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Subject: {ASSM} Transcending the Role (Part Five of Six) by Frank Downey (mf teen rom) 
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Copyright 2002 Frank Downey. All rights reserved. Permission for any use
other than personal must be requested from the author. Do not repost.

This is adult material. If you're not one, begone.

Like this? More of my stuff is at

http://www.asstr-mirror.org/files/Authors/Frank_Downey/www/

TRANSCENDING THE ROLE
Part Five
By Frank Downey
fabfour.fan@verizon.net

THE ENSUING WEEKS

They had gone to the exclusive Governor's Ball party after the awards.
Meredith, still stunned, bathed in all the accolades and paraded Josh around
the room, introducing him to all the big stars. A few, referencing her
speech, made references to "the famous Josh" which had poor Josh walking
around half the night with a spreading blush.

When they got back to the hotel room, Meredith was still wound up, so she
tackled Josh into the bed and they made love for hours. When they got to the
airport the next day, they were exhausted, but happy.

They slept Monday, but headed back to school on Tuesday.

Meredith found she could barely move.  She was congratulated by well-wishers
at every turn. All the teachers in every class she was in found it difficult
to maintain order, as the first 15 minutes of every class turned into
questions about Meredith's exploits. Not that the teachers minded much.

Meredith ate with Josh, Kylie, and Tomasz, as usual, and Meredith held
court, telling her best friends about the weekend.

Things got a bit back to normal with the foursome the next day, but Meredith
was still being stopped in the halls, and on the street.

She and Josh spent the whole weekend together. Josh was amazed when they
went to the restaurant and she was repeatedly accosted with autograph
requests and gushing fans. She seemed to handle it well, though.

When they got back to Meredith's house, Josh noticed a huge pile of paper
scattered around the living room.

"Scripts!" Meredith told him. "I'm getting script after script sent to me,"
she giggled. "And Mike keeps calling."

"I thought you weren't going to do a film after the one this summer," Josh
pointed out.

"Well, I'm going to keep my options open in case I get offered the role of a
lifetime," she said, "but most of this stuff is lightweight. Top billing,
and you wouldn't believe the money Mike says he can get me for some of
these, but nothing's jumped out at me."

They spent all weekend together, and spent most of Saturday in bed.

It was the next Monday that things started to change.

First of all, Meredith, in the lunchroom, was waylaid by Jackie Dumars and
the rest of the cool clique. She went and ate lunch with them that day. And
the following two days.

"What is going on with her?" Kylie asked Wednesday.

"Well, look," Tomasz said astutely, "they're fawning over her. We didn't do
that. We were proud of her and happy for her, sure, but after the first day,
we treated her like Meredith, our pal. They're treating her like a
Superduperstar."

"That's funny, because she told me she hated the fawning," Josh said. "It
was one of the reasons that she was crying under the bleachers, that first
day I met her."

"Maybe things have changed," Kylie pointed out.

"Or maybe she's just being nice," Josh countered.

"You'd better find out," Tomasz told him.

Josh tried to, the next day. He cornered her in English class. "Hey, honey,
we miss you at lunch."

"Oh, I'm sorry, honey, but Jackie and her friends just want to talk about
the Academy Awards. I'm just giving them a little thrill. Don't worry about
it."

"OK," he said, tempering his worry. "So, what are we doing tomorrow night?"

"Oh, Josh, the girls want to take me out. To celebrate, you know. I'll catch
up with you later in the weekend."

"OK," Josh said, even though it wasn't.

When he relayed that conversation to Kylie and Tomasz at lunch, Tomasz told
him, "This don't look good. This don't look good at all."

Josh was forced to agree, especially when Meredith begged out of seeing him
on Saturday, claiming that she had to "get through some of these scripts."

The whole next week, Josh barely saw Meredith. She wouldn't eat lunch with
the guys. She let Jackie Dumars and her friends fawn all over her. Josh even
noticed she looked different. She was wearing far more makeup. Josh got a
glimpse in English class-and couldn't see her freckles.

He grabbed her that Friday. "So, am I going to see you this weekend?" he
said, faking calm.

"Well, I don't know. Jackie and the girls want to go out tonight. Tomorrow's
kind of up in the air."

"Meredith, what about us?"

"Oh, Josh, don't worry. It'll all work out."

"Meredith, you're different. You've changed."

"Well, we all change, don't we? Hey, you can't expect a person to win an
Academy Award and not change. I have demands, obligations."

"Here, in Lamawakka?" Josh asked.

