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The A-List: Hollywood Royalty #1 Page 5


  famed birthmark, a dark pink spot shaped like a near-perfect heart, at the base of her creamy

  neck. Her lips--naturally a dark, pomegranate red that L'Oreal had mimicked in its fall Lailah's

  Look line of cosmetics--formed a gentle smile.

  "Or maybe you just want a steak?" Barkley Everhart grinned, his pool blue eyes alert. His

  famously muscular arms were lost beneath a too-big polo shirt and a Kiss the Cook apron,

  while a smear of steak sauce accentuated his dimpled cheek.

  "Some hash browns and a steak sounds great," Jojo said, smiling. She wondered if Sunday

  brunch was always like this in the Everhart household, or if they'd gone all out for her.

  She was sitting at the head--yes, the head--of a dining room table that she'd read about in Us

  Weekly. It was custom-made, and Barbar had had all of the family's names hand-carved into its

  baseboard. Right now, Jojo was running her finger along the L in Lailah. She'd seen photos of

  this room in OK! before: Three chandeliers, each ten feet across, hung from the fifteen-foot

  ceilings. Barbar had commissioned them from a sect of glassblowing Tibetan monks. Along

  the wall across from Jojo was an heirloom china cabinet that Barkley had restored himself. The

  couple used it to display the kids' artwork. Front and center was a pretty decent crayon drawing

  of a brontosaurus with "Mahalo" scrawled in an eight-year-old's messy printing.

  They'd spent the last twenty-four hours at home, since Lailah and Barkley had explained that

  fending off the paparazzi would cut into their time together. Jojo couldn't say she minded lying

  low at their Bel Air compound. When the driver had first pulled the hybrid SUV through the

  wrought-iron gates of the Everhart estate, Jojo had been awestruck, and nervous all over again.

  The house was, literally, a castle. Fashioned from custard-colored brick, it resembled a threestory dessert. Cylindrical towers, a circular window at the top of each, framed each side of the

  mansion. Spread out front was a magnificent French-style garden, replete with crimson tree

  roses and a duck pond. But now, Jojo felt more comfortable. She could definitely get used to

  this. If she weren't leaving tomorrow, she reminded herself sadly.

  She glanced around at her huge collection of siblings. Eight-year-old Mahalo's jet-black hair

  touched the collar of his vintage Muppets T-shirt, while six-year-old Bobby's tightly cropped

  curls hid beneath a knit cap. Ajani, Indigo, and Nelson--adopted from Cambodia, Ethopia, and

  India, respectively, all in the last two years--lined one side of the table in modern Swedish

  booster seats. Nelson, who had to be about three, proudly chomped on the cut-up chicken

  fingers his mom had set before him as Ajani and Indigo, each two years old, smushed

  couscous between their chubby fingers.

  Mahalo gave Jojo a thumbs-up, grinning widely, while Barkley unloaded a giant filet mignon

  before her. Jojo smiled back. The kids had welcomed her warmly. Several times today, Mahalo

  had even led them in an improvised song--really just a chant of "Hello, Jojo"--that reached a

  fever pitch before they all erupted in giggles.

  Lailah spooned some couscous onto the sliver of space left on Jojo's plate. "I'm sorry you

  haven't met Myla yet. She's with her boyfriend. They haven't seen each other all summer--"

  "Hi guys, I'm home." Myla yawned sleepily as she made her way into the dining room. It was

  only one o'clock, but she fully planned to crawl under her Frette duvet as soon as possible. She

  smiled weakly at her siblings, trying to keep her eyelids at half-mast and look jet-lagged so she

  could go straight to her room.

  After leaving Ash's this morning, she'd gotten a manipedi at Elle, then hit Barneys for some

  retail therapy. But the pampering and purchases hadn't elevated her mood. She'd been expecting

  Ash to call, apologizing for what happened and begging to make it up to her.

  But he hadn't. Not yet, anyway. She told herself not to worry too much. Myla knew he'd come

  back, hot pink peonies in hand, eventually.

