A Project Gutenberg of Australia eBook

Title:      The Complete Pat Hobby Stories
Author:     F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940)
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Language:   English
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Date first posted:          December 2004
Date most recently updated: December 2004

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Title:      The Complete Pat Hobby Stories
Author:     F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940)





CONTENTS


Pat Hobby's Christmas Wish
Esquire (January 1940)

A Man in the Way Esquire
(February 1940)

"Boil Some Water--Lots of It"
Esquire (March 1940)

Teamed with Genius
Esquire (April 1940)

Pat Hobby and Orson Welles
Esquire (May 1940)

Pat Hobby's Secret
Esquire (June 1940)

Pat Hobby, Putative Father
Esquire (July 1940)

The Homes of the Stars
Esquire (August 1940)

Pat Hobby Does His Bit
Esquire (September 1940)

Pat Hobby's Preview
Esquire (October 1940)

No Harm Trying
Esquire (November 1940)

A Patriotic Short
Esquire (December 1940)

On the Trail of Pat Hobby
Esquire (January 1941)

Fun in an Artist's Studio
Esquire (February 1941)

Two Old-Timers
Esquire (March 1941)

Mightier than the Sword
Esquire (April 1941)

Pat Hobby's College Days
Esquire (May 1941)




PAT HOBBY'S CHRISTMAS WISH

Esquire (January 1940)


I


It was Christmas Eve in the studio.  By eleven o'clock in the
morning, Santa Claus had called on most of the huge population
according to each one's deserts.

Sumptuous gifts from producers to stars, and from agents to
producers arrived at offices and studio bungalows: on every stage
one heard of the roguish gifts of casts to directors or directors
to casts; champagne had gone out from publicity office to the
press.  And tips of fifties, tens and fives from producers,
directors and writers fell like manna upon the white collar class.

In this sort of transaction there were exceptions.  Pat Hobby, for
example, who knew the game from twenty years' experience, had had
the idea of getting rid of his secretary the day before.  They were
sending over a new one any minute--but she would scarcely expect a
present the first day.

Waiting for her, he walked the corridor, glancing into open offices
for signs of life.  He stopped to chat with Joe Hopper from the
scenario department.

'Not like the old days,' he mourned, 'Then there was a bottle on
every desk.'

'There're a few around.'

'Not many.'  Pat sighed.  'And afterwards we'd run a picture--made
up out of cutting-room scraps.'

'I've heard.  All the suppressed stuff,' said Hopper.

Pat nodded, his eyes glistening.

'Oh, it was juicy.  You darned near ripped your guts laughing--'

He broke off as the sight of a woman, pad in hand, entering his
office down the hall recalled him to the sorry present.

'Gooddorf has me working over the holiday,' he complained bitterly.

'I wouldn't do it.'

'I wouldn't either except my four weeks are up next Friday, and if
I bucked him he wouldn't extend me.'

As he turned away Hopper knew that Pat was not being extended
anyhow.  He had been hired to script an old-fashioned horse-opera
and the boys who were 'writing behind him'--that is working over
his stuff--said that all of it was old and some didn't make sense.

'I'm Miss Kagle,' said Pat's new secretary.

She was about thirty-six, handsome, faded, tired, efficient.  She
went to the typewriter, examined it, sat down and burst into sobs.

Pat started.  Self-control, from below anyhow, was the rule around
here.  Wasn't it bad enough to be working on Christmas Eve?  Well--
less bad than not working at all.  He walked over and shut the door--
someone might suspect him of insulting the girl.

'Cheer up,' he advised her.  'This is Christmas.'

Her burst of emotion had died away.  She sat upright now, choking
and wiping her eyes.

'Nothing's as bad as it seems,' he assured her unconvincingly.
'What's it, anyhow?  They going to lay you off?'

She shook her head, did a sniffle to end sniffles, and opened her
note book.

'Who you been working for?'

She answered between suddenly gritted teeth.

'Mr Harry Gooddorf.'

Pat widened his permanently bloodshot eyes.  Now he remembered he
had seen her in Harry's outer office,

'Since 1921.  Eighteen years.  And yesterday he sent me back to the
department.  He said I depressed him--I reminded him he was getting
on.'  Her face was grim.  'That isn't the way he talked after hours
eighteen years ago.'

'Yeah, he was a skirt chaser then,' said Pat.

'I should have done something then when I had the chance.'

Pat felt righteous stirrings.

'Breach of promise?  That's no angle!'

'But I had something to clinch it.  Something bigger than breach of
promise.  I still have too.  But then, you see, I thought I was in
love with him.'  She brooded for a moment.  'Do you want to dictate
something now?'

Pat remembered his job and opened a script.

'It's an insert,' he began, 'Scene 114A.'

Pat paced the office.

'Ext.  Long Shot of the Plains,' he decreed.  'Buck and Mexicans
approaching the hyacenda.'

'The what?'

'The hyacenda--the ranch house.'  He looked at her reproachfully,
'114 B.  Two Shot:  Buck and Pedro.  Buck:  "The dirty son-of-a-
bitch.  I'll tear his guts out!"'

Miss Kagle looked up, startled.

'You want me to write that down?'

'Sure.'

'It won't get by.'

'I'm writing this.  Of course, it won't get by.  But if I put "you
rat" the scene won't have any force.'

'But won't somebody have to change it to "you rat"?'

He glared at her--he didn't want to change secretaries every day.

'Harry Gooddorf can worry about that.'

'Are you working for Mr Gooddorf?' Miss Kagle asked in alarm.

'Until he throws me out.'

'I shouldn't have said--'

'Don't worry,' he assured her.  'He's no pal of mine anymore.  Not
at three-fifty a week, when I used to get two thousand . . .  Where
was I?'

He paced the floor again, repeating his last line aloud with
relish.  But now it seemed to apply not to a personage of the story
but to Harry Gooddorf.  Suddenly he stood still, lost in thought.
'Say, what is it you got on him?  You know where the body is
buried?'

'That's too true to be funny.'

'He knock somebody off?'

'Mr Hobby, I'm sorry I ever opened my mouth.'

'Just call me Pat.  What's your first name?'

'Helen.'

'Married?'

'Not now.'

'Well, listen Helen:  What do you say we have dinner?'


II


On the afternoon of Christmas Day he was still trying to get the
secret out of her.  They had the studio almost to themselves--only
a skeleton staff of technical men dotted the walks and the
commissary.  They had exchanged Christmas presents.  Pat gave her a
five dollar bill, Helen bought him a white linen handkerchief.
Very well he could remember the day when many dozen such
handkerchiefs had been his Christmas harvest.

The script was progressing at a snail's pace but their friendship
had considerably ripened.  Her secret, he considered, was a very
valuable asset, and he wondered how many careers had turned on just
such an asset.  Some, he felt sure, had been thus raised to
affluence.  Why, it was almost as good as being in the family, and
he pictured an imaginary conversation with Harry Gooddorf.

'Harry, it's this way.  I don't think my experience is being made
use of.  It's the young squirts who ought to do the writing--I
ought to do more supervising.'

'Or--?'

'Or else,' said Pat firmly.

He was in the midst of his day dream when Harry Gooddorf
unexpectedly walked in.

'Merry Christmas, Pat,' he said jovially.  His smile was less
robust when he saw Helen, 'Oh, hello Helen--didn't know you and Pat
had got together.  I sent you a remembrance over to the script
department.'

'You shouldn't have done that.'

Harry turned swiftly to Pat.

'The boss is on my neck,' he said.  'I've got to have a finished
script Thursday.'

'Well, here I am,' said Pat.  'You'll have it.  Did I ever fail
you?'

'Usually,' said Harry.  'Usually.'

He seemed about to add more when a call boy entered with an
envelope and handed it to Helen Kagle--whereupon Harry turned and
hurried out.

'He'd better get out!' burst forth Miss Kagle, after opening the
envelope.  'Ten bucks--just TEN BUCKS--from an executive--after
eighteen years.'

It was Pat's chance.  Sitting on her desk he told her his plan.

'It's soft jobs for you and me,' he said.  'You the head of a
script department, me an associate producer.  We're on the gravy
train for life--no more writing--no more pounding the keys.  We
might even--we might even--if things go good we could get married.'

She hesitated a long time.  When she put a fresh sheet in the
typewriter Pat feared he had lost.

'I can write it from memory,' she said.  'This was a letter he
typed HIMSELF on February 3rd, 1921.  He sealed it and gave it to
me to mail--but there was a blonde he was interested in, and I
wondered why he should be so secret about a letter.'

Helen had been typing as she talked, and now she handed Pat a note.


To Will Bronson
First National Studios
Personal

Dear Bill:

We killed Taylor.  We should have cracked down on him sooner.  So
why not shut up.

Yours, Harry


'Get it?' Helen said.  'On February 1st, 1921, somebody knocked off
William Desmond Taylor, the director.  And they've never found out
who.'


III


For eighteen years she had kept the original note, envelope and
all.  She had sent only a copy to Bronson, tracing Harry Gooddorf's
signature.

'Baby, we're set!' said Pat.  'I always thought it was a GIRL got
Taylor.'

He was so elated that he opened a drawer and brought forth a half-
pint of whiskey.  Then, with an afterthought, he demanded:

'Is it in a safe place?'

'You bet it is.  He'd never guess where.'

'Baby, we've got him!'

Cash, cars, girls, swimming pools swam in a glittering montage
before Pat's eye.

He folded the note, put it in his pocket, took another drink and
reached for his hat.

'You going to see him now?' Helen demanded in some alarm.  'Hey,
wait till I get off the lot.  _I_ don't want to get murdered.'

'Don't worry!  Listen I'll meet you in "the Muncherie" at Fifth and
La Brea--in one hour.'

As he walked to Gooddorf's office he decided to mention no facts or
names within the walls of the studio.  Back in the brief period
when he had headed a scenario department Pat had conceived a plan
to put a dictaphone in every writer's office.  Thus their loyalty
to the studio executives could be checked several times a day.

The idea had been laughed at.  But later, when he had been 'reduced
back to a writer', he often wondered if his plan was secretly
followed.  Perhaps some indiscreet remark of his own was
responsible for the doghouse where he had been interred for the
past decade.  So it was with the idea of concealed dictaphones in
mind, dictaphones which could be turned on by the pressure of a
toe, that he entered Harry Gooddorf's office.

'Harry--' he chose his words carefully, 'do you remember the night
of February 1st, 1921?'

Somewhat flabbergasted, Gooddorf leaned back in his swivel chair.

'WHAT?'

'Try and think.  It's something very important to you.'

Pat's expression as he watched his friend was that of an anxious
undertaker.

'February 1st, 1921.'  Gooddorf mused.  'No.  How could I remember?
You think I keep a diary?  I don't even know where I was then.'

'You were right here in Hollywood.'

'Probably.  If you know, tell me.'

'You'll remember.'

'Let's see.  I came out to the coast in sixteen.  I was with
Biograph till 1920.  Was I making some comedies?  That's it.  I was
making a piece called Knuckleduster--on location.'

'You weren't always on location.  You were in town February 1st.'

'What is this?' Gooddorf demanded.  'The third degree?'

'No--but I've got some information about your doings on that date.'

Gooddorf's face reddened; for a moment it looked as if he were
going to throw Pat out of the room--then suddenly he gasped, licked
his lips and stared at his desk.

'Oh,' he said, and after a minute:  'But I don't see what business
it is of yours.'

'It's the business of every decent man.'

'Since when have you been decent?'

'All my life,' said Pat.  'And, even if I haven't, I never did
anything like that.'

'My foot!' said Harry contemptuously.  'YOU showing up here with a
halo!  Anyhow, what's the evidence?  You'd think you had a written
confession.  It's all forgotten long ago.'

'Not in the memory of decent men,' said Pat.  'And as for a written
confession--I've got it.'

'I doubt you.  And I doubt if it would stand in any court.  You've
been taken in.'

'I've seen it,' said Pat with growing confidence.  'And it's enough
to hang you.'

'Well, by God, if there's any publicity I'll run you out of town.'

'You'll run ME out of town.'

'I don't want any publicity.'

'Then I think you'd better come along with me.  Without talking to
anybody.'

'Where are we going?'

'I know a bar where we can be alone.'

The Muncherie was in fact deserted, save for the bartender and
Helen Kagle who sat at a table, jumpy with alarm.  Seeing her,
Gooddorf's expression changed to one of infinite reproach.

'This is a hell of a Christmas,' he said, 'with my family expecting
me home an hour ago.  I want to know the idea.  You say you've got
something in my writing.'

Pat took the paper from his pocket and read the date aloud.  Then
he looked up hastily:

'This is just a copy, so don't try and snatch it.'

He knew the technique of such scenes as this.  When the vogue for
Westerns had temporarily subsided he had sweated over many an orgy
of crime.

'To William Bronson, Dear Bill:  We killed Taylor.  We should have
cracked down on him sooner.  So why not shut up.  Yours, Harry.'

Pat paused.  'You wrote this on February 3rd, 1921.'

Silence.  Gooddorf turned to Helen Kagle.

'Did YOU do this?  Did I dictate that to you?'

'No,' she admitted in an awed voice.  'You wrote it yourself.  I
opened the letter.'

'I see.  Well, what do you want?'

'Plenty,' said Pat, and found himself pleased with the sound of the
word.

'What exactly?'

Pat launched into the description of a career suitable to a man of
forty-nine.  A glowing career.  It expanded rapidly in beauty and
power during the time it took him to drink three large whiskeys.
But one demand he returned to again and again.

He wanted to be made a producer tomorrow.

'Why tomorrow?' demanded Gooddorf.  'Can't it wait?'

There were sudden tears in Pat's eyes--real tears.

'This is Christmas,' he said.  'It's my Christmas wish.  I've had a
hell of a time.  I've waited so long.'

Gooddorf got to his feet suddenly.

'Nope,' he said.  'I won't make you a producer.  I couldn't do it
in fairness to the company.  I'd rather stand trial.'

Pat's mouth fell open.

'What?  You won't?'

'Not a chance.  I'd rather swing.'

He turned away, his face set, and started toward the door.

'All right!' Pat called after him.  'It's your last chance.'

Suddenly he was amazed to see Helen Kagle spring up and run after
Gooddorf--try to throw her arms around him.

'Don't worry!' she cried.  'I'll tear it up, Harry!  It was a joke
Harry--'

Her voice trailed off rather abruptly.  She had discovered that
Gooddorf was shaking with laughter.

'What's the joke?' she demanded, growing angry again.  'Do you
think I haven't got it?'

'Oh, you've got it all right,' Gooddorf howled.  'You've got it--
but it isn't what you think it is.'

He came back to the table, sat down and addressed Pat.

'Do you know what I thought that date meant?  I thought maybe it
was the date Helen and I first fell for each other.  That's what I
thought.  And I thought she was going to raise Cain about it.  I
thought she was nuts.  She's been married twice since then, and so
have I.'

'That doesn't explain the note,' said Pat sternly but with a sinky
feeling.  'You admit you killed Taylor.'

Gooddorf nodded.

'I still think a lot of us did,' he said.  'We were a wild crowd--
Taylor and Bronson and me and half the boys in the big money.  So a
bunch of us got together in an agreement to go slow.  The country
was waiting for somebody to hang.  We tried to get Taylor to watch
his step but he wouldn't.  So instead of cracking down on him, we
let him "go the pace".  And some rat shot him--who did it I don't
know.'

He stood up.

'Like somebody should have cracked down on YOU, Pat.  But you were
an amusing guy in those days, and besides we were all too busy.'

Pat sniffled suddenly.

'I've BEEN cracked down on,' he said.  'Plenty.'

'But too late,' said Gooddorf, and added, 'you've probably got a
new Christmas wish by now, and I'll grant it to you.  I won't say
anything about this afternoon.'

When he had gone, Pat and Helen sat in silence.  Presently Pat took
out the note again and looked it over.

'"So why not shut up?"' he read aloud.  'He didn't explain that.'

'Why NOT shut up?' Helen said.




A MAN IN THE WAY

Esquire (February 1940)


I


Pat Hobby could always get on the lot.  He had worked there fifteen
years on and off--chiefly off during the past five--and most of the
studio police knew him.  If tough customers on watch asked to see
his studio card he could get in by phoning Lou, the bookie.  For
Lou also, the studio had been home for many years.

Pat was forty-nine.  He was a writer but he had never written much,
nor even read all the 'originals' he worked from, because it made
his head bang to read much.  But the good old silent days you got
somebody's plot and a smart secretary and gulped benzedrine
'structure' at her six or eight hours every week.  The director
took care of the gags.  After talkies came he always teamed up with
some man who wrote dialogue.  Some young man who liked to work.

'I've got a list of credits second to none,' he told Jack Berners.
'All I need is an idea and to work with somebody who isn't all
wet.'

He had buttonholed Jack outside the production office as Jack was
going to lunch and they walked together in the direction of the
commissary.

'You bring me an idea,' said Jack Berners.  'Things are tight.  We
can't put a man on salary unless he's got an idea.'

'How can you get ideas off salary?' Pat demanded--then he added
hastily:  'Anyhow I got the germ of an idea that I could be telling
you all about at lunch.'

Something might come to him at lunch.  There was Baer's notion
about the boy scout.  But Jack said cheerfully:

'I've got a date for lunch, Pat.  Write it out and send it around,
eh?'

He felt cruel because he knew Pat couldn't write anything out but
he was having story trouble himself.  The war had just broken out
and every producer on the lot wanted to end their current stories
with the hero going to war.  And Jack Berners felt he had thought
of that first for his production.

'So write it out, eh?'

When Pat didn't answer Jack looked at him--he saw a sort of whipped
misery in Pat's eye that reminded him of his own father.  Pat had
been in the money before Jack was out of college--with three cars
and a chicken over every garage.  Now his clothes looked as if he'd
been standing at Hollywood and Vine for three years.

'Scout around and talk to some of the writers on the lot,' he said.
'If you can get one of them interested in your idea, bring him up
to see me.'

'I hate to give an idea without money on the line,' Pat brooded
pessimistically, 'These young squirts'll lift the shirt off your
back.'

They had reached the commissary door.

'Good luck, Pat.  Anyhow we're not in Poland.'

--Good YOU'RE not, said Pat under his breath.  They'd slit your
gizzard.

Now what to do?  He went up and wandered along the cell block of
writers.  Almost everyone had gone to lunch and those who were in
he didn't know.  Always there were more and more unfamiliar faces.
And he had thirty credits; he had been in the business, publicity
and script-writing, for twenty years.

The last door in the line belonged to a man he didn't like.  But he
wanted a place to sit a minute so with a knock he pushed it open.
The man wasn't there--only a very pretty, frail-looking girl sat
reading a book.

'I think he's left Hollywood,' she said in answer to his question.
'They gave me his office but they forgot to put up my name.'

'You a writer?' Pat asked in surprise.

'I work at it.'

'You ought to get 'em to give you a test.'

'No--I like writing.'

'What's that you're reading.'

She showed him.

'Let me give you a tip,' he said.  'That's not the way to get the
guts out of a book.'

'Oh.'

'I've been here for years--I'm Pat Hobby--and I KNOW.  Give the
book to four of your friends to read it.  Get them to tell you what
stuck in their minds.  Write it down and you've got a picture--
see?'

The girl smiled.

'Well, that's very--very original advice, Mr Hobby.'

'Pat Hobby,' he said.  'Can I wait here a minute?  Man I came to
see is at lunch.'

He sat down across from her and picked up a copy of a photo
magazine.

'Oh, just let me mark that,' she said quickly.

He looked at the page which she checked.  It showed paintings being
boxed and carted away to safety from an art gallery in Europe.

'How'll you use it?' he said.

'Well, I thought it would be dramatic if there was an old man
around while they were packing the pictures.  A poor old man,
trying to get a job helping them.  But they can't use him--he's in
the way--not even good cannon fodder.  They want strong young
people in the world.  And it turns out he's the man who painted the
pictures many years ago.'

Pat considered.

'It's good but I don't get it,' he said.

'Oh, it's nothing, a short short maybe.'

'Got any good picture ideas?  I'm in with all the markets here.'

'I'm under contract.'

'Use another name.'

Her phone rang.

'Yes, this is Pricilla Smith,' the girl said.

After a minute she turned to Pat.

'Will you excuse me?  This is a private call.'

He got it and walked out, and along the corridor.  Finding an
office with no name on it he went in and fell asleep on the couch.


II


Late that afternoon he returned to Jack Berners' waiting rooms.  He
had an idea about a man who meets a girl in an office and he thinks
she's a stenographer but she turns out to be a writer.  He engages
her as a stenographer, though, and they start for the South Seas.
It was a beginning, it was something to tell Jack, he thought--and,
picturing Pricilla Smith, he refurbished some old business he
hadn't seen used for years.

He became quite excited about it--felt quite young for a moment and
walked up and down the waiting room mentally rehearsing the first
sequence.  'So here we have a situation like It Happened One Night--
only NEW.  I see Hedy Lamarr--'

Oh, he knew how to talk to these boys if he could get to them, with
something to say.

'Mr Berners still busy?' he asked for the fifth time.

'Oh, yes, Mr Hobby.  Mr Bill Costello and Mr Bach are in there.'

He thought quickly.  It was half-past five.  In the old days he had
just busted in sometimes and sold an idea, an idea good for a
couple of grand because it was just the moment when they were very
tired of what they were doing at present.

He walked innocently out and to another door in the hall.  He knew
it led through a bathroom right in to Jack Berners' office.
Drawing a quick breath he plunged . . .

'. . . So that's the notion,' he concluded after five minutes.
'It's just a flash--nothing really worked out, but you could give
me an office and a girl and I could have something on paper for you
in three days.'

Berners, Costello and Bach did not even have to look at each other.
Berners spoke for them all as he said firmly and gently:

'That's no idea, Pat.  I can't put you on salary for that.'

