Read To the Moon and Back Online
Authors: Jill Mansell
âI'm sorry, Zack's not here today. Did you have an appointment?'
The couple on the doorstep looked disappointed. The girl, who was petite and dark-haired, said, âWe just called round on the off chance. Oh, what a shame! We read that piece about him in the
Telegraph
the other day and thought he sounded like our kind of person.'
âNot afraid to take a leap occasionally, if he comes across a proposition he likes.' The man with her was tall, thin, and slightly beaky looking, but in a good way. His hair was Scandinavian blond, his manner was enthusiastic, and he resembled a scruffily dressed tennis player. Eagerly he said, âAnd that's what we think we have for him.'
âOK, well, come in for a minute and let's see what we can do.' Ellie ushered them through to the office. Pulling the appointments diary across the desk, she said, âI tell you what, he's had a cancellation for tomorrow morning. I could put you in for eleven o'clock, how does that sound?'
âWe can do that. Brilliant.' They looked at each other and beamed.
âGive me your names.' Ellie reached for the diary and picked up a pen.
âKaye and Joe Kerrigan.'
âAnd the proposal's in there, is it?' She indicated the padded A4 envelope Joe was clutching to his chest like treasure. âWhy don't you leave it here, then Zack can have a look through it before he sees you? That'll save some time.'
âOh, butâ¦' Kaye looked worried, then stopped herself. âThe thing is, we kind of wanted to talk him through the whole thingâ¦'
Joe put a bony hand on her arm. âLet her take it. Whatever's easiest for Mr McLaren. We'll see him tomorrow.' He flashed Ellie an apologetic look. âSorry. This just means so much to us. You have no idea.'
âIt means everything in the world,' Kaye echoed longingly. âIf anyone can make this happen, it's Zack McLaren. We've been reading up on him all week.' Her eyes were shining. âYou're so lucky. He must be fantastic to work for.'
âHe's a nightmare.' Ellie broke into a smile. âNo, he isn't, he's great. I'll make sure he gets this.' She reached for the padded envelope. âAnd we'll see you tomorrow.'
âHang on.' Kaye grabbed the envelope before Joe could hand it over. âSorry! Just let me give it one last kiss for luckâ¦'
***
Zack arrived back at four. Ellie brought him up to date with everything that had been happening in the office. Then she passed him the folder that had been inside the padded envelope.
Zack flicked through the proposal for all of twenty seconds, then closed the folder, and Frisbeed it on to the desk.
âYou have to read it,' Ellie said.
âJust have.'
âAll of it!'
âI don't need to read all of it. I just need to get the gist.'
âAnd?'
âIt's a film script.'
âI know!'
âThey want me to be their backer, to provide the finance to get the film made.' Amused, Zack shook his head. âIt's completely crazy. Not my thing at all. No way.'
âBut if it took offâ¦'
âIt wouldn't. We're talking about the riskiest business on the planet. I wouldn't touch a project like that with a barge pole.'
Kaye and Joe Kerrigan's earnest faces, so filled with hope, swam in front of her. They were going to be devastated. Ellie said, âWhat about
Mamma Mia
?'
âThe exception that proves the rule.'
â
Titanic
.'
âThe other exception that proves the rule.'
â
ET
.'
âAnd just how much of your own money would you be prepared to bet that this script is as good as the script for
ET
? Look,' said Zack, âI'm not going to back these people. It would be madness. And don't look at me like that. I'm not an ogre. I just don't want to pack all my hard-earned money into one giant firework and explode it over London.'
âYou haven't even read the script,' Ellie protested.
âI don't need to. What would be the point?'
âOh, come on, you're an entrepreneur. It might be stupendous. You just don't
know
.' She jiggled the pen she'd been using. âHonestly, this couple has worked so hard on it. You not looking at the script is like⦠it's like spotting a Lotto ticket on the pavement but not bothering to bend down and pick it up because the chances are that it wouldn't win the jackpot anyway!'
Zack raised his hands in surrender. âOK, OK. You've made your point. You really want to shame me into reading this script?'
âYes, I really do.'
âFine then, you win. I'll read it.'
âPromise?'
