car. She dropped her phone turning onto 12th and hit her head on the horn trying to snatch it up. The light was still on; the call hadn’t been ended. She saw the red house on the left side of the street and stuck the phone in her mouth.

            When she parked in front of Sam’s house all the lights were out. Katie couldn’t see anything through Sam’s basement window. She was surprised to see the street light still on. Both the front and back doors were locked. Even the cellar doors, which were always forgotten before, were chained and padlocked. Katie’s phone still showed that Sam had not hung up.

            Amazingly, a basement window was ajar. She climbed through and landed on the floor of the bathroom. Struggling to her feet, she raced to the door and stopped; she listened for movement on the other side. Behind the door was Sam’s room.

            Katie thought of nothing. Only pure fear went through her mind. It wasn’t until she opened the door and saw only blackness that she felt anything else. Katie was angry, furious even, and stood on pinpricks, waiting.

            There was, finally, a sound. “Katie?” She was still connected.

 

*   *   *

            Sam was sitting at his desk in the dorm room he shared. His cell phone rang; he hated calls during homework. But he smiled when he saw the words on his screen read, “KateZ.”

            “Hey, Katie.” Sam clicked his pen. “Where are you? Study session started an hour ago.”

            Katie panted into the phone. “I’m on my way. Rush hour at the pharmacy. And I have your prescription.”

            Sam picked up the bottle on the corner of his desk. One pill was inside. God, I owe her, he thought. “You are my savior, Katie.”

            She laughed. “Well,” she replied, “you could have a Coke ready for your savior. I’m wiped.”

            “Anything,” he said. Sam would have gladly given Katie all he had. She hadn’t given up; not that night and not for the past four years. She had stayed connected all this time, and he owed her his life for it.

            “Sam?” He had nearly left Katie alone on the line.

            “Sorry,” Sam said. “Just zoned out this time.”

            “Okay,” she seemed ready to scold him. Sam only heard worry. He saw Katie’s smile before she spoke. “I’ll be right up. I just went past the food court. I won’t leave you up there alone for too much longer.’

            “You never do. I’ll see you soon.” Sam stared at his phone timer for ten seconds before hanging up.

 

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