  Suddenly her eyes fell on an unfamiliar face. There was a girl sitting in her chair. Her very

  special, oldest-sibling, head-of-the-table chair. The girl was pretty, with dark blue violet eyes,

  high cheekbones, and olive-colored skin. Myla narrowed her eyes, immediately shaken out of

  her jet-lagged act. Who was this person? The kids' nannies never ate with them.

  "Myla, you're finally home," Lailah said, smiling. Her father, who'd been wiping egg yolk from

  Nelson's face, slung an arm around her mom's waist and pulled her to him. Lailah's free hand

  was on the girl's shoulder. Why was she touching the nanny?

  "Myla, this is your sister Josephine," Barkley said. He chuckled nervously, shooting Jojo a

  sheepish smile. "Sorry. Jojo, she prefers Jojo."

  Um, sister? Myla pulled tightly on her ring, the gold chain digging into the back of her neck.

  What. The. Fuck? Yes she had grown accustomed to sharing her parents with regular new

  family additions, but seriously? Her parents had only been home a week and they'd somehow

  managed to procure a new child?

  Besides, this girl didn't look like some third-world refugee. Normally, there was the sympathy

  factor. But her V-neck shirt screamed "suburban mall," not "wartorn village."

  "Hi." Jojo stood, crossing the expanse of dining room. She extended a hand. "It's great to meet

  you."

  Myla shook Jojo's hand limply, putting on her fakest smile.

  "Myla, why don't you sit down?" Lailah said, gesturing to a chair. "I'll get you something to

  eat."

  Usually, her parents had a three-person kitchen staff to serve meals, but then, it wasn't every

  day they brought home a new kid. It just felt that way sometimes, Myla thought, looking

  around the table at Mahalo, Bobby, and the rest of the toddler U.N.

  Myla sat in an empty chair next to the little girls. Indigo and Ajani, their ringlets in pigtails,

  wore matching poufy Fairy Princess party dresses--you couldn't get them to take those things

  off. Myla suppressed a grin, seeing her sisters and their tiny sparkle-polished fingernails. But

  no way would she let warm fuzzies interrupt her pissed-off mood.

  She ignored the food on her plate, looking from Lailah to Barkley expectantly. They sat near

  Jojo, on the opposite side of the antiqued farmhouse table. Every so often they'd study Jojo,

  like she was some creature from another planet. Well, it won't be long before they start

  adopting those, too, Myla thought.

  Barkley looked nervously around the table at his children. He cleared his throat and then

  cleared it again.

  "It's awkward for me, talking about this, because I love your mother so much," Barkley said,

  his face focused on Myla's. "But you know I was married before. Well, when I met your

  mother."

  Myla nodded. She really didn't need her dad's romantic history right now. Anyone who'd so

  much as heard of Us Weekly knew about Barkley's first wife, Heather Merryton, America's

  sweetheart--whom Barkley had allegedly left for Lailah.

  Her mom chimed in. "We couldn't help it. Your dad and I fell in love. And I got pregnant," she

  said, her eyes misty, like she was delivering an Oscar-worthy monologue. All she needed was

  a Dario Marianelli score behind her.

  "Pregnant, pregnant," Nelson chimed in. "What pregnant?"

  Lailah looked beatifically across the table at he
r three-year-old son, his dark curls in wisps

  around his face. "Shhh, honey, this is serious."

  Myla almost burst out laughing. Yeah, right. Like the tabloids wouldn't have been all over her

  rising-star mom for having a baby on board. As it was, they were always hounding Barbar

  about whether they would have biological kids of their own. She could feel the words prove it

  on her tongue, but held back.

  Lailah turned back to Myla, clutching Barkley's hand tightly. "I was twenty-two, and my career

  was just taking off," Lailah went on. "I couldn't be a homewrecker and pregnant to boot. We

  finished the movie, and I took a hiatus after I started to show. I went to live with some friends

  upstate, had the baby, and gave her up for adoption." Lailah looked at Jojo here, then quickly

  snapped her gaze back to Barkley. He squeezed her hand still tighter.