"Well, yeah. Jackie and her friends are big fans of mine. They tell me so,
all the time."

"I thought I was your biggest fan," Josh said softly.

"Well, you are. But not about my acting," she giggled.

"I like your acting."

"Yeah, but they love my acting. Look, Josh, I'll talk to you later."  She
hurried off.

"But I love the whole you," Josh said softly to the air.

THE NEXT MONDAY

Meredith's parents had sensed something was up with their daughter, but she
lowered the boom at supper that next Monday night.

"Mom? Dad? I want to talk to you about something."

"OK, honey, shoot," Bill said.

"I think I should stay in California after 'Lessons in Danger' is done
filming."

"What?" Marie blurted out. "What brought this on?"

"Mom, I'm hot. I can't keep up with all the scripts, and Mike says he can
get me huge money if I agree to do a couple of them after 'Lessons in Danger
'. I just won an Academy Award. An opportunity like this isn't going to come
around again."

"What about Josh?" Marie asked.

"I can't turn down these opportunities just for him."

Bill was really worried now. "I thought you hadn't seen too many meaty roles
in those scripts."

"Who cares? 'Lessons' is a meaty role, but it's not top billing. I'm
committed to do it, anyway, so I might as well cash in afterwards. These
people want to make me a star. Top billing, top money."

"That's not a good enough reason," Bill said. "I think it wouldn't be a good
idea at all for you to stay in Hollywood after this summer."

"Well, you don't get a say in it," Meredith spat out, stunning her parents.
"'Lessons' finishes shooting in mid-September. I turn 18 in mid-October.
Unless you want to stick to your guns and force me home for a month, then I'
m staying, because after I turn 18 you can't say a word about it anyway."

"MEREDITH!" Bill hollered. "What has gotten into you?"

"I have a career I need to maintain," she said, standing up to place her
dish in the dishwasher.

"What about college?" Marie tried.

"Jeez, Mother, I'm an Oscar winning actress. Who needs college?" she
sneered, and left the room.

"Oh, Jesus, what are we going to do now?" Marie moaned after Meredith had
left.

"What can we do?" Bill asked. "She's right. She's going to be 18. We don't
have much of a say."

"I don't understand what's gotten into her."

"Unfortunately, I do," Bill said. "The Oscar is going straight to her head."

"You're right. And the one person who could bring her back to earth is Josh,
and I haven't seen him around for over two weeks," Marie pointed out.

"You think she's blowing him off?" Bill asked.

"If she's planning on going back to Hollywood, of course she is," Marie
pointed out.

THE NEXT WEDNESDAY.

"You're losing her." Tomasz told Josh at lunch. "I'm telling you, she's
slipping through your fingers."

"Don't I know it."

"What are you doing about it?" Kylie asked him.

"What can I do?"

"Confront her," Tomasz told him. "Make her lay her cards on the table. She's
leaving to do that film in a couple of weeks. It's now or never, pal."

"He's right," Kylie said. "I mean, look at her. Jackie Dumars and her clones
are fawning all over her, and she's eating it up with a spoon. Is that the
Meredith you know and love?"

"No. No, it isn't," Josh agreed. "You're right, I need to confront her."

He waited for her to get out of school that afternoon, and then followed
her, making sure she was going home. She was. He quickly pulled up in front
of her house and knocked on the door.

"Josh! What are you doing here?" Meredith said, flustered, as she answered
the door.

"We need to talk."

"It's not a good time," Meredith said nervously.

"It never seems to be a good time, lately. Why are you avoiding me?"

"Um, well, all right. Come in. I'd might as well get this over with." She
led him into the living room, and sat down on the couch next to him.

"Josh," she began, "when I go out to Hollywood to do the film next month,
well, I'm not coming back."

"Not coming back?" Josh managed to get out.

"No."

"What do your parents think about this?"

"They can't say a thing about it. I turn 18 in October. I can do what I
want."

"What about us?" Josh asked.

"Well, there's no point in having an 'us' if we're going to be three
thousand miles apart."

"Meri, why are you doing this?"

"Oh, Josh, you should see the offers I'm getting!"

"Oh. Good roles?"

"Good roles? Who cares?" Meredith blurted out. "We're talking about star
billing! Big money! Oh, Josh, you have no idea what winning an Oscar does to
your career. Everybody wants me."

"I want you too, you know," Josh said sadly.

"Oh, Josh, I know this is hard, but it's for the best. I need to cash in
while I can."

"You never cared about that before."

"Well, things change."

"What about the prom?" Josh asked.

