Method Acting: An opposites attract, found family romance (Center Stage Book 2) Adele Buck (e novels to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Adele Buck
Book online «Method Acting: An opposites attract, found family romance (Center Stage Book 2) Adele Buck (e novels to read .TXT) đ». Author Adele Buck
Susan would hate that if she knew.
Not that Alicia would ever tell her. Aliciaâs few friendships were loose, light things, reflecting the nomadic nature of her life. But keeping tabs on Susan was professionally smart. They were all too often up for the same roles.
She tapped âReplyâ and thought for another minute before starting to type.
To: Susan Vernon
From: Alicia Johnson
Subject: Re: Ugh.
Oh, donât worry about the silence. What kind of friends would we be if we didnât let each other focus on ourselves from time to time? Sorry I couldnât stay for much of the party. The reviews are FABULOUS, though. I hear thereâs a possibility it will transfer to New York?
Alicia paused here, well aware that Susanâs tantrums had probably sunk her chances of staying with the show for an extended run, and thinking of New York, glanced down the quiet Capitol Hill street. Could she really stay here? For a while at least? Sheâd have to leave the cozy garden apartment in the old town house at the end of the summer when the professor who owned it returned from her summer abroad, but that didnât bother Alicia, as much as she liked its charm. Moving on was nothing new to her. Alicia decided to table that thought and returned to her e-mail.
And Cath and Paul are getting married? Frankly, itâs about time those two crazy kids got serious.
Alicia liked the pair, what she knew of them. And Susanâs claims that Paul had always been into her had seemed all tooâŠwell, all too Susan to be true. A feral grin spread across Aliciaâs face when she thought how much her bland acknowledgement of a thing that had been almost inevitable would tick Susan off.
Weâre beyond previews, sweetie. A week into the run, if you can believe it. We had a big shindig for donors last night. You know the kind of thing: let people get a thrill from talking to actual actors. Balance a ball on your nose for some rich people. And I did meet a lobbyist! Tall, dark, handsome, andâŠkind of an asshole, to be honest. Oh, well. What can you expect from rich people anyway?
Realizing she was chewing on her nail again, Alicia whipped the finger out of her mouth and wiped it on her shorts. She wondered if she should keep that last piece. It was a bit more open than she usually was in her e-mails to Susan. Shrugging one shoulder, she let it stand.
Anyway, enjoying a day off. Hot and sunny here. How is it in your rural hideaway?
Xoxo-âLis
Alicia tapped âSendâ without reviewing the e-mail again. Either it would enrage Susan and Alicia wouldnât hear from her again for a few weeks or months, or she would get a nice, gossipy message in a day or so. Either outcome was fine with her.
âSo, this âtroubleâ woman. Why so troubling?â Russellâs deep brown eyes filled with humor as he looked at Colin.
âIâm not sure. I thought we were having a nice conversation, if a bit confusing, and suddenly she just scarpered.â
âScarpered.â
âYes.â
âThat British for âfucked offâ?â
âQuite.â
âCan you think of anything you might have done to make herâŠer, scarper?â
Colin rubbed his chin. âI donât think so. I mean, I got off on the wrong foot with her initially, but then I thought the conversation was going rather well.â
âWait, wait, back upâwhat wrong foot?â Russellâs expression was amused. âAnd did you use that wrong foot to step on her toes?â
Colin grimaced. âWell, she is an actress in the production. AndâŠI might have intimated that I thought actors wereâŠnot trustworthy.â
Russell blinked. âYou called her a liar and were surprised that scarpering happened?â
âYouâve become all too fond of that word in a very short amount of time, my friend.â
âDonât change the subject,â Russell said. âHow the hell did you walk back from that? And donât tell me it was British charm.â
âOh, it wasnât. It was an abject apology.â
âAbject?â Russellâs eyes crinkled. He was enjoying this too much, damn him.
Colin pinched his thumb and forefinger close together. âThis close to a complete grovel.â
âOkay.â Russell took a long sip of beer. âAnd you managed to grovel, walk back from that, and still piss her off? How?â
Shrugging, Colin set his own glass down. âI have no idea. We were talking, I was a bit baffled. Every time I would think I had her figured out a little, she would surprise me. I wasâŠoff balance around her.â
âHm. And she just walked off?â
âWell she said her castmate was calling her over.â
âYou sound like you donât believe her. Again.â
Colin shrugged.
âLet me get this straight,â Russell said, extending one finger. âYou call the woman a liar having barely met her.â Another finger joined the first. âYou managed to apologize well enough that she didnât tell you to fuck off forever.â A third finger. âYou still somehow donât trust her when she says a colleague is calling her over and she has to leave.â Russell studied Colinâs face. âAnd if you looked anything like that,â he said, waving the three fingers at Colinâs expression, âshe probably saw this distrust in your eyes. You should never play poker.â
âI donât.â
âGood.â Russell picked up his pint again. âBut Iâll tell you what as someone whoâs been married, divorced, and live to tell the tale. This sounds like Tressa living rent-free in your head.â
âWhat do you mean by that?â
âYou meet someone new and the first thing you think of is what broke up your last relationship.â
âYouâre saying I think she shagged the doorman of her condo like Tressa did?â
âCute. No. Iâm saying this womanâŠdoes she have a name, anyway?â Russell asked.
âAlicia.â
âYou meet Alicia and the first thing you assume is that sheâs lying to you. Like Tressa did. Youâre looking for patterns.â
Colin shifted on the bar stool, turning this truth over in his mind.
Russell jabbed him in the ribs with an index finger. âSeems like Alicia got under your skin, dude. Any plans to see her again?â
âWhat would
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