Magic Hour Susan Isaacs (best books to read for self development txt) đ
- Author: Susan Isaacs
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âShit. All right, if I get finished by ten, ten-thirty, can I pick you up and take you over to my place?â
Just as Lynne was saying, âOkay, but not too late a night, because I have a huge pile of test results for next yearâs kids I have to go through,â a Southamp-MAGIC HOUR / 113
ton Village cop appeared at the door with a surprise guest: Gregory J. Canfield.
Gregory gaped at the room, slack-jawed, trying to register everything, as if the decorâincluding the brown-stained hot plate of the Mr. Coffee machine and me with my feet upâwas going to be the subject of his final in Advance Set Design at NYU film school. Now that there was no corpse to upset his delicate balance, he was Mr. Movie Man.
I said, âPeople. Speak to you later,â to Lynne and âThanksâ
to the cop whoâd shown Gregory in. Then I hung up, swung my feet off the Xerox machine and told Gregory to sit. But he barely got through the door when he stopped short. You could see his mind moving in for a close-up; he stood before the bulletin board, staring at a yellowing FBI Most Wanted list, at hand-printed signs offering Doberman-mix puppies, an â81 Datsun 280 ZX and a model 12 Winchester pump-action shotgun, probably wishing someone else from NYU
was there to share this Moment of Authenticity.
âOkay, now you know what lower middle class looks like, Gregory. Time to sit down.â He did. âYouâre here to help me. Right?â
He nodded. He looked slightly less repulsive than the day before, mainly because instead of baggy shorts, he was wearing baggy slacks. His skeletal white legs, with their bulbous kneecaps, were covered. âI remembered what I couldnât remember last night.â
âGreat,â I replied. I waited. He was staring at my holster, which was clipped onto my belt. âYou remembered something?â
âYou asked me if there were any threats made to Sy Spencer.â
âAnd?â
âI donât know if youâd classify this as a threat. I 114 / SUSAN ISAACS
mean, a genuine threat.â Gregory hesitated. Now he was gazing at me with the same passionate intensity heâd directed at the bulletin board. Heâd obviously decided I was the star of this movie. He flushed. He fidgeted. He beamed at me. I was his True Detective.
âListen, Gregory, anything you think is even remotely threateningâa dirty lookâis something I want to hear about.â
âDid you know Sy had an ex-wife who lives in Bridgehampton?â
My heart gave a thump. I sat up, alert. Damn it, Iâd been right. There was something about her. âBonnie Spencer,â I said. His face fell. âHey, if by this time I didnât know Sy had an ex in the neighborhood, what the hell kind of detective would I be?â Gregory still looked like he was debating whether or not to be clinically depressed. âNow come on.
Youâre my key man in this investigation. Okay, I gave you a name: Bonnie Spencer. But now itâs your job to fill me in.â
âWell, Sy married her right at the beginning of his career as producer. Sheâd written the scenarioâŠThatâs another term for screenplay. Itâs more common in Britain. In any case, sheâd written a movie called Cowgirl in the late seventies.
Unpretentious film. Her credit was Bonnie Bernstein.â
That big Utah jockette didnât strike me as a Bernstein.
âHad she ever been married before Sy?â I asked.
âI donât know.â
âOkay, go on.â
Itâs funny; as he was talking, I realized that Bonnie had been on my mind since Iâd left her that morning. I couldnât shake the images I had of her. One was the real Bonnie as Iâd seen her. The other one was even more vivid, and unconnected with reality; she was in some sort of sleeveless thing, a dress or a tank top, that bared part of her broad shoulders.
I could see
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her arms and shoulders: strong, smooth, with the sheen of a deep tan. Incredibly silky skin. It was really, well, an exciting imageâand a strange one, because the bare-shouldered Bonnie in my mindâs eye was so incredibly desirable, and really had nothing to do with the big girl in the big T-shirt Iâd interviewed.
âThe marriage broke up,â Gregory reported, âand she went into total eclipse as a writer.â
âHow come?â
âI donât know.â
Maybe, I thought, Bonnie Spencer reminded me of someone else, some large, bewitching girl out of my past.
That made sense. But my house was no more than four miles from hers; I could have passed her one summer evening on one of my runs and focused in on her best few square inches.
Or maybe Iâd given her a half second of consideration in my bar-hopping days, before moving on to someone better. Who the hell knew? In all those years of drinkingâespecially toward the endâthere were black holes in my memory. We could have met at a cocktail lounge and discussed Truth and Beauty all night, and it would be a total blank.
âFrom what Iâve heard,â Gregory went on, âBonnie is pretty much of a zero. Her only real significance is that she used to be married to Sy. But even then, I probably wouldnât have heard about her if she hadnât come to the set.â
Right. Bonnie had mentioned sheâd dropped in to see Sy.
âWhat happened?â
Gregory rubbed his palms together as though he was heating them up for a passionate prayer. âOne of the other P.A.s came running over to me, saying Syâs ex-wife was there and what should he do. But he couldnât do anything, because she was right there behind him. Sheâd followed him. To see her, sheâs
116 / SUSAN ISAACS
this very plain Jane type, but you could understand how she must have learned a thing or two from Sy, because before I could say a word or go get one of the assistant directors, she walked right past me and knocked on the trailer door. I said,
âExcuse me, miss, but that trailer is private. Iâll have to ask you to please wait over by the craft services table.â
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