"Well, things being the way they are, you should probably find someone else
to take."

"So, this is it? It's over, just like that?" Josh said plaintively.

"I'm sorry, Josh, it has to be." She giggled. "Just think, though, now you
can tell everybody that you slept with an Academy Award winner."

Josh recoiled like he had been slapped. Furiously blinking back the tears,
he blurted out, "I can not believe you just said that," and ran out of the
house.

Meredith's conscience prodded her to go after him. She ignored it.

THE NEXT MONTH

Josh was living in hell.

He didn't know what was worse-watching her prance around the school,
ignoring him, in the two weeks before she left-or not watching her prance
around the school after she was gone.

Tomasz and Kylie tried to provide all the support they could, but they
couldn't do much.

Tomasz, worried, blurted out after a few weeks, "Man, you got to get over
her."

Josh just looked at him. "If Kylie walked out of your life, never to return,
would you be able to get over her just like that?"

"Uh, well, no. Good point. Forget I said anything."

"Josh," Kylie tried, "It's just that we're worried about you."

"I know you guys are, and I appreciate it," Josh said, "but I have to work
this out on my own."

Two weeks after Meredith had left, Josh got a package in the mail.

He eagerly opened it, knowing what it was-two copies of the Anthology of
Young American Poetry. He quickly opened up one copy, and found his poems.
That provided a needed bit of cheering up-seeing his work in print. He
called Tomasz and Kylie and shared the good news with them.

Afterwards, he looked at the other copy. He had ordered that for Meredith.
There was a poem in there, which she had never read. It was for her. Giving
it to her this way, printed in the book, was supposed to be a surprise. He
knew the books would arrive after she left for California, so he had planned
to give it to her on prom night.

I should just give it to Kylie, he thought. And then he decided, no.

He knew Meredith's original plans were to have her mother accompany her to
the film set for the duration, as she always did, and her father was going
to fly out for a week in early June when he took his vacation from the law
firm. Josh wondered if those plans were still in force. Well, there was one
way to find out.

He took the copy of the poetry book, and took a sticky note and attached it
to the page containing the poem he had written for Meredith. He jotted a
little note on it, and then wrapped the book up in some wrapping paper. Then
he got in the car.

"Josh!" Bill Fowler said as he opened the door. "Come in. What can I do for
you?"

"Hi, Mr. Fowler. I was wondering if you were still planning on going to see
Meredith next week."

"Yeah, I am," he said with a sigh. "Evidently things on the film set are not
all hunky-dory. I don't know exactly what's up, but I am going out there."

"Oh," Josh said. "Well, would you mind giving this to her for me, please?"
He held out the package.

"I'd be glad to." Bill took a breath. "Josh, you're a fine young man. You
were good for my daughter. She screwed up by you, as far as I'm concerned."

"Thank you for saying that, sir. However, the Meredith that got on that
plane wasn't the Meredith I knew."

"I agree," Bill said. "Is there something in this package that you're hoping
will bring back the Meredith you knew?"

"Well, it should make her remember, at least. I don't hope for anything more
than that. I think it's too late for anything else. She's back in that
world." He took a deep breath and headed for the door. "Thanks for
delivering it." With that, he left.

THE NEXT WEEK

Bill Fowler landed in LA on June 1st. He immediately went to the hotel,
where his wife was waiting for him.

"Oh, am I glad to see you," Marie told him. "Meredith is out of control."

"How so?"

"Well, have you ever considered our daughter a prima donna? Somehow, she's
become one. Tim Hicks is wondering what happened to the delightful girl he
worked with just last summer, and Roger DiNardo wants to strangle her. And
she's oblivious."

Bill went to the film set the next couple of days to see what his wife was
talking about. Unfortunately, it was all she had said, if not worse.

Meredith was petulant, demanding, and imperious. She berated crew members
and makeup artists. She refused to listen to Tim, and kept insisting on
different ways of doing things. At one point she shouted out, like a spoiled
child, "What does a damn Oscar winner have to do to get a drink of soda arou
nd here?"

After a few days of this, Bill had seen all he needed to see. Meredith went
out to dinner on a Friday night with some of her Hollywood pals, and Bill
and Marie had a discussion. They decided that it was time to confront
Meredith.

At the same time, Tim Hicks and Roger DiNardo were discussing Meredith over
dinner.

"Oscaritis," Tim maintained. "Worst case I've ever seen."

"I agree," Roger said, "but she's disrupting the set. You need to do
something."


