“Are … Are you requesting my assistance in an act of forgery, dear sister? Oh, how wayward you have become! Oh, stars! I am afraid I cannot—”
“For fuck’s sake, Cece, I need your help,” I hiss into the phone, my hands trembling. “It’s just a résumé. I can’t go in there Friday with nothing!”
Cece draws a deep breath into the phone. I can even picture her as she does so, her body turning rigid and her long eyelashes batting with irritation as she steels herself for her next words.
“Every actor must start somewhere. It is not my fault that you have no history. To have a history, you must first make one. Life experience makes the actor, Desdemona. Not a sheet of paper.”
“I haven’t been given the experiences you have. It isn’t fair of you to act superior to me, treating me like it’s my fault I don’t get the callbacks. You’re the one who inherited all our family’s magic mojo and left none for me. So help me out a little, Cece.”
“If I may allow you to stand corrected,” my sister retorts, her voice clipped and sterile, “with regard to our family’s ‘magic mojo’, you did, in fact, ask for a journey to Texas to find that very thing, didn’t you, dear sister? Why cannot you try and see this as a most precious opportunity to find that very special thing that makes you, you? I guarantee, it won’t be by forging a false résumé.”
I’m clenching my phone so tight, the muscles in my palm ache.
“Thanks for nothing, Cece. I gotta go. I’m so busy over here having my life experience.”
I hang up, cutting off her response. I always regret asking my sister for help; she makes me want to act upon violent impulses. With a huff, I turn to the sign-up sheet on the wall and bring a pen to its surface with too much force, scratching on my name.
When I’m about to turn away, I hear a noise from the opened door of the auditorium. I stop and listen.
Nothing else comes.
I move to the door and poke my head in. I don’t see anyone in the seats. Coming further inside, I look up at the stage. No one. Nothing.
“Hello?” I call out, like the half-naked bimbo does in the horror movie before she’s caught and gutted by the killer. “Hello?”
No one answers. I move down the aisle, curious, drawn by the silence. I ascend the steps and stand center stage, looking out at the seating, which is only half-lit by the spray of stage light above.
A smile finds my face. No one uses the auditorium at all, not until after auditions when the set building and rehearsing begins. This big room is abandoned for the time being, according to my new friends.
This auditorium is mine.
I imagine the seats filled to the walls with people who’ve purchased tickets. I imagine the hum of an animated crowd as they enjoy the house music and await the first act to begin. I imagine myself standing backstage, wringing my hands and excitedly longing for the drapes to be drawn. This is my moment. This is my show.
On this big stage, I feel a stronger sense of privacy than I do in my dorm. The desire to express myself grows strong, stronger … until I can no longer contain it. The first thing that comes to mind is a song no one’s heard of called “A Palace of Stone”. I part my lips and sing:
I have made a palace of stone,
a place of which to call my own.
Here is my bed
to lay down my head
and dream that I’m not alone.
For such a feat, what do I win?
The doors are deceivingly thin.
But I built the walls too high
nearly kissing the sky
so no one can find their way in.
There’s no staff to help with the messes.
There’s no guests to admire my dresses.
Dinners cook themselves
as I dust off my shelves
and watch as my lifetime progresses.
I’m an actress who shows no fear.
The bravest in my whole biosphere.
And by my painted skin
you see the people I’ve been
and the people I’ll never go near.
It’s work to perch atop this throne
made of credit cards and silicone.
Don’t dare give your heart
or you’ll fall right apart
right here in my palace of stone.
When I’ve finished, I imagine the room erupting into applause. I face the crowd and take it all in, rejoicing. I wonder if flowers are being thrown to the stage. I can smell them if I close my eyes.
There’s a noise from behind. I spin, alarmed by it.
He’s standing by the light rack, watching me. His eyes are fierce and focused, his lips parted slightly.
Oh shit. He heard everything.
“I-I’m sorry,” I murmur, my face flushing horribly. “I … I didn’t realize …”