“I could be doing something with that sculpture.”

“No. I don’t think so. How about the canoe? It’s coming down, right?”

“Yes, but not right now-”

“Hey, nothing is happening right now. It’s all fiction. But you climb up the ladder and look like you’re examining the… whatever is holding that canoe up there and I’ll walk up as though I’m Courtney. Okay?”

Josie knew why she didn’t want to do it, but she couldn’t think of a rational excuse not to, so she climbed up slowly and then even more slowly as she approached the top.

“Now, why don’t you just put your hand… not that hand! The other one! Don’t want to block that… uh, pretty… face! Okay! Okay! Just hold that position! How does she look?”

Josie jumped back. He knew Courtney was up there. “She… she…”

“The cameraman is trying to get your face in the picture.” The statement came from Dottie, and Josie suddenly realized that Bobby Valentine was talking about her, not Courtney. “Maybe I should tie back my hair?”

“No!”

“Didn’t you tell her? I thought that Henshaw kid… Chad… was supposed to tell everybody on the crew about their clothing!” The cameraman seemed distressed.

“I…” Annette was hesitant. “I… He told me and I told him… that is, I said I would explain to everyone else. I… Something happened and… I forgot.”

“Okay. I will repeat myself. Everybody listen to me. We will be taping six shows. While each of you may not appear in each show, you will all appear in more than one, probably half of them, maybe more. You must wear the same thing for each day of shooting-”

“We-”

“What?”

“Guess you don’t care how we smell, do you?”

“What’s the big deal? Just put your jeans and T-shirt in the washer when you get home each night and-”

Josie was momentarily distracted. “Most of us don’t live in houses with a washer and dryer in the basement.” (She had a fleeting vision of the laundry room in her parents’ basement. Like the rest of the house, it was color-coordinated; in this case turquoise, cream, and yellow.) “And even if we did, we work hard. Going home to do laundry is not exactly restful.”

“Besides, we didn’t know we were going to be seen in what we showed up in today for the entire series,” Annette protested.

“Look, just try to wear something similar. Maybe we can make an exception with this series-after all, we all know how ladies are about their clothing.” He looked up at four scowling women. “Uh, let’s get going. Don’t be afraid to really get into your work.”

The hammering became louder. Josie knew that when those windows were pulled the sound would be deafening, but Bobby Valentine continued to give directions.

“I will walk in with the cameraman following me. The camera will pan the room-quickly-and then up the rungs of the ladder to where Josie is working.” He turned all his attention on her. “I’ll call out a loud hello and we’ll take it from there. Okay?”

“I… uh… what if I say something stupid?”

“Not to worry. In the first place, you’re a smart cookie and you won’t. In the second place, nothing goes out unedited. Ready?”

“Yeah. I guess.” She wasn’t, but her nervousness about being on television was competing with the horror of being so near Courtney’s body. She had to get down off this ladder as quickly as possible.

“Okay. Take one. Panning. Panning. Panning. Panning. Hi, Josie!”

“Hi, Bo… Mr… Shit. You wanted me to say hello to Courtney, didn’t you?”

“Sure didn’t want you to say hello to Mr. Shit.”

“Yeah. Sorry. Can we do that again? Take two?” she asked, inspired.

“Yeah, as Ms. Pigeon says, take two. Everyone’s a producer these days. We’ll start with the hello.

“Hello, Josie!”

She looked down at him and grinned. “Hello, Courtney… Miss Castle… Is it all right if I call her Courtney?”

“Everyone else in America does, why not you? Take three. Hello, Ms. Pigeon.”

“Hello, Courtney.” Josie found herself grinning foolishly down into the large lens of a video camera.

“Josie Pigeon is the founder, owner, and head carpenter at Island Contracting- What’s that, Josie?”

“I said not founder. It was founded by Noel Roberts. He died and left the company to me.”

“Well, I guess he was a real friend, wasn’t he? So, Josie, why don’t you tell us a bit about this house you’re working on today? That canoe is an interesting thing to hang from the ceiling. Is it decoration or is something hiding in there? What was that?”

“Sounds like a window coming out of a wall-the easy way, Courtney.” She was particularly proud of herself for remembering to speak to the dead woman, but she was having a difficult time not glancing over at the body. Then she had an inspiration. “You know, Courtney, this canoe is going to hang in the house after it’s remodeled. Except for the sculpture by the fireplace, pretty much everything else is going to change. Maybe you’d like to see the blueprints?”

“Cut. Josie, Courtney is the one who decides in what direction the conversation is going. Just respond to her questions, please.”

“Oh, of course.”

“So is this canoe going to hang in the house once it’s remodeled?”

“Yes.”

“And is it the only original decoration that will remain?”

“Well, there’s a sculpture next to the fireplace. It was created by a famous artist and will be in the new living room as well.”

“Maybe you could come down from there and we could look at the blueprints for this project?”

“Sure, Courtney. That’s a great idea.” She heard some snickering from her crew, but maybe the audience would think it was just some sort of construction noise. She made some unnecessary noise coming down the ladder, trying to cover it up. “I think the blues are on the counter in the kitchen.”

“Well, let’s go look at them, shall we?”

Thank God! Knees shaking from stress, Josie started to walk toward the kitchen.

“Cut!”

She jumped and looked around. That hadn’t been Bobby Valentine’s voice.

“Keep going in that direction and those women will be in the next shot,” the cameraman warned them.

Bobby Valentine stopped in his tracks. “I see what you mean, but we don’t want to give the impression that Josie and Courtney are here alone. I mean, it doesn’t hurt to have people in the background shots.”

“Maybe they could be working out on the deck and the camera could sort of glimpse them through the window. You know, enough to see people-women-working, but not enough so that they can be identified later.”

“Great. Good. Super. How about it, ladies?”

“Do you all mind?” Josie asked. She was beginning to feel very frustrated by this whole operation.

“We don’t mind at all,” Jill said, a smile on her face as she hurried out of camera range. Dottie, as usual, looked disgruntled. And Annette, spying Chad Henshaw carrying a load of lights toward the house, hurried in his direction.

“Josie, those blues are interesting and we’ll be referring to them as we go through the other shows, but right now I want to ask you about your past, about what led you to be a carpenter in the first place.”

“I… Courtney wanted you to ask me these questions?”

“Cut! I have a list here. It won’t take long, but answer as briefly as possible and PLEASE remember you’re talking to Courtney, as well as to thirteen or fourteen million viewers.”

“Thirteen… Well, go ahead.”

“Tell us a bit about your background. Where did you grow up, for instance?”

“I… I grew up in a small town, a suburb really, of Philadelphia.”

“Really? And what led you into carpentry? And to this island?”

“Well, I… um… that’s not easy to answer.”

“Were there builders in your family? Did you have any particular role model?”

Josie laughed. “No, my family specialized in bankers and businessmen, not builders. I… Do you think I need to answer these questions? They’re sort of private.”


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