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    The Pat Hobby Stories

    Page 7
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    he added vaguely, 'Recognize Finland.'

      'I didn't know writers had unions,' said the man. 'Well, if you're

      on strike who writes the movies?'

      'The producers,' said Pat bitterly. 'That's why they're so lousy.'

      'Well, that's what I would call an odd state of things.'

      They came in sight of Ronald Colman's house and Pat swallowed

      uneasily. A shining new roadster sat out in front.

      'I better go in first,' he said. 'I mean we wouldn't want to come

      in on any--on any family scene or anything.'

      'Does he have family scenes?' asked the lady eagerly.

      'Oh, well, you know how people are,' said Pat with charity. 'I

      think I ought to see how things are first.'

      The car stopped. Drawing a long breath Pat got out. At the same

      moment the door of the house opened and Ronald Colman hurried down

      the walk. Pat's heart missed a beat as the actor glanced in his

      direction.

      'Hello Pat,' he said. Evidently he had no notion that Pat was a

      caller for he jumped into his car and the sound of his motor

      drowned out Pat's responses as he drove away.

      'Well, he called you "Pat",' said the woman impressed.

      'I guess he was in a hurry,' said Pat. 'But maybe we could see his

      house.'

      He rehearsed a speech going up the walk. He had just spoken to his

      friend Mr Colman, and received permission to look around.

      But the house was shut and locked and there was no answer to the

      bell. He would have to try Melvyn Douglas whose salutations, on

      second thought, were a little warmer than Ronald Colman's. At any

      rate his clients' faith in him was now firmly founded. The 'Hello,

      Pat,' rang confidently in their ears; by proxy they were already

      inside the charmed circle.

      'Now let's try Clark Gable's,' said the lady. 'I'd like to tell

      Carole Lombard about her hair.'

      The lese majesty made Pat's stomach wince. Once in a crowd he had

      met Clark Gable but he had no reason to believe that Mr Gable

      remembered.

      'Well, we could try Melvyn Douglas' first and then Bob Young or

      else Young Doug. They're all on the way. You see Gable and

      Lombard live away out in the St Joaquin valley.'

      'Oh,' said the lady, disappointed, 'I did want to run up and see

      their bedroom. Well then, our next choice would be Shirley

      Temple.' She looked at her little dog. 'I know that would be

      Boojie's choice too.'

      'They're kind of afraid of kidnappers,' said Pat.

      Ruffled, the man produced his business card and handed it to Pat.

      DEERING R. ROBINSON

      Vice President and Chairman

      of the Board

      Robdeer Food Products

      'Does THAT sound as if I want to kidnap Shirley Temple?'

      'They just have to be sure,' said Pat apologetically. 'After we go

      to Melvyn--'

      'No--let's see Shirley Temple's now,' insisted the woman. 'Really!

      I told you in the first place what I wanted.'

      Pat hesitated.

      'First I'll have to stop in some drugstore and phone about it.'

      In a drugstore he exchanged some of the five dollars for a half

      pint of gin and took two long swallows behind a high counter, after

      which he considered the situation. He could, of course, duck Mr

      and Mrs Robinson immediately--after all he had produced Ronald

      Colman, with sound, for their five smackers. On the other hand

      they just MIGHT catch Miss Temple on her way in or out--and for a

      pleasant day at Santa Anita tomorrow Pat needed five smackers more.

      In the glow of the gin his courage mounted, and returning to the

      limousine he gave the chauffeur the address.

      But approaching the Temple house his spirit quailed as he saw that

      there was a tall iron fence and an electric gate. And didn't

      guides have to have a licence?

      'Not here,' he said quickly to the chauffeur. 'I made a mistake.

      I think it's the next one, or two or three doors further on.'

      He decided on a large mansion set in an open lawn and stopping the

      chauffeur got out and walked up to the door. He was temporarily

      licked but at least he might bring back some story to soften them--

      say, that Miss Temple had mumps. He could point out her sick-room

      from the walk.