'Why don't you work it out further by yourself,' suggested Bill
Costello.  'And then let's see it.  We're looking for ideas--
especially about the war.'

'A man can think better on salary,' said Pat.

There was silence.  Costello and Bach had drunk with him, played
poker with him, gone to the races with him.  They'd honestly be
glad to see him placed.

'The war, eh,' he said gloomily.  'Everything is war now, no matter
how many credits a man has.  Do you know what it makes me think of?
It makes me think of a well-known painter in the discard.  It's war
time and he's useless--just a man in the way.'  He warmed to his
conception of himself, '--but all the time they're carting away his
OWN PAINTINGS as the most valuable thing worth saving.  And they
won't even let me help.  That's what it reminds me of.'

There was again silence for a moment.

'That isn't a bad idea,' said Bach thoughtfully.  He turned to the
others.  'You know?  In itself?'

Bill Costello nodded

'Not bad at all.  And I know where we could spot it.  Right at the
end of the fourth sequence.  We just change old Ames to a painter.'

Presently they talked money.

'I'll give you two weeks on it,' said Berners to Pat.  'At two-
fifty.'

'Two-fifty!' objected Pat.  'Say there was one time you paid me ten
times that!'

'That was ten years ago,' Jack reminded him.  'Sorry.  Best we can
do now.'

'You make me feel like that old painter--'

'Don't oversell it,' said Jack, rising and smiling.  'You're on the
payroll.'

Pat went out with a quick step and confidence in his eyes.  Half a
grand--that would take the pressure off for a month and you could
often stretch two weeks into three--sometimes four.  He left the
studio proudly through the front entrance, stopping at the liquor
store for a half-pint to take back to his room.

By seven o'clock things were even better.  Santa Anita tomorrow, if
he could get an advance.  And tonight--something festive ought to
be done tonight.  With a sudden rush of pleasure he went down to
the phone in the lower hall, called the studio and asked for Miss
Pricilla Smith's number.  He hadn't met anyone so pretty for
years . . .

In her apartment Pricilla Smith spoke rather firmly into the phone.

'I'm awfully sorry,' she said, 'but I couldn't possibly . . .  No--
and I'm tied up all the rest of the week.'

As she hung up, Jack Berners spoke from the couch.

'Who was it?'

'Oh, some man who came in the office,' she laughed, 'and told me
never to read the story I was working on.'

'Shall I believe you?'

'You certainly shall.  I'll even think of his name in a minute.
But first I want to tell you about an idea I had this morning.  I
was looking at a photo in a magazine where they were packing up
some works of art in the Tate Gallery in London.  And I thought--'





"BOIL SOME WATER--LOTS OF IT"


Esquire (March 1940)



Pat Hobby sat in his office in the writers' building and looked at
his morning's work, just come back from the script department.  He
was on a "polish job," about the only kind he ever got nowadays.
He was to repair a messy sequence in a hurry, but the word "hurry"
neither frightened nor inspired him for Pat had been in Hollywood
since he was thirty--now he was forty-nine.  All the work he had
done this morning (except a little changing around of lines so he
could claim them as his own)--all he had actually invented was a
single imperative sentence, spoken by a doctor.

"Boil some water--lots of it."

It was a good line.  It had sprung into his mind full grown as soon
as he had read the script.  In the old silent days Pat would have
used it as a spoken title and ended his dialogue worries for a
space, but he needed some spoken words for other people in the
scene.  Nothing came.

"Boil some water," he repeated to himself.  "Lots of it."

The word boil brought a quick glad thought of the commissary.  A
reverent thought too--for an old-timer like Pat, what people you
sat with at lunch was more important in getting along than what you
dictated in your office.  This was no art, as he often said--this
was an industry.

"This is no art," he remarked to Max Learn who was leisurely
drinking at a corridor water cooler.  "This is an industry."

Max had flung him this timely bone of three weeks at three-fifty.

"Say look, Pat!  Have you got anything down on paper yet?"

"Say I've got some stuff already that'll make 'em--"  He named a
familiar biological function with the somewhat startling assurance
that it would take place in the theater.

Max tried to gauge his sincerity.

"Want to read it to me now?" he asked.

"Not yet.  But it's got the old guts if you know what I mean."

Max was full of doubts.

"Well, go to it.  And if you run into any medical snags check with
the doctor over at the First Aid Station.  It's got to be right."

The spirit of Pasteur shone firmly in Pat's eyes.

"It will be."

He felt good walking across the lot with Max--so good that he
decided to glue himself to the producer and sit down with him at
the Big Table.  But Max foiled his intention by cooing "See you
later" and slipping into the barber shop.

Once Pat had been a familiar figure at the Big Table; often in his
golden prime he had dined in the private canteens of executives.
Being of the older Hollywood he understood their jokes, their
vanities, their social system with its swift fluctuations.  But
there were too many new faces at the Big Table now--faces that
looked at him with the universal Hollywood suspicion.  And at the
little tables where the young writers sat they seemed to take work
so seriously.  As for just sitting down anywhere, even with
secretaries or extras--Pat would rather catch a sandwich at the
corner.

Detouring to the Red Cross Station he asked for the doctor.  A
girl, a nurse, answered from a wall mirror where she was hastily
drawing her lips, "He's out.  What is it?"

"Oh.  Then I'll come back."

She had finished, and now she turned--vivid and young and with a
bright consoling smile.

"Miss Stacey will help you.  I'm about to go to lunch."

He was aware of an old, old feeling--left over from the time when
he had had wives--a feeling that to invite this little beauty to
lunch might cause trouble.  But he remembered quickly that he
didn't have any wives now--they had both given up asking for
alimony.

"I'm working on a medical," he said.  "I need some help."

"A medical?"

"Writing it--idea about a doc.  Listen--let me buy you lunch.  I
want to ask you some medical questions."

The nurse hesitated.

"I don't know.  It's my first day out here."

"It's all right," he assured her, "studios are democratic;
everybody is just 'Joe' or 'Mary'--from the big shots right down to
the prop boys."

He proved it magnificently on their way to lunch by greeting a male
star and getting his own name back in return.  And in the
commissary, where they were placed hard by the Big Table, his
producer, Max Leam, looked up, did a little "takem" and winked.

The nurse--her name was Helen Earle--peered about eagerly.

"I don't see anybody," she said.  "Except oh, there's Ronald
Colman.  I didn't know Ronald Colman looked like that."

Pat pointed suddenly to the floor.

"And there's Mickey Mouse!"

She jumped and Pat laughed at his joke--but Helen Earle was already
staring starry-eyed at the costume extras who filled the hall with
the colors of the First Empire.  Pat was piqued to see her interest
go out to these nonentities.

"The big shots are at this next table," he said solemnly,
wistfully, "directors and all except the biggest executives.  They
could have Ronald Colman pressing pants.  I usually sit over there
but they don't want ladies.  At lunch, that is, they don't want
ladies."

"Oh," said Helen Earle, polite but unimpressed.  "It must be
wonderful to be a writer too.  It's so very interesting."

"It has its points," he said . . . he had thought for years it was
a dog's life.

"What is it you want to ask me about a doctor?"

Here was toil again.  Something in Pat's mind snapped off when he
thought of the story.

"Well, Max Leam--that man facing us--Max Leam and I have a script
about a Doc.  You know?  Like a hospital picture?"

"I know."  And she added after a moment, "That's the reason that I
went in training."

"And we've got to have it RIGHT because a hundred million people
would check on it.  So this doctor in the script he tells them to
boil some water.  He says, 'Boil some water--lots of it.'  And we
were wondering what the people would do then."

"Why--they'd probably boil it," Helen said, and then, somewhat
confused by the question, "What people?"

"Well, somebody's daughter and the man that lived there and an
attorney and the man that was hurt."

Helen tried to digest this before answering.

"--and some other guy I'm going to cut out," he finished.

There was a pause.  The waitress set down tuna fish sandwiches.

"Well, when a doctor gives orders they're orders," Helen decided.

"Hm."  Pat's interest had wandered to an odd little scene at the
Big Table while he inquired absently, "You married?"

"No."

"Neither am I."

Beside the Big Table stood an extra.  A Russian Cossack with a
fierce moustache.  He stood resting his hand on the back of an
empty chair between Director Paterson and Producer Leam.

"Is this taken?" he asked, with a thick Central European accent.

All along the Big Table faces stared suddenly at him.  Until after
the first look the supposition was that he must be some well-known
actor.  But he was not--he was dressed in one of the many-colored
uniforms that dotted the room.

Someone at the table said:  "That's taken."  But the man drew out
the chair and sat down.

"Got to eat somewhere," he remarked with a grin.

A shiver went over the near-by tables.  Pat Hobby stared with his
mouth ajar.  It was as if someone had crayoned Donald Duck into the
Last Supper.

"Look at that," he advised Helen.  "What they'll do to him!  Boy!"

The flabbergasted silence at the Big Table was broken by Ned
Harman, the Production Manager.

"This table is reserved," he said.

The extra looked up from a menu.

"They told me sit anywhere."

He beckoned a waitress--who hesitated, looking for an answer in the
faces of her superiors.

"Extras don't eat here," said Max Leam, still politely.  "This is
a--"

"I got to eat," said the Cossack doggedly.  "I been standing around
six hours while they shoot this stinking mess and now I got to
eat."

The silence had extended--from Pat's angle all within range seemed
to be poised in mid-air.

The extra shook his head wearily.

"I dunno who cooked it up--" he said--and Max Leam sat forward in
his chair--"but it's the lousiest tripe I ever seen shot in
Hollywood."

--At his table Pat was thinking why didn't they do something?
Knock him down, drag him away.  If they were yellow themselves they
could call the studio police.

"Who is that?"  Helen Earle was following his eyes innocently,
"Somebody I ought to know?"

He was listening attentively to Max Leam's voice, raised in anger.

"Get up and get out of here, buddy, and get out quick!"

The extra frowned.

"Who's telling me?" he demanded.

"You'll see."  Max appealed to the table at large, "Where's Cushman--
where's the Personnel man?"

"You try to move me," said the extra, lifting the hilt of his
scabbard above the level of the table, "and I'll hang this on your
ear.  I know my rights."

The dozen men at the table, representing a thousand dollars an hour
in salaries, sat stunned.  Far down by the door one of the studio
police caught wind of what was happening and started to elbow
through the crowded room.  And Big Jack Wilson, another director,
was on his feet in an instant coming around the table.

But they were too late--Pat Hobby could stand no more.  He had
jumped up, seizing a big heavy tray from the serving stand nearby.
In two springs he reached the scene of action--lifting the tray he
brought it down upon the extra's head with all the strength of his
forty-nine years.  The extra, who had been in the act of rising to
meet Wilson's threatened assault, got the blow full on his face and
temple and as he collapsed a dozen red streaks sprang into sight
through the heavy grease paint.  He crashed sideways between the
chairs.

Pat stood over him panting--the tray in his hand.

"The dirty rat!" he cried.  "Where does he think--"

The studio policeman pushed past; Wilson pushed past--two aghast
men from another table rushed up to survey the situation.

"It was a gag!" one of them shouted.  "That's Walter Herrick, the
writer.  It's his picture."

"My God!"

"He was kidding Max Leam.  It was a gag I tell you!"

"Pull him out . . .  Get a doctor . . .  Look out, there!"

Now Helen Earle hurried over; Walter Herrick was dragged out into a
cleared space on the floor and there were yells of "Who did it?--
Who beaned him?"

Pat let the tray lapse to a chair, its sound unnoticed in the
confusion.

He saw Helen Earle working swiftly at the man's head with a pile of
clean napkins.

"Why did they have to do this to him?" someone shouted.

Pat caught Max Leam's eye but Max happened to look away at the
moment and a sense of injustice came over Pat.  He alone in this
crisis, real or imaginary, had ACTED.  He alone had played the man,
while those stuffed shirts let themselves be insulted and abused.
And now he would have to take the rap--because Walter Herrick was
powerful and popular, a three thousand a week man who wrote hit
shows in New York.  How could anyone have guessed that it was a
gag?

There was a doctor now.  Pat saw him say something to the
manageress and her shrill voice sent the waitresses scattering like
leaves toward the kitchen.

"Boil some water!  Lots of it!"

The words fell wild and unreal on Pat's burdened soul.  But even
though he now knew at first hand what came next, he did not think
that he could go on from there.




TEAMED WITH GENIUS


Esquire (April 1940)



"I took a chance in sending for you," said Jack Berners.  "But
there's a job that you just MAY be able to help out with."

Though Pat Hobby was not offended, either as man or writer, a
formal protest was called for.

"I been in the industry fifteen years, Jack.  I've got more screen
credits than a dog has got fleas."

"Maybe I chose the wrong word," said Jack.  "What I mean is, that
was a long time ago.  About money we'll pay you just what Republic
paid you last month--three-fifty a week.  Now--did you ever hear of
a writer named Ren� Wilcox?"

The name was unfamiliar.  Pat had scarcely opened a book in a
decade.

"She's pretty good," he ventured.

"It's a man, an English playwright.  He's only here in L. A. for
his health.  Well--we've had a Russian Ballet picture kicking
around for a year--three bad scripts on it.  So last week we signed
up Ren� Wilcox--he seemed just the person."

Pat considered.

"You mean he's--"

"I don't know and I don't care," interrupted Berners sharply.  "We
think we can borrow Zorina, so we want to hurry things up--do a
shooting script instead of just a treatment.  Wilcox is
inexperienced and that's where you come in.  You used to be a good
man for structure."

"USED to be!"

"All right, maybe you still are."  Jack beamed with momentary
encouragement.  "Find yourself an office and get together with Ren�
Wilcox."  As Pat started out he called him back and put a bill in
his hand.  "First of all, get a new hat.  You used to be quite a
boy around the secretaries in the old days.  Don't give up at forty-
nine!"

Over in the Writers' Building Pat glanced at the directory in the
hall and knocked at the door of 216.  No answer, but he went in to
discover a blond, willowy youth of twenty-five staring moodily out
the window.

"Hello, Ren�!" Pat said.  "I'm your partner."

Wilcox's regard questioned even his existence, but Pat continued
heartily, "I hear we're going to lick some stuff into shape.  Ever
collaborate before?"

"I have never written for the cinema before."

While this increased Pat's chance for a screen credit he badly
needed, it meant that he might have to do some work.  The very
thought made him thirsty.

"This is different from playwriting," he suggested, with suitable
gravity.

"Yes--I read a book about it."

Pat wanted to laugh.  In 1928 he and another man had concocted such
a sucker-trap, Secrets of Film Writing.  It would have made money
if pictures hadn't started to talk.

"It all seems simple enough," said Wilcox.  Suddenly he took his
hat from the rack.  "I'll be running along now."

"Don't you want to talk about the script?" demanded Pat.  "What
have you done so far?"

"I've not done anything," said Wilcox deliberately.  "That idiot,
Berners, gave me some trash and told me to go on from there.  But
it's too dismal."  His blue eyes narrowed.  "I say, what's a boom
shot?"

"A boom shot?  Why, that's when the camera's on a crane."

Pat leaned over the desk and picked up a blue-jacketed "Treatment."
On the cover he read:


                        BALLET SHOES

                         A Treatment
                             by
                       Consuela Martin
         An Original from an idea by Consuela Martin


Pat glanced at the beginning and then at the end.

"I'd like it better if we could get the war in somewhere," he said
frowning.  "Have the dancer go as a Red Cross nurse and then she
could get regenerated.  See what I mean?"

There was no answer.  Pat turned and saw the door softly closing.

What is this? he exclaimed.  What kind of collaborating can a man
do if he walks out?  Wilcox had not even given the legitimate
excuse--the races at Santa Anita!

The door opened again, a pretty girl's face, rather frightened,
showed itself momentarily, said "Oh," and disappeared.  Then it
returned.

"Why it's Mr. Hobby!" she exclaimed.  "I was looking for Mr.
Wilcox."

He fumbled for her name but she supplied it.

"Katherine Hodge.  I was your secretary when I worked here three
years ago."

Pat knew she had once worked with him, but for the moment could not
remember whether there had been a deeper relation.  It did not seem
to him that it had been love--but looking at her now, that appeared
rather too bad.

"Sit down," said Pat.  "You assigned to Wilcox?"

"I thought so--but he hasn't given me any work yet."

"I think he's nuts," Pat said gloomily.  "He asked me what a boom
shot was.  Maybe he's sick--that's why he's out here.  He'll
probably start throwing up all over the office."

"He's well now," Katherine ventured.

"He doesn't look like it to me.  Come on in my office.  You can
work for ME this afternoon."

Pat lay on his couch while Miss Katherine Hodge read the script of
Ballet Shoes aloud to him.  About midway in the second sequence he
fell asleep with his new hat on his chest.



Except for the hat, that was the identical position in which he
found Ren� next day at eleven.  And it was that way for three
straight days--one was asleep or else the other--and sometimes
both.  On the fourth day they had several conferences in which Pat
again put forward his idea about the war as a regenerating force
for ballet dancers.

"Couldn't we NOT talk about the war?" suggested Ren�.  "I have two
brothers in the Guards."

"You're lucky to be here in Hollywood."

"That's as it may be."

"Well, what's your idea of the start of the picture?"

"I do not like the present beginning.  It gives me an almost
physical nausea."

"So then, we got to have something in its place.  That's why I want
to plant the war--"

"I'm late to luncheon," said Ren� Wilcox.  "Good-bye, Mike."

Pat grumbled to Katherine Hodge:

"He can call me anything he likes, but somebody's got to write this
picture.  I'd go to Jack Berners and tell him--but I think we'd
both be out on our ears."

For two days more he camped in Ren�'s office, trying to rouse him
to action, but with no avail.  Desperate on the following day--when
the playwright did not even come to the studio--Pat took a
benzedrine tablet and attacked the story alone.  Pacing his office
with the treatment in his hand he dictated to Katherine--
interspersing the dictation with a short, biased history of his
life in Hollywood.  At the day's end he had two pages of script.

The ensuing week was the toughest in his life--not even a moment to
make a pass at Katherine Hodge.  Gradually with many creaks, his
battered hulk got in motion.  Benzedrine and great drafts of coffee
woke him in the morning, whiskey anesthetized him at night.  Into
his feet crept an old neuritis and as his nerves began to crackle
he developed a hatred against Ren� Wilcox, which served him as a
sort of ersatz fuel.  He was going to finish the script by himself
and hand it to Berners with the statement that Wilcox had not
contributed a single line.

But it was too much--Pat was too far gone.  He blew up when he was
half through and went on a twenty-four-hour bat--and next morning
arrived back at the studio to find a message that Mr. Berners
wanted to see the script at four.  Pat was in a sick and confused
state when his door opened and Ren� Wilcox came in with a
typescript in one hand, and a copy of Berners' note in the other.

"It's all right," said Wilcox.  "I've finished it."

"WHAT?  Have you been WORKING?"

"I always work at night."

"What've you done?  A treatment?"

"No, a shooting script.  At first I was held back by personal
worries, but once I got started it was very simple.  You just get
behind the camera and dream."

Pat stood up aghast.

"But we were supposed to collaborate.  Jack'll be wild."

"I've always worked alone," said Wilcox gently.  "I'll explain to
Berners this afternoon."

Pat sat in a daze.  If Wilcox's script was good--but how could a
first script be good?  Wilcox should have fed it to him as he
wrote; then they might have HAD something.

Fear started his mind working--he was struck by his first original
idea since he had been on the job.  He phoned to the script
department for Katherine Hodge and when she came over told her what
he wanted.  Katherine hesitated.

"I just want to READ it," Pat said hastily.  "If Wilcox is there
you can't take it, of course.  But he just might be out."

He waited nervously.  In five minutes she was back with the script.

"It isn't mimeographed or even bound," she said.

He was at the typewriter, trembling as he picked out a letter with
two fingers.

"Can I help?" she asked.

"Find me a plain envelope and a used stamp and some paste."

Pat sealed the letter himself and then gave directions:

"Listen outside Wilcox's office.  If he's in, push it under his
door.  If he's out get a call boy to deliver it to him, wherever he
is.  Say it's from the mail room.  Then you better go off the lot
for the afternoon.  So he won't catch on, see?"

As she went out Pat wished he had kept a copy of the note.  He was
proud of it--there was a ring of factual sincerity in it too often
missing from his work.


"Dear Mr. Wilcox:

I am sorry to tell you your two brothers were killed in action
today by a long range Tommy-gun.  You are wanted at home in England
right away.

John Smythe
The British Consulate, New York"


But Pat realized that this was no time for self-applause.  He
opened Wilcox's script.

To his vast surprise it was technically proficient--the dissolves,
fades, cuts, pans and trucking shots were correctly detailed.  This
simplified everything.  Turning back to the first page he wrote at
the top:


BALLET SHOES

First Revise

From Pat Hobby and Ren� Wilcox--presently changing this to read:
From Ren� Wilcox and Pat Hobby.


Then, working frantically, he made several dozen small changes.  He
substituted the word "Scram!" for "Get out of my sight!", he put
"Behind the eight-ball" instead of "in trouble," and replaced
"you'll be sorry" with the apt coinage "Or else!"  Then he phoned
the script department.

"This is Pat Hobby.  I've been working on a script with Ren�
Wilcox, and Mr. Berners would like to have it mimeographed by half-
past three."

This would give him an hour's start on his unconscious
collaborator.

"Is it an emergency?"

"I'll say."

"We'll have to split it up between several girls."

Pat continued to improve the script till the call boy arrived.  He
wanted to put in his war idea but time was short--still, he finally
told the call boy to sit down, while he wrote laboriously in pencil
on the last page.


CLOSE SHOT: Boris and Rita

Rita: What does anything matter now!  I have enlisted as a trained
nurse in the war.

