Telorian and Pellam had spent an evening together several years ago, drinking and talking about Claire Trevor and Gloria Grahame and Robert Mitchum and Ed Dmytryk. They argued vocally and with white knuckles around their thick glasses of ouzo.
The reason for that meeting several years ago was Telorian's other avocation-producer of low-budget films. He had read Pellam's Central Standard Time and was interested in optioning it. This happened to be at a time when Pellam had not wished to have anything to do with film companies, except location scouting. A generous offer of option money was rejected and Telorian had huffed away from the meeting. Pellam had not thought about him since then. He now felt his pulse increase a few tempos as he asked, "He's in Maddox?"
More likely to see Elvis hustling for a table at the Hard Rock Cafe.
"He happened to be in Chicago. My secretary tracked him down. You kind of blew him off a few years ago, he says."
"I blew everybody off a few years ago."
"It's not like he's taking it personally. Not too personally. He still thinks Central Standard can be a hit. He's got to be home day after tomorrow but I got him to agree to stop over in St. Louis to talk to you."
"What does he feel about me directing?"
"Not a problem. He just wants to know how you'd do it. Times aren't as flush as they used to be. He's interested in hits.
He doesn't mind a grainy film. But it has to be hit grainy film. Got it?"
"When's his plane get in?"
"Whenever he tells his pilot to land. Meet us at eight at the Waterfront Sheraton. Lobby bar. You know where it is?"
"I can find it."
"About forty, fifty minutes from Maddox."
"He's got the treatment? The script?" Pellam asked.
"He's got everything. All you need to bring is as much Tony Sloan gossip as you can dig up."
In the floral-wallpapered entryway was a white Formica table. On it rested a Lucite pitcher filled with plastic flowers. To the left, through an arched doorway, was a parlor. The furniture in the rooms was mostly 1950s chain store-kidney-shaped tables, blond wood chairs, wing-backs and love seats upholstered in beige, a lot of plastic. Plastic everywhere. In the corner of the parlor was a young woman in a white blouse and black pedal pushers, struggling through a Chopin Etude. A young, muscular man in brown slacks and yellow short-sleeved shirt leaned against the piano, smiling at her and nodding slowly.
"When I first saw you, you know, it was the night of the dance. It was-"
"I remember." She stopped playing and looked up.
"It was hot as a in-line block. You were across the room under that Japanese lantern."
"That lantern, it was the one that was busted."
"Sure, it was busted and the bulb shone through that paper and covered you in light. That's when I knowed you was the girl for me." He put his hand on hers.
A heavyset man appeared slowly in the doorway. He lifted a Thompson submachine gun. The couple turned to him. Their smiles vanished,
"No!" The woman screamed. The man started forward toward the assailant. The gun began its fierce rattling. Pictures, vases, lamps exploded, black holes popped into the wall, bloody wounds appeared on the bodies of the couple as they reached toward each other. As the magazine in the submachine gun emptied and a throbbing silence returned, the couple slowly spiraled to the floor, their slick, bloody hands groping for each other's. Their fingers touched. The bodies lay still.
None of the fifteen or so sweaty people standing in the room around the immobile, bloody bodies said a single word. No one moved. Most of them were not even staring at the couple but were looking instead at the bearded man in jeans and green T-shirt who leaned against a reflector stand, his red eyes dancing pensively around the room. Tony Sloan paced over the spent machine-gun cartridges. He was shaking his head.
The man in brown sat up, wiped blood off his nose, and said, "Come on, Tony. It works."
"Cut," came the shout from behind the camera.
The bloody actress jumped to her feet and slapped her sticky palms on her hips. "Oh, Christ," she muttered viciously.
Sloan stepped closer to the carnage, surveying it. He spat out "It doesn't work.'"
The machine gunner pulled cotton out of his ears and said, "What's he say?"
The actress grimaced. "He says it doesn't work."
The killer shrugged.
Sloan motioned to Danny the script writer and the assistant director, a young blond woman in her early thirties. The three of them huddled in the corner of the room, while wardrobe and grips spread out onto the set, cleaning up. "We gotta shoot it outside," Sloan said.
The assistant director's golden ponytail swaggered as she nodded vigorous approval.
"Outside?" Danny sighed. According to the Writer's Guild contract, he was paid a great deal of money every time he revised Missouri River Blues. The fun of making that money, however, had long ago worn off.
"It's not, you know, dynamic enough," Sloan mused. "We need a sense of motion. They should be moving. I think it's important that they move."
Danny pulled his earplugs out. "If you remember the book and if you remember the shooting script, they escaped. I didn't kill them in the first place."
The director said, "No, no, no, I don't mean that. They've got to die. I just think they should get killed outside. You know, like it suggests they're that much closer to freedom. Remember Ross's fear."
"Fear of the lock-down," the assistant director recited, shaking her stern blond ponytail. It was impossible to tell if she was speaking with reverence or sarcasm.
Danny wound his own ponytail, the color of a raven's wings, around stubby fingers, then touched from his cheek a fleck of red cardboard from the blank machine-gun shells. He looked as exhausted as Sloan. 'Tell me what you want, Tony. You want them dead, I'll make them dead. You want them dead outside, I'll make them dead outside. Just tell me."
The director shouted, "Pellam? Shit, did he leave?"
Pellam, who had not been wearing earplugs but had been sitting on the front hall stairs thirty feet away from the shooting, stood up and walked into the living room. He dodged bits of pottery and glass and stepped over two arms assistants in protective gear who were removing several of the explosive gunshot-impact squibs that had failed to detonate.
Sloan asked him, "What about a road?"
"Why do you want a road?"
"I'd like them to die on a road," Sloan said. "Or at least near a road."
The actress in pedal pushers said, "I don't want to get shot again. It's loud and it's messy and I don't like it."
"You've got to die," Sloan said. "Quit complaining about it."
With a bloody finger she pointed to the cartridge of film the assistant photographer was pulling off the Panaflex camera.
"I'm dead. It's in the can."
The director stared at the ground. "What I'd like is to find a road going through woods. No, a field. A big field. Maybe beside a school or something. Ross and Dehlia are planning one last heist. But it's an ambush. The Pinkerton guys stand up in the window suddenly, out of the blue-"
Pellam began to say something.
"Will you stop with that Bonnie and Clyde shit already, Pellam?" Sloan snapped. "This'll be different.
Everybody thinks they're going to get shot-I mean, the audience is thinking Bonnie and Clyde. They're thinking they've seen this before. But uh-uh. Here, the lads get away. Maybe the guns don't go off and-"
Danny said, "Neither of the guns go off? There are two agents."
"Well, one gun jams and the other guy misses."