THE NEXT DAY

Saturday wasn't a shooting day. Meredith was in the hotel, in early
afternoon, when her parents knocked on her door.

"We need to talk to you," Bill told her.

"Sure! Come on it."

"OK, Meredith, this is the deal," Marie started. "When your father goes home
next week, I'm going with him."

"Huh?" Meredith spouted. "But why? You always stay with me until a film is
done!"

"Because I can't stand to watch your act anymore," Marie said bluntly.

"What are you talking about?"

"You're rude. You're condescending. You're making everyone around you
miserable," Marie told her. "Somehow you've become a spoiled brat. I can't
watch it anymore. You pointed out to us that you're almost 18, and can do
anything you want. Fine, do what you want. Just don't expect me to watch the
train wreck."

"Mom, you're exaggerating," Meredith contended. "These people just aren't
giving me the respect due an Oscar winner."

"Nobody really gives a flying fuck that you won an Oscar!" Bill shouted,
shocking Meredith-Bill almost never cursed. "How long are you going to milk
that? Yes, it was wonderful. Yes, it was quite an accomplishment. Yes, you
should be proud of it. But you've gone way beyond proud of it. It's gone
right to your head. When you bellowed about being an 'Oscar winner' to that
poor makeup girl, I wanted to smack you. If I had been the makeup girl, I
would have thrown the tray of makeup in your face."

"How can you say these things to me?"

"How can you do what you've been doing? You don't care what your mother and
I think. You don't care what your co-workers think. You're ready to take any
old role that offers you enough money and prestige so you can milk this
Oscar for all it's worth." Bill was on a roll now. "Meredith, this is not
like you. And I don't even want to know what you did to poor Josh. I saw him
last week and he looks like he got run over by a truck."

"You..you saw Josh?" Meredith asked hesitantly.

"Yeah. He asked me to deliver this to you." Bill had brought the package
over, and now handed it to Meredith.

"Josh sent me something?" Meredith said, pitifully, staring at it.

"Yeah, God knows why," Bill stamped out. "Just what did you do to that boy?"

"I..uh...well.." Meredith's hesitating was interrupted by a knock on the
door. Bill opened it, and in stepped Tim Hicks.

"Hi, Tim," Bill greeted him. "This isn't a very good time. We're having a
discussion with our daughter."

"This won't take long and, if you've been seeing what I've been seeing-and I
know you have-I'm probably just going to join right in on the discussion."
He turned to Meredith. "Meredith, I want you to know that I called the
studio last night, trying to get them to replace you."

"WHAT?" Meredith said in shock.

"That's right," Tim said grimly. "However, they paid you too damn much money
and I can only fire you if I can prove you breached your contract. Believe
me, I will be combing that contract with a fine-tooth comb over the next
couple of days and I will be watching you like a hawk the next week. One
breach of contract I find, and you are gone."

"Tim? How can you do this to me? I thought we were friends!"

"Yeah, that's what I thought too, until you stormed on my set like a little
prima donna and fucked up my movie. DiNardo hates your guts. I told this
man, one of the greatest actors in Hollywood, that you were a doll and a
pleasure to work with. He now thinks I'm nuts and wants you gone in a
 hurry."

"I don't believe this!" Meredith said petulantly. "Why are you all turning
against me?"

"Because we can't watch what you've been doing to yourself since you won
that Oscar," Bill told her. "Tim, you were right, you stepped in on a
similar conversation."

"You just don't get it, do you, Meredith?" Tim asked. "Look, Oscars are
wonderful. But I've won five, you've got one, that one was a gift."

"A GIFT?" Meredith bellowed.

"That's what I said, a gift. It was a weak category this year. Anyhow,
winning an Oscar does not give you license to treat everyone around you as
if they should bow down and genuflect. Like I said, I've got five, and I've
never pulled the stunts you've pulled on this set."

"I really don't see what I've done that's so bad," Meredith said.

Bill and Marie snorted in derision, but Tim jumped in. "I knew she'd say
something like that. So, I've got a little tape here. Call it Meredith's
Greatest Hits. This is some of the stuff you've pulled on this set."

Tim popped the tape in to the room's VCR, and hit play. What they all saw
was about twenty minutes of Meredith pouting, screaming, ordering,
dictating, and generally making a nuisance of herself. Furthermore, in that
twenty minutes, she mentioned the word "Oscar" more times than any one of
them can count.

"Oh my God," Meredith said, finally realizing.

