
No political science degree could ever prepare Elizabeth
Miller for her new job as a second assistant at The
Agency, whose clients include everyone you've never met—
but you know who they're sleeping with. A former
congressional intern in Washington, Lizzie made a bid for
a life change that landed her a job a world away, where
ethics and First Amendment debates take a backseat to
pleading the Fifth for Ritalin-snorting boss Scott Wagner.
He's the hottest young agent in Hollywood, who devotes his
days to playing online poker—that is, when he's not
closing a $30 million deal for one of his AAA-list
clients. And while getting six-hundred-dollar highlights
from Cameron's colorist or organizing the strippers for
George's birthday party come close to causing heart
failure for this East Coast girl, the real dangers lurk
elsewhere. But Lizzie is a survivor, and no Machiavellian
assistant, lecherous producer, or power struggle at The
Agency can douse her nascent dreams of climbing up the
Hollywood ladder. But first she has to run down to the
Coffee Bean to pick up that triple espresso, or Scott is
going to throw something….
Excerpt All you need to start an asylum is an empty room and
the right kind of people.
—Eugene Pallette as Alexander Bullock
My Man Godfrey “Your job will be to separate the white thumbtacks from
the colored ones. Be sure to throw the colored ones away.
They must leave the building. If they don’t, then you
will. The president, Daniel Rosen, likes only white
thumbtacks at The Agency. Also, should you ever serve him
a drink, he has just four ice cubes in his Diet Coke. If
you put in more, he will throw the surplus ice cubes at
you. If you put in three, he’ll throw the entire drink at
you.”
This was honestly my first task in Hollywood. And I know
it’s not normal. I knew then that it wasn’t normal. But as
anyone who’s ever been involved in an abusive relationship
will tell you, it’s a process of erosion. It’s not as
though the guy just thumps you in the face on your first
date. Oh, no, it’s a more subtle, undermining, mind-fuck
of a process than that. It starts with the little things
that you let slide because they hardly seem worth making a
fuss over. But somehow it culminates with you believing
that black is white, right is wrong, and eventually your
entire universe is topsy-turvy, ass over tits, and the
lunatics have taken over the asylum. My abusive relationship with Hollywood started not with a
kiss but a thumbtack. There are other things that I know
are not normal but, since I became involved with
Hollywood, I now cease to bat an eyelid at. They are: 1. Men who wear mascara in between eyelash dyes.
2. The sign in the bathroom of my office that
says “Smoking and Vomiting Prohibited.”
3. Kabala water that retails at $126 a bottle.
4. Men who take you to the Beverly Hills Gun Club on a
first date.
5. Women who take fertility drugs even though they don’t
have a boyfriend.
6. Promises Rehabilitation Centre in Malibu, which runs an
Equine-Assisted Therapy Program for recovering addicts
because “horses have no agenda or ego and respond to
contact rather than titles, status or celebrity.”
(www.promisesmalibu.com. I kid you not.)
7. Men who ask you not to sue them after they kiss you.
8. Actors. Of both sexes. “Okay, that shouldn’t take me too long.” I smiled and sat
down at my desk, keen to make a good impression by the
efficient sorting of the thumbtacks. It was my first day
at The Agency. My first day as second assistant to Scott
Wagner, Hollywood agent extraordinaire. And even though a
career in Hollywood hadn’t always been my life ambition, I
was determined to put my heart and soul into it. Perhaps
stay a few years, see some of my favorite novels turned
into lavish, Academy Award–winning movies, and then return
to the East Coast with a like-minded husband and a suntan. I was born and, bar the occasional summer vacation in
Europe and Florida, had spent my entire life in Rockville,
Maryland, a suburb of Washington, D.C. As far as I
remember, I’d always planned on doing something vaguely
worthwhile with my life. At four I was going to be an
astronaut. Then the Challenger shuttle blew up, and I
began to dream of a more earthbound career in medicine. I
became an expert with a plastic stethoscope, and every
member of my family received the lifesaving Kool-Aid
vaccination. But the genes will out, and as my parents had
always been involved in government and served in soup
kitchens every Thanksgiving, I eventually followed the
yellow-brick path of least resistance into politics. I graduated summa cum laude from Georgetown. Double major:
economics and political science. And then, after a
seemingly endless round of interviews, was offered a job
with Congressman Edmunds. I loved politics. I loved being
part of a team. I would happily stay in the office past
midnight photocopying flyers, I pumped helium into
balloons, I fetched coffee, I avidly read everything from
the Washington Post to the Nation, and I looked forward to
the day I would be able to go to work on a public-waste
bill or launch a petition on behalf of refugees. I didn’t
have time for a meaningful relationship, and I’d never had