Boris: (moved) War purifies and regenerates!

(He puts his arms around her in a wild embrace as the music soars
way up and we FADE OUT)


Limp and exhausted by his effort he needed a drink, so he left the
lot and slipped cautiously into the bar across from the studio
where he ordered gin and water.

With the glow, he thought warm thoughts.  He had done ALMOST what
he had been hired to do--though his hand had accidentally fallen
upon the dialogue rather than the structure.  But how could Berners
tell that the structure wasn't Pat's?  Katherine Hodge would say
nothing, for fear of implicating herself.  They were all guilty but
guiltiest of all was Ren� Wilcox for refusing to play the game.
Always, according to his lights, Pat had played the game.

He had another drink, bought breath tablets and for awhile amused
himself at the nickel machine in the drugstore.  Louie, the studio
bookie, asked if he was interested in wagers on a bigger scale.

"Not today, Louie."

"What are they paying you, Pat?"

"Thousand a week."

"Not so bad."

"Oh, a lot of us old-timers are coming back," Pat prophesied.  "In
silent days was where you got real training--with directors
shooting off the cuff and needing a gag in a split second.  Now
it's a sis job.  They got English teachers working in pictures!
What do they know?"

"How about a little something on 'Quaker Girl'?"

"No," said Pat.  "This afternoon I got an important angle to work
on.  I don't want to worry about horses."

At three-fifteen he returned to his office to find two copies of
his script in bright new covers.


                        BALLET SHOES

                            from
                  Ren� Wilcox and Pat Hobby
                        First Revise


It reassured him to see his name in type.  As he waited in Jack
Berners' anteroom he almost wished he had reversed the names.  With
the right director this might be another It Happened One Night, and
if he got his name on something like that it meant a three or four
year gravy ride.  But this time he'd save his money--go to Santa
Anita only once a week--get himself a girl along the type of
Katherine Hodge, who wouldn't expect a mansion in Beverly Hills.

Berners' secretary interrupted his reverie, telling him to go in.
As he entered he saw with gratification that a copy of the new
script lay on Berners' desk.

"Did you ever--" asked Berners suddenly "--go to a psychoanalyst?"

"No," admitted Pat.  "But I suppose I could get up on it.  Is it a
new assignment?"

"Not exactly.  It's just that I think you've lost your grip.  Even
larceny requires a certain cunning.  I've just talked to Wilcox on
the phone."

"Wilcox must be nuts," said Pat, aggressively.  "I didn't steal
anything from him.  His name's on it, isn't it?  Two weeks ago I
laid out all his structure--every scene.  I even wrote one whole
scene--at the end about the war."

"Oh yes, the war," said Berners as if he was thinking of something
else.

"But if you like Wilcox's ending better--"

"Yes, I like his ending better.  I never saw a man pick up this
work so fast."  He paused.  "Pat, you've told the truth just once
since you came in this room--that you didn't steal anything from
Wilcox."

"I certainly did not.  I GAVE him stuff."

But a certain dreariness, a grey malaise, crept over him as Berners
continued:

"I told you we had three scripts.  You used an old one we discarded
a year ago.  Wilcox was in when your secretary arrived, and he sent
one of them to you.  Clever, eh?"

Pat was speechless.

"You see, he and that girl like each other.  Seems she typed a play
for him this summer."

"They like each other," said Pat incredulously.  "Why, he--"

"Hold it, Pat.  You've had trouble enough today."

"He's responsible," Pat cried.  "He wouldn't collaborate--and all
the time--"

"--he was writing a swell script.  And he can write his own ticket
if we can persuade him to stay here and do another."

Pat could stand no more.  He stood up.

"Anyhow thank you, Jack," he faltered.  "Call my agent if anything
turns up."  Then he bolted suddenly and surprisingly for the door.

Jack Berners signaled on the Dictograph for the President's office.

"Get a chance to read it?" he asked in a tone of eagerness.

"It's swell.  Better than you said.  Wilcox is with me now."

"Have you signed him up?"

"I'm going to.  Seems he wants to work with Hobby.  Here, you talk
to him."

Wilcox's rather high voice came over the wire.

"Must have Mike Hobby," he said.  "Grateful to him.  Had a quarrel
with a certain young lady just before he came, but today Hobby
brought us together.  Besides I want to write a play about him.  So
give him to me--you fellows don't want him any more."

Berners picked up his secretary's phone.

"Go after Pat Hobby.  He's probably in the bar across the street.
We're putting him on salary again but we'll be sorry."  He switched
off, switched on again.  "Oh!  Take him his hat.  He forgot his
hat."




PAT HOBBY AND ORSON WELLES

Esquire (May 1940)


I


'Who's this Welles?' Pat asked of Louie, the studio bookie.  'Every
time I pick up a paper they got about this Welles.'

'You know, he's that beard,' explained Louie.

'Sure, I know he's that beard, you couldn't miss that.  But what
credits's he got?  What's he done to draw one hundred and fifty
grand a picture?'

What indeed?  Had he, like Pat, been in Hollywood over twenty
years?  Did he have credits that would knock your eye out,
extending up to--well, up to five years ago when Pat's credits had
begun to be few and far between?

'Listen--they don't last long,' said Louie consolingly, 'We've seen
'em come and we've seen 'em go.  Hey, Pat?'

Yes--but meanwhile those who had toiled in the vineyard through the
heat of the day were lucky to get a few weeks at three-fifty.  Men
who had once had wives and Filipinos and swimming pools.

'Maybe it's the beard,' said Louie.  'Maybe you and I should grow a
beard.  My father had a beard but it never got him off Grand
Street.'

The gift of hope had remained with Pat through his misfortunes--and
the valuable alloy of his hope was proximity.  Above all things one
must stick around, one must be there when the glazed, tired mind of
the producer grappled with the question 'Who?'  So presently Pat
wandered out of the drug-store, and crossed the street to the lot
that was home.

As he passed through the side entrance an unfamiliar studio
policeman stood in his way.

'Everybody in the front entrance now.'

'I'm Hobby, the writer,' Pat said.

The Cossack was unimpressed.

'Got your card?'

'I'm between pictures.  But I've got an engagement with Jack
Berners.'

'Front gate.'

As he turned away Pat thought savagely:  'Lousy Keystone Cop!'  In
his mind he shot it out with him.  Plunk! the stomach.  Plunk!
plunk! plunk!

At the main entrance, too, there was a new face.

'Where's Ike?' Pat demanded.

'Ike's gone.'

'Well, it's all right, I'm Pat Hobby.  Ike always passes me.'

'That's why he's gone,' said the guardian blandly.  'Who's your
business with?'

Pat hesitated.  He hated to disturb a producer.

'Call Jack Berners' office,' he said.  'Just speak to his
secretary.'

After a minute the man turned from the phone.

'What about?' he said.

'About a picture.'

He waited for an answer.

'She wants to know what picture?'

'To hell with it,' said Pat disgustedly.  'Look--call Louie
Griebel.  What's all this about?'

'Orders from Mr Kasper,' said the clerk.  'Last week a visitor from
Chicago fell in the wind machine--Hello.  Mr Louie Griebel?'

'I'll talk to him,' said Pat, taking the phone.

'I can't do nothing, Pat,' mourned Louie.  'I had trouble getting
my boy in this morning.  Some twirp from Chicago fell in the wind
machine.'

'What's that got to do with me?' demanded Pat vehemently.

He walked, a little faster than his wont, along the studio wall to
the point where it joined the back lot.  There was a guard there
but there were always people passing to and fro and he joined one
of the groups.  Once inside he would see Jack and have himself
excepted from this absurd ban.  Why, he had known this lot when the
first shacks were rising on it, when this was considered the edge
of the desert.

'Sorry mister, you with this party?'

'I'm in a hurry,' said Pat.  'I've lost my card.'

'Yeah?  Well, for all I know you may be a plain clothes man.'  He
held open a copy of a photo magazine under Pat's nose.  'I wouldn't
let you in even if you told me you was this here Orson Welles.'


II


There is an old Chaplin picture about a crowded street car where
the entrance of one man at the rear forces another out in front.  A
similar image came into Pat's mind in the ensuing days whenever he
thought of Orson Welles.  Welles was in; Hobby was out.  Never
before had the studio been barred to Pat and though Welles was on
another lot it seemed as if his large body, pushing in brashly from
nowhere, had edged Pat out the gate.

'Now where do you go?' Pat thought.  He had worked in the other
studios but they were not his.  At this studio he never felt
unemployed--in recent times of stress he had eaten property food on
its stages--half a cold lobster during a scene from The Divine Miss
Carstairs; he had often slept on the sets and last winter made use
of a Chesterfield overcoat from the costume department.  Orson
Welles had no business edging him out of this.  Orson Welles
belonged with the rest of the snobs back in New York.

On the third day he was frantic with gloom.  He had sent note after
note to Jack Berners and even asked Louie to intercede--now word
came that Jack had left town.  There were so few friends left.
Desolate, he stood in front of the automobile gate with a crowd of
staring children, feeling that he had reached the end at last.

A great limousine rolled out, in the back of which Pat recognized
the great overstuffed Roman face of Harold Marcus.  The car rolled
toward the children and, as one of them ran in front of it, slowed
down.  The old man spoke into the tube and the car halted.  He
leaned out blinking.

'Is there no policeman here?' he asked of Pat.

'No, Mr Marcus,' said Pat quickly.  'There should be.  I'm Pat
Hobby, the writer--could you give me a lift down the street?'

It was unprecedented--it was an act of desperation but Pat's need
was great.

Mr Marcus looked at him closely.

'Oh yes, I remember you,' he said.  'Get in.'

He might possibly have meant get up in front with the chauffeur.
Pat compromised by opening one of the little seats.  Mr Marcus was
one of the most powerful men in the whole picture world.  He did
not occupy himself with production any longer.  He spent most of
his time rocking from coast to coast on fast trains, merging and
launching, launching and merging, like a much divorced woman.

'Some day those children'll get hurt.'

'Yes, Mr Marcus,' agreed Pat heartily, 'Mr Marcus--'

'They ought to have a policeman there.'

'Yes.  Mr Marcus.  Mr Marcus--'

'Hm-m-m!' said Mr Marcus.  'Where do you want to be dropped?'

Pat geared himself to work fast.

'Mr Marcus, when I was your press agent--'

'I know,' said Mr Marcus.  'You wanted a ten dollar a week raise.'

'What a memory!' cried Pat in gladness.  'What a memory!  But Mr
Marcus, now I don't want anything at all.'

'This is a miracle.'

'I've got modest wants, see, and I've saved enough to retire.'

He thrust his shoes slightly forward under a hanging blanket, The
Chesterfield coat effectively concealed the rest.

'That's what I'd like,' said Mr Marcus gloomily.  'A farm--with
chickens.  Maybe a little nine-hole course.  Not even a stock
ticker.'

'I want to retire, but different,' said Pat earnestly.  'Pictures
have been my life.  I want to watch them grow and grow--'

Mr Marcus groaned.

'Till they explode,' he said.  'Look at Fox!  I cried for him.'  He
pointed to his eyes, 'Tears!'

Pat nodded very sympathetically.

'I want only one thing.'  From the long familiarity he went into
the foreign locution.  'I should go on the lot anytime.  From
nothing.  Only to be there.  Should bother nobody.  Only help a
little from nothing if any young person wants advice.'

'See Berners,' said Marcus.

'He said see you.'

'Then you did want something,' Marcus smiled.  'All right, all
right by me.  Where do you get off now?'

'Could you write me a pass?' Pat pleaded.  'Just a word on your
card?'

'I'll look into it,' said Mr Marcus.  'Just now I've got things on
my mind.  I'm going to a luncheon.'  He sighed profoundly.  'They
want I should meet this new Orson Welles that's in Hollywood.'

Pat's heart winced.  There it was again--that name, sinister and
remorseless, spreading like a dark cloud over all his skies.

'Mr Marcus,' he said so sincerely that his voice trembled, 'I
wouldn't be surprised if Orson Welles is the biggest menace that's
come to Hollywood for years.  He gets a hundred and fifty grand a
picture and I wouldn't be surprised if he was so radical that you
had to have all new equipment and start all over again like you did
with sound in 1928.'

'Oh my God!' groaned Mr Marcus.

'And me,' said Pat, 'all I want is a pass and no money--to leave
things as they are.'

Mr Marcus reached for his card case.


III


To those grouped together under the name 'talent', the atmosphere
of a studio is not unfailingly bright--one fluctuates too quickly
between high hope and grave apprehension.  Those few who decide
things are happy in their work and sure that they are worthy of
their hire--the rest live in a mist of doubt as to when their vast
inadequacy will be disclosed.

Pat's psychology was, oddly, that of the masters and for the most
part he was unworried even though he was off salary.  But there was
one large fly in the ointment--for the first time in his life he
began to feel a loss of identity.  Due to reasons that he did not
quite understand, though it might have been traced to his
conversation, a number of people began to address him as 'Orson'.

Now to lose one's identity is a careless thing in any case.  But to
lose it to an enemy, or at least to one who has become scapegoat
for our misfortunes--that is a hardship.  Pat was NOT Orson.  Any
resemblance must be faint and far-fetched and he was aware of the
fact.  The final effect was to make him, in that regard, something
of an eccentric.

'Pat,' said Joe the barber, 'Orson was in here today and asked me
to trim his beard.'

'I hope you set fire to it,' said Pat.

'I did,' Joe winked at waiting customers over a hot towel.  'He
asked for a singe so I took it all off.  Now his face is as bald as
yours.  In fact you look a bit alike.'

This was the morning the kidding was so ubiquitous that, to avoid
it, Pat lingered in Mario's bar across the street.  He was not
drinking--at the bar, that is, for he was down to his last thirty
cents, but he refreshed himself frequently from a half-pint in his
back pocket.  He needed the stimulus for he had to make a touch
presently and he knew that money was easier to borrow when one
didn't have an air of urgent need.

His quarry, Jeff Boldini, was in an unsympathetic state of mind.
He too was an artist, albeit a successful one, and a certain great
lady of the screen had just burned him up by criticizing a wig he
had made for her.  He told the story to Pat at length and the
latter waited until it was all out before broaching his request.

'No soap,' said Jeff.  'Hell, you never paid me back what you
borrowed last month.'

'But I got a job now,' lied Pat.  'This is just to tide me over.  I
start tomorrow.'

'If they don't give the job to Orson Welles,' said Jeff humorously.

Pat's eyes narrowed but he managed to utter a polite, borrower's
laugh.

'Hold it,' said Jeff.  'You know I think you look like him?'

'Yeah.'

'Honest.  Anyhow I could make you look like him.  I could make you
a beard that would be his double.'

'I wouldn't be his double for fifty grand.'

With his head on one side Jeff regarded Pat.

'I could,' he said.  'Come on in to my chair and let me see.'

'Like hell.'

'Come on.  I'd like to try it.  You haven't got anything to do.
You don't work till tomorrow.'

'I don't want a beard.'

'It'll come off.'

'I don't want it.'

'It won't cost you anything.  In fact I'll be paying YOU--I'll loan
you the ten smackers if you'll let me make you a beard.'

Half an hour later Jeff looked at his completed work.

'It's perfect,' he said.  'Not only the beard but the eyes and
everything.'

'All right.  Now take it off,' said Pat moodily.

'What's the hurry?  That's a fine muff.  That's a work of art.  We
ought to put a camera on it.  Too bad you're working tomorrow--
they're using a dozen beards out on Sam Jones' set and one of them
went to jail in a homo raid.  I bet with that muff you could get
the job.'

It was weeks since Pat had heard the word job and he could not
himself say how he managed to exist and eat.  Jeff saw the light in
his eye.

'What say?  Let me drive you out there just for fun,' pleaded Jeff.
'I'd like to see if Sam could tell it was a phony muff.'

'I'm a writer, not a ham.'

'Come on!  Nobody would never know you back of that.  And you'd
draw another ten bucks.'

As they left the make-up department Jeff lingered behind a minute.
On a strip of cardboard he crayoned the name Orson Welles in large
block letters.  And outside, without Pat's notice, he stuck it in
the windshield of his car.

He did not go directly to the back lot.  Instead he drove not too
swiftly up the main studio street.  In front of the administration
building he stopped on the pretext that the engine was missing, and
almost in no time a small but definitely interested crowd began to
gather.  But Jeff's plans did not include stopping anywhere long,
so he hopped in and they started on a tour around the commissary.

'Where are we going?' demanded Pat.

He had already made one nervous attempt to tear the beard from him,
but to his surprise it did not come away.

He complained of this to Jeff.

'Sure,' Jeff explained.  'That's made to last.  You'll have to soak
it off.'

The car paused momentarily at the door of the commissary.  Pat saw
blank eyes staring at him and he stared back at them blankly from
the rear seat.

'You'd think I was the only beard on the lot,' he said gloomily.

'You can sympathize with Orson Welles.'

'To hell with him.'

This colloquy would have puzzled those without, to whom he was
nothing less than the real McCoy.

Jeff drove on slowly up the street.  Ahead of them a little group
of men were walking--one of them, turning, saw the car and drew the
attention of the others to it.  Whereupon the most elderly member
of the party threw up his arms in what appeared to be a defensive
gesture, and plunged to the sidewalk as the car went past.

'My God, did you see that?' exclaimed Jeff.  'That was Mr Marcus.'

He came to a stop.  An excited man ran up and put his head in the
car window.

'Mr Welles, our Mr Marcus has had a heart attack.  Can we use your
car to get him to the infirmary?'

Pat stared.  Then very quickly he opened the door on the other side
and dashed from the car.  Not even the beard could impede his
streamlined flight.  The policeman at the gate, not recognizing the
incarnation, tried to have words with him but Pat shook him off
with the ease of a triple-threat back and never paused till he
reached Mario's bar.

Three extras with beards stood at the rail, and with relief Pat
merged himself into their corporate whiskers.  With a trembling
hand he took the hard-earned ten dollar bill from his pocket.

'Set 'em up,' he cried hoarsely.  'Every muff has a drink on me.'




PAT HOBBY'S SECRET

Esquire (June 1940)


I


Distress in Hollywood is endemic and always acute.  Scarcely an
executive but is being gnawed at by some insoluble problem and in a
democratic way he will let you in on it, with no charge.  The
problem, be it one of health or of production, is faced
courageously and with groans at from one to five thousand a week.
That's how pictures are made.

'But this one has got me down,' said Mr Banizon, '--because how did
the artillery shell get in the trunk of Claudette Colbert or Betty
Field or whoever we decide to use?  We got to explain it so the
audience will believe it.'

He was in the office of Louie the studio bookie and his present
audience also included Pat Hobby, venerable script-stooge of forty-
nine.  Mr Banizon did not expect a suggestion from either of them
but he had been talking aloud to himself about the problem for a
week now and was unable to stop.

'Who's your writer on it?' asked Louie.

'R. Parke Woll,' said Banizon indignantly.  'First I buy this
opening from another writer, see.  A grand notion but only a
notion.  Then I call in R. Parke Woll, the playwright, and we meet
a couple of times and develop it.  Then when we get the end in
sight, his agent horns in and says he won't let Woll talk any more
unless I give him a contract--eight weeks at $3,000!  And all I
need him for is one more day!'

The sum brought a glitter into Pat's old eyes.  Ten years ago he
had camped beatifically in range of such a salary--now he was lucky
to get a few weeks at $250.  His inflamed and burnt over talent had
failed to produce a second growth.

'The worse part of it is that Woll told me the ending,' continued
the producer.

'Then what are you waiting for?' demanded Pat.  'You don't need to
pay him a cent.'

'I forgot it!' groaned Mr Banizon.  'Two phones were ringing at
once in my office--one from a working director.  And while I was
talking Woll had to run along.  Now I can't remember it and I can't
get him back.'

Perversely Pat Hobby's sense of justice was with the producer, not
the writer.  Banizon had almost outsmarted Woll and then been
cheated by a tough break.  And now the playwright, with the
insolence of an Eastern snob, was holding him up for twenty-four
grand.  What with the European market gone.  What with the war.

'Now he's on a big bat,' said Banizon.  'I know because I got a man
tailing him.  It's enough to drive you nuts--here I got the whole
story except the pay-off.  What good is it to me like that?'

'If he's drunk maybe he'd spill it,' suggested Louie practically.

'Not to me,' said Mr Banizon.  'I thought of it but he would
recognize my face.'

Having reached the end of his current blind alley, Mr Banizon
picked a horse in the third and one in the seventh and prepared to
depart.

'I got an idea,' said Pat.

Mr Banizon looked suspiciously at the red old eyes.

'I got no time to hear it now,' he said.

'I'm not selling anything,' Pat reassured him.  'I got a deal
almost ready over at Paramount.  But once I worked with this R.
Parke Woll and maybe I could find what you want to know.'

He and Mr Banizon went out of the office together and walked slowly
across the lot.  An hour later, for an advance consideration of
fifty dollars, Pat was employed to discover how a live artillery
shell got into Claudette Colbert's trunk or Betty Field's trunk or
whosoever's trunk it should be.


II


The swath which R. Parke Woll was now cutting through the City of
the Angels would have attracted no special notice in the twenties;
in the fearful forties it rang out like laughter in church.  He was
easy to follow: his absence had been requested from two hotels but
he had settled down into a routine where he carried his sleeping
quarters in his elbow.  A small but alert band of rats and weasels
were furnishing him moral support in his journey--a journey which
Pat caught up with at two a.m. in Conk's Old Fashioned Bar.

Conk's Bar was haughtier than its name, boasting cigarette girls
and a doorman-bouncer named Smith who had once stayed a full hour
with Tarzan White.  Mr Smith was an embittered man who expressed
himself by goosing the patrons on their way in and out and this was
Pat's introduction.  When he recovered himself he discovered R.
Parke Woll in a mixed company around a table, and sauntered up with
an air of surprise.