      There was no answer to his ring but he saw that the door was partly

      ajar. Cautiously he pushed it open. He was staring into a

      deserted living room on the baronial scale. He listened. There

      was no one about, no footsteps on the upper floor, no murmur from

      the kitchen. Pat took another pull at the gin. Then swiftly he

      hurried back to the limousine.

      'She's at the studio,' he said quickly. 'But if we're quiet we can

      look at their living-room.'

      Eagerly the Robinsons and Boojie disembarked and followed him. The

      living-room might have been Shirley Temple's, might have been one

      of many in Hollywood. Pat saw a doll in a corner and pointed at

      it, whereupon Mrs Robinson picked it up, looked at it reverently

      and showed it to Boojie who sniffed indifferently.

      'Could I meet Mrs Temple?' she asked.

      'Oh, she's out--nobody's home,' Pat said--unwisely.

      'Nobody. Oh--then Boojie would so like a wee little peep at her

      bedroom.'

      Before he could answer she had run up the stairs. Mr Robinson

      followed and Pat waited uneasily in the hall, ready to depart at

      the sound either of an arrival outside or a commotion above.

      He finished the bottle, disposed of it politely under a sofa

      cushion and then deciding that the visit upstairs was tempting fate

      too far, he went after his clients. On the stairs he heard Mrs

      Robinson.

      'But there's only ONE child's bedroom. I thought Shirley had

      brothers.'

      A window on the winding staircase looked upon the street, and

      glancing out Pat saw a large car drive up to the curb. From it

      stepped a Hollywood celebrity who, though not one of those pursued

      by Mrs Robinson, was second to none in prestige and power. It was

      old Mr Marcus, the producer, for whom Pat Hobby had been press

      agent twenty years ago.

      At this point Pat lost his head. In a flash he pictured an

      elaborate explanation as to what he was doing here. He would not

      be forgiven. His occasional weeks in the studio at two-fifty would

      now disappear altogether and another finis would be written to his

      almost entirely finished career. He left, impetuously and swiftly--

      down the stairs, through the kitchen and out the back gate,

      leaving the Robinsons to their destiny.

      Vaguely he was sorry for them as he walked quickly along the next

      boulevard. He could see Mr Robinson producing his card as the head

      of Robdeer Food Products. He could see Mr Marcus' scepticism, the

      arrival of the police, the frisking of Mr and Mrs Robinson.

      Probably it would stop there--except that the Robinsons would be

      furious at him for his imposition. They would tell the police

      where they had picked him up.

      Suddenly he went ricketing down the street, beads of gin breaking

      out profusely on his f
    orehead. He had left his car beside Gus

      Venske's umbrella. And now he remembered another recognizing clue

      and hoped that Ronald Colman didn't know his last name.

      PAT HOBBY DOES HIS BIT

      Esquire (September 1940)

      I

      In order to borrow money gracefully one must choose the time and

      place. It is a difficult business, for example, when the borrower

      is cockeyed, or has measles, or a conspicuous shiner. One could

      continue indefinitely but the inauspicious occasions can be

      catalogued as one--it is exceedingly difficult to borrow money when

      one needs it.

      Pat Hobby found it difficult in the case of an actor on a set

      during the shooting of a moving picture. It was about the stiffest

      chore he had ever undertaken but he was doing it to save his car.

      To a sordidly commercial glance the jalopy would not have seemed

      worth saving but, because of Hollywood's great distances, it was an

      indispensable tool of the writer's trade.

      'The finance company--' explained Pat, but Gyp McCarthy

      interrupted.

      'I got some business in this next take. You want me to blow up on

      it?'

      'I only need twenty,' persisted Pat. 'I can't get jobs if I have

      to hang around my bedroom.'

      'You'd save money that way--you don't get jobs anymore.'

      This was cruelly correct. But working or not Pat liked to pass his

      days in or near a studio. He had reached a dolorous and precarious

      forty-nine with nothing else to do.

      'I got a rewrite job promised for next week,' he lied.

      'Oh, nuts to you,' said Gyp. 'You better get off the set before

      Hilliard sees you.'

      Pat glanced nervously toward the group by the camera--then he

      played his trump card.

      'Once--' he said,'--once I paid for you to have a baby.'