my hair highlighted. But when Congressman Edmunds’s campaign collapsed because
of dubious fund-raising practices, I found myself out on a
limb. I didn’t want to take an internship and would rather
have eaten my mother in a pie than accept the vacancy I’d
been promised working for a Republican senator with a
pending murder charge. Though with crippling student
loans, my options seemed bleak. That was until I
discovered the dog-eared business card of Daniel Rosen in
my jacket pocket. He had pressed it on me at a fund-raiser
a few weeks before. Had I known then that this onetime
member of the Young Turks, the Hollywood band of hell-
raising superagents, now president of The Agency, was the
nearest thing to the Second Coming in Los Angeles, I might
have behaved differently. But as with all things
Hollywood, at that time I had no clue. All I knew was that
this man had offered me a job, and I was desperate enough
to follow up on the offer. Daniel Rosen had stood by a tray of chicken satay and
pensively stroked his Hermès tie as he tried to convince
me that my political aptitude would be an asset in the
entertainment industry. He said that Hollywood was always
in need of bright young minds, and while he didn’t exactly
promise that I’d be running a studio within a year, he did
hint that I might soon be influencing the morals and minds
of the entire planet. Political power was nothing compared
to Hollywood power, he informed me. After all, how many
Democrats can get as many butts in seats as the new Vin
Diesel movie can, huh? How many world leaders can make
$104 million in a weekend? I smiled politely and was about
to shake his hand and tell him thanks but no thanks when
he spied Kevin Spacey by the poached salmon, so I never
actually got the chance. Which was about the only stroke of luck I’d had that
month. When I eventually called, his assistant had set me
up with an interview with the head of Human Resources at
The Agency. In preparation I had gone to Blockbuster and
rented every movie that I’ve ever been castigated for not
having seen, from Taxi Driver to The Godfather, and Antz
for good measure. Then I’d maxed out my credit card and
flown to Los Angeles. Even though my interviewer never
asked me about movies—only my typing speed and whether I
had a history of mental illness—I was hired. Back in Rockville I packed my suitcase for the migration
and read an unauthorized biography of Steven Spielberg. I
ignored my dad’s chuckle as he handed me a giant canister
of bear mace and told me that when God made America, all
the loose marbles had rolled down to Los Angeles. Now, on
my first day at work, as I sucked my bleeding fingers, I
received news of my next task. “When you’re done with the thumbtacks I’ll run through a
call sheet with you.” “Great.” I smiled my newly minted new-girl smile. My
insouciance was touching. Little did I know that for the
next six months of my life, this seemingly innocuous list
of names and telephone numbers would prove more puzzling
to me than Antonio Gramsci’s theories on hegemony and
cause me more sleepless nights than the threat of nuclear
war ever had. The person navigating me through this foreign, and
dangerous, terrain was Lara Brooks. She had cropped red
hair, a black pantsuit, and an expression on her face that
perpetually resembled that of a nun forced to give a blow
job. As Scott’s assistant, she was my immediate boss. But
just as she was about to regale me with the intricacies of
the call sheet, we were interrupted by a gothically thin,
poker-haired woman who emerged from behind a glass door, “Where’s Scott?” she snapped. “He’s in Switzerland getting his blood swapped with Keith
Richards’s ’cause his is cleaner.” Lara replied, deadpan. “No, seriously.” The woman didn’t appear to be in the mood
for frivolity. Ever. “Marketing meeting at Dreamworks.” “Asshole.” The woman vanished back behind a closed door
and silence settled over the room. “So what’s Scott
actually like?” I asked. Because I’d been interviewed by
someone in Human Resources, I had never actually met my
new boss. I imagined him as quite suave, quietly
intelligent, and softly spoken. But with edge. I wasn’t
naïve enough to imagine that any agent in the
entertainment industry would be a complete pussycat. But
neither was I prepared for Lara’s eviscerating character
analysis. “Scott is an undereducated, in-over-his-head, coke-
snorting, X-taking, Vicodin-popping junkie. He has
platinum memberships to every strip club in L.A. and
dresses like a gas-station attendant. My job is to keep
him solvent and out of rehab.” “I see.” “Your job is to support me in that role. That is why you
went to college, isn’t it?” “Er...” I stammered, unsure of exactly what I was supposed
to say here. “Well, I’m assuming it’s always been your ambition to
nursemaid a guy who in any other town but here would be
asking, ‘Would you like me to supersize that shake for
you?’ Am I right?” I caught a sarcastic glint in her green
eyes and laughed. Lara wasn’t a bitch, she just hated
everyone and everything in Hollywood without
discrimination. But at least she had a sense of humor.