'Hello, good looking,' he said to Woll.  'Remember me--Pat Hobby?'

R. Parke Woll brought him with difficulty into focus, turning his
head first on one side then on the other, letting it sink, snap up
and then lash forward like a cobra taking a candid snapshot.
Evidently it recorded for he said:

'Pat Hobby!  Sit down and wha'll you have.  Genlemen, this is Pat
Hobby--best left-handed writer in Hollywood.  Pat h'are you?'

Pat sat down, amid suspicious looks from a dozen predatory eyes.
Was Pat an old friend sent to get the playwright home?

Pat saw this and waited until a half-hour later when he found
himself alone with Woll in the washroom.

'Listen Parke, Banizon is having you followed,' he said.  'I don't
know why he's doing it.  Louie at the studio tipped me off.'

'You don't know why?' cried Parke.  'Well, I know why.  I got
something he wants--that's why!'

'You owe him money?'

'Owe him money.  Why that--he owes ME money!  He owes me for three
long, hard conferences--I outlined a whole damn picture for him.'
His vague finger tapped his forehead in several places.  'What he
wants is in here.'

An hour passed at the turbulent orgiastic table.  Pat waited--and
then inevitably in the slow, limited cycle of the lush, Woll's mind
returned to the subject.

'The funny thing is I told him who put the shell in the trunk and
why.  And then the Master Mind forgot.'

Pat had an inspiration.

'But his secretary remembered.'

'She did?'  Woll was flabbergasted.  'Secretary--don't remember
secretary.'

'She came in,' ventured Pat uneasily.

'Well then by God he's got to pay me or I'll sue him.'

'Banizon says he's got a better idea.'

'The hell he has.  My idea was a pip.  Listen--'

He spoke for two minutes.

'You like it?' he demanded.  He looked at Pat for applause--then he
must have seen something in Pat's eye that he was not intended to
see.  'Why you little skunk,' he cried.  'You've talked to Banizon--
he sent you here.'

Pat rose and tore like a rabbit for the door.  He would have been
out into the street before Woll could overtake him had it not been
for the intervention of Mr Smith, the doorman.

'Where you going?' he demanded, catching Pat by his lapels.

'Hold him!' cried Woll, coming up.  He aimed a blow at Pat which
missed and landed full in Mr Smith's mouth.

It has been mentioned that Mr Smith was an embittered as well as a
powerful man.  He dropped Pat, picked up R. Parke Woll by crotch
and shoulder, held him high and then in one gigantic pound brought
his body down against the floor.  Three minutes later Woll was
dead.


III


Except in great scandals like the Arbuckle case the industry
protects its own--and the industry included Pat, however
intermittently.  He was let out of prison next morning without
bail, wanted only as a material witness.  If anything, the
publicity was advantageous--for the first time in a year his name
appeared in the trade journals.  Moreover he was now the only
living man who knew how the shell got into Claudette Colbert's (or
Betty Field's) trunk.

'When can you come up and see me?' said Mr Banizon.

'After the inquest tomorrow,' said Pat enjoying himself.  'I feel
kind of shaken--it gave me an earache.'

That too indicated power.  Only those who were 'in' could speak of
their health and be listened to.

'Woll really did tell you?' questioned Banizon.

'He told me,' said Pat.  'And it's worth more than fifty smackers.
I'm going to get me a new agent and bring him to your office.'

'I tell you a better plan.' said Banizon hastily, 'I'll get you on
the payroll.  Four weeks at your regular price.'

'What's my price?' demanded Pat gloomily.  'I've drawn everything
from four thousand to zero.'  And he added ambiguously, 'As
Shakespeare says, "Every man has his price."'

The attendant rodents of R. Parke Woll had vanished with their
small plunder into convenient rat holes, leaving as the defendant
Mr Smith, and, as witnesses, Pat and two frightened cigarette
girls.  Mr Smith's defence was that he had been attacked.  At the
inquest one cigarette girl agreed with him--one condemned him for
unnecessary roughness.  Pat Hobby's turn was next, but before his
name was called he started as a voice spoke to him from behind.

'You talk against my husband and I'll twist your tongue out by the
roots.'

A huge dinosaur of a woman, fully six feet tall and broad in
proportion, was leaning forward against his chair.

'Pat Hobby, step forward please . . . now Mr Hobby tell us exactly
what happened.'

The eyes of Mr Smith were fixed balefully on his and he felt the
eyes of the bouncer's mate reaching in for his tongue through the
back of his head.  He was full of natural hesitation.

'I don't know exactly,' he said, and then with quick inspiration,
'All I know is everything went white!'

'WHAT?'

'That's the way it was.  I saw white.  Just like some guys see red
or black I saw white.'

There was some consultation among the authorities.

'Well, what happened from when you came into the restaurant--up to
the time you saw white?'

'Well--' said Pat fighting for time.  'It was all kind of that way.
I came and sat down and then it began to go black.'

'You mean white.'

'Black AND white.'

There was a general titter.

'Witness dismissed.  Defendant remanded for trial.'

What was a little joking to endure when the stakes were so high--
all that night a mountainous Amazon pursued him through his dreams
and he needed a strong drink before appearing at Mr Banizon's
office next morning.  He was accompanied by one of the few
Hollywood agents who had not yet taken him on and shaken him off.

'A flat sum of five hundred,' offered Banizon.  'Or four weeks at
two-fifty to work on another picture.'

'How bad do you want this?' asked the agent.  'My client seems to
think it's worth three thousand.'

'Of my own money?' cried Banizon.  'And it isn't even HIS idea.
Now that Woll is dead it's in the Public Remains.'

'Not quite,' said the agent.  'I think like you do that ideas are
sort of in the air.  They belong to whoever's got them at the time--
like balloons.'

'Well, how much?' asked Mr Banizon fearfully.  'How do I know he's
got the idea?'

The agent turned to Pat.

'Shall we let him find out--for a thousand dollars?'

After a moment Pat nodded.  Something was bothering him.

'All right,' said Banizon.  'This strain is driving me nuts.  One
thousand.'

There was silence.

'Spill it Pat,' said the agent.

Still no word from Pat.  They waited.  When Pat spoke at last his
voice seemed to come from afar.

'Everything's white,' he gasped.

'WHAT?'

'I can't help it--everything has gone white.  I can see it--white.
I remember going into the joint but after that it all goes white.'

For a moment they thought he was holding out.  Then the agent
realized that Pat actually had drawn a psychological blank.  The
secret of R. Parke Woll was safe forever.  Too late Pat realized
that a thousand dollars was slipping away and tried desperately to
recover.

'I remember, I remember!  It was put in by some Nazi dictator.'

'Maybe the girl put it in the trunk herself,' said Banizon
ironically.  'For her bracelet.'

For many years Mr Banizon would be somewhat gnawed by this
insoluble problem.  And as he glowered at Pat he wished that
writers could be dispensed with altogether.  If only ideas could be
plucked from the inexpensive air!




PAT HOBBY, PUTATIVE FATHER

Esquire (July 1940)


I


Most writers look like writers whether they want to or not.  It is
hard to say why--for they model their exteriors whimsically on Wall
Street brokers, cattle kings or English explorers--but they all
turn out looking like writers, as definitely typed as 'The Public'
or 'The Profiteers' in the cartoons.

Pat Hobby was the exception.  He did not look like a writer.  And
only in one corner of the Republic could he have been identified as
a member of the entertainment world.  Even there the first guess
would have been that he was an extra down on his luck, or a bit
player who specialized in the sort of father who should NEVER come
home.  But a writer he was: he had collaborated in over two dozen
moving picture scripts, most of them, it must be admitted, prior to
1929.

A writer?  He had a desk in the Writers' Building at the studio; he
had pencils, paper, a secretary, paper clips, a pad for office
memoranda.  And he sat in an overstuffed chair, his eyes not so
very bloodshot taking in the morning's Reporter.

'I got to get to work,' he told Miss Raudenbush at eleven.  And
again at twelve:

'I got to get to work.'

At quarter to one, he began to feel hungry--up to this point every
move, or rather every moment, was in the writer's tradition.  Even
to the faint irritation that no one had annoyed him, no one had
bothered him, no one had interfered with the long empty dream which
constituted his average day.

He was about to accuse his secretary of staring at him when the
welcome interruption came.  A studio guide tapped at his door and
brought him a note from his boss, Jack Berners:


Dear Pat:

Please take some time off and show these people around the lot.

                                                       Jack


'My God!' Pat exclaimed.  'How can I be expected to get anything
done and show people around the lot at the same time.  Who are
they?' he demanded of the guide.

'I don't know.  One of them seems to be kind of coloured.  He looks
like the extras they had at Paramount for Bengal Lancer.  He can't
speak English.  The other--'

Pat was putting on his coat to see for himself.

'Will you be wanting me this afternoon?' asked Miss Raudenbush.

He looked at her with infinite reproach and went out in front of
the Writers' Building.

The visitors were there.  The sultry person was tall and of a fine
carriage, dressed in excellent English clothes except for a turban.
The other was a youth of fifteen, quite light of hue.  He also wore
a turban with beautifully cut jodhpurs and riding coat.

They bowed formally.

'Hear you want to go on some sets,' said Pat, 'You friends of Jack
Berners?'

'Acquaintances,' said the youth.  'May I present you to my uncle:
Sir Singrim Dak Raj.'

Probably, thought Pat, the company was cooking up a Bengal Lancers,
and this man would play the heavy who owned the Khyber Pass.  Maybe
they'd put Pat on it--at three-fifty a week.  Why not?  He knew how
to write that stuff:

Beautiful Long Shot.  The Gorge.  Show Tribesman firing from behind
rocks.

Medium Shot.  Tribesman hit by bullet making nose dive over high
rock.  (use stunt man)

Medium Long Shot.  The Valley.  British troops wheeling out cannon.

'You going to be long in Hollywood?' he asked shrewdly.

'My uncle doesn't speak English,' said the youth in a measured
voice.  'We are here only a few days.  You see--I am your putative
son.'


II


'--And I would very much like to see Bonita Granville,' continued
the youth.  'I find she has been borrowed by your studio.'

They had been walking toward the production office and it took Pat
a minute to grasp what the young man had said.

'You're my what?' he asked.

'Your putative son,' said the young man, in a sort of sing-song.
'Legally I am the son and heir of the Rajah Dak Raj Indore.  But I
was born John Brown Hobby.'

'Yes?' said Pat.  'Go on!  What's this?'

'My mother was Delia Brown.  You married her in 1926.  And she
divorced you in 1927 when I was a few months old.  Later she took
me to India, where she married my present legal father.'

'Oh,' said Pat.  They had reached the production office.  'You want
to see Bonita Granville.'

'Yes,' said John Hobby Indore.  'If it is convenient.'

Pat looked at the shooting schedule on the wall.

'It may be,' he said heavily.  'We can go and see.'

As they started toward Stage 4, he exploded.

'What do you mean, "my potato son"?  I'm glad to see you and all
that, but say, are you really the kid Delia had in 1926?'

'Putatively,' John Indore said.  'At that time you and she were
legally married.'

He turned to his uncle and spoke rapidly in Hindustani, whereupon
the latter bent forward, looked with cold examination upon Pat and
threw up his shoulders without comment.  The whole business was
making Pat vaguely uncomfortable.

When he pointed out the commissary, John wanted to stop there 'to
buy his uncle a hot dog'.  It seemed that Sir Singrim had conceived
a passion for them at the World's Fair in New York, whence they had
just come.  They were taking ship for Madras tomorrow.

'--whether or not,' said John, sombrely.  'I get to see Bonita
Granville.  I do not care if I MEET her.  I am too young for her.
She is already an old woman by our standards.  But I'd like to SEE
her.'

It was one of those bad days for showing people around.  Only one
of the directors shooting today was an old timer, on whom Pat could
count for a welcome--and at the door of that stage he received word
that the star kept blowing up in his lines and had demanded that
the set be cleared.

In desperation he took his charges out to the back lot and walked
them past the false fronts of ships and cities and village streets,
and medieval gates--a sight in which the boy showed a certain
interest but which Sir Singrim found disappointing.  Each time that
Pat led them around behind to demonstrate that it was all phony Sir
Singrim's expression would change to disappointment and faint
contempt.

'What's he say?' Pat asked his offspring, after Sir Singrim had
walked eagerly into a Fifth Avenue jewellery store, to find nothing
but carpenter's rubble inside.

'He is the third richest man in India,' said John.  'He is
disgusted.  He says he will never enjoy an American picture again.
He says he will buy one of our picture companies in India and make
every set as solid as the Taj Mahal.  He thinks perhaps the
actresses just have a false front too, and that's why you won't let
us see them.'

The first sentence had rung a sort of carillon in Pat's head.  If
there was anything he liked it was a good piece of money--not this
miserable, uncertain two-fifty a week which purchased his freedom.

'I'll tell you,' he said with sudden decision.  'We'll try Stage 4,
and peek at Bonita Granville.'

Stage 4 was double locked and barred, for the day--the director
hated visitors, and it was a process stage besides.  'Process' was
a generic name for trick photography in which every studio competed
with other studios, and lived in terror of spies.  More
specifically it meant that a projecting machine threw a moving
background upon a transparent screen.  On the other side of the
screen, a scene was played and recorded against this moving
background.  The projector on one side of the screen and the camera
on the other were so synchronized that the result could show a star
standing on his head before an indifferent crowd on 42nd Street--a
REAL crowd and a REAL star--and the poor eye could only conclude
that it was being deluded and never quite guess how.

Pat tried to explain this to John, but John was peering for Bonita
Granville from behind the great mass of coiled ropes and pails
where they hid.  They had not got there by the front entrance, but
by a little side door for technicians that Pat knew.

Wearied by the long jaunt over the back lot, Pat took a pint flask
from his hip and offered it to Sir Singrim who declined.  He did
not offer it to John.

'Stunt your growth,' he said solemnly, taking a long pull.

'I do not want any,' said John with dignity.

He was suddenly alert.  He had spotted an idol more glamorous than
Siva not twenty feet away--her back, her profile, her voice.  Then
she moved off.

Watching his face, Pat was rather touched.

'We can go nearer,' he said.  'We might get to that ballroom set.
They're not using it--they got covers on the furniture.'

On tip toe they started, Pat in the lead, then Sir Singrim, then
John.  As they moved softly forward Pat heard the word 'Lights' and
stopped in his tracks.  Then, as a blinding white glow struck at
their eyes and the voice shouted 'Quiet!  We're rolling!' Pat began
to run, followed quickly through the white silence by the others.

The silence did not endure.

'CUT!' screamed a voice, 'What the living, blazing hell!'

From the director's angle something had happened on the screen
which, for the moment, was inexplicable.  Three gigantic
silhouettes, two with huge Indian turbans, had danced across what
was intended to be a New England harbour--they had blundered into
the line of the process shot.  Prince John Indore had not only seen
Bonita Granville--he had acted in the same picture.  His
silhouetted foot seemed to pass miraculously through her blonde
young head.


III


They sat for some time in the guard-room before word could be
gotten to Jack Berners, who was off the lot.  So there was leisure
for talk.  This consisted of a longish harangue from Sir Singrim to
John, which the latter--modifying its tone if not its words--
translated to Pat.

'My uncle says his brother wanted to do something for you.  He
thought perhaps if you were a great writer he might invite you to
come to his kingdom and write his life.'

'I never claimed to be--'

'My uncle says you are an ignominious writer--in your own land you
permitted him to be touched by those dogs of the policemen.'

'Aw--bananas,' muttered Pat uncomfortably.

'He says my mother always wished you well.  But now she is a high
and sacred lady and should never see you again.  He says we will go
to our chambers in the Ambassador Hotel and meditate and pray and
let you know what we decide.'

When they were released, and the two moguls were escorted
apologetically to their car by a studio yes-man, it seemed to Pat
that it had been pretty well decided already.  He was angry.  For
the sake of getting his son a peek at Miss Granville, he had quite
possibly lost his job--though he didn't really think so.  Or rather
he was pretty sure that when his week was up he would have lost it
anyhow.  But though it was a pretty bad break he remembered most
clearly from the afternoon that Sir Singrim was 'the third richest
man in India', and after dinner at a bar on La Cienega he decided
to go down to the Ambassador Hotel and find out the result of the
prayer and meditation.

It was early dark of a September evening.  The Ambassador was full
of memories to Pat--the Coconut Grove in the great days, when
directors found pretty girls in the afternoon and made stars of
them by night.  There was some activity in front of the door and
Pat watched it idly.  Such a quantity of baggage he had seldom
seen, even in the train of Gloria Swanson or Joan Crawford.  Then
he started as he saw two or three men in turbans moving around
among the baggage.  So--they were running out on him.

Sir Singrim Dak Raj and his nephew Prince John, both pulling on
gloves as if at a command, appeared at the door, as Pat stepped
forward out of the darkness.

'Taking a powder, eh?' he said.  'Say, when you get back there,
tell them that one American could lick--'

'I have left a note for you,' said Prince John, turning from his
Uncle's side.  'I say, you WERE nice this afternoon and it really
was too bad.'

'Yes, it was,' agreed Pat.

'But we are providing for you,' John said.  'After our prayers we
decided that you will receive fifty sovereigns a month--two hundred
and fifty dollars--for the rest of your natural life.'

'What will I have to do for it?' questioned Pat suspiciously.

'It will only be withdrawn in case--'

John leaned and whispered in Pat's ear, and relief crept into Pat's
eyes.  The condition had nothing to do with drink and blondes,
really nothing to do with him at all.

John began to get in the limousine.

'Goodbye, putative father,' he said, almost with affection.

Pat stood looking after him.

'Goodbye son,' he said.  He stood watching the limousine go out of
sight.  Then he turned away--feeling like--like Stella Dallas.
There were tears in his eyes.

Potato Father--whatever that meant.  After some consideration he
added to himself: it's better than not being a father at all.


IV


He awoke late next afternoon with a happy hangover--the cause of
which he could not determine until young John's voice seemed to
spring into his ears, repeating:  'Fifty sovereigns a month, with
just one condition--that it be withdrawn in case of war, when all
revenues of our state will revert to the British Empire.'

With a cry Pat sprang to the door.  No Los Angeles Times lay
against it, no Examiner--only Toddy's Daily Form Sheet.  He
searched the orange pages frantically.  Below the form sheets, the
past performances, the endless oracles for endless racetracks, his
eye was caught by a one-inch item:


LONDON.  SEPTEMBER 3RD.  ON THIS MORNING'S DECLARATION BY
CHAMBERLAIN, DOUGIE CABLES 'ENGLAND TO WIN.  FRANCE TO PLACE.
RUSSIA TO SHOW'.





THE HOMES OF THE STARS

Esquire (August 1940)


Beneath a great striped umbrella at the side of a boulevard in a
Hollywood heat wave, sat a man.  His name was Gus Venske (no
relation to the runner) and he wore magenta pants, cerise shoes and
a sport article from Vine Street which resembled nothing so much as
a cerulean blue pajama top.

Gus Venske was not a freak nor were his clothes at all extraordinary
for his time and place.  He had a profession--on a pole beside the
umbrella was a placard:


                VISIT THE HOMES OF THE STARS


Business was bad or Gus would not have hailed the unprosperous man
who stood in the street beside a panting, steaming car, anxiously
watching its efforts to cool.

'Hey fella,' said Gus, without much hope.  'Wanna visit the homes
of the stars?'

The red-rimmed eyes of the watcher turned from the automobile and
looked superciliously upon Gus.

'I'm IN pictures,' said the man, 'I'm in 'em myself.'

'Actor?'

'No.  Writer.'

Pat Hobby turned back to his car, which was whistling like a peanut
wagon.  He had told the truth--or what was once the truth.  Often
in the old days his name had flashed on the screen for the few
seconds allotted to authorship, but for the past five years his
services had been less and less in demand.

Presently Gus Venske shut up shop for lunch by putting his folders
and maps into a briefcase and walking off with it under his arm.
As the sun grew hotter moment by moment, Pat Hobby took refuge
under the faint protection of the umbrella and inspected a soiled
folder which had been dropped by Mr Venske.  If Pat had not been
down to his last fourteen cents he would have telephoned a garage
for aid--as it was, he could only wait.

After a while a limousine with a Missouri licence drew to rest
beside him.  Behind the chauffeur sat a little white moustached man
and a large woman with a small dog.  They conversed for a moment--
then, in a rather shamefaced way, the woman leaned out and
addressed Pat.

'What stars' homes can you visit?' she asked.

It took a moment for this to sink in.

'I mean can we go to Robert Taylor's home and Clark Gable's and
Shirley Temple's--'

'I guess you can if you can get in,' said Pat.

'Because--' continued the woman, '--if we could go to the very best
homes, the most exclusive--we would be prepared to pay more than
your regular price.'

Light dawned upon Pat.  Here together were suckers and smackers.
Here was that dearest of Hollywood dreams--the angle.  If one got
the right angle it meant meals at the Brown Derby, long nights with
bottles and girls, a new tyre for his old car.  And here was an
angle fairly thrusting itself at him.

He rose and went to the side of the limousine.

'Sure.  Maybe I could fix it.'  As he spoke he felt a pang of
doubt.  'Would you be able to pay in advance?'

The couple exchanged a look.

'Suppose we gave you five dollars now,' the woman said, 'and five
dollars if we can visit Clark Gable's home or somebody like that.'

Once upon a time such a thing would have been so easy.  In his
salad days when Pat had twelve or fifteen writing credits a year,
he could have called up many people who would have said, 'Sure,
Pat, if it means anything to you.'  But now he could only think of
a handful who really recognized him and spoke to him around the
lots--Melvyn Douglas and Robert Young and Ronald Colman and Young
Doug.  Those he had known best had retired or passed away.