  Nausea suddenly hit Myla, and it wasn't from the three iced blendeds she'd drunk at the

  Beverly Center. This was starting to feel real, and she had an idea where it was headed. Myla

  gripped the edge of the table.

  "Once my divorce was final, your mom and I got married. But we've always regretted giving

  that baby--you--up." Barkley was clutching Jojo's forearm tightly, as though he was afraid

  she'd get away.

  Myla put her head against the back of her chair, feeling like she'd topple out of it if she didn't.

  Biological child. So it was true? Her parents, with their Multicultural Offspring Variety Pack,

  actually had a flesh-and-blood kid of their own?

  And what did that mean for the rest of them?

  Jojo, Barkley, and Lailah now formed a chain at one end of the table. "After dinner, I should

  dig up your birth certificate," Lailah finished, chuckling through the few tears that cascaded

  prettily down her cheek.

  Barkley grinned. "It's the only one we've got that's in English."

  Myla faked a laugh, wanting to pretend this was all okay with her. But her parents barely

  noticed. A kidnapper could have walked in, thrown a bag over her head, and carried her-kicking and screaming--out of the room and they wouldn't have glanced up from their new

  sixteen-year-old baby. Their real baby.

  It wasn't fair. Myla was their first child--she had the People magazine spread on her adoption to

  prove it. They'd adopted her when she was four from a crappy orphanage in Mai Hong,

  Thailand. Barbar had been shooting their first international action thriller, The Bangkok Project,

  and had gone in search of jade jewelry for Lailah. A fisherman had given them lousy directions

  to the marketplace, and Barbar had gotten lost in the bustling village. They'd wound up on the

  doorstep of an orphanage, when their eyes had landed on Myla, small for her age, with a mass

  of dark hair and bright green eyes. It was adoption at first sight. On her birthdays, Barkley

  liked to hold his hands about a foot apart and joke with her, "I remember when you were only

  this big." Lailah once told Myla they'd almost named her Jade, because they'd never found the

  jewelry but had found a much better treasure. And she was their treasure. She was their first

  and--she always thought--their favorite. But now she knew the truth: She was just their

  rebound kid. The one they'd gotten impulsively, to help ease the pain of missing the one they

  really wanted. The one that was their own, not a third-world castoff.

  Finally, when Barkley and Lailah were finished talking, Lailah sat down on one side of Jojo,

  looking across the table at her husband. "We hope you've had a good time this weekend, Jojo.

  And Myla would be happy to show you around next time," she added, smiling at her oldest

  daughter like they were all in this together.

  "It's been amazing," Jojo gushed, meaning it. She couldn't finish her heaping plate of food, in

  part because she was so nervous about meeting Myla and in part because she was so sad at the

  prospect of leaving the next morning. "I only wish I didn't have to go to Nuuk tomorrow. I feel

  like I just got here. And Myla just got back." She smiled shyly at her new sister, but Myla was

  just staring at their parents, her face inscrutable.

  At that, Barkley and Lailah exchanged a look.

  "Well, we'd love to have you stay for a few more weeks," Barkley said, beaming at her. "It's no

  problem for us, if your dads could spare you."

  Lailah gazed at Barkley like she wanted to throw her arms around him in appreciation. She

  turned back to Jojo, her eyes hopeful. "If you like it here, you could even stay . . . longer?"

  Her voice trailed off, but Jojo got the message. They were saying she could live here, in

  Beverly Hills, with the world's most beautiful couple--her parents--instead of in icy, barren

  Nuuk.

  Myla's fingers curled around the cold steel of her fork. She got the message too.

  100 PERCENT HEAVENLY

  "Reader, I married him." Amelie had read the same line of Jane Eyre about a million times

  now, but she couldn't bring herself to concentrate on what was technically her favorite book.

  She'd never had this problem on the set of Fairy Princess, where she could polish off full

  chapters of classics between takes. But today was no day on the set of Fairy Princess. Today

  she was on the Class Angel set, which meant that Hunter Sparks was somewhere on the

  premises.

