Hayley Aldridge Is Still Here
Dedication
To Alexandra and John
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Dedication
Author’s Note
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Acknowledgments
P.S. Insights, Interviews & More . . .*
About the Author
About the Book
Praise for Hayley Aldridge Is Still Here
Also by Elissa R. Sloan
Copyright
About the Publisher
Author’s Note
Please note that there are some triggering elements in this book. Disordered eating, statutory rape, grooming of a minor, emotional and drug abuse, pregnancy, and death are all portrayed in this novel. Please be gentle with yourself while reading.
If you or someone you know has a substance abuse problem, there’s help. If you’re in the US, SAMHSA’s National Helpline can be reached at 1-800-662-4357.
Chapter 1
I wonder what the outside world is like, I think while sitting outside my twelve-bedroom, thirteen-bathroom Spanish-style mansion. After all, there’s nothing much wrong with me. I’m fit and healthy, yet stuck in the house with two young women who look unsettlingly like me. And some days, I feel like I’m going to lose it.
I suck on a piece of mango and wish it could be in a daiquiri, but I gave up alcohol years ago. Drinking makes time go by faster, but it also makes you sluggish. What I need now is a sharp mind. No excuses for being kept in this house for any longer than I already have been.
Jessica joins me by the pool, sunglasses perched on her head. I squint up at her. She’s the spitting image of her father in the backlight.
“Mom,” she says, and I marvel at how my child can speak. She’s seventeen now, but will always be my baby.
“Yes?”
“Why don’t we go out? Why are we always stuck in the house?”
“We’re waiting for your grandfather,” I say indifferently. “He and I will discuss it.” For the thousandth time.
“I just don’t get it.”
I wonder, if I knew then what I know now, if I would still make the same decisions, urge my parents to take me to auditions. Gone along for the ride. It’s not fair to blame a five-year-old, but that’s what I do: put the onus on a younger me, as if I knew better then. Would all this have come to a head like it had now? Or would I be living a free life, unfettered, somewhere else? Something boring and predictable.
“Go get your sister.”
Jessica sighs, but leaves and comes back with Jane. I bite another piece of mango, licking my fingers after it’s in my mouth. I used to count the calories of fruit; every bite, fifteen calories, until I hit ninety and then I’d stop. Now I can’t get enough. My belly is rounded from all the fruit and doughnuts and sugared cereal and potato chips, all the treats I wasn’t able to eat when I was younger. It is what it is. I’m having a second-childhood renaissance.
“Mom,” Jane whines. She’s identical to her twin, but I can tell them apart without any problem. I’m a good mother, no matter what people say. “Why don’t we go hiking today? Why are we stuck here again?”
“We’re waiting,” I repeat. “But while we’re waiting, should I tell you a story?”
The twins exchange looks. “What kind of story?” Jessica says hesitatingly.
“The story about your mom.”
“What kind of story would you have that we don’t already know?” Jane asks.
“Well, why I’m stuck here.”
“We’ve seen the tabloids,” Jane says, rolling her eyes.
“That’s not the story,” I say, slightly horrified that she would have read any of that trash. “That’s the screwed-up fairy tale.”
Jessica crosses her arms. Jane mirrors her.
I sniff. “I just figured you were old enough now to know.”
“Know what?”
It doesn’t matter which twin said it; I’m lost in my own world again. Remembering Ted and Brandon and Millie and Trey and Anthony and Olive. Where do I start? Do I begin in 2007, when the twins were just two and I was sentenced to this new life? Do I tell them it was only supposed to be temporary, but that it kept getting extended, over and over again, and it’s still not over, years later?
“Once upon a time,” I say, and the twins groan in unison. “You really don’t want to hear this?” I ask them, surprised.
The tablet chimes and I look down at it; there’s activity in the front of the house. I watch as a car snakes its way up the driveway and parks. A man gets out: short, bald, hawkish nose. He pulls his pants up over his belly with a snap and moves toward the front door.
“Maybe this can wait until later,” I say.
The man has crossed through the kitchen and appears in the back doorway.
“Hi, Dad.”
MY FATHER HAS no interest in mangoes. Inwardly, I curse, but I smile at him with my winningest grin. It’s Tuesday, which means it’s social media day. I’m already made up, though I know I’ve eaten off my lip gloss, and wearing a high-waisted bikini. He’s already pulling out his phone and aiming it toward me.
“What today? Maybe a monologue from Third Time Around?” I say. He grunts in affirmation. He didn’t even say hello when he walked in.
I swipe under my eyes, to make sure my mascara hasn’t run, and clear my throat. The twins escaped the moment their grandfather came into the backyard, and I don’t blame them.
“Make it a happy one, not a crying one,” he instructs.
So I do. I pull out one of the scenes from season eleven—or was it twelve?—where I am telling Ted he’d make a wonderful father. Not to me, of course (I played his kid sister), but to the child he’d conceived with his fiancée, Natasha. I forget the actress’s name now; Natasha was just the character’s name. I deliver the monologue with a warm smile.