And he did not know except vaguely where the new stars lived, but
he had noticed that on the folder were typewritten several dozen
names and addresses with pencilled checks after each.

'Of course you can't be sure anybody's at home,' he said, 'they
might be working in the studios.'

'We understand that.'  The lady glanced at Pat's car, glanced away.
'We'd better go in our motor.'

'Sure.'

Pat got up in front with the chauffeur--trying to think fast.  The
actor who spoke to him most pleasantly was Ronald Colman--they had
never exchanged more than conventional salutations but he might
pretend that he was calling to interest Colman in a story.

Better still, Colman was probably not at home and Pat might wangle
his clients an inside glimpse of the house.  Then the process might
be repeated at Robert Young's house and Young Doug's and Melvyn
Douglas'.  By that time the lady would have forgotten Gable and the
afternoon would be over.

He looked at Ronald Colman's address on the folder and gave the
direction to the chauffeur.

'We know a woman who had her picture taken with George Brent,' said
the lady as they started off, 'Mrs Horace J. Ives, Jr.'

'She's our neighbour,' said her husband.  'She lives at 372 Rose
Drive in Kansas City.  And we live at 327.'

'She had her picture taken with George Brent.  We always wondered
if she had to pay for it.  Of course I don't know that I'd want to
go so far as THAT.  I don't know what they'd say back home.'

'I don't think we want to go as far as all that,' agreed her
husband.

'Where are we going first?' asked the lady, cosily.

'Well, I had a couple calls to pay anyhow,' said Pat.  'I got to
see Ronald Colman about something.'

'Oh, he's one of my favourites.  Do you know him well?'

'Oh yes,' said Pat, 'I'm not in this business regularly.  I'm just
doing it today for a friend.  I'm a writer.'

Sure in the knowledge that not so much as a trio of picture writers
were known to the public he named himself as the author of several
recent successes.

'That's very interesting,' said the man, 'I knew a writer once--
this Upton Sinclair or Sinclair Lewis.  Not a bad fellow even if he
was a socialist.'

'Why aren't you writing a picture now?' asked the lady.

'Well, you see we're on strike,' Pat invented.  'We got a thing
called the Screen Playwriters' Guild and we're on strike.'

'Oh.'  His clients stared with suspicion at this emissary of Stalin
in the front seat of their car.

'What are you striking for?' asked the man uneasily.

Pat's political development was rudimentary.  He hesitated.

'Oh, better living conditions,' he said finally, 'free pencils and
paper, I don't know--it's all in the Wagner Act.'  After a moment
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 forehead.  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
something else.'

'What is it?' persisted Pat.  'If I got to be protected against
something I got a right to know what it is.'

Near the false front of a warehouse a battery of cameras were
getting into position.  George Hilliard came suddenly out of a
group and toward Pat and putting his arm on his shoulder steered
him toward the actors' dressing tent.  Once inside he handed Pat a
flask.

'Have a drink, old man.'

Pat took a long pull.

'There's a bit of business, Pat,' Hilliard said, 'needs some new
costuming.  I'll explain it while they dress you.'

Pat was divested of coat and vest, his trousers were loosened and
in an instant a hinged iron doublet was fastened about his middle,
extending from his armpits to his crotch very much like a plaster
cast.

'This is the very finest strongest iron, Pat,' Hilliard assured
him.  'The very best in tensile strength and resistance.  It was
built in Pittsburgh.'

Pat suddenly resisted the attempts of two dressers to pull his
trousers up over the thing and to slip on his coat and vest.

'What's it for?' he demanded, arms flailing.  'I want to know.
You're not going to shoot at me if that's what--'

'No shooting.'

'Then what IS it?  I'm no stunt man--'

'You signed a contract just like McCarthy's to do anything within
reason--and our lawyers have certified this.'

'What IS it?'  Pat's mouth was dry.

'It's an automobile.'

'You're going to hit me with an automobile.'

'Give me a chance to tell you,' begged Hilliard.  'Nobody's going
to hit you.  The auto's going to pass over you, that's all.  This
case is so strong--'

'Oh no!' said Pat.  'Oh no!'  He tore at the iron corselet.  'Not
on your--'

George Hilliard pinioned his arms firmly.

'Pat, you almost wrecked this picture once--you're not going to do
it again.  Be a man.'

'That's what I'm going to be.  You're not going to squash me out
flat like that extra last month.'

He broke off.  Behind Hilliard he saw a face he knew--a hateful and
dreaded face--that of the collector for the North Hollywood Finance
and Loan Company.  Over in the parking lot stood his coupe,
faithful pal and servant since 1934, companion of his misfortunes,
his only certain home.

'Either you fill your contract,' said George Hilliard, '--or you're
out of pictures for keeps.'

The man from the finance company had taken a step forward.  Pat
turned to Hilliard.

'Will you loan me--' he faltered, '--will you advance me twenty-
five dollars?'

'Sure,' said Hilliard.

Pat spoke fiercely to the credit man:

'You hear that?  You'll get your money, but if this thing breaks,
my death'll be on your head.'

The next few minutes passed in a dream.  He heard Hilliard's last
instructions as they walked from the tent.  Pat was to be lying in
a shallow ditch to touch off the dynamite--and then the hero would
drive the car slowly across his middle.  Pat listened dimly.  A
picture of himself, cracked like an egg by the factory wall, lay a-
thwart his mind.

He picked up the torch and lay down in the ditch.  Afar off he
heard the call 'Quiet', then Hilliard's voice and the noise of the
car warming up.

'Action!' called someone.  There was the sound of the car growing
nearer--louder.  And then Pat Hobby knew no more.


IV


When he awoke it was dark and quiet.  For some moments he failed to
recognize his whereabouts.  Then he saw that stars were out in the
California sky and that he was somewhere alone--no--he was held
tight in someone's arms.  But the arms were of iron and he realized
that he was still in the metallic casing.  And then it all came
back to him--up to the moment when he heard the approach of the
car.

As far as he could determine he was unhurt--but why out here and
alone?

He struggled to get up but found it was impossible and after a
horrified moment he let out a cry for help.  For five minutes he
called out at intervals until finally a voice came from far away;
and assistance arrived in the form of a studio policeman.

'What is it fella?  A drop too much?'

'Hell no,' cried Pat.  'I was in the shooting this afternoon.  It
was a lousy trick to go off and leave me in this ditch.'

'They must have forgot you in the excitement.'

'Forgot me!  _I_ was the excitement.  If you don't believe me then
feel what I got on!'

The cop helped him to his feet.

'They was upset,' he explained.  'A star don't break his leg every
day.'

'What's that?  Did something happen?'

'Well, as I heard, he was supposed to drive the car at a bump and
the car turned over and broke his leg.  They had to stop shooting
and they're all kind of gloomy.'

'And they leave me inside this--this stove.  How do I get it off
tonight?  How'm I going to drive my car?'

But for all his rage Pat felt a certain fierce pride.  He was
Something in this set-up--someone to be reckoned with after years
of neglect.  He had managed to hold up the picture once more.




PAT HOBBY'S PREVIEW

Esquire (October 1940)


I


'I haven't got a job for you,' said Berners.  'We've got more
writers now than we can use.'

'I didn't ask for a job,' said Pat with dignity.  'But I rate some
tickets for the preview tonight--since I got a half credit.'

'Oh yes, I want to talk to you about that,' Berners frowned.  'We
may have to take your name off the screen credits.'

'WHAT?' exclaimed Pat.  'Why, it's already on!  I saw it in the
Reporter.  "By Ward Wainwright and Pat Hobby."'

'But we may have to take it off when we release the picture.
Wainwright's back from the East and raising hell.  He says that you
claimed lines where all you did was change "No" to "No sir" and
"crimson" to "red", and stuff like that.'

'I been in this business twenty years,' said Pat.  'I know my
rights.  That guy laid an egg.  I was called in to revise a
turkey!'

'You were not,' Berners assured him.  'After Wainwright went to New
York I called you in to fix one small character.  If I hadn't gone
fishing you wouldn't have got away with sticking your name on the
script.'  Jack Berners broke off, touched by Pat's dismal, red-
streaked eyes.  'Still, I was glad to see you get a credit after so
long.'

'I'll join the Screen Writers Guild and fight it.'

'You don't stand a chance.  Anyhow, Pat, your name's on it tonight
at least, and it'll remind everybody you're alive.  And I'll dig
you up some tickets--but keep an eye out for Wainwright.  It isn't
good for you to get socked if you're over fifty.'

'I'm in my forties,' said Pat, who was forty-nine.

The Dictograph buzzed.  Berners switched it on.

'It's Mr Wainwright.'

'Tell him to wait.'  He turned to Pat:  'That's Wainwright.  Better
go out the side door.'

'How about the tickets?'

'Drop by this afternoon.'

To a rising young screen poet this might have been a crushing blow
but Pat was made of sterner stuff.  Sterner not upon himself, but
on the harsh fate that had dogged him for nearly a decade.  With
all his experience, and with the help of every poisonous herb that
blossoms between Washington Boulevard and Ventura, between Santa
Monica and Vine--he continued to slip.  Sometimes he grabbed
momentarily at a bush, found a few weeks' surcease upon the island
of a 'patch job', but in general the slide continued at a pace that
would have dizzied a lesser man.

Once safely out of Berners' office, for instance, Pat looked ahead
and not behind.  He visioned a drink with Louie, the studio bookie,
and then a call on some old friends on the lot.  Occasionally, but
less often every year, some of these calls developed into jobs
before you could say 'Santa Anita'.  But after he had had his drink
his eyes fell upon a lost girl.

She was obviously lost.  She stood staring very prettily at the
trucks full of extras that rolled toward the commissary.  And then
gazed about helpless--so helpless that a truck was almost upon her
when Pat reached out and plucked her aside.

'Oh, thanks,' she said, 'thanks, I came with a party for a tour of
the studio and a policeman made me leave my camera in some office.
Then I went to stage five where the guide said, but it was closed.'

She was a 'Cute Little Blonde'.  To Pat's liverish eye, cute little
blondes seemed as much alike as a string of paper dolls.  Of course
they had different names.

'We'll see about it,' said Pat.

'You're very nice.  I'm Eleanor Carter from Boise, Idaho.'

He told her his name and that he was a writer.  She seemed first
disappointed--then delighted.

'A writer? . . .  Oh, of course.  I knew they had to have writers
but I guess I never heard about one before.'

'Writers get as much as three grand a week,' he assured her firmly.
'Writers are some of the biggest shots in Hollywood.'

'You see, I never thought of it that way.'

'Bernud Shaw was out here,' he said, '--and Einstein, but they
couldn't make the grade.'

They walked to the Bulletin Board and Pat found that there was work
scheduled on three stages--and one of the directors was a friend
out of the past.

'What did you write?' Eleanor asked.

A great male Star loomed on the horizon and Eleanor was all eyes
till he had passed.  Anyhow the names of Pat's pictures would have
been unfamiliar to her.

'Those were all silents,' he said.

'Oh.  Well, what did you write last?'

'Well, I worked on a thing at Universal--I don't know what they
called it finally--'  He saw that he was not impressing her at all.
He thought quickly.  What did they know in Boise, Idaho?'  I wrote
Captains Courageous,' he said boldly.  'And Test Pilot and
Wuthering Heights and--and The Awful Truth and Mr Smith Goes to
Washington.'

'Oh!' she exclaimed.  'Those are all my favourite pictures.  And
Test Pilot is my boy friend's favourite picture and Dark Victory is
mine.'

'I thought Dark Victory stank,' he said modestly.  'Highbrow
stuff,' and he added to balance the scales of truth, 'I been here
twenty years.'

They came to a stage and went in.  Pat sent his name to the
director and they were passed.  They watched while Ronald Colman
rehearsed a scene.

'Did you write this?' Eleanor whispered.

'They asked me to,' Pat said, 'but I was busy.'

He felt young again, authoritative and active, with a hand in many
schemes.  Then he remembered something.

'I've got a picture opening tonight.'

'You HAVE?'

He nodded.

'I was going to take Claudette Colbert but she's got a cold.  Would
you like to go?'


II


He was alarmed when she mentioned a family, relieved when she said
it was only a resident aunt.  It would be like old times walking
with a cute little blonde past the staring crowds on the sidewalk.
His car was Class of 1933 but he could say it was borrowed--one of
his Jap servants had smashed his limousine.  Then what? he didn't
quite know, but he could put on a good act for one night.

He bought her lunch in the commissary and was so stirred that he
thought of borrowing somebody's apartment for the day.  There was
the old line about 'getting her a test'.  But Eleanor was thinking
only of getting to a hair-dresser to prepare for tonight, and he
escorted her reluctantly to the gate.  He had another drink with
Louie and went to Jack Berners' office for the tickets.

Berners' secretary had them ready in an envelope.

'We had trouble about these, Mr Hobby.'

'Trouble?  Why?  Can't a man go to his own preview?  Is this
something new?'

'It's not that, Mr Hobby,' she said.  'The picture's been talked
about so much, every seat is gone.'

Unreconciled, he complained, 'And they just didn't think of me.'

'I'm sorry.'  She hesitated.  'These are really Mr Wainwright's
tickets.  He was so angry about something that he said he wouldn't
go--and threw them on my desk.  I shouldn't be telling you this.'

'These are HIS seats?'

'Yes, Mr Hobby.'

Pat sucked his tongue.  This was in the nature of a triumph.
Wainwright had lost his temper, which was the last thing you should
ever do in pictures--you could only pretend to lose it--so perhaps
his applecart wasn't so steady.  Perhaps Pat ought to join the
Screen Writers Guild and present his case--if the Screen Writers
Guild would take him in.

This problem was academic.  He was calling for Eleanor at five
o'clock and taking her 'somewhere for a cocktail'.  He bought a two-
dollar shirt, changing into it in the shop, and a four-dollar
Alpine hat--thus halving his bank account which, since the Bank
Holiday of 1933, he carried cautiously in his pocket.

The modest bungalow in West Hollywood yielded up Eleanor without a
struggle.  On his advice she was not in evening dress but she was
as trim and shining as any cute little blonde out of his past.
Eager too--running over with enthusiasm and gratitude.  He must
think of someone whose apartment he could borrow for tomorrow.

'You'd like a test?' he asked as they entered the Brown Derby bar.

'What girl wouldn't?'

'Some wouldn't--for a million dollars.'  Pat had had setbacks in
his love life.  'Some of them would rather go on pounding the keys
or just hanging around.  You'd be surprised.'

'I'd do almost anything for a test,' Eleanor said.

Looking at her two hours later he wondered honestly to himself if
it couldn't be arranged.  There was Harry Gooddorf--there was Jack
Berners--but his credit was low on all sides.  He could do
SOMETHING for her, he decided.  He would try at least to get an
agent interested--if all went well tomorrow.

'What are you doing tomorrow?' he asked.

'Nothing,' she answered promptly.  'Hadn't we better eat and get to
the preview?'

'Sure, sure.'

He made a further inroad on his bank account to pay for his six
whiskeys--you certainly had the right to celebrate before your own
preview--and took her into the restaurant for dinner.  They ate
little.  Eleanor was too excited--Pat had taken his calories in
another form.

It was a long time since he had seen a picture with his name on it.
Pat Hobby.  As a man of the people he always appeared in the credit
titles as Pat Hobby.  It would be nice to see it again and though
he did not expect his old friends to stand up and sing Happy
Birthday to You, he was sure there would be back-slapping and even
a little turn of attention toward him as the crowd swayed out of
the theatre.  That would be nice.

'I'm frightened,' said Eleanor as they walked through the alley of
packed fans.

'They're looking at you,' he said confidently.  'They look at that
pretty pan and try to think if you're an actress.'

A fan shoved an autograph album and pencil toward Eleanor but Pat
moved her firmly along.  It was late--the equivalent of' 'all
aboard' was being shouted around the entrance.

'Show your tickets, please sir.'

Pat opened the envelope and handed them to the doorman.  Then he
said to Eleanor:

'The seats are reserved--it doesn't matter that we're late.'

She pressed close to him, clinging--it was, as it turned out, the
high point of her debut.  Less than three steps inside the theatre
a hand fell on Pat's shoulder.

'Hey Buddy, these aren't tickets for here.'

Before they knew it they were back outside the door, glared at with
suspicious eyes.

'I'm Pat Hobby.  I wrote this picture.'

For an instant credulity wandered to his side.  Then the hard-
boiled doorman sniffed at Pat and stepped in close.

'Buddy you're drunk.  These are tickets to another show.'

Eleanor looked and felt uneasy but Pat was cool.

'Go inside and ask Jack Berners,' Pat said.  'He'll tell you.'

'Now listen,' said the husky guard, 'these are tickets for a
burlesque down in L.A.'  He was steadily edging Pat to the side.
'You go to your show, you and your girl friend.  And be happy.'

'You don't understand.  I wrote this picture.'

'Sure.  In a pipe dream.'

'Look at the programme.  My name's on it.  I'm Pat Hobby.'

'Can you prove it?  Let's see your auto licence.'

As Pat handed it over he whispered to Eleanor, 'Don't worry!'

'This doesn't say Pat Hobby,' announced the doorman.  'This says
the car's owned by the North Hollywood Finance and Loan Company.
Is that you?'

For once in his life Pat could think of nothing to say--he cast one
quick glance at Eleanor.  Nothing in her face indicated that he was
anything but what he thought he was--all alone.


III


Though the preview crowd had begun to drift away, with that vague
American wonder as to why they had come at all, one little cluster
found something arresting and poignant in the faces of Pat and
Eleanor.  They were obviously gate-crashers, outsiders like
themselves, but the crowd resented the temerity of their effort to
get in--a temerity which the crowd did not share.  Little jeering
jests were audible.  Then, with Eleanor already edging away from
the distasteful scene, there was a flurry by the door.  A well-
dressed six-footer strode out of the theatre and stood gazing till
he saw Pat.

'There you are!' he shouted.

Pat recognized Ward Wainwright.

'Go in and look at it!' Wainwright roared.  'Look at it.  Here's
some ticket stubs!  I think the prop boy directed it!  Go and
look!'  To the doorman he said:  'It's all right!  He wrote it.  I
wouldn't have my name on an inch of it.'

Trembling with frustration, Wainwright threw up his hands and
strode off into the curious crowd.

Eleanor was terrified.  But the same spirit that had inspired 'I'd
do anything to get in the movies', kept her standing there--though
she felt invisible fingers reaching forth to drag her back to
Boise.  She had been intending to run--hard and fast.  The hard-
boiled doorman and the tall stranger had crystallized her feelings
that Pat was 'rather simple'.  She would never let those red-rimmed
eyes come close to her--at least for any more than a doorstep kiss.
She was saving herself for somebody--and it wasn't Pat.  Yet she
felt that the lingering crowd was a tribute to her--such as she had
never exacted before.  Several times she threw a glance at the
crowd--a glance that now changed from wavering fear into a sort of
queenliness.

She felt exactly like a star.

Pat, too, was all confidence.  This was HIS preview; all had been
delivered into his hands: his name would stand alone on the screen
when the picture was released.  There had to be somebody's name,
didn't there?--and Wainwright had withdrawn.

SCREENPLAY BY PAT HOBBY.

He seized Eleanor's elbow in a firm grasp and steered her
triumphantly towards the door:

'Cheer up, baby.  That's the way it is.  You see?'




NO HARM TRYING

Esquire (November 1940)


Pat hobby's apartment lay athwart a delicatessen shop on Wilshire
Boulevard.  And there lay Pat himself, surrounded by his books--the
Motion Picture Almanac of 1928 and Barton's Track Guide, 1939--by
his pictures, authentically signed photographs of Mabel Normand and
Barbara LaMarr (who, being deceased, had no value in the pawn-
shops)--and by his dogs in their cracked leather oxfords, perched
on the arm of a slanting settee.

Pat was at "the end of his resources"--though this term is too
ominous to describe a fairly usual condition in his life.  He was
an old-timer in pictures; he had once known sumptuous living, but
for the past ten years jobs had been hard to hold--harder to hold
than glasses.

"Think of it," he often mourned.  "Only a writer--at forty-nine."

All this afternoon he had turned the pages of The Times and The
Examiner for an idea.  Though he did not intend to compose a motion
picture from this idea, he needed it to get him inside a studio.
If you had nothing to submit it was increasingly difficult to pass
the gate.  But though these two newspapers, together with Life,
were the sources most commonly combed for "originals," they yielded
him nothing this afternoon.  There were wars, a fire in Topanga
Canyon, press releases from the studios, municipal corruptions, and
always the redeeming deeds of "The Trojuns," but Pat found nothing
that competed in human interest with the betting page.

--If I could get out to Santa Anita, he thought--I could maybe get
an idea about the nags.

This cheering idea was interrupted by his landlord, from the
delicatessen store below.

"I told you I wouldn't deliver any more messages," said Nick, "and
STILL I won't.  But Mr. Carl Le Vigne is telephoning in person from
the studio and wants you should go over right away."

The prospect of a job did something to Pat.  It anesthetized the
crumbled, struggling remnants of his manhood, and inoculated him
instead with a bland, easygoing confidence.  The set speeches and
attitudes of success returned to him.  His manner as he winked at a
studio policeman, stopped to chat with Louie, the bookie, and
presented himself to Mr. Le Vigne's secretary, indicated that he
had been engaged with momentous tasks in other parts of the globe.
By saluting Le Vigne with a facetious "Hel-LO Captain!" he behaved
almost as an equal, a trusted lieutenant who had never really been
away.

"Pat, your wife's in the hospital," Le Vigne said.  "It'll probably
be in the papers this afternoon."

Pat started.

"My wife?" he said.  "What wife?"

"Estelle.  She tried to cut her wrists."

"Estelle!" Pat exclaimed.  "You mean ESTELLE?  Say, I was only
married to her three weeks!"