      'Sure you did!' said Gyp wrathfully. 'That was sixteen years ago.

      And where is it now--it's in jail for running over an old lady

      without a licence.'

      'Well I paid for it,' said Pat. 'Two hundred smackers.'

      'That's nothing to what it cost me. Would I be stunting at my age

      if I had dough to lend? Would I be working at all?'

      From somewhere in the darkness an assistant director issued an

      order:

      'Ready to go!'

      Pat spoke quickly.

      'All right,' he said. 'Five bucks.'

      'No.'

      'All right then,' Pat's red-rimmed eyes tightened. 'I'm going to

      stand over there and put the hex on you while you say your line.'

      'Oh, for God's sake!' said Gyp uneasily. 'Listen, I'll give you

      five. It's in my coat over there. Here, I'll get it.'

      He dashed from the set and Pat heaved a sigh of relief. Maybe

      Louie, the studio bookie, would let him have ten more.

      Again the assistant director's voice:

      'Quiet! . . . We'll take it now! . . . Lights!'

      The glare stabbed into Pat's eyes, blinding him. He took a step

      the wrong way--then back. Six other people were in the take--a

      gangster's hide-out--and it seemed that each was in his way.

      'All right . . . Roll 'em . . . We're turning!'

      In his panic Pat had stepped behind a flat which would effectually

      conceal him. While the actors played their scene he stood there

      trembling a little, his back hunched--quite unaware that it was a

      'trolley shot', that the camera, moving forward on its track, was

      almost upon him.

      'You by the window--hey you, GYP! hands up.'

      Like a man in a dream Pat raised his hands--only then did he

      realize that he was looking directly into a great black lens--in an

      instant it also included the English leading woman, who ran past

      him and jumped out the window. After an interminable second Pat

      heard the order 'Cut.'

      Then he rushed blindly through a property door, around a corner,

      tripping over a cable, recovering himself and tearing for the

      entrance. He heard footsteps running behind him and increased his

      gait, but in the doorway itself he was overtaken and turned

      defensively.

      It was the English actress.

      'Hurry up!' she cried. 'That finishes my work. I'm flying home to

      England.'

      As she scrambled into her waiting limousine she threw back a last

      irrelevant remark. 'I'm catching a New York plane in an hour.'

      Who cares! Pat thought bitterly, as he scurried away.

      He was unaware that her repatriation was to change the course of

      his life.

      II

      And he did not have the five--he feared that this particular five

      was forever out of range. Other means must be found to keep the

      wolf from the two doors of his coupe. Pat left the lot with

      despair in his heart, stopping only momentarily to get gas for the

      car and gin for himself, possibly the last of many drinks they had

      had together.

      Next morning he awoke with an aggravated problem. For once he did

      not want to go to the studio. It was not merely Gyp McCarthy he

      feared--it was the whole corporate might of a moving picture

      company, nay of an industry. Actually to have interfered with the

      shooting of a movie was somehow a major delinquency, compared to

      which expensive fumblings on the part of producers or writers went

      comparatively unpunished.

      On the other hand zero hour for the car was the day after tomorrow

      and Louie, the studio bookie, seemed positively the last resource

      and a poor one at that.

      Nerving himself with an unpalatable snack from the bottom of the

      bottle, he went to the studio at ten with his coat collar turned up

      and his hat pulled low over his ears. He knew a sort of

      underground railway through the make-up department and the

      commissary kitchen which might get him to Louie's suite unobserved.

      Two studio policemen seized him as he rounded the corner by the

      barber shop.

      'Hey, I got a pass!' he protested, 'Good for a week--signed by Jack

      Berners.'

      'Mr Berners specially wants to see you.'

      Here it was then--he would be barred from the lot.

      'We could sue you!' cried Jack Berners. 'But we couldn't recover.'

      'What's one take?' demanded Pat. 'You can use another.'

      'No we can't--the camera jammed. And this morning Lily Keatts took

      a plane to England. She thought she was through.'

      'Cut the scene,' suggested Pat--and then on inspiration, 'I bet I

      could fix it for you.'

