Authors: Lisa Mantchev
Gertrude shivered as though something had already wriggled up her stocking. “I don’t work with reptiles.”
Hamlet stopped leaning on the pyramid he’d been holding up since his dressing-down. “But think of the impact you could have, using live ones! Imagine Mother Dearest as a reincarnation of Cleopatra, with an asp clasped to her breast.”
“Leave my breasts out of it, you little degenerate!” Gertrude threw her cup at him.
He dodged remarkably fast for a melancholy introvert. Most of the coffee ended up on Polonius, who shrieked and attempted to dry himself on the curtains.
“Let’s just fetch out one of the dear creatures.” Hamlet peeked into the basket and grinned. A premonition of doom slid through Bertie, but before she could stop him, the prince dumped out the slithering contents of the basket, and a dozen glittering, very-much-alive asps wiggled free.
Gertrude screamed and jumped onto her chair as the rest of the cast scattered to the outermost edges of the stage.
Bertie hopped from one foot to the other, trying to make sense of it. “Someone call a Snake Charmer!”
“Help!” Gertrude shrieked. “Murder! Sabotage!”
Yes, sabotage. Probably by Ariel’s hand.
Bertie caught sight of the Stage Manager smirking into his headset.
Except it’s not just Ariel who wants to see me fail. I have more enemies than Hamlet himself.
“A little help, if ye please!” Nate had leapt onstage to grab snakes and shove them back into the basket.
Bertie flapped at her sleeves until they covered her hands—hardly protection against a venomous bite, but it was better than nothing. She grabbed an asp by the tail and flung it at him, doing her best not to shriek.
“Well done!” Moth yelled, flying past her to help.
“Don’t touch them,” Bertie said, catching hold of two more and feeling her skin prickle all over as she dropped them in the basket. “I don’t want any of you getting bitten.”
Nate returned with a wiggling handful.
“Bertie!” Peaseblossom cried, pointing at the side door. “The Players are running away!”
Bertie raised her voice to a shout. “Everyone is going to take their places for Act One, Scene One, this instant!”
“What about the snakes?” Gertrude demanded, poised to make a grand exit. Her Ladies-in-Waiting agreed with clucks and murmurs of equal parts sympathy and vitriol.
“We got them,” Nate announced as he clapped the lid back on the basket. “Every last one.”
“We haven’t any time to waste,” Bertie said, standing on tiptoe to make her entreaty. “We need to make it through the play at least once this afternoon!”
Amidst grumbles and confusion, everyone moved into position while keeping a careful watch on the floor. Bertie went out into the auditorium and took a seat, signaling to Francisco and Bernardo.
The latter clomped over to stand in front of the center pyramid. “Who’s there?”
The Ghost of Hamlet’s Father shoved past him. “Whooooooooo!” He circled the astounded sentries with his costume flapping.
“That’s not the cue for your entrance,” Bertie said, addressing the pink-flowered sheet. “Excuse me! Stop that immediately.”
He continued to flap around the stage like an enormous, psychotic bird. “Whoop, whoop, whooooo!”
“I think the costume change might have broken his head,” Bertie said. “Can I get some help, please?”
Marcellus and Horatio joined Bernardo and Francisco. The four of them chased the Ghost around the pyramids and into the orchestra pit.
“Your cue,” Bertie yelled over the din of overturned instruments and creative cursing, “is ‘the bell then beating one.’ Get backstage, and change out of that ridiculous thing.”
The Ghost obediently ripped off his sheet with a flourish. Gertrude put a hand to her forehead and swooned against the nearest Lady-in-Waiting.
“Oh, please!” said Claudius. “You were married to him!”
Gertrude stopped overdramatizing long enough to glare at him. “So?”
“So, unless Hamlet was an immaculate conception, there’s nothing going on there that you haven’t seen before. Stop playing the dewy-eyed virgin.” Claudius jabbed a finger in Ophelia’s direction. “That’s her job!”
“If you like her so much, why don’t you marry her?”
“Maybe I will!” Claudius took Ophelia by the hand and began to kiss his way up her arm.
“Let me go!” Ophelia struggled, but she was no match for the portly king.
“Cad! Philanderer!” Gertrude closed her fan and hit Claudius with it.
“Hellcat!” he yelped even as an angry, red welt bloomed on his cheek.