"She was the best girl you ever had," said Le Vigne grimly.

"I haven't even heard of her for ten years."

"You're hearing about her now.  They called all the studios trying
to locate you."

"I had nothing to do with it."

"I know--she's only been here a week.  She had a run of hard luck
wherever it was she lived--New Orleans?  Husband died, child died,
no money . . ."

Pat breathed easier.  They weren't trying to hang anything on him.

"Anyhow she'll live," Le Vigne reassured him superfluously, "--and
she was the best script girl on the lot once.  We'd like to take
care of her.  We thought the way was give you a job.  Not exactly a
job, because I know you're not up to it."  He glanced into Pat's
red-rimmed eyes.  "More of a sinecure."

Pat became uneasy.  He didn't recognize the word, but "sin"
disturbed him and "cure" brought a whole flood of unpleasant
memories.

"You're on the payroll at two-fifty a week for three weeks," said
Le Vigne, "--but one-fifty of that goes to the hospital for your
wife's bill."

"But we're divorced!" Pat protested.  "No Mexican stuff either.
I've been married since, and so has--"

"Take it or leave it.  You can have an office here, and if anything
you can do comes up we'll let you know."

"I never worked for a hundred a week."

"We're not asking you to work.  If you want you can stay home."

Pat reversed his field.

"Oh, I'll work," he said quickly.  "You dig me up a good story and
I'll show you whether I can work or not."

Le Vigne wrote something on a slip of paper.

"All right.  They'll find you an office."

Outside Pat looked at the memorandum.

"Mrs. John Devlin," it read, "Good Samaritan Hospital."

The very words irritated him.

"Good Samaritan!" he exclaimed.  "Good gyp joint!  One hundred and
fifty bucks a week!"



Pat had been given many a charity job but this was the first one
that made him feel ashamed.  He did not mind not EARN-ing his
salary, but not getting it was another matter.  And he wondered if
other people on the lot who were obviously doing nothing, were
being fairly paid for it.  There were, for example, a number of
beautiful young ladies who walked aloof as stars, and whom Pat took
for stock girls, until Eric, the callboy, told him they were
imports from Vienna and Budapest, not yet cast for pictures.  Did
half their pay checks go to keep husbands they had only had for
three weeks!

The loveliest of these was Lizzette Starheim, a violet-eyed little
blonde with an ill-concealed air of disillusion.  Pat saw her alone
at tea almost every afternoon in the commissary--and made her
acquaintance one day by simply sliding into a chair opposite.

"Hello, Lizzette," he said.  "I'm Pat Hobby, the writer."

"Oh, hel-LO!"

She flashed such a dazzling smile that for a moment he thought she
must have heard of him.

"When they going to cast you?" he demanded.

"I don't know."  Her accent was faint and poignant.

"Don't let them give you the run-around.  Not with a face like
yours."  Her beauty roused a rusty eloquence.  "Sometimes they just
keep you under contract till your teeth fall out, because you look
too much like their big star."

"Oh no," she said distressfully.

"Oh yes!" he assured her.  "I'm telling YOU.  Why don't you go to
another company and get borrowed?  Have you thought of that idea?"

"I think it's wonderful."

He intended to go further into the subject but Miss Starheim looked
at her watch and got up.

"I must go now, Mr.--"

"Hobby.  Pat Hobby."

Pat joined Dutch Waggoner, the director, who was shooting dice with
a waitress at another table.

"Between pictures, Dutch?"

"Between pictures hell!" said Dutch.  "I haven't done a picture for
six months and my contract's got six months to run.  I'm trying to
break it.  Who was the little blonde?"

Afterwards, back in his office, Pat discussed these encounters with
Eric the callboy.

"All signed up and no place to go," said Eric.  "Look at this Jeff
Manfred, now--an associate producer!  Sits in his office and sends
notes to the big shots--and I carry back word they're in Palm
Springs.  It breaks my heart.  Yesterday he put his head on his
desk and boo-hoo'd."

"What's the answer?" asked Pat.

"Changa management," suggested Eric, darkly.  "Shake-up coming."

"Who's going to the top?" Pat asked, with scarcely concealed
excitement.

"Nobody knows," said Eric.  "But wouldn't I like to land uphill!
Boy!  I want a writer's job.  I got three ideas so new they're wet
behind the ears."

"It's no life at all," Pat assured him with conviction.  "I'd trade
with you right now."

In the hall next day he intercepted Jeff Manfred who walked with
the unconvincing hurry of one without a destination.

"What's the rush, Jeff?" Pat demanded, falling into step.

"Reading some scripts," Jeff panted without conviction.

Pat drew him unwillingly into his office.

"Jeff, have you heard about the shake-up?"

"Listen now, Pat--"  Jeff looked nervously at the walls.  "What
shake-up?" he demanded.

"I heard that this Harmon Shaver is going to be the new boss,"
ventured Pat, "Wall Street control."

"Harmon Shaver!" Jeff scoffed.  "He doesn't know anything about
pictures--he's just a money man.  He wanders around like a lost
soul."  Jeff sat back and considered.  "Still--if you're RIGHT,
he'd be a man you could get to."  He turned mournful eyes on Pat.
"I haven't been able to see Le Vigne or Barnes or Bill Behrer for a
month.  Can't get an assignment, can't get an actor, can't get a
story."  He broke off.  "I've thought of drumming up something on
my own.  Got any ideas?"

"Have I?" said Pat.  "I got three ideas so new they're wet behind
the ears."

"Who for?"

"Lizzette Starheim," said Pat, "with Dutch Waggoner directing--
see?"



"I'm with you all a hundred per cent," said Harmon Shaver.  "This
is the most encouraging experience I've had in pictures."  He had a
bright bond-salesman's chuckle.  "By God, it reminds me of a circus
we got up when I was a boy."

They had come to his office inconspicuously like conspirators--Jeff
Manfred, Waggoner, Miss Starheim and Pat Hobby.

"You like the idea, Miss Starheim?" Shaver continued.

"I think it's wonderful."

"And you, Mr. Waggoner?"

"I've heard only the general line," said Waggoner with director's
caution, "but it seems to have the old emotional socko."  He winked
at Pat.  "I didn't know this old tramp had it in him."

Pat glowed with pride.  Jeff Manfred, though he was elated, was
less sanguine.

"It's important nobody talks," he said nervously.  "The Big Boys
would find some way of killing it.  In a week, when we've got the
script done we'll go to them."

"I agree," said Shaver.  "They have run the studio so long that--
well, I don't trust my own secretaries--I sent them to the races
this afternoon."

Back in Pat's office Eric, the callboy, was waiting.  He did not
know that he was the hinge upon which swung a great affair.

"You like the stuff, eh?" he asked eagerly.

"Pretty good," said Pat with calculated indifference.

"You said you'd pay more for the next batch."

"Have a heart!"  Pat was aggrieved.  "How many callboys get seventy-
five a week?"

"How many callboys can write?"

Pat considered.  Out of the two hundred a week Jeff Manfred was
advancing from his own pocket, he had naturally awarded himself a
commission of sixty per cent.

"I'll make it a hundred," he said.  "Now check yourself off the lot
and meet me in front of Benny's bar."

At the hospital, Estelle Hobby Devlin sat up in bed, overwhelmed by
the unexpected visit.

"I'm glad you came, Pat," she said, "you've been very kind.  Did
you get my note?"

"Forget it," Pat said gruffly.  He had never liked this wife.  She
had loved him too much--until she found suddenly that he was a poor
lover.  In her presence he felt inferior.

"I got a guy outside," he said.

"What for?"

"I thought maybe you had nothing to do and you might want to pay me
back for all this jack--"

He waved his hand around the bare hospital room.

"You were a swell script girl once.  Do you think if I got a
typewriter you could put some good stuff into continuity?"

"Why--yes.  I suppose I could."

"It's a secret.  We can't trust anybody at the studio."

"All right," she said.

"I'll send this kid in with the stuff.  I got a conference."

"All right--and--oh Pat--come and see me again."

"Sure, I'll come."

But he knew he wouldn't.  He didn't like sickrooms--he lived in one
himself.  From now on he was done with poverty and failure.  He
admired strength--he was taking Lizzette Starheim to a wrestling
match that night.



In his private musings Harmon Shaver referred to the showdown as
"the surprise party."  He was going to confront Le Vigne with a
fait accompli and he gathered his coterie before phoning Le Vigne
to come over to his office.

"What for?" demanded Le Vigne.  "Couldn't you tell me now--I'm busy
as hell."

This arrogance irritated Shaver--who was here to watch over the
interests of Eastern stockholders.

"I don't ask much," he said sharply, "I let you fellows laugh at me
behind my back and freeze me out of things.  But now I've got
something and I'd like you to come over."

"All right--all right."

Le Vigne's eyebrows lifted as he saw the members of the new
production unit but he said nothing--sprawled into an arm chair
with his eyes on the floor and his fingers over his mouth.

Mr. Shaver came around the desk and poured forth words that had
been fermenting in him for months.  Simmered to its essentials, his
protest was:  "You would not let me play, but I'm going to play
anyhow."  Then he nodded to Jeff Manfred--who opened the script and
read aloud.  This took an hour, and still Le Vigne sat motionless
and silent.

"There you are," said Shaver triumphantly.  "Unless you've got any
objection I think we ought to assign a budget to this proposition
and get going.  I'll answer to my people."

Le Vigne spoke at last.

"You like it, Miss Starheim?"

"I think it's wonderful."

"What language you going to play it in?"

To everyone's surprise Miss Starheim got to her feet.

"I must go now," she said with her faint poignant accent.

"Sit down and answer me," said Le Vigne.  "What language are you
playing it in?"

Miss Starheim looked tearful.

"Wenn I gute teachers h�tte konnte ich dann thees r�le gut
spielen," she faltered.

"But you like the script."

She hesitated.

"I think it's wonderful."

Le Vigne turned to the others.

"Miss Starheim has been here eight months," he said.  "She's had
three teachers.  Unless things have changed in the past two weeks
she can say just three sentences.  She can say, 'How do you do';
she can say, 'I think it's wonderful'; and she can say, 'I must go
now.'  Miss Starheim has turned out to be a pinhead--I'm not
insulting her because she doesn't know what it means.  Anyhow--
there's your Star."

He turned to Dutch Waggoner, but Dutch was already on his feet.

"Now Carl--" he said defensively.

"You force me to it," said Le Vigne.  "I've trusted drunks up to a
point, but I'll be goddam if I'll trust a hophead."

He turned to Harmon Shaver.

"Dutch has been good for exactly one week apiece on his last four
pictures.  He's all right now but as soon as the heat goes on he
reaches for the little white powders.  Now Dutch!  Don't say
anything you'll regret.  We're carrying you in HOPES--but you won't
get on a stage till we've had a doctor's certificate for a year."

Again he turned to Harmon.

"There's your director.  Your supervisor, Jeff Manfred, is here for
one reason only--because he's Behrer's wife's cousin.  There's
nothing against him but he belongs to silent days as much as--as
much as--"  His eyes fell upon a quavering broken man, "--as much
as Pat Hobby."

"What do you mean?" demanded Jeff.

"You trusted Hobby, didn't you?  That tells the whole story."  He
turned back to Shaver.  "Jeff's a weeper and a wisher and a
dreamer.  Mr. Shaver, you have bought a lot of condemned building
material."

"Well, I've bought a good story," said Shaver defiantly.

"Yes.  That's right.  We'll make that story."

"Isn't that something?" demanded Shaver.  "With all this secrecy
how was I to know about Mr. Waggoner and Miss Starheim?  But I do
know a good story."

"Yes," said Le Vigne absently.  He got up.  "Yes--it's a good
story. . . .  Come along to my office, Pat."

He was already at the door.  Pat cast an agonized look at Mr.
Shaver as if for support.  Then, weakly, he followed.

"Sit down, Pat."

"That Eric's got talent, hasn't he?" said Le Vigne.  "He'll go
places.  How'd you come to dig him up?"

Pat felt the straps of the electric chair being adjusted.

"Oh--I just dug him up.  He--came in my office."

"We're putting him on salary," said Le Vigne.  "We ought to have
some system to give these kids a chance."

He took a call on his Dictograph, then swung back to Pat.

"But how did you ever get mixed up with this goddam Shaver.  YOU,
Pat--an old-timer like you."

"Well, I thought--"

"Why doesn't he go back East?" continued Le Vigne disgustedly.
"Getting all you poops stirred up!"

Blood flowed back into Pat's veins.  He recognized his signal, his
dog-call.

"Well, I got you a story, didn't I?" he said, with almost a
swagger.  And he added, "How'd you know about it?"

"I went down to see Estelle in the hospital.  She and this kid were
working on it.  I walked right in on them."

"Oh," said Pat.

"I knew the kid by sight.  Now, Pat, tell me this--did Jeff Manfred
think you wrote it--or was he in on the racket?"

"Oh God," Pat mourned.  "What do I have to answer that for?"

Le Vigne leaned forward intensely.

"Pat, you're sitting over a trap door!" he said with savage eyes.
"Do you see how the carpet's cut?  I just have to press this button
and drop you down to hell!  Will you TALK?"

Pat was on his feet, staring wildly at the floor.

"Sure I will!" he cried.  He believed it--he believed such things.

"All right," said Le Vigne relaxing.  "There's whiskey in the
sideboard there.  Talk quick and I'll give you another month at two-
fifty.  I kinda like having you around."




A PATRIOTIC SHORT

Esquire (December 1940)


Pat Hobby, the writer and the man, had his great success in
Hollywood during what Irving Cobb refers to as 'the mosaic swimming-
pool age--just before the era when they had to have a shinbone of
St Sebastian for a clutch lever.'

Mr Cobb no doubt exaggerates, for when Pat had his pool in those
fat days of silent pictures, it was entirely cement, unless you
should count the cracks where the water stubbornly sought its own
level through the mud.

'But it WAS a pool,' he assured himself one afternoon more than a
decade later.  Though he was now more than grateful for this small
chore he had assigned him by producer Berners--one week at two-
fifty--all the insolence of office could not take that memory away.

He had been called in to the studio to work upon an humble short.
It was based on the career of General Fitzhugh Lee who fought for
the Confederacy and later for the U.S.A. against Spain--so it would
offend neither North nor South.  And in the recent conference Pat
had tried to co-operate.

'I was thinking--' he suggested to Jack Berners '--that it might be
a good thing if we could give it a Jewish touch.'

'What do you mean?' demanded Jack Berners quickly.

'Well I thought--the way things are and all, it would be a sort of
good thing to show that there were a number of Jews in it too.'

'In what?'

'In the Civil War.'  Quickly he reviewed his meagre history.  'They
were, weren't they?'

'Naturally,' said Berners, with some impatience, 'I suppose
everybody was except the Quakers.'

'Well, my idea was that we could have this Fitzhugh Lee in love
with a Jewish girl.  He's going to be shot at curfew so she grabs a
church bell--'

Jack Berners leaned forward earnestly.

'Say, Pat, you want this job, don't you?  Well, I told you the
story.  You got the first script.  If you thought up this tripe to
please me you're losing your grip.'

Was that a way to treat a man who had once owned a pool which had
been talked about by--

That was how he happened to be thinking about his long lost
swimming pool as he entered the shorts department.  He was
remembering a certain day over a decade ago in all its details, how
he had arrived at the studio in his car driven by a Filipino in
uniform; the deferential bow of the guard at the gate which had
admitted car and all to the lot, his ascent to that long lost
office which had a room for the secretary and was really a
director's office . . .

His reverie was broken off by the voice of Ben Brown, head of the
shorts department, who walked him into his own chambers.

'Jack Berners just phoned me,' he said.  'We don't want any new
angles, Pat.  We've got a good story.  Fitzhugh Lee was a dashing
cavalry commander.  He was a nephew of Robert E. Lee and we want to
show him at Appomattox, pretty bitter and all that.  And then show
how he became reconciled--we'll have to be careful because Virginia
is swarming with Lees--and how he finally accepts a U.S. commission
from President McKinley--'

Pat's mind darted back again into the past.  The President--that
was the magic word that had gone around that morning many years
ago.  The President of the United States was going to make a visit
to the lot.  Everyone had been agog about it--it seemed to mark a
new era in pictures because a President of the United States had
never visited a studio before.  The executives of the company were
all dressed up--from a window of his long lost Beverly Hills house
Pat had seen Mr Maranda, whose mansion was next door to him, bustle
down his walk in a cutaway coat at nine o'clock, and had known that
something was up.  He thought maybe it was clergy but when he
reached the lot he had found it was the President of the United
States himself who was coming . . .

'Clean up the stuff about Spain,' Ben Brown was saying.  'The guy
that wrote it was a Red and he's got all the Spanish officers with
ants in their pants.  Fix up that.'

In the office assigned him Pat looked at the script of True to Two
Flags.  The first scene showed General Fitzhugh Lee at the head of
his cavalry receiving word that Petersburg had been evacuated.  In
the script Lee took the blow in pantomime, but Pat was getting two-
fifty a week--so, casually and without effort, he wrote in one of
his favourite lines:


Lee (to his officers)

Well, what are you standing here gawking for?  DO something!  6.
Medium Shot Officers pepping up, slapping each other on back, etc.

Dissolve to:


To what?  Pat's mind dissolved once more into the glamorous past.
On that happy day in the twenties his phone had rung at about noon.
It had been Mr Maranda.

'Pat, the President is lunching in the private dining room.  Doug
Fairbanks can't come so there's a place empty and anyhow we think
there ought to be one writer there.'

His memory of the luncheon was palpitant with glamour.  The Great
Man had asked some questions about pictures and had told a joke and
Pat had laughed and laughed with the others--all of them solid men
together--rich, happy and successful.

Afterwards the President was to go on some sets and see some scenes
taken and still later he was going to Mr Maranda's house to meet
some of the women stars at tea.  Pat was not invited to that party
but he went home early anyhow and from his veranda saw the cort�ge
drive up, with Mr Maranda beside the President in the back seat.
Ah he was proud of pictures then--of his position in them--of the
President of the happy country where he was born . . .

Returning to reality Pat looked down at the script of True to Two
Flags and wrote slowly and thoughtfully:


Insert: A calendar--with the years plainly marked and the sheets
blowing off in a cold wind, to show Fitzhugh Lee growing older and
older.


His labours had made him thirsty--not for water, but he knew better
than to take anything else his first day on the job.  He got up and
went out into the hall and along the corridor to the water-cooler.

As he walked he slipped back into his reverie.

That had been a lovely California afternoon so Mr Maranda had taken
his exalted guest and the coterie of stars into his garden, which
adjoined Pat's garden.  Pat had gone out his back door and followed
a low privet hedge keeping out of sight--and then accidentally come
face to face with the Presidential party.

The President had smiled and nodded.  Mr Maranda smiled and nodded.

'You met Mr Hobby at lunch,' Mr Maranda said to the President.
'He's one of our writers.'

'Oh yes,' said the President, 'you write the pictures.'

'Yes I do,' said Pat.

The President glanced over into Pat's property.

'I suppose--' he said, '--that you get lots of inspiration sitting
by the side of that fine pool.'

'Yes,' said Pat, 'yes, I do,'

. . . Pat filled his cup at the cooler.  Down the hall there was a
group approaching--Jack Berners, Ben Brown and several other
executives and with them a girl to whom they were very attentive
and deferential.  He recognized her face--she was the girl of the
year, the It girl, the Oomph girl, the Glamour Girl, the girl for
whose services every studio was in violent competition.

Pat lingered over his drink.  He had seen many phonies break in and
break out again, but this girl was the real thing, someone to stir
every pulse in the nation.  He felt his own heart beat faster.
Finally, as the procession drew near, he put down the cup, dabbed
at his hair with his hand and took a step out into the corridor.

The girl looked at him--he looked at the girl.  Then she took one
arm of Jack Berners' and one of Ben Brown's and suddenly the party
seemed to walk right through him--so that he had to take a step
back against the wall.

An instant later Jack Berners turned around and said back to him,
'Hello, Pat.'  And then some of the others threw half glances
around but no one else spoke, so interested were they in the girl.

In his office, Pat looked at the scene where President McKinley
offers a United States commission to Fitzhugh Lee.  Suddenly he
gritted his teeth and bore down on his pencil as he wrote:


Lee

Mr President, you can take your commission and go straight to hell.


Then he bent down over his desk, his shoulders shaking as he
thought of that happy day when he had had a swimming pool.




ON THE TRAIL OF PAT HOBBY

Esquire (January 1941)


I


The day was dark from the outset, and a California fog crept
everywhere.  It had followed Pat in his headlong, hatless flight
across the city.  His destination, his refuge, was the studio,
where he was not employed but which had been home to him for twenty
years.

Was it his imagination or did the policeman at the gate give him
and his pass an especially long look?  It might be the lack of a
hat--Hollywood was full of hatless men but Pat felt marked,
especially as there had been no opportunity to part his thin grey
hair.

In the Writers' Building he went into the lavatory.  Then he
remembered: by some inspired ukase from above, all mirrors had been
removed from the Writers' Building a year ago.

Across the hall he saw Bee McIlvaine's door ajar, and discerned her
plump person.

'Bee, can you loan me your compact box?' he asked.

Bee looked at him suspiciously, then frowned and dug it from her
purse.

'You on the lot?' she inquired.

'Will be next week,' he prophesied.  He put the compact on her desk
and bent over it with his comb.  'Why won't they put mirrors back
in the johnnies?  Do they think writers would look at themselves
all day?'

'Remember when they took out the couches?' said Bee.  'In nineteen
thirty-two.  And they put them back in thirty-four.'

'I worked at home,' said Pat feelingly.

Finished with her mirror he wondered if she were good for a loan--
enough to buy a hat and something to eat.  Bee must have seen the
look in his eyes for she forestalled him.