âPromise.' His phone burst into life and Zack answered it. âRobert, thanks for getting back to me, do you have time to run through these figures now? Great, hang on, my notes are upstairsâ¦' Backing out of the office, Zack pointed to the folder on the desk then pressed his hand to his chest and silently mouthed, âI
promise
.'
When he'd gone, Ellie opened the folder and detached the film script from the rest of the paperwork. There were just over a hundred loose A4 pages. Crossing the office, she fitted them into the photocopier and pressed PRINT. She might not be a multimillionaire entrepreneur, but Kaye and Joe Kerrigan's enthusiasm had sparked her curiosity.
She was going to read the script, even if Zack wasn't.
***
âWell?' Ellie demanded the next morning.
âWell what?' Zack was throwing Elmo's rubber ball around the kitchen, bouncing it off the units so that Elmo skittered and slid across the cream marble-tiled floor like something out of a cartoon.
âDid you read it?'
âRead what?'
âThe film script.'
âOh, that. Yes I did.'
â
Woof.
' Elmo barked impatiently, ready for Zack to throw the ball again.
âWhat was it like?'
âActually, it was pretty good.'
Throw
.
Ellie filled the kettle at the sink, skipping out of the way as Elmo barreled past in ecstatic pursuit of the ball.
âAnd?'
âStill not doing it.'
âWoof woof
woof
.' Elmo's tail wagged furiously as Zack dodged behind the table and grabbed the ball a split second before he could reach it.
âWho was the priest?' said Ellie.
âWhat priest?'
Ha! âThe one in the film script who turned up at the end.'
Zack straightened up; his red polo shirt had come untucked and there was a new rip in the knee of his Levi's. âOh, that priest.' He narrowed his eyes in concentration then said innocently, âSorry.I don't think I can remember.'
Ellie shook her head. âYou promised.' The one thing she'd thought about Zack was that he was honest. If he said he'd do something, he should do it.
âI was really busy last night.' He was watching her reaction. âAnyway, how do you know there's a priest in it?'
âI made a copy, took it home last night, and read it.' Meaningfully, she added, âUnlike some people.'
âHave I disappointed you?' Zack lobbed the ball towards her, over Elmo's head. âHere, catch.'
Ellie caught it in her left hand as Elmo leapt into the air. âYes, you have.'
âNeat catch.' He signaled his approval. âSo what did you make of the script then?'
She threw the ball back to him, sending Elmo into a frenzy of excitement. âI thought it was brilliant. It
is
brilliant. It's funny, it's moving, and it's original. If it was made into a film, I'd go and see it.'
âWould you?'
âYes.'
Zack teased Elmo by waving the ball just out of reach. âAnd would you cry at the sad bits?'
âMaybe. OK,' Ellie conceded, âprobably.'
âLike when Mary finally meets the son she put up for adoption and discovers it's Father Dermot?'
âOh God,
yes
!' Belatedly she stopped dead in her tracks. Zack lobbed the ball into the air and she stood there, not even attempting to catch it. One of the stools clattered as Elmo almost brained himself, diving on the ball and triumphantly regaining possession at last.
Zack half-smiled and said, âIt just came back to me in a flash.'
âSo you did read the whole thing?'
âI wasn't going to. You shamed me into it.'
âExcellent.' Ellie felt herself flush with pleasure. âAnd will you back them?'
âI still can't do that.' He looked regretful. âIt's not my field, the risks are astronomical, I don't have any contacts who'd be prepared to invest in that kind of venture. But I did like the script,' he went on. âA lot. When they get here, I'll let them down lightly.'
âRight.' Oh well, at least she'd tried.
âAnd if their film ever does get made,' said Zack, âwe'll go along to the cinema and watch it together. My treat.'
Elmo dropped the ball at his feet, desperate to get the game up and running again.
Ellie said, âAnd will I get to say I told you so?'
Zack said good-naturedly, âDeal.'
***
The doorbell went at two minutes to eleven. Ellie opened the door to the Kerrigans and saw the naked hope in their eyes.
As she showed them into the hall, Kaye whispered excitedly, âHas he read the script?'
âHe has.'
âWe didn't sleep a wink last night! And on our way over here this morning we saw two magpies. Two for joy!'