"And that's just a small snippet," Tim said. "You've got Oscaritis. A very
bad case of it. And if you don't get over it, and in a damn hurry, this will
be the last movie you ever make, because word gets around." He softened his
voice. "Meredith, I love you. I've always loved you. You're like my kid
sister. But the Meredith I've seen on this set is not only unlovable, she's
unlikable. "

"You gave a speech, at the Oscars, that was one of the most eloquent and
heartfelt ever," Bill interjected. Tim nodded agreement. "Everyone said
that. And, in two months, you've made every word a lie."

"He's right," Tim agreed. "You think about it." He nodded to Meredith's
parents, and left the room.

"Oh shit," Meredith said, burying her face in her hands. "What have I done?"

"You needed to realize, honey," Marie said. "We've been trying to tell you
this since before you left Lamawakka, but you just wouldn't listen."

"You have some fences to mend," Bill added.

"Oh, damn. Lamawakka." She gazed off into space. "I said something pretty
horrific to Josh before I left. I knew I had to break up with him, but I
didn't have to say what I did."

"Why did you have to break up with him?" Marie asked.

"Because I knew I wasn't going back."

"I still think that's not a wise idea. However, like you said, there's not
much I can do about it," Bill said. Meredith just stared into space. "Honey,
what did Josh have me deliver to you?"

Meredith glanced over to the package. She reached for it, and opened it.

"It's the poetry book," she said with a weak smile. "The one he got
published in. He's got a page bookmarked, must be one of his."

She grabbed the sticky note and read it: "Meri, this poem is for you. You've
never seen this one. I planned on this being a surprise. Hopefully, you'll
read it, and remember what we had fondly. I miss you. Love, Josh."

Hands slightly trembling, she took the book and read:

WHY DO I LOVE YOU?

When you smile, the sun comes out.
When you laugh, it's summer all the time.
When you cry, you let me in to help
When you love, you love me

When I touch you, it opens your heart
When you touch me, it makes my heart sing
When I kiss you, I feel the promise
Of a thousand sunrises, all at once
When you kiss me, I come alive

You came to my world
And let me draw you in
You took me to yours
And pulled me in with you

You opened yourself to me
And gave me your soul
And took mine

When we made love
For the first time
Sharing what we had never shared with anyone else
I cried

You did, too.

This is why I love you
This is why I always will.


"He knew, he knew I cried," Meredith said in a strangled whisper. "He knew
all along. Oh God what have I done? What have I done?" That's when the
floodgates opened. Meredith started crying and couldn't stop.

Her mother, worried, sat beside her and stroked her back. The wails
gradually became strangled sobs, and then just the sounds of Meredith
catching her breath. Marie felt her finally calm down.

"I think I need some time alone," she told her parents.

She spent the rest of the day in the hotel room, ordering room service for
supper, thinking. Crying a bit. She cancelled an outing with some friends
that had been planned for that night, and went to bed early.

THE NEXT DAY

Meredith awoke, bright and early, and went to find Tim Hicks at his room in
the hotel. She knocked on his door and he called "come on in!" She entered
and found Tim and Roger DiNardo sitting at the table, eating breakfast.

"Hey, kid," Tim said, taking the pleasant approach, hoping for the best.
"You're up early. Eat yet? We've got too much food here."

"Actually, if you don't mind, I think I will. I forgot about breakfast." She
smiled wanly. "But first, there's something I have to say. Roger, I'm glad
you're here. I owe you an apology. When I found out that I would be working
with you, I was thrilled. I thought that working with Roger DiNardo would be
the opportunity of a lifetime. It probably should have been, but I've fucked
it up. I am sorry for what I have put you through on the set, and I promise
you, it ends. Starting right now."

"Apology accepted," DiNardo said. "But words are cheap."

"I know," Meredith replied. She turned to Tim.

"Meredith, you don't have to say it."

"Thanks," she smiled gratefully.

"I just want the old Meredith Fowler back," Tim said. Meredith nodded
agreement. "Good. Now sit down and eat something."

"Thanks, don't mind if I do," Meredith said, piling eggs onto a plate. "I
have one other thing to ask you, Tim. Am I still scheduled off for those
days I was supposed to be going to my prom?"

"Yeah. But I was thinking of rearranging, because we're behind a bit, and
you told me you weren't going."

"Well, I'm still not sure if I'm going. I have to make a phone call. But
this isn't the only place where I have fences to mend."

"I see," Tim said. "Yeah, you can still go if you want."

"I want." She sighed. "After how I treated him, I hope that Josh still
wants."

TO BE CONTINUED

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