'The Finns got all my money,' she said, 'and I'm worried about my
job.  Either my picture starts tomorrow or it's going to be
shelved.  We haven't even got a title.'

She handed him a mimeographed bulletin from the scenario department
and Pat glanced at the headline.


TO ALL DEPARTMENTS

TITLE WANTED--FIFTY DOLLARS REWARD
SUMMARY FOLLOWS


'I could use fifty,' Pat said.  'What's it about?'

'It's written there.  It's about a lot of stuff that goes on in
tourist cabins.'

Pat started and looked at her wild-eyed.  He had thought to be safe
here behind the guarded gates but news travelled fast.  This was a
friendly or perhaps not so friendly warning.  He must move on.  He
was a hunted man now, with nowhere to lay his hatless head.

'I don't know anything about that,' he mumbled and walked hastily
from the room.


II


Just inside the door of the commissary Pat looked around.  There
was no guardian except the girl at the cigarette stand but
obtaining another person's hat was subject to one complication: it
was hard to judge the size by a cursory glance, while the sight of
a man trying on several hats in a check room was unavoidably
suspicious.

Personal taste also obtruded itself.  Pat was beguiled by a green
fedora with a sprightly feather but it was too readily identifiable.
This was also true of a fine white Stetson for the open spaces.
Finally he decided on a sturdy grey Homburg which looked as if it
would give him good service.  With trembling hands he put it on.
It fitted.  He walked out--in painful, interminable slow motion.

His confidence was partly restored in the next hour by the fact
that no one he encountered made references to tourists' cabins.  It
had been a lean three months for Pat.  He had regarded his job as
night clerk for the Selecto Tourists Cabins as a mere fill-in,
never to be mentioned to his friends.  But when the police squad
came this morning they held up the raid long enough to assure Pat,
or Don Smith as he called himself, that he would be wanted as a
witness.  The story of his escape lies in the realm of melodrama,
how he went out a side door, bought a half pint of what he so
desperately needed at the corner drug-store, hitchhiked his way
across the great city, going limp at the sight of traffic cops and
only breathing free when he saw the studio's high-flown sign.

After a call on Louie, the studio bookie, whose great patron he
once had been, he dropped in on Jack Berners.  He had no idea to
submit, but he caught Jack in a hurried moment flying off to a
producers' conference and was unexpectedly invited to step in and
wait for his return.

The office was rich and comfortable.  There were no letters worth
reading on the desk, but there were a decanter and glasses in a
cupboard and presently he lay down on a big soft couch and fell
asleep.

He was awakened by Berners' return, in high indignation.

'Of all the damn nonsense!  We get a hurry call--heads of all
departments.  One man is late and we wait for him.  He comes in and
gets a bawling out for wasting thousands of dollars worth of time.
Then what do you suppose: Mr Marcus has lost his favourite hat!'

Pat failed to associate the fact with himself.

'All the department heads stop production!' continued Berners.
'Two thousand people look for a grey Homburg hat!'  He sank
despairingly into a chair, 'I can't talk to you today, Pat.  By
four o'clock, I've got to get a title to a picture about a tourist
camp.  Got an idea?'

'No,' said Pat.  'No.'

'Well, go up to Bee McIlvaine's office and help her figure
something out.  There's fifty dollars in it.'

In a daze Pat wandered to the door.

'Hey,' said Berners, 'don't forget your hat.'


III


Feeling the effects of his day outside the law, and of a tumbler
full of Berners' brandy, Pat sat in Bee McIlvaine's office.

'We've got to get a title,' said Bee gloomily.

She handed Pat the mimeograph offering fifty dollars reward and put
a pencil in his hand.  Pat stared at the paper unseeingly.

'How about it?' she asked.  'Who's got a title?'

There was a long silence.

'Test Pilot's been used, hasn't it?' he said with a vague tone.

'Wake up!  This isn't about aviation.'

'Well, I was just thinking it was a good title.'

'So's The Birth of a Nation.'

'But not for this picture,' Pat muttered.  'Birth of a Nation
wouldn't suit this picture.'

'But not for this picture,' Pat muttered.  'Birth of a Nation
wouldn't suit this picture.'

'Are you ribbing me?' demanded Bee.  'Or are you losing your mind?
This is serious.'

'Sure--I know.'  Feebly he scrawled words at the bottom of the
page.  'I've had a couple of drinks that's all.  My head'll clear
up in a minute.  I'm trying to think what have been the most
successful titles.  The trouble is they've all been used, like It
Happened One Night.'

Bee looked at him uneasily.  He was having trouble keeping his eyes
open and she did not want him to pass out in her office.  After a
minute she called Jack Berners.

'Could you possibly come up?  I've got some title ideas.'

Jack arrived with a sheaf of suggestions sent in from here and
there in the studio, but digging through them yielded no ore.

'How about it, Pat?  Got anything?'

Pat braced himself to an effort.

'I like It Happened One Morning,' he said--then looked desperately
at his scrawl on the mimeograph paper, 'or else--Grand Motel.'

Berners smiled.

'Grand Motel,' he repeated.  'By God!  I think you've got
something.  Grand Motel.'

'I said Grand Hotel,' said Pat.

'No, you didn't.  You said Grand Motel--and for my money it wins
the fifty.'

'I've got to go lie down,' announced Pat.  'I feel sick.'

'There's an empty office across the way.  That's a funny idea Pat,
Grand Motel--or else Motel Clerk.  How do you like that?'

As the fugitive quickened his step out the door Bee pressed the hat
into his hands.

'Good work, old timer,' she said.

Pat seized Mr Marcus' hat, and stood holding it there like a bowl
of soup.

'Feel--better--now,' he mumbled after a moment.  'Be back for the
money.'

And carrying his burden he shambled toward the lavatory.





FUN IN AN ARTIST'S STUDIO

Esquire (February 1941)


I


This was back in 1938 when few people except the Germans knew that
they had already won their war in Europe.  People still cared about
art and tried to make it out of everything from old clothes to
orange peel and that was how the Princess Dignanni found Pat.  She
wanted to make art out of him.

'No, not you, Mr DeTinc.' she said, 'I can't paint you.  You are a
very standardized product, Mr DeTinc.'

Mr DeTinc, who was a power in pictures and had even been
photographed with Mr Duchman, the Secret Sin specialist, stepped
smoothly out of the way.  He was not offended--in his whole life Mr
DeTinc had never been offended--but especially not now, for the
Princess did not want to paint Clark Gable or Spencer Rooney or
Vivien Leigh either.

She saw Pat in the commissary and found he was a writer, and asked
that he be invited to Mr DeTinc's party.  The Princess was a pretty
woman born in Boston, Massachusetts and Pat was forty-nine with red-
rimmed eyes and a soft purr of whiskey on his breath.

'You write scenarios, Mr Hobby?'

'I help,' said Pat.  'Takes more than one person to prepare a
script.'

He was flattered by this attention and not a little suspicious.  It
was only because his supervisor was a nervous wreck that he
happened to have a job at all.  His supervisor had forgotten a week
ago that he had hired Pat, and when Pat was spotted in the
commissary and told he was wanted at Mr DeTinc's house, the writer
had passed a mauvais quart d'heure.  It did not even look like the
kind of party that Pat had known in his prosperous days.  There was
not so much as a drunk passed out in the downstairs toilet.

'I imagine scenario writing is very well-paid,' said the Princess.

Pat glanced around to see who was within hearing.  Mr DeTinc had
withdrawn his huge bulk somewhat, but one of his apparently
independent eyes seemed fixed glittering on Pat.

'Very well paid,' said Pat--and he added in a lower voice, '--if
you can get it.'

The Princess seemed to understand and lowered her voice too.

'You mean writers have trouble getting work?'

He nodded.

'Too many of 'em get in these unions.'  He raised his voice a
little for Mr DeTinc's benefit.  'They're all Reds, most of these
writers.'

The Princess nodded.

'Will you turn your face a little to the light?' she said politely.
'There, that's fine.  You won't mind coming to my studio tomorrow,
will you?  Just to pose for me an hour?'

He scrutinized her again.

'Naked?' he asked cautiously.

'Oh, no,' she averred.  'Just the head.'

Mr DeTinc moved nearer and nodded.

'You ought to go.  Princess Dignanni is going to paint some of the
biggest stars here.  Going to paint Jack Benny and Baby Sandy and
Hedy Lamarr--isn't that a fact, Princess?'

The artist didn't answer.  She was a pretty good portrait painter
and she knew just how good she was and just how much of it was her
title.  She was hesitating between her several manners--Picasso's
rose period with a flash of Boldini, or straight Reginald Marsh.
But she knew what she was going to call it.  She was going to call
it Hollywood and Vine.


II


In spite of the reassurance that he would be clothed Pat approached
the rendezvous with uneasiness.  In his young and impressionable
years he had looked through a peep-hole into a machine where two
dozen postcards slapped before his eyes in sequence.  The story
unfolded was Fun in an Artist's Studio.  Even now with the strip
tease a legalized municipal project, he was a little shocked at the
remembrance, and when he presented himself next day at the
Princess's bungalow at the Beverly Hills Hotel it would not have
surprised him if she had met him in a turkish towel.  He was
disappointed.  She wore a smock and her black hair was brushed
straight back like a boy's.

Pat had stopped off for a couple of drinks on the way, but his
first words:  'How'ya Duchess?' failed to set a jovial note for the
occasion.

'Well, Mr Hobby,' she said coolly, 'it's nice of you to spare me an
afternoon.'

'We don't work too hard in Hollywood,' he assured her.  'Everything
is "Ma�ana"--in Spanish that means tomorrow.'

She led him forthwith into a rear apartment where an easel stood on
a square of canvas by the window.  There was a couch and they sat
down.

'I want to get used to you for a minute,' she said.  'Did you ever
pose before?'

'Do I look that way?'  He winked, and when she smiled he felt
better and asked:  'You haven't got a drink around, have you?'

The Princess hesitated.  She had wanted him to look as if he NEEDED
one.  Compromising, she went to the ice box and fixed him a small
highball.  She returned to find that he had taken off his coat and
tie and lay informally upon the couch.

'That IS better,' the Princess said.  'That shirt you're wearing.
I think they make them for Hollywood--like the special prints they
make for Ceylon and Guatemala.  Now drink this and we'll get to
work.'

'Why don't you have a drink too and make it friendly?' Pat
suggested.

'I had one in the pantry,' she lied.

'Married woman?' he asked.

'I have been married.  Now would you mind sitting on this stool?'

Reluctantly Pat got up, took down the highball, somewhat thwarted
by the thin taste, and moved to the stool.  'Now sit very still,'
she said.

He sat silent as she worked.  It was three o'clock.  They were
running the third race at Santa Anita and he had ten bucks on the
nose.  That made sixty he owed Louie, the studio bookie, and Louie
stood determinedly beside him at the pay window every Thursday.
This dame had good legs under the easel--her red lips pleased him
and the way her bare arms moved as she worked.  Once upon a time he
wouldn't have looked at a woman over twenty-five, unless it was a
secretary right in the office with him.  But the kids you saw
around now were snooty--always talking about calling the police.

'Please sit still, Mr Hobby.'

'What say we knock off,' he suggested.  'This work makes you
thirsty.'

The Princess had been painting half an hour.  Now she stopped and
stared at him a moment.

'Mr Hobby, you were loaned me by Mr DeTinc.  Why don't you act just
as if you were working over at the studio?  I'll be through in
another half-hour.'

'What do I get out of it?' he demanded, 'I'm no poser--I'm a
writer.'

'Your studio salary has not stopped,' she said, resuming her work.
'What does it matter if Mr DeTinc wants you to do this?'

'It's different.  You're a dame.  I've got my self-respect to think
of.'

'What do you expect me to do--flirt with you?'

'No--that's old stuff.  But I thought we could sit around and have
a drink.'

'Perhaps later,' she said, and then, 'Is this harder work than the
studio?  Am I so difficult to look at?'

'I don't mind looking at you but why couldn't we sit on the sofa?'

'You don't sit on the sofa at the studio.'

'Sure you do.  Listen, if you tried all the doors in the Writers'
Building you'd find a lot of them locked and don't you forget it.'

She stepped back and squinted at him.

'Locked?  To be undisturbed?'  She put down her brush.  'I'll get
you a drink.'

When she returned she stopped for a moment in the doorway--Pat had
removed his shirt and stood rather sheepishly in the middle of the
floor holding it toward her.

'Here's that shirt,' he said.  'You can have it.  I know where I
can get a lot more.'

For a moment longer she regarded him; then she took the shirt and
put it on the sofa.

'Sit down and let me finish,' she said.  As he hesitated she added,
'Then we'll have a drink together.'

'When'll that be?'

'Fifteen minutes.'

She worked quickly--several times she was content with the lower
face--several times she deliberated and started over.  Something
that she had seen in the commissary was missing.

'Been an artist a long time?' Pat asked.

'Many years.'

'Been around artists' studios a lot?'

'Quite a lot--I've had my own studios.'

'I guess a lot goes on around those studios.  Did you ever--'

He hesitated.

'Ever what?' she queried.

'Did you ever paint a naked man?'

'Don't talk for one minute, please.'  She paused with brush
uplifted, seemed to listen, then made a swift stroke and looked
doubtfully at the result.

'Do you know you're difficult to paint?' she said, laying down the
brush.

'I don't like this posing around,' he admitted.  'Let's call it a
day.'  He stood up.  'Why don't you--why don't you slip into
something so you'll be comfortable?'

The Princess smiled.  She would tell her friends this story--it
would sort of go with the picture, if the picture was any good,
which she now doubted.

'You ought to revise your methods,' she said.  'Do you have much
success with this approach?'

Pat lit a cigarette and sat down.

'If you were eighteen, see, I'd give you that line about being nuts
about you.'

'But why any line at all?'

'Oh, come off it!' he advised her.  'You wanted to paint me, didn't
you?'

'Yes.'

'Well, when a dame wants to paint a guy--'  Pat reached down and
undid his shoe strings, kicked his shoes onto the floor, put his
stockinged feet on the couch.  '--when a dame wants to see a guy
about something or a guy wants to see a dame, there's a payoff,
see.'

The Princess sighed.  'Well I seem to be trapped,' she said.  'But
it makes it rather difficult when a dame just wants to paint a
guy.'

'When a dame wants to paint a guy--'  Pat half closed his eyes,
nodded and flapped his hands expressively.  As his thumbs went
suddenly toward his suspenders, she spoke in a louder voice.

'Officer!'

There was a sound behind Pat.  He turned to see a young man in
khaki with shining black gloves, standing in the door.

'Officer, this man is an employee of Mr DeTinc's.  Mr DeTinc lent
him to me for the afternoon.'

The policeman looked at the staring image of guilt upon the couch.

'Get fresh?' he inquired.

'I don't want to prefer charges--I called the desk to be on the
safe side.  He was to pose for me in the nude and now he refuses.'
She walked casually to her easel.'  Mr Hobby, why don't you stop
this mock-modesty--you'll find a turkish towel in the bathroom.'

Pat reached stupidly for his shoes.  Somehow it flashed into his
mind that they were running the eighth race at Santa Anita--

'Shake it up, you,' said the cop.  'You heard what the lady said.'

Pat stood up vaguely and fixed a long poignant look on the
Princess.

'You told me--' he said hoarsely, 'you wanted to paint--'

'You told me I meant something else.  Hurry please.  And officer,
there's a drink in the pantry.'

. . . A few minutes later as Pat sat shivering in the centre of the
room his memory went back to those peep-shows of his youth--though
at the moment he could see little resemblance.  He was grateful at
least for the turkish towel, even now failing to realize that the
Princess was not interested in his shattered frame but in his face.

It wore the exact expression that had wooed her in the commissary,
the expression of Hollywood and Vine, the other self of Mr DeTinc--
and she worked fast while there was still light enough to paint by.





TWO OLD-TIMERS

Esquire (March 1941)


Phil Macedon, once the Star of Stars, and Pat Hobby, script writer,
had collided out on Sunset near the Beverly Hills Hotel.  It was
five in the morning and there was liquor in the air as they argued
and Sergeant Gaspar took them around to the station house.  Pat
Hobby, a man of forty-nine, showed fight, apparently because Phil
Macedon failed to acknowledge that they were old acquaintances.

He accidentally bumped Sergeant Gaspar who was so provoked that he
put him in a little barred room while they waited for the Captain
to arrive.

Chronologically Phil Macedon belonged between Eugene O'Brien and
Robert Taylor.  He was still a handsome man in his early fifties
and he had saved enough from his great days for a hacienda in the
San Fernando Valley; there he rested as full of honours, as
rolicksome and with the same purposes in life as Man o' War.

With Pat Hobby life had dealt otherwise.  After twenty-one years in
the industry, script and publicity, the accident found him driving
a 1933 car which had lately become the property of the North
Hollywood Finance and Loan Co.  And once, back in 1928, he had
reached a point of getting bids for a private swimming pool.

He glowered from his confinement, still resenting Macedon's failure
to acknowledge that they had ever met before.

'I suppose you don't remember Coleman,' he said sarcastically.  'Or
Connie Talmadge or Bill Corker or Allan Dwan.'

Macedon lit a cigarette with the sort of timing in which the silent
screen has never been surpassed, and offered one to Sergeant
Gaspar.

'Couldn't I come in tomorrow?' he asked.  'I have a horse to
exercise--'

'I'm sorry, Mr Macedon,' said the cop--sincerely for the actor was
an old favourite of his.  'The Captain is due here any minute.
After that we won't be holding YOU.'

'It's just a formality,' said Pat, from his cell.

'Yeah, it's just a--'  Sergeant Gaspar glared at Pat.  'It may not
be any formality for YOU.  Did you ever hear of the sobriety test?'

Macedon flicked his cigarette out the door and lit another.

'Suppose I come back in a couple of hours,' he suggested.

'No,' regretted Sergeant Gaspar.  'And since I have to detain you,
Mr Macedon, I want to take the opportunity to tell you what you
meant to me once.  It was that picture you made, The Final Push, it
meant a lot to every man who was in the war.'

'Oh, yes,' said Macedon, smiling.

'I used to try to tell my wife about the war--how it was, with the
shells and the machine guns--I was in there seven months with the
26th New England--but she never understood.  She'd point her finger
at me and say "Boom!  you're dead," and so I'd laugh and stop
trying to make her understand.'

'Hey, can I get out of here?' demanded Pat.

'You shut up!' said Gaspar fiercely.  'You probably wasn't in the
war.'

'I was in the Motion Picture Home Guard,' said Pat.  'I had bad
eyes.'

'Listen to him,' said Gaspar disgustedly.  'That's what all them
slackers say.  Well, the war was something.  And after my wife saw
that picture of yours I never had to explain to her.  She knew.
She always spoke different about it after that--never just pointed
her finger at me and said "Boom!"  I'll never forget the part where
you was in that shell hole.  That was so real it made my hands
sweat.'

'Thanks,' said Macedon graciously.  He lit another cigarette, 'You
see, I was in the war myself and I knew how it was.  I knew how it
felt.'

'Yes sir,' said Gaspar appreciatively.  'Well; I'm glad of the
opportunity to tell you what you did for me.  You--you explained
the war to my wife.'

'What are you talking about?' demanded Pat Hobby suddenly.  'That
war picture Bill Corker did in 1925?'

'There he goes again,' said Gaspar.  'Sure--The Birth of a Nation.
Now you pipe down till the Captain comes.'

'Phil Macedon knew me then all right,' said Pat resentfully, 'I
even watched him work on it one day.'

'I just don't happen to remember you, old man,' said Macedon
politely, 'I can't help that.'

'You remember the day Bill Corker shot that shell hole sequence
don't you?  Your first day on the picture?'

There was a moment's silence.

'When will the Captain be here?' Macedon asked.

'Any minute now,' Mr Macedon.'

'Well, I remember,' said Pat, '--because I was there when he had
that shell hole dug.  He was out there on the back lot at nine
o'clock in the morning with a gang of hunkies to dig the hole and
four cameras.  He called you up from a field telephone and told you
to go to the costumer and get into a soldier suit.  Now you
remember?'

'I don't load my mind with details, old man.'

'You called up that they didn't have one to fit you and Corker told
you to shut up and get into one anyhow.  When you got out to the
back lot you were sore as hell because your suit didn't fit.'

Macedon smiled charmingly.

'You have a most remarkable memory.  Are you sure you have the
right picture--and the right actor?' he asked.

'Am I!' said Pat grimly.  'I can see you right now.  Only you
didn't have much time to complain about the uniform because that
wasn't Corker's plan.  He always thought you were the toughest ham
in Hollywood to get anything natural out of--and he had a scheme.
He was going to get the heart of the picture shot by noon--before
you even knew you were acting.  He turned you around and shoved you
down into that shell hole on your fanny, and yelled "Camera".'

'That's a lie,' said Phil Macedon.  'I GOT down.'

'Then why did you start yelling?' demanded Pat.  'I can still hear
you:  "Hey, what's the idea!  Is this some -- -- gag?  You get me
out of here or I'll walk out on you!"

'--and all the time you were trying to claw your way up the side of
that pit, so damn mad you couldn't see.  You'd almost get up and
then you'd slide back and lie there with your face working--till
finally you began to bawl and all this time Bill had four cameras
on you.  After about twenty minutes you gave up and just lay there,
heaving.  Bill took a hundred feet of that and then he had a couple
of prop men pull you out.'

The police Captain had arrived in the squad car.  He stood in the
doorway against the first grey of dawn.

'What you got here, Sergeant?  A drunk?'

Sergeant Gaspar walked over to the cell, unlocked it and beckoned
Pat to come out.  Pat blinked a moment--then his eyes fell on Phil
Macedon and he shook his finger at him.