“Good,” Dad says, and pockets his phone. “I brought over your mail,” he continues, placing it on a deck chair. There’s a heap of cards in the pile, from fans who sign #helphayley on the backs of the envelopes. Dad lets me have them because they improve my morale. But it doesn’t change the fact that he still controls my life.
“Can the girls and I go hiking today?” I ask.
“No, I don’t think so,” he answers. He places a Visa on the table. It’s another gift card with an allotted amount of money on it for incidentals. Then he gives me a kiss on the forehead and rubs my hair. “Anything else you need, you tell Adam.”
“Okay.” I’m glum.
Once he’s gone—and I watch him snake his way back down the driveway on the tablet—the girls reappear.
“Okay, this would be weird if it happened in any other family,” Je
ssica says.
“We talked about it, and we want to know the full story,” Jane says.
I lean back in my lounge chair and set one arm across my eyes to keep out the sun. “Here goes nothing.”
Church Gazette, June 23, 1991
One of our own is off to Hollywood! Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Aldridge, of Anita, TX, are proud to announce that their daughter Hayley (7) has been cast in a TV show! Everyone in the congregation is urged to keep their eyes peeled for Hayley’s debut in Third Time Around, coming this fall on CBS!
Chapter 2
My life wasn’t always controlled. I was raised in a small town smack-dab between Houston and Austin called Anita. We didn’t have much growing up, but we did have community. My parents, Gerald and Patricia, were active members in the Presbyterian church, the only one in the town. (There was also a Catholic church and a Methodist church, but no synagogue.) I was on my own until I was four, when your aunt Ashley came along.
My mother said I was born to perform. She claims that I was tap-dancing in her belly even before they knew she was pregnant with me. When I was three, we drove to nearby Columbus so I could start taking dancing lessons. It soon became apparent to me that I could get a lot more attention if I did something well. So I began to excel. I was the best ballet student, the best little singer my preschool teacher ever saw, and I had a lot of time to myself to make up stories and act them out for my exasperated parents.
I think my folks knew I was not going to give up my hamming-up for all the cookies in the world, and they decided to nourish my need to perform. Maybe get it all out of my system before I turned ten.
When I was five and Ashley was one, my mother decided to take me to a talent agency in Houston. This was 1989 and Austin was still a sleepy college town, so my mom picked the busier metropolis. She got dressed in her Sunday best and pressed powder all over her face. Then we drove the ninety minutes to make our appointment.
This was the first time I’d been to the big city and it fascinated me—the skyscrapers especially. Anita’s biggest building was the Walmart, and it was only one story. The giant towers boggled my mind. We parked in a parking garage—another first—and entered one of those enormous buildings. It was my first time in an elevator, and I itched to push every single button. But my mother allowed me to press only one, the button that led us to the fourteenth floor, and we were deposited neatly in the waiting room for Mrs. Emma Murray. It held a few other children with their parents.
Mrs. Murray was a dazzling woman. She was tall, taller than my mother, and wore red lipstick. “Let’s take a look at you,” she said, when it was my turn. I knew I was supposed to impress her. I stood up very straight and smiled with all my teeth.
“She sings, she dances,” my mother said. “She can act.”
“How do you know she can act?” Mrs. Murray asked.
“She makes up little plays for us.”
“Imaginative, eh?” Mrs. Murray said.
I know that, as a five-year-old, my memory of this event shouldn’t be so strong. But that huff of admiration, that “Imaginative, eh?” was etched inside my mind from the very moment that it happened. Imaginative! That was me.
The rest of the meeting was a blur, but I know that my mother was pleased. Mrs. Murray added us to her roster, and every so often, I was called forth to audition for something. Juice commercials, mostly. I landed a TV ad for a local toy store and my payment was either one of the toys on set or an actual check. This was the first time my mother and I disagreed on my career: she wanted the check, and I had my eye on a stuffed bunny.
“That’s it!” she said to me firmly. “I’m the mom and that means you listen to me. We are getting paid.”
She took that check to the bank, cashed it, and then bought me the bunny.
“Let this be a lesson,” she said. “Always take the money. Now we’re both happy.”
I DON’T KNOW when the commercials were deemed “not good enough” for my parents or me. All I know is that once we tuned into Sesame Street and noticed that my peers were on there—one of the girls I’d auditioned against for Welch’s grape juice was a featured player—the commercials I’d been in seemed paltry in comparison.
“Hayley,” my mother said, “do you want to be on Sesame Street?”
I don’t remember my answer.
But what happened next was that my mother and Ashley and I took off for Los Angeles while my father held down the fort in Anita. We booked ourselves in a long-term apartment in Hollywood and began going to every audition that we could find. I was six.
The Third Time Around audition I remember very well, and not just because there are clips of the casting video famously floating around on YouTube.
“What’s your name?” a voice off-camera says.
“Hayley Aldridge.”