Oh dear. And now Zack was about to dash their dreams. Ellie led them up the staircase and knocked on the living-room door.
âIt's finally happening. This could be it.' Joe Kerrigan, taking deep breaths, briefly touched Ellie's arm as they waited for Zack to appear. âWish us luck.'
They were in with him for almost thirty minutes. Ellie, typing away with her ears on elastic, finally heard the door open upstairs, followed by the sound of footsteps on the staircase. If the meeting had lasted half an hour, could that mean Zack had changed his mind?
Then she heard Joe say, âWell, thanks anyway,' and knew he hadn't.
Zack put his head round the office door. âI have calls to make, but Joe and Kaye would like a quick word before they go, so I'll leave you to show them out.'
âHe can't help us,' Joe explained when Zack had disappeared back upstairs. âBut we just wanted to say thanks for fighting our corner.'
âHe told us about you nagging him to read the manuscript.' Kaye was being heartbreakingly brave. âAnd he said you read it too.'
âI thought it was brilliant.' They were such a lovely couple.
âThat means so much.' Kaye smiled at her.
âYou mustn't give up.'
âWe won't. We can't,' said Joe. âWe think it's brilliant too.'
âPlus he's modest.' Kaye gave him a nudge.
âI can't help how I feel. This is our dream. It's been our dream for so long.'
âIt's just that we're starting to run out of options.'
Joe shook his head. âWe have to keep going.'
Ellie said, âLook, I don't know anything about getting films made, but do you have to do all this yourself? How about sending the script out to all the big film companies? Maybe one of them will snap it up!'
âWe've already tried that. Every company, every last screen agent. They all turned us down.'
âOh.' OK, now she felt stupid.
âWe have enough rejection letters to paper our whole house. It's just so frustrating.' Kaye
sounded
intensely frustrated. âMost of them don't even bother to look at the script. I started putting hairs between the pages so you could see if they'd been opened. And they hadn't!'
Nice. Ellie wondered how charmed any potential producer would be by the sight of a script full of hair.
âNot a whole head's worth.' Joe grinned. âJust one hair per script.'
âGlad to hear it.' He had an open, friendly face and an easy manner. Together he and Kaye made a good couple.
âAnyway,' said Kaye, âyou need to be getting back to work. But we just wanted to say thank you for being so enthusiastic and for doing your best with Zack.'
âDon't give up,' Ellie said as she showed them out.
âDon't worry.' Joe paused on the doorstep, then raised a hand in salute. âWe won't.'
Tony, back from three days in Wales, was watching
Deal Or No Deal
when Ellie arrived home from work.
âI've ordered Indian.' He waved to her from the sofa. âIt'll be here in twenty minutes. How was your weekend, darling?'
Ellie waited until the food had been delivered before telling him what she knew she had to tell him. Tony was flying back to LA tomorrow morning and he deserved to know the truth.
That was, if they didn't burst from overeating before she could get the words out.
âDid I order too much?'
âMaybe a bit.' Faced with a takeaway menu, Tony was famous for his inability to whittle things down. Practically every surface in the kitchen bristled with foil containers and discarded lids.
âI can't help it, I just hate the thought of missing out.' He was helping himself to lamb jalfrezi, peshwari naan, saag aloo, bindi bhaji, and mushroom rice. âRemember the time I ordered
the
tandoori chicken and they thought I'd said three?' Chuckling at the memory, Tony said, âJamie never could resist a challenge, could he? Ended up eating every last one of them.'
Oh no, and now he'd brought Jamie into the conversation. Her heart sinking, Ellie put down the carton of prawn bhuna. How to say it? She took a deep breath. âTony, do you think Jamie would be OK about it if I started⦠um, maybe seeing someone else?'
He stopped spooning mango chutney onto his lamb. There was the tiniest of pauses while he gathered himself.
âOh, my darling, of course he'd be OK. It's been a year and a half. Haven't I said this before? You
should
be getting out there again. Jamie would be happy for you, I know he would. And I'm happy for you too. So long as it's someone nice, someone who deserves you.' He looked at her sideways. âIs it someone nice?'
âYes.'