'So you see I DO know you,' he said.  'Bill Corker cut that piece
of film and titled it so you were supposed to be a doughboy whose
pal had just been killed.  You wanted to climb out and get at the
Germans in revenge, but the shells bursting all around and the
concussions kept knocking you back in.'

'What's it about?' demanded the Captain.

'I want to prove I know this guy,' said Pat.  'Bill said the best
moment in the picture was when Phil was yelling "I've al-READY
broken my first finger nail!"  Bill titled it "Ten Huns will go to
hell to shine your shoes!"'

'You've got here "collision with alcohol",' said the Captain
looking at the blotter.  'Let's take these guys down to the
hospital and give them the test.'

'Look here now,' said the actor, with his flashing smile, 'my
name's Phil Macedon.'

The Captain was a political appointee and very young.  He
remembered the name and the face but he was not especially
impressed because Hollywood was full of has-beens.

They all got into the squad car at the door.

After the test Macedon was held at the station house until friends
could arrange bail.  Pat Hobby was discharged but his car would not
run, so Sergeant Gaspar offered to drive him home.

'Where do you live?' he asked as they started off.

'I don't live anywhere tonight,' said Pat.  'That's why I was
driving around.  When a friend of mine wakes up I'll touch him for
a couple of bucks and go to a hotel.'

'Well now,' said Sergeant Gaspar, 'I got a couple of bucks that
ain't working.'

The great mansions of Beverly Hills slid by and Pat waved his hand
at them in salute.

'In the good old days,' he said, 'I used to be able to drop into
some of those houses day or night.  And Sunday mornings--'

'Is that all true you said in the station,' Gaspar asked, '--about
how they put him in the hole?'

'Sure, it is,' said Pat.  'That guy needn't have been so upstage.
He's just an old-timer like me.'





MIGHTIER THAN THE SWORD

Esquire (April 1941)


I


The swarthy man, with eyes that snapped back and forward on a
rubber band from the rear of his head, answered to the alias of
Dick Dale.  The tall, spectacled man who was put together like a
camel without a hump--and you missed the hump--answered to the name
of E. Brunswick Hudson.  The scene was a shoeshine stand,
insignificant unit of the great studio.  We perceive it through the
red-rimmed eyes of Pat Hobby who sat in the chair beside Director
Dale.

The stand was out of doors, opposite the commissary.  The voice of
E. Brunswick Hudson quivered with passion but it was pitched low so
as not to reach passers-by.

'I don't know what a writer like me is doing out here anyhow,' he
said, with vibrations.

Pat Hobby, who was an old-timer, could have supplied the answer,
but he had not the acquaintance of the other two.

'It's a funny business,' said Dick Dale, and to the shoe-shine boy,
'Use that saddle soap.'

'Funny!' thundered E., 'It's SUS-pect!  Here against my better
judgement I write just what you tell me--and the office tells me to
get out because we can't seem to agree.'

'That's polite,' explained Dick Dale.  'What do you want me to do--
knock you down?'

E. Brunswick Hudson removed his glasses.

'Try it!' he suggested.  'I weigh a hundred and sixty-two and I
haven't got an ounce of flesh on me.'  He hesitated and redeemed
himself from this extremity.  'I mean FAT on me.'

'Oh, to hell with that!' said Dick Dale contemptuously, 'I can't
mix it up with you.  I got to figure this picture.  You go back
East and write one of your books and forget it.'  Momentarily he
looked at Pat Hobby, smiling as if HE would understand, as if
anyone would understand except E. Brunswick Hudson.  'I can't tell
you all about pictures in three weeks.'

Hudson replaced his spectacles.

'When I DO write a book,' he said, 'I'll make you the laughing
stock of the nation.'

He withdrew, ineffectual, baffled, defeated.  After a minute Pat
spoke.

'Those guys can never get the idea,' he commented.  'I've never
seen one get the idea and I been in this business, publicity and
script, for twenty years.'

'You on the lot?' Dale asked.

Pat hesitated.

'Just finished a job,' he said.

That was five months before.

'What screen credits you got?' Dale asked.

'I got credits going all the way back to 1920.'

'Come up to my office,' Dick Dale said, 'I got something I'd like
to talk over--now that bastard is gone back to his New England
farm.  Why do they have to get a New England farm--with the whole
West not settled?'

Pat gave his second-to-last dime to the bootblack and climbed down
from the stand.


II


We are in the midst of technicalities.

'The trouble is this composer Reginald de Koven didn't have any
colour,' said Dick Dale.  'He wasn't deaf like Beethoven or a
singing waiter or get put in jail or anything.  All he did was
write music and all we got for an angle is that song O Promise Me.
We got to weave something around that--a dame promises him
something and in the end he collects.'

'I want time to think it over in my mind,' said Pat.  'If Jack
Berners will put me on the picture--'

'He'll put you on,' said Dick Dale.  'From now on I'm picking my
own writers.  What do you get--fifteen hundred?'  He looked at
Pat's shoes, 'Seven-fifty?'

Pat stared at him blankly for a moment; then out of thin air,
produced his best piece of imaginative fiction in a decade.

'I was mixed up with a producer's wife,' he said, 'and they ganged
up on me.  I only get three-fifty now.'

In some ways it was the easiest job he had ever had.  Director Dick
Dale was a type that, fifty years ago, could be found in any
American town.  Generally he was the local photographer, usually he
was the originator of small mechanical contrivances and a leader in
bizarre local movements, almost always he contributed verse to the
local press.  All the most energetic embodiments of this 'Sensation
Type' had migrated to Hollywood between 1910 and 1930, and there
they had achieved a psychological fulfilment inconceivable in any
other time or place.  At last, and on a large scale, they were able
to have their way.  In the weeks that Pat Hobby and Mabel Hatman,
Mr Dale's script girl, sat beside him and worked on the script, not
a movement, not a word went into it that was not Dick Dale's
coinage.  Pat would venture a suggestion, something that was
'Always good'.

'Wait a minute!  Wait a minute!'  Dick Dale was on his feet, his
hands outspread.  'I seem to see a dog.'  They would wait, tense
and breathless, while he saw a dog.

'Two dogs.'

A second dog took its place beside the first in their obedient
visions.

'We open on a dog on a leash--pull the camera back to show another
dog--now they're snapping at each other.  We pull back further--the
leashes are attached to tables--the tables tip over.  See it?'

Or else, out of a clear sky.

'I seem to see De Koven as a plasterer's apprentice.'

'Yes.'  This hopefully.

'He goes to Santa Anita and plasters the walls, singing at his
work.  Take that down, Mabel.'  He continued on . . .

In a month they had the requisite hundred and twenty pages.
Reginald de Koven, it seemed, though not an alcoholic, was too fond
of 'The Little Brown Jug'.  The father of the girl he loved had
died of drink, and after the wedding when she found him drinking
from the Little Brown Jug, nothing would do but that she should go
away, for twenty years.  He became famous and she sang his songs as
Maid Marian but he never knew it was the same girl.

The script, marked 'Temporary Complete.  From Pat Hobby' went up to
the head office.  The schedule called for Dale to begin shooting in
a week.

Twenty-four hours later he sat with his staff in his office, in an
atmosphere of blue gloom.  Pat Hobby was the least depressed.  Four
weeks at three-fifty, even allowing for the two hundred that had
slipped away at Santa Anita, was a far cry from the twenty cents he
had owned on the shoeshine stand.

'That's pictures, Dick,' he said consolingly.  'You're up--you're
down--you're in, you're out.  Any old-timer knows.'

'Yes,' said Dick Dale absently.  'Mabel, phone that E. Brunswick
Hudson.  He's on his New England farm--maybe milking bees.'

In a few minutes she reported.

'He flew into Hollywood this morning, Mr Dale.  I've located him at
the Beverly Wilshire Hotel.'

Dick Dale pressed his ear to the phone.  His voice was bland and
friendly as he said:

'Mr Hudson, there was one day here you had an idea I liked.  You
said you were going to write it up.  It was about this De Koven
stealing his music from a sheepherder up in Vermont.  Remember?'

'Yes.'

'Well, Berners wants to go into production right away, or else we
can't have the cast, so we're on the spot, if you know what I mean.
Do you happen to have that stuff?'

'You remember when I brought it to you?' Hudson asked.  'You kept
me waiting two hours--then you looked at it for two minutes.  Your
neck hurt you--I think it needed wringing.  God, how it hurt you.
That was the only nice thing about that morning.'

'In picture business--'

'I'm so glad you're stuck.  I wouldn't tell you the story of The
Three Bears for fifty grand.'

As the phones clicked Dick Dale turned to Pat.

'Goddam writers!' he said savagely.  'What do we pay you for?
Millions--and you write a lot of tripe I can't photograph and get
sore if we don't read your lousy stuff!  How can a man make
pictures when they give me two bastards like you and Hudson.  How?
How do you think--you old whiskey bum!'

Pat rose--took a step toward the door.  He didn't know, he said.

'Get out of here!' cried Dick Dale.  'You're off the payroll.  Get
off the lot.'

Fate had not dealt Pat a farm in New England, but there was a caf�
just across from the studio where bucolic dreams blossomed in
bottles if you had the money.  He did not like to leave the lot,
which for many years had been home for him, so he came back at six
and went up to his office.  It was locked.  He saw that they had
already allotted it to another writer--the name on the door was E.
Brunswick Hudson.

He spent an hour in the commissary, made another visit to the bar,
and then some instinct led him to a stage where there was a bedroom
set.  He passed the night upon a couch occupied by Claudette
Colbert in the fluffiest ruffles only that afternoon.

Morning was bleaker, but he had a little in his bottle and almost a
hundred dollars in his pocket.  The horses were running at Santa
Anita and he might double it by night.

On his way out of the lot he hesitated beside the barber shop but
he felt too nervous for a shave.  Then he paused, for from the
direction of the shoeshine stand he heard Dick Dale's voice.

'Miss Hatman found your other script, and it happens to be the
property of the company.'

E. Brunswick Hudson stood at the foot of the stand.

'I won't have my name used,' he said.

'That's good.  I'll put her name on it.  Berners thinks it's great,
if the De Koven family will stand for it.  Hell--the sheepbreeder
never would have been able to market those tunes anyhow.  Ever hear
of any sheepherder drawing down jack from ASCAP?'

Hudson took off his spectacles.

'I weigh a hundred and sixty-three--'

Pat moved in closer.

'Join the army,' said Dale contemptuously, 'I got no time for
mixing it up.  I got to make a picture.'  His eyes fell on Pat.
'Hello old-timer.'

'Hello Dick,' said Pat smiling.  Then knowing the advantage of the
psychological moment he took his chance.

'When do we work?' he said.

'How much?' Dick Dale asked the shoeshine boy--and to Pat, 'It's
all done.  I promised Mabel a screen credit for a long time.  Look
me up some day when you got an idea.'

He hailed someone by the barber shop and hurried off.  Hudson and
Hobby, men of letters who had never met, regarded each other.
There were tears of anger in Hudson's eyes.

'Authors get a tough break out here,' Pat said sympathetically.
'They never ought to come.'

'Who'd make up the stories--these feebs?'

'Well anyhow, not authors,' said Pat.  'They don't want authors.
They want writers--like me.'




PAT HOBBY'S COLLEGE DAYS

Esquire (May 1941)


I


The afternoon was dark.  The walls of Topanga Canyon rose sheer on
either side.  Get rid of it she must.  The clank clank in the back
seat frightened her.  Evylyn did not like the business at all.  It
was not what she came out here to do.  Then she thought of Mr
Hobby.  He believed in her, trusted her--and she was doing this for
him.

But the mission was arduous.  Evylyn Lascalles left the canyon and
cruised along the inhospitable shores of Beverly Hills.  Several
times she turned up alleys, several times she parked beside vacant
lots--but always some pedestrian or loiterer threw her into a mood
of nervous anxiety.  Once her heart almost stopped as she was eyed
with appreciation--or was it suspicion--by a man who looked like a
detective.

--He had no right to ask me this, she said to herself.  Never
again.  I'll tell him so.  Never again.

Night was fast descending.  Evylyn Lascalles had never seen it come
down so fast.  Back to the canyon then, to the wild, free life.
She drove up a paint-box corridor which gave its last pastel shades
to the day.  And reached a certain security at a bend overlooking
plateau land far below.

Here there could be no complication.  As she threw each article
over the cliff it would be as far removed from her as if she were
in a different state of the Union.

Miss Lascalles was from Brooklyn.  She had wanted very much to come
to Hollywood and be a secretary in pictures--now she wished that
she had never left her home.

On with the job though--she must part with her cargo--as soon as
this next car passed the bend . . .


II


. . . Meanwhile her employer, Pat Hobby, stood in front of the
barber shop talking to Louie, the studio bookie.  Pat's four weeks
at two-fifty would be up tomorrow and he had begun to have that
harassed and aghast feeling of those who live always on the edge of
solvency.

'Four lousy weeks on a bad script,' he said.  'That's all I've had
in six months.'

'How do you live?' asked Louie--without too much show of interest.

'I don't live.  The days go by, the weeks go by.  But who cares?
Who cares--after twenty years.'

'You had a good time in your day,' Louie reminded him.

Pat looked after a dress extra in a shimmering lam� gown.

'Sure,' he admitted, 'I had three wives.  All anybody could want.'

'You mean THAT was one of your wives?' asked Louie.

Pat peered after the disappearing figure.

'No-o.  I didn't say THAT was one.  But I've had plenty of them
feeding out of my pocket.  Not now though--a man of forty-nine is
not considered human.'

'You've got a cute little secretary,' said Louie.  'Look Pat, I'll
give you a tip--'

'Can't use it,' said Pat, 'I got fifty cents.'

'I don't mean that kind of tip.  Listen--Jack Berners wants to make
a picture about U.W.C. because he's got a kid there that plays
basketball.  He can't get a story.  Why don't you go over and see
the Athaletic Superintendent named Doolan at U.W.C.?  That
superintendent owes me three grand on the nags, and he could maybe
give you an idea for a college picture.  And then you bring it back
and sell it to Berners.  You're on salary, ain't you?'

'Till tomorrow,' said Pat gloomily.

'Go and see Jim Kresge that hangs out in the Campus Sport Shop.
He'll introduce you to the Athaletic Superintendent.  Look, Pat, I
got to make a collection now.  Just remember, Pat, that Doolan owes
me three grand.'


III


It didn't seem hopeful to Pat but it was better than nothing.
Returning for his coat to his room in the Writers' Building he was
in time to pick up a plainting telephone.

'This is Evylyn,' said a fluttering voice.  'I can't get rid of it
this afternoon.  There's cars on every road--'

'I can't talk about it here,' said Pat quickly, 'I got to go over
to U.W.C. on a notion.'

'I've tried,' she wailed, '--and TRIED!  And every time, some car
comes along--'

'Aw, please!'  He hung up--he had enough on his mind.

For years Pat had followed the deeds of 'the Trojums' of U.S.C. and
the almost as fabulous doings of 'the Roller Coasters', who
represented the Univ. of the Western Coast.  His interest was not
so much physiological, tactical or intellectual as it was
mathematical--but the Rollers had cost him plenty in their day--and
thus it was with a sense of vague proprietorship that he stepped
upon the half De Mille, half Aztec campus.

He located Kresge who conducted him to Superintendent Kit Doolan.
Mr Doolan, a famous ex-tackle, was in excellent humour.  With five
coloured giants in this year's line, none of them quite old enough
for pensions, but all men of experience, his team was in a fair way
to conquer his section.

'Glad to be of help to your studio,' he said.  'Glad to help Mr
Berners--or Louie.  What can I do for you?  You want to make a
picture? . . .  Well, we can always use publicity.  Mr Hobby, I got
a meeting of the Faculty Committee in just five minutes and perhaps
you'd like to tell them your notion.'

'I don't know,' said Pat doubtfully.  'What I thought was maybe I
could have a spiel with you.  We could go somewhere and hoist one.'

'Afraid not,' said Doolan jovially.  'If those smarties smelt
liquor on me--Boy!  Come on over to the meeting--somebody's been
getting away with watches and jewellery on the campus and we're
sure it's a student.'

Mr Kresge, having played his role, got up to leave.

'Like something good for the fifth tomorrow?'

'Not me,' said Mr Doolan.

'You, Mr Hobby?'

'Not me,' said Pat.


IV


Ending their alliance with the underworld, Pat Hobby and
Superintendent Doolan walked down the corridor of the Administration
Building.  Outside the Dean's office Doolan said:  'As soon as
I can, I'll bring you in and introduce you.'  As an accredited
representative neither of Jack Berners' nor of the studio, Pat
waited with a certain malaise.  He did not look forward to
confronting a group of highbrows but he remembered that he bore
an humble but warming piece of merchandise in his threadbare
overcoat.  The Dean's assistant had left her desk to take notes at
the conference so he repleated his calories with a long, gagging
draught.

In a moment, there was a responsive glow and he settled down in his
chair, his eye fixed on the door marked:


                      SAMUEL K. WISKETH

                  DEAN OF THE STUDENT BODY


It might be a somewhat formidable encounter.

. . . but why?  There were stuffed shirts--everybody knew that.
They had college degrees but they could be bought.  If they'd play
ball with the studio they'd get a lot of good publicity for U.W.C.
And that meant bigger salaries for them, didn't it, and more jack?

The door to the conference room opened and closed tentatively.  No
one came out but Pat sat up and readied himself.  Representing the
fourth biggest industry in America, or ALMOST representing it, he
must not let a bunch of highbrows stare him down.  He was not
without an inside view of higher education--in his early youth he
had once been the 'Buttons' in the DKE House at the University of
Pennsylvania.  And with encouraging chauvinism he assured himself
that Pennsylvania had it over this pioneer enterprise like a tent.

The door opened--a flustered young man with beads of sweat on his
forehead came tearing out, tore through--and disappeared.  Mr
Doolan stood calmly in the doorway.

'All right, Mr Hobby,' he said.

Nothing to be scared of.  Memories of old college days continued to
flood over Pat as he walked in.  And instantaneously, as the juice
of confidence flowed through his system, he had his idea . . .

'. . . it's more of a realistic idea,' he was saying five minutes
later.  'Understand?'

Dean Wiskith, a tall, pale man with an earphone, seemed to
understand--if not exactly to approve.  Pat hammered in his point
again.

'It's up-to-the-minute,' he said patiently, 'what we call "a
topical".  You admit that young squirt who went out of here was
stealing watches, don't you?'

The faculty committee, all except Doolan, exchanged glances, but no
one interrupted.

'There you are,' went on Pat triumphantly.  'You turn him in to the
newspapers.  But here's the twist.  In the Picture we make it turns
out he steals the watches to support his young BRO-ther--and his
young brother is the mainstay of the football team!  He's the
climax runner.  We probably try to borrow Tyrone Power but we use
one of YOUR players as a double.'

Pat paused, trying to think of everything.

'--of course, we've got to release it in the southern states, so
it's got to be one of your players that's white.'

There was an unquiet pause.  Mr Doolan came to his rescue.

'Not a bad idea,' he suggested.

'It's an appalling idea,' broke out Dean Wiskith.  'It's--'

Doolan's face tightened slowly.

'Wait a minute,' he said.  'Who's telling WHO around here?  You
listen to him!'

The Dean's assistant, who had recently vanished from the room at
the call of a buzzer, had reappeared and was whispering in the
Dean's ear.  The latter started.

'Just a minute, Mr Doolan,' he said.  He turned to the other
members of the committee.

'The proctor has a disciplinary case outside and he can't legally
hold the offender.  Can we settle it first?  And then get back to
this--'  He glared at Mr Doolan,'--to this preposterous idea?'

At his nod the assistant opened the door.

This proctor, thought Pat, ranging back to his days on the
vineclad, leafy campus, looked like all proctors, an intimidated
cop, a scarcely civilized beast of prey.

'Gentlemen,' the proctor said, with delicately modulated respect,
'I've got something that can't be explained away.'  He shook his
head, puzzled, and then continued:  'I know it's all wrong--but I
can't seem to get to the point of it.  I'd like to turn it over to
YOU--I'll just show you the evidence and the offender . . .  Come
in, you.'

As Evylyn Lascalles entered, followed shortly by a big clinking
pillow cover which the proctor deposited beside her, Pat thought
once more of the elm-covered campus of the University of
Pennsylvania.  He wished passionately that he were there.  He
wished it more than anything in the world.  Next to that he wished
that Doolan's back, behind which he tried to hide by a shifting of
his chair, were broader still.

'There you are!' she cried gratefully.  'Oh, Mr Hobby--Thank God!
I couldn't get rid of them--and I couldn't take them home--my
mother would kill me.  So I came here to find you--and this man
packed into the back seat of my car.'

'What's in that sack?' demanded Dean Wiskith.  'Bombs?  What?'

Seconds before the proctor had picked up the sack and bounced it on
the floor, so that it gave out a clear unmistakable sound, Pat
could have told them.  There were dead soldiers--pints, half-pints,
quarts--the evidence of four strained weeks at two-fifty--empty
bottles collected from his office drawers.  Since his contract was
up tomorrow he had thought it best not to leave such witnesses
behind.

Seeking for escape his mind reached back for the last time to those
careless days of fetch and carry at the University of Pennsylvania.

'I'll take it,' he said rising.

Slinging the sack over his shoulder, he faced the faculty committee
and said surprisingly:

'Think it over.'


V


'We did,' Mr Doolan told his wife that night.  'But we never made
head nor tail of it.'

'It's kind of spooky,' said Mrs Doolan.  'I hope I don't dream
tonight.  The poor man with that sack!  I keep thinking he'll be
down in purgatory--and they'll make him carve a ship in EVERY ONE
of those bottles--before he can go to heaven.'

'Don't!' said Doolan quickly.  'You'll have ME dreaming.  There
were plenty bottles.'



End of this Project Gutenberg of Australia eBook
The Complete Pat Hobby Stories by F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940)