      'You fixed it, all right!' Berners assured him. 'If there was any

      way to fix it back I wouldn't have sent for you.'

      He paused, looked speculatively at Pat. His buzzer sounded and a

      secretary's voice said 'Mr Hilliard'.

      'Send him in.'

      George Hilliard was a huge man and the glance he bent upon Pat was

      not kindly. But there was some other element besides anger in it

      and Pat squirmed doubtfully as the two men regarded him with almost

      impersonal curiosity--as if he were a candidate for a cannibal's

      frying pan.

      'Well, goodbye,' he suggested uneasily.

      'What do you think, George?' demanded Berners.

      'Well--' said Hilliard, hesitantly, 'we could black out a couple of


      teeth.'

      Pat rose hurriedly and took a step toward the door, but Hilliard

      seized him and faced him around.

      'Let's hear you talk,' he said.

      'You can't beat me up,' Pat clamoured. 'You knock my teeth out and

      I'll sue you.'

      There was a pause.

      'What do you think?' demanded Berners.

      'He can't talk,' said Hilliard.

      'You damn right I can talk!' said Pat.

      'We can dub three or four lines,' continued Hilliard, 'and

      nobody'll know the difference. Half the guys you get to play rats

      can't talk. The point is this one's got the physique and the

      camera will pull it out of his face too.'

      Berners nodded.

      'All right, Pat--you're an actor. You've got to play the part this

      McCarthy had. Only a couple of scenes but they're important.

      You'll have papers to sign with the Guild and Central Casting and

      you can report for work this afternoon.'

      'What is this!' Pat demanded. 'I'm no ham--' Remembering that

      Hilliard had once been a leading man he recoiled from this

      attitude: 'I'm a writer.'

      'The character you play is called "The Rat",' continued Berners.

      He explained why it was necessary for Pat to continue his impromptu

      appearance of yesterday. The scenes which included Miss Keatts had

      been shot first, so that she could fulfil an English engagement.

      But in the filling out of the skeleton it was necessary to show how

      the gangsters reached their hide-out, and what they did after Miss

      Keatts dove from the window. Having irrevocably appeared in the

      shot with Miss Keatts, Pat must appear in half a dozen other shots,

      to be taken in the next few days.

      'What kind of jack is it?' Pat inquired.

      'We were paying McCarthy fifty a day--wait a minute Pat--but I

      thought I'd pay you your last writing price, two-fifty for the

      week.'

      'How about my reputation?' objected Pat.

      'I won't answer that one,' said Berners. 'But if Benchley can act

      and Don Stewart and Lewis and Wilder and Woollcott, I guess it

      won't ruin you.'

      Pat drew a long breath.

      'Can you let me have fifty on account,' he asked, 'because really I

      earned that yester--'

      'If you got what you earned yesterday you'd be in a hospital. And

      you're not going on any bat. Here's ten dollars and that's all you

      see for a week.'

      'How about my car--'

      'To hell with your car.'

      III

      'The Rat' was the die-hard of the gang who were engaged in sabotage

      for an unidentified government of N-zis. His speeches were

      simplicity itself--Pat had written their like many times. 'Don't

      finish him till the Brain comes'; 'Let's get out of here'; 'Fella,

      you're going out feet first.' Pat found it pleasant--mostly

      waiting around as in all picture work--and he hoped it might lead

      to other openings in this line. He was sorry that the job was so

      short.

      His last scene was on location. He knew 'The Rat' was to touch off

      an explosion in which he himself was killed but Pat had watched

      such scenes and was certain he would be in no slightest danger.

      Out on the back lot he was mildly curious when they measured him

      around the waist and chest.

      'Making a dummy?' he asked.

      'Not exactly,' the prop man said. 'This thing is all made but it

      was for Gyp McCarthy and I want to see if it'll fit you.'

      'Does it?'

      'Just exactly.'

      'What is it?'

      'Well--it's a sort of protector.'

      A slight draught of uneasiness blew in Pat's mind.

      'Protector for what? Against the explosion?'

      'Heck no! The explosion is phony--just a process shot. This is

     


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