Tell him, tell himâ¦
âI think I know.' Tony's smile was compassionate. âAre we talking about Mr McLaren?'
What? God, what a thing to say
. âZack? No, it's not Zack!'
âOh, sorry, my mistake. Go on then, who's the lucky man?'
Ellie braced herself.
Just tell him
.
âUnless it's a woman,' Tony said hastily. âThat's fine too. It doesn't have to be a man.'
Ellie snorted with laughter and the tension was broken. âThe look on your face!'
âI know. Sorry.' He shook his head. âIt's all this bloody political correctness. Of course I'd rather it was a man.'
âWell, that's good, because it is a man.'
For crying out loud, just spit it outâ¦
âIt's Todd.'
Another pause. Then Tony broke into a broad smile and said, âReally? Even better! Sweetheart, that's great news. I had no idea.' He seemed genuinely pleased.
âMe neither. I thought we were just friends. And now it seems as if it might be⦠you know, turning into something else.' Hurrying to reassure him, Ellie said, âIt's very early days, though. He only told me on Saturday. Nothing's happened yet.' Way too much information probably, but she needed Tony to know she hadn't been cavorting here in the flat behind his back.
âTrust me, Jamie would want you to live your life.'
Hopefully he was right. âI'm doing my best.'
âAnd no need to feel guilty either.' Tony was perspicacious. âYou're not being unfaithful.'
âI know.' She dolloped a spoonful of rice on to her plate. âBut it still feels funny.'
âBound to.'
Now that she'd started, Ellie discovered she couldn't stop. âIt kind of feels like an arranged marriage.'
âOh, sweetheart, it's just a question of getting used to the idea. So long as the basic attraction's there, you'll be fine.'
Hmm, that was the other thing she wasn't so sure of.
Was
there a basic attraction? How could she even tell when she was this much out of practice? Since Saturday evening she had given it a lot of thought. Like the kiss itself, the prospect of becoming emotionally involved with Todd didn't fill her with abject horror. Whereas if she turned him down, his feelings would be hurt. Consequently she had decided to go along with the idea for the time being. If nothing else, it would be nice to be part of a couple, to just feel normal again.
Well, relatively normal.
Anyway, take things slowly, see how they go. And at least she'd told Jamie's dad now. That was one hurdle out of the way.
Their plates were both full. No longer even hungry, Ellie picked hers up and said, âShall we go through?'
In the living room, keen to change the subject, she launched into the story of Kaye and Joe Kerrigan's unsuccessful meeting with Zack.
âIt's tough.' Tony nodded in agreement. âYou've got more chance of being struck by lightning than you have of getting a film made. In LA,' he went on drily, âyou've got more chance of being struck by lightning than you have of finding someone who hasn't written a film script.'
âThis one's really good, though.'
âThousands of scripts are really good. Tens of thousands.'
âBut they tried sending it to agents and film companies and they didn't even bother to read the thing!'
âThat's because they get sent thousands of unsolicited scripts. Literally. If they sat down and read them all, they'd never get anything else done. Sometimes they'll look at the first page.' He said this as if that made it better.
Ellie said frustratedly, âThat's so unfair, though.'
âLike I said, it's a tough business.'
She swallowed a mouthful of bhaji. âI know. It's ironic, though, isn't it, that so many films do get made and turn out to be crap.'
***
The next morning Tony was up early, packed and waiting for his car to arrive and deliver him to Heathrow. Carrying his cup of coffee through to the living room, he flicked through the jumble of newspapers and copies of
heat
in the magazine rack in search of something to take with him to read on the plane.
TV Guide
, nope.
Cosmopolitan
, not likely. Cheap-and-cheerful holiday brochures, no thanks. Argos catalogue, just kill me now. Then he came to the screenplay Ellie had been banging on about last night. At one stage she'd even pulled it out of the rack and tried to persuade him to read it himself. What she lacked in slick salesmanship she more than made up for with enthusiasm, but he'd retaliated by arguing, âIs there a part for me in this nonexistent movie?' And when her face had fallen and she'd said, âWell, not really,' he had replied, âSo that would be like asking an alligator to be interested in a dandelion sandwich.'