Gertrude swung at Claudius again. When he turned to run, he collided with the naked Ghost, and the two men went down in a tangle of limbs.
“Line!” Hamlet yelled. “For mercy’s sake, someone give me the line!”
Bertie watched with growing horror as the brawl expanded to include most of the Ladies-in-Waiting and Rosencrantz.
Guildenstern abandoned the fray to lick all the swords in sight, testing for poison. Someone in the very back row of the auditorium snickered.
Bertie turned to see who would make such a noise and spotted Lady Macbeth. “This is a closed rehearsal! Get out!”
“Interloper!” Gertrude bellowed as she charged down the stairs after her rival.
Lady Macbeth shrieked and leapt for the aisle. Bertie managed to grab Gertrude by her sash, thwarting the attack.
“Unhand me this instant!” Gertrude turned to kick at Bertie through a swirl of satin petticoats and bad temper.
Retreating from the assault, Bertie stumbled, fell, and cracked her head on a wooden armrest. Two Gertrudes stuck their fans in Bertie’s face.
“I hold you personally responsible for this anarchy,” they screeched.
“Me? You hold me responsible, you stupid old
sow
?” Bertie clutched at her head and tried to clear her vision. “Get out, or I’ll kick your sorry ass myself!”
“How dare you?” Gertrude puffed up to twice her already considerable size and thrust out her chin. “I will speak to the Management about your ineptitude this very second.”
“You do that!”
The fairies converged on Bertie as she struggled to her feet. There were eight of them, then twelve.
That is,
she thought,
twelve too many.
Bertie put a hand to the back of her head. Pain lanced in one eye and out the other. Her hand came away smeared with red. “I probably have a concussion.”
“Let me have a look, lass.” Nate reached for her.
Bertie peered up at him through a haze of pain and tears. “Just stay away from me, all of you. I’ve had enough help for one day.” She stumbled to her seat and pulled The Book out of its hiding place. “Clear the stage!”
No one tried to stop her as she fled into the corridor. The door hissed shut behind her, and hot tears pricked her eyes.
How long do I have before the Theater Manager kicks me out?
Bertie swallowed a sob, tightened her arms around The Book, and limped in the direction of the Properties Department.
T
he Properties Department
was unoccupied when Bertie arrived. Dropping to her knees, she shoved The Book under Marie Antoinette’s chaise and muffled its golden glow with one of the pillows. Resting her forehead against the sofa cushions, she wanted to cry until there was nothing left, but tears were saltwater.
And an impromptu appearance by a pissed-off deity is the last thing I need right now!
The door behind her opened, and Mr. Hastings entered, squinting at a piece of his ever-present paperwork.
Bertie stood up so that he wouldn’t catch her kneeling on the floor and ask what she was doing. “Hey, Mr. Hastings.”
He adjusted his spectacles. “How did the rehearsal go?”
Bertie stared very, very hard at his stapler and refused to blink, refused to let the tears fall.
Except it wasn’t working.
She reached up, closed her hand around the medallion, broke the chain with one swift jerk, and slid the necklace in her pocket as the first tear slid down her cheek. “Not well. I expect the Theater Manager will be here any second to throw me out.”
Her nose was running now. Bertie went to swipe at it with her sleeve, but Mr. Hastings stopped her with a look and held out his voluminous white handkerchief.
“What happened?” he demanded.
Before Bertie finished explaining, the Properties Manager’s shoulders shook with laughter that was silent at first, then a bit rusty, like he’d stored his sense of humor between the oxidized metal birdbaths and boxes of discarded iron finials.
“My dear, I am so sorry about the mix-up with the snakes! But do you honestly think you’re the first member of Management to have difficulty with the Company?” He turned to put the kettle on the electric burner and reached for a tin of biscuits. “Every one of them, at one point or another, has ended up right where you’re sitting.”
Bertie picked through the biscuit tin until she found one dipped in chocolate. “Probably not the Stage Manager.”
“Oh, yes.” Mr. Hastings spooned tea into the chipped ceramic pot. “Even him.”
“What about the Theater Manager?”
“Didn’t start off as the Theater Manager. He wanted to write a grand opera.”
That surprised a small laugh out of Bertie. “Really?” She paused to think about him as a playwright, and the quill-tickle returned.
