I back away slightly. Iโve ruined it. โI apologize,โ I say. โThat was a poor choice of words.โ
Evelyn doesnโt say anything.
โIโm sorry, Ms. Hugo. This is all a bit surreal for me.โ
โYou can call me Evelyn,โ she says.
โOK, Evelyn, whatโs the next step here? What, precisely, are we going to do together?โ I take the coffee cup and put it up to my lips, sipping just the littlest bit.
โWeโre not doing a Vivant cover story,โ she says.
โOK, that much I got,โ I say, putting the cup down.
โWeโre writing a book.โ
โWe are?โ
Evelyn nods. โYou and I,โ she says. โIโve read your work. I like the way you communicate clearly and succinctly. Your writing has a no-nonsense quality to it that I admire and that I think my book could use.โ
โYouโre asking me to ghostwrite your autobiography?โ This is fantastic. This is absolutely, positively fantastic. This is a good reason to stay in New York. A great reason. Things like this donโt happen in San Francisco.
Evelyn shakes her head again. โIโm giving you my life story, Monique. Iโm going to tell you the whole truth. And you are going to write a book about it.โ
โAnd weโll package it with your name on it and tell everyone you wrote it. Thatโs ghostwriting.โ I pick up my cup again.
โMy name wonโt be on it. Iโll be dead.โ
I choke on my coffee and in doing so stain the white carpet with flecks of umber.
โOh, my God,โ I say, perhaps a bit too loudly, as I put down the cup. โI spilled coffee on your carpet.โ
Evelyn waves this off, but Grace knocks on the door and opens it just a crack, poking her head in.
โEverything OK?โ
โI spilled, Iโm afraid,โ I say.
Grace opens the door fully and comes in, taking a look.
โIโm really sorry. I just got a bit shocked is all.โ
I catch Evelynโs eye, and I donโt know her very well, but what I do know is that sheโs telling me to be quiet.
โItโs not a problem,โ Grace says. โIโll take care of it.โ
โAre you hungry, Monique?โ Evelyn says, standing up.
โIโm sorry?โ
โI know a place just down the street that makes really great salads. My treat.โ
Itโs barely noon, and when Iโm anxious, the first thing to go is my appetite, but I say yes anyway, because I get the distinct impression that itโs not really a question.
โGreat,โ Evelyn says. โGrace, will you call ahead to Trambinoโs?โ
Evelyn takes me by the shoulder, and less than ten minutes later, weโre walking down the manicured sidewalks of the Upper East Side.
The sharp chill in the air surprises me, and I notice Evelyn grab her coat tightly around her tiny waist.