Black, naturally. “Don’t worry.” She looked me bang in the eye. “Therapy’s
included in the health-care package.” As it turned out, I didn’t have to wait as long as I’d
anticipated to meet my new boss. Seconds later the office
door crashed open, and a man of medium height, wearing
combat pants and a khaki sweater that wouldn’t have looked
out of place on a teenage skateboarder, marched toward the
desk where Lara and I were working. “Lara?” His voice reverberated off the office walls. His
black, spiky hair looked young, but the lines around his
slightly bloodshot eyes hinted that Lara’s brutal
assessment hadn’t been too far wide of the mark. He was
probably a well-partied thirty-four years old. “Scott?” she replied, without a hint of submissiveness or
even trepidation. If someone had yelled my name out like
that, I’d have buckled at the knees. Lara merely looked
bored. “Wassup.” This was spoken as an order, not a question. “Messages.” Lara held out a limp arm, and Scott took his
call sheet. “Yup.” He strode by, heading for the heavy maple door of
what I assumed was his office, though it had no name on
it, only a Lakers sticker. “And this is Elizabeth, your new second assistant.” “Sure.” Scott seemed not to notice me and scanned the
sheets of paper in his hand before pausing
dramatically. “Ashton called?” “He’s on location in Hawaii.” “Get him on for me.” Scott ignored the fact that I was now
standing up, awaiting my formal introduction to him. Ready
to curtsy if necessary. Hell, ready to let blood if
necessary. “I’ll try.” Lara shrugged without much optimism. “Oh, and
hey, Scott?” He looked up at her quizzically as she
motioned to me. “This is Elizabeth.” “Oh, sure, sure.” Suddenly a light switched on in his
brain, and the full wattage of his gaze fell upon me. I
smiled politely and held out my hand to meet his
enthusiastic shake. “Elizabeth. It is. Great. To meet
you.” “Oh, you, too, Mr. Wagner. You, too. Well, I’ll just be
here if you need me....” “So where are you from, Elizabeth?” Scott asked as I
anticipated golden days ahead, basking in the warmth of my
new boss’s appreciation and admiration, not to mention the
tutelage of one of the most famous agents in town. He was
a good-looking, young, cool guy. This was going to be a
fun job. Cocktails, premieres, movie stars...well, didn’t
Ashton have to be that Ashton? “Rockville, Maryland. It’s a suburb of D.C., actually. I
worked for Senator Edmunds for a year until his campaign—” “Wow, you worked in politics?” “Yes, I did.” “Incredible. You must be one smart chiquita.” “Well, I’m not sure about that, but I’ll certainly try my
best and—” But suddenly the light went out. Scott had looked down.
Only for about .003 of a second but nonetheless it was
enough. He was gone. “Reese called?” He was scowling at his call sheet. I was
as distant a memory as his first day at kindergarten. “Why
in hell’s name didn’t you tell me before now? Jesus
Christ, Lara. Reese called and you didn’t tell me?” “You told me not to put any calls through.” “It was Reese, for fuck’s sake.” “You said tell everyone you were in the elevator.” “Christ, Lara.” Scott stomped into his office and
collapsed behind his desk. “Get her for me now. Now.” And that was that. In actual fact that was probably the
longest conversation I ever had with Scott. Another
distinguishing feature of the inhabitants of Hollywood is
that their attention spans are no longer than a very fast,
witty pitch for a movie. Which is about two and a half
minutes. And that is only if the pitch has million-plus
legs. Anything under that price tag and you lose them at
hello.
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