“Wrangling this lot took all his time and effort, so he gave it up,” Mr. Hastings said. “You’ll try again, and you’ll do better each time, I promise you.”
“Uh-huh.” Bertie shoved the entire biscuit into her mouth and poked between its plain butter brethren for another. “I had my audition, and I’m not getting a callback.”
“What do you mean by that, my dear?” He reached for the cups.
Bertie chewed and swallowed first, because Mr. Hastings didn’t appreciate it when she spewed crumbs on his desk. “It means I blew my chance at staying.”
“You’re a bit young to be so very cynical,” Mr. Hastings observed.
“Mrs. Edith said the same thing to me yesterday,” Bertie said with a lopsided shrug. “But I’m older than Juliet, and she was plenty cynical by the end of that mess.”
Mr. Hastings winced. “Touché.” He pushed a teacup at
her. “Drink up. It won’t restore your soul, but it might settle your thoughts.”
“Can you put some pirate rum in it?”
“I find myself fresh out,” he said. “But would you care for a bit of unsolicited advice instead?”
She sighed and wrinkled her nose. “That depends. Is it the kind of advice that has me pulling myself up by the bootstraps and slogging my way to school barefoot in the snow, uphill, both ways?”
“Not quite.” Mr. Hastings added a bit of lemon to his tea. He carefully stirred three times counterclockwise and ran the edge of his spoon along the thin porcelain rim of the cup. “It’s more along the lines of badinage and persiflage.”
“Persi-what?”
“Banter, my dear. You’re exceptionally skilled at wheedling people into doing things they wouldn’t normally do.” He held up a hand to silence her when she began to protest. “Please don’t argue. We both know it to be true.”
“And if it is?” Bertie shoved another biscuit into her mouth and chewed viciously.
“Play to your strengths. Become the person you need to be. Put your Players at ease and persuade them to dance down the path of your choosing. The trick is to let the sheep think they are herding themselves.”
“Sheep, eh?” Bertie said. “Has Gertrude heard you compare her to a farm animal?”
“Goodness, no,” Mr. Hastings chortled. “Otherwise I wouldn’t be alive to tell the tale.”
“Badinage,” said Bertie.
“And persiflage,” Mr. Hastings finished for her.
“That’s if anyone bothers to show up to the next rehearsal,” she said.
“They’ll be there. They’re too curious to miss it.” He reached over to the vintage stereo cabinet and dropped the needle on a thick, vinyl record. Instantly, the room filled with the guitar-song and castanets of a tango.
“Why, Mr. Hastings,” Bertie teased. “I never would have figured you for an aficionado of the Latin dances. Shall I put a rose between my teeth?”
“I think you have more important matters to attend to at the moment.”
Bertie sighed into her tea, not at all convinced that she could direct the next rehearsal or that there would even be another rehearsal once Management heard Gertrude’s thoughts on the matter.
“I hate to ask,” Mr. Hastings said, “but about the asps?”
“We got them all back in the basket.”
“I should fetch them and examine the container. It must have been mislabeled. If you’ll excuse me for a moment?”
Bertie nodded, finishing her tea and three more chocolate-covered biscuits as she mulled over his advice.
Become the person you need to be.
Mr. Hastings could well dispense such wisdom, but transformation wasn’t as simple as sipping from Alice’s “Drink Me” bottle.
Unless it is just that simple.
Before she could second-guess the idea, Bertie was out of her chair and running full tilt for Shelf 49B. There were the hookahs, in all their jewel-toned glory; one shelf up and over sat a faceted crystal bottle, etched with the infamous command.
Bertie wrapped her fingers about it and pulled the stopper out. The gently sloshing contents smelled of fruit and candy, coffee and mint, and something else, under all that, something sweet and dark and flower-filled.
Alice needed to be short to get through the tiny door.
Bertie caught her distorted reflection in the green glass surface of the Caterpillar’s hookah.
And I need to become the sort of person who can command my cast. A person the Theater Manager thinks of as invaluable.
“Bottoms up.” Sparing a second to pray she wouldn’t shrink to the size of a dormouse, Bertie took the tiniest of sips.
And waited. In the distance, she could hear the record player lift its arm and lower the needle back at the beginning of the song. She didn’t feel different, and judging by the metal shelving, she hadn’t lost any height, either.