“So this is the scene where Amy’s mom finds out Amy has flushed her rings down the toilet. And those rings are special to her mom because Amy’s dad gave them to her, and Amy’s dad is dead. And Amy knows she’s done something wrong but she’s also a little naughty and doesn’t want to be punished. Are you ready, Hayley?”
“Mm-hmm.”
“Amy, what have you done?”
My voice immediately wavers. “I didn’t mean to do it!”
“Amy, those rings meant a lot to Mommy, you know better than to play in Mommy’s jewelry box.”
“I know, Mommy. I didn’t mean to. I was just playing with them, you know, and pretending to be you. But then they fell in. And I didn’t want to put my hand in the toilet, and I was afraid of getting in trouble, and so I flushed the toilet.”
“Why would you flush the toilet?”
The quaver in my voice grows even more despondent. “Because! Because if you knew that I’d done it, you would’ve gotten mad at me.”
“Amy, I’m mad at you now. I’m so mad at you. Because now instead of me digging in the plumbing for the rings, they’re just gone, and nothing will bring them back.”
My voice is small. “Like nothing will bring back Daddy?”
“Like nothing will bring back Daddy,” the voice affirms.
My chin shakes and I begin to cry, two perfect streaks down my cheeks. “I miss Daddy,” I say.
“And scene. You got it.”
After I won the part of Amy, my parents dealt with a new conundrum. They’d already been separated by distance for six months while I’d been auditioning. We didn’t have the kind of money where we could fly back and forth between California and Texas every other week to keep the family somewhat intact. I’m sure that the distance put some strain on my parents’ marriage. And what could they do now? Should my father upend our lives in Anita for a life in Hollywood, based on the needs and wants of his now seven-year-old?
The answer was no. My dad stayed in Anita, continued his job as a salesman, and wired money to my mother in L.A. while I got started in my role on Third Time Around.
It was typical for shows like this to have twins playing a single character of my age, but because I didn’t have a lot of screen time at first, just me was fine. The thorny problem of how to stick to regulations for underage actors came into play when Amy’s role expanded at my tender age of twelve. But for the first five years of the show—and I realize how impressive that is, that a show lasted longer than five years and wasn’t canceled for more than fifteen altogether—it was just me as Amy, with my colleagues Ted-as-Zac and Millie-as-Erica to make up my newfound family.
We looked alike: a trio of siblings with sandy-blond hair, blue eyes, and button noses. Millie had to have her stick-straight hair professionally curled to give it a similar appearance to Ted’s and mine, but we looked like we could be genetically linked. Ted was twelve; Millie, ten.
As an icebreaker, the three of us were invited, along with our parents, to Disneyland before we began filming. It was my first time and I was enthralled.
“I want to go on Space Mountain!” Ted yelled, when we were through the entrance.
“I wan
t to go to Haunted Mansion!” Millie countered.
“Space Mountain!”
Ted’s father, who had joined his wife, Millie’s parents, and my mother, said to me kindly, “And you, Hayley?”
I smiled at Mr. Sumner and said, “I want to meet Goofy.”
Ted groaned.
“We’ll do all of these,” Mr. Sumner said, taking control of the group.
We went to the Haunted Mansion first, but one look at some of the kids coming off the ride and I knew I didn’t want to go in there. I hid my face in my mother’s bleached jeans, Ashley’s legs kicking at my cheek from where she sat perched on my mother’s back in a sling. Ted sighed exasperatedly, as a twelve-year-old would when a kid sister is being annoying, and when I peeked out again, he and Millie and a few of the parents were gone.
“We’ll just hang out here,” Ted’s father said kindly, and took my mother and me to a nearby ice cream vendor. It was eleven in the morning, but we still got Popsicles and sat on a bench to eat them. Mom fed a bite to Ashley, who dribbled it down her chin. It seemed like hours later when the group reformed, and off we went to Space Mountain, another trek.
This one seemed fun, but we ran into a block: the height requirement. “Hayley, you’re too short,” my mother said, a real note of sadness in her voice. I could tell she was unhappy that we had come to this giant wonderland of a playground and that I wouldn’t get on yet another ride.
“Nooo.” I could feel a tantrum start to build. I stamped my feet.
Ted sighed, this time a resigned one. “If Hayley can’t get on, we don’t have to ride,” he said, mature beyond his years.
“What! Why?” Millie asked.
“That’s very grown-up of you,” Millie’s mother said to Ted, obviously impressed.
“This is a chance to get to know everyone, and how can you do that if you’re not even in the same place at the same time?” Ted’s father asked, a bit of pride in his voice. He had probably coached his son on the purpose of this trip and Ted had actually listened.
Ted reached out an arm and grabbed a hold of my hand. “Let’s find Goofy,” he said amiably.
It’s funny, what we remember as children. I don’t recall the parade we ended up seeing, but we clearly stood to watch it in the photos I have. But the weight of Ted’s hand in mine, I will always remember. I’m getting choked up now thinking about his kindness. That was just the type of person Ted was, a lovely and thoughtful person who put others before himself. Just the type of person who would get eaten alive in Hollywood, as we all saw.