Ellie had abandoned her campaign after that. Instead, they had watched
The Apprentice
on TV, made fun of the contestants, and chatted about his weekend in Wales with the cast of the upcoming
Gavin, Stacey, and Two Smoking Barrels
film.
Now Tony straightened and glanced out of the window. His car had pulled up outside. Fine, he'd pick up a few magazines when he reached Departures, but he could still do with something to pass the time on the way to the airport. A closer look out of the window confirmed that he'd yet again drawn the short straw on the driver front; Malcolm was a good soul, but his never-ending cheerfulness, garrulousness, and terrible impressions of celebrities were a bit too much to bear at this hour of the morning.
Tony drained his coffee cup, picked the screenplay out of the rack, and surveyed the title page:
My Long-Lost Irish Daddy
by Kaye and Joe Kerrigan. With a God-awful title like that, was it any wonder it hadn't been taken seriously by the professionals?
Right, he'd take the thing with him and read through it on the way to Heathrow; that way maybe noisy Malcolm would lay off the Tom Jones impersonations and leave him in peace. He zipped it into his hand luggage and paused in the hallway, wondering whether to knock on Ellie's door. Should he wake her up to say goodbye?
Sanity prevailed. It was six o'clock. In the months following Jamie's death, Ellie had suffered terribly from insomnia, not to mention the dreaded waking up at four in the morning and not being able to get back to sleep again. Her sleeping routine was only now returning to normal.
To disturb her would be an act of cruelty.
He'd just go.
***
Another weekend, another Saturday out with Todd, another awkward moment at the end of it.
And threeâthree!âkisses this time; one when he'd arrived at the flat, another while they'd been walking through Regent's Park, and now this, the goodbye one on her doorstep at the end of the evening.
Ellie did her best to make her muscles go loose. She'd been trying to just let herself relax into it, but it still felt weird. Her whole body was uncomfortable. Worst of all, she was now unable to banish from her mind the idea that Jamie was up there somewhere, looking down at them, watching her, and finding her ineptness and lack of engagement hilarious.
It was all so off-putting. No wonder she couldn't concentrate.
âI've had a really good time.' Todd stroked the side of her face, smoothing back a stray strand of hair.
âMm, me too.'
âSure?' Jamie's voice was in her head, as clear as anything. âBecause you never used to kiss me like that.'
Shut up, shut up, shut up.
âIf you've forgotten how to do it,' Jamie added helpfully, âmaybe you should sign up for evening classes.'
For crying out loud, was it any wonder she couldn't relax?
Todd was still doing the smoothing thing with her hair. âAre you OK?'
Could he stop doing it now? âYes, fine. Just a bit tired, that's all.'
âOh dear, oh dear.' Jamie tutted with amusement. âNow that's definitely not true.'
Bugger off, will you?
âTired,' echoed Todd, clearly equally unconvinced.
âSorry.' She could tell from his expression that he knew what she was saying. Basically, if he'd been entertaining hopes of staying over, it wasn't going to happen. Again.
âNo problem.' As before, Todd hid his disappointment well. âYou have a good night's sleep.' He gave her a final hug. âI'll call you tomorrow. And don't forget about Mum's barbecue, whatever you do.'
Ellie suppressed another qualm. Her very first invitation to a social event as Todd's girlfriend. It was his mum's sixtieth birthday the week after next. On that Wednesday they were having a big old party at home with a barbecue, dancing in the back garden, and friends and relatives from all over to celebrate the occasion. When Todd had broken the news to his mother that he and Ellie were an item, Maria Howard had evidently clapped her hands in delight and cried, âOh, how wonderful. I'm so
happy
for the two of you!'
So that was it; in eleven days' time Ellie would be introduced to everyone and officially welcomed into the family. What's more, there was nothing to be nervous about because she had it on good authority that they were all lovely people and looking forward to meeting her.
âA week on Wednesday.' She nodded and smiled reassuringly at Todd. âI'll write it on my calendar. I won't forget.'
âI can't wait for you to meet everyone. It's going to be great.' Todd gave her one last kiss on the mouth.
â
Mwah
.' Oh well, she liked parties and she liked people. Maybe actually being introduced as Todd's girlfriend would make it feel a bit more⦠real.