  Kady Parker's loud, tinkling laugh rang out from across the soundstage. Amelie glanced at her,

  across the wide expanse of the Reavis High auditorium set. It took up most of the available

  space, and crepe streamers in navy and white hung from the basketball hoops. The woodpaneled floor shone under the overhead lights, a dark blue silhouette of a Reavis Knight painted

  in the center. On the auditorium's stage, a drum set and two guitars waited for the Creases, a

  new band that would play its hit single, "Drop It," in the movie.

  Amelie sat with her back to the soundstage wall on one end of a set of bleachers. On the

  opposite end, Kady sat with DeAndra, Lina Colletti, Dani Mills, and the Lacey twins, who'd

  signed on for two days of shooting as backup bitchy cheerleaders. Kady wore her character's

  signature black hoodie.

  Amelie was playing an angel sent to help Kady's mixed-up character buckle down and stay out

  of trouble, do well on the SATs, and get into art school. The script was eye-rollingly formulaic:

  Kady's punky loner got framed for stealing the school's treasured basketball trophy by a bitchy

  popular girl; then, with the assistance of a guardian angel and a sympathetic jock, she cleared

  her name and got the real villain in trouble. The producers had cast Amelie in the angel role to

  capitalize on her maturing Fairy Princess fans. Even though she'd secretly wanted Kady's part,

  Amelie contented herself that at least she was doing a movie set in a high school, rather than an

  enchanted forest.

  Kady and the other girls had come late to the set after doing a sexy photo shoot for EW that

  morning, for a story titled "They're No Angels." It was about how Kady and Co. managed to

  live it up while still getting the job done, unlike past teen stars (who of course would not be

  named). Amelie thought it was a little premature for the magazine to go out on a limb like that,

  but maybe she was just jealous--she'd only done a five-question interview for an inset box,

  "100 Percent Heavenly." The reporter had asked things like, "Do you even know what's in a

  gin and tonic?"
r />   Kady gave Amelie a little wave. It didn't feel like an invitation to come talk, though, so Amelie

  stayed put, glancing down at her weathered paperback. Kady and the other girls had been

  perfectly nice during lunch, sitting by Amelie as they nibbled on turkey-avocado wraps from

  CafĂ© Surfas and rehashed their latest nightclub adventures. Of course, their escapades sounded

  kind of fun, but Amelie wasn't about to take any chances. You didn't have a choice when your

  entire career was Fairy Princess. Little girls looked up to her. Her mom was proud of her. She

  knew better than to screw around, or she'd wind up on the Board.

  The Board was a six-by-twelve-foot piece of corkboard in their upstairs den. On it, her mother

  had tirelessly pinned photos of child stars whose careers had gone awry. Along the top of the

  board were age markers: A star who at ten had been playing plucky twins in a Disney flick

  could be graphed to age sixteen as dating an older nightclub owner, to age eighteen as entering

  rehab for the first time, and to age twenty-two as being caught passed out and drooling on a

  chairlift in Aspen. Another Hollywood sweetheart, who'd gotten a start in sitcoms at age six,

  had gone platinum with innuendo-laden lyrics (and stripperlike dance moves) while professing

  her virginity at seventeen, married an ex-con (age eighteen), divorced (age nineteen), shoplifted

  at Target (age twenty), crashed her car into a 7-Eleven (twenty-one), and joined a cult (twentytwo). Amelie's timeline dated back to her debut, at two months old, as a Pampers model, and

  her trajectory was so far unmarred.

  With the Class Angel part, the diapers were finally starting to come off. But that didn't mean

  Amelie wanted to jump from training pants to being photographed without underwear.

  She buried her face in her book again, waiting while the crew hung more banners for the

  school dance scene. With every page she turned, her stomach twitched nervously. Where was

  Hunter? She'd checked the call sheet and discovered they had very few scenes together. Still,

  she'd hoped he'd stop by the set today. Amelie glanced at the digital clock near the camera

  setup. Five thirty. Day one was approaching the nine-hour mark, without so much as a trace of

  him.

  "Amelie?"

  She looked up to see the assistant director, Gary, standing in front of her, his ball cap pulled