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Page 15

The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo

I walk back to the subway in the chilly air. I cram myself into a car packed with people, holding on to the handrail above my head. I walk to my apartment and open my front door.

I sit on my couch, open my laptop, and answer some e-mails. I start to order something for dinner. And it is only when I go to put my feet up that I remember there is no coffee table. For the first time since he left, I have not come into this apartment immediately thinking of David.

Instead, what plays in the back of my mind all weekendโ€”from my Friday night in to my Saturday night out and my Sunday morning at the parkโ€”isnโ€™t How did my marriage fail? but rather Who the hell was Evelyn Hugo in love with?

I AM ONCE AGAIN IN Evelynโ€™s study. The sun is shining directly into the windows, lighting Evelynโ€™s face with so much warmth that it obscures her right side from view.

Weโ€™re really doing this. Evelyn and me. Subject and biographer. It begins now.

She is wearing black leggings and a manโ€™s navy-blue button-down shirt with a belt. Iโ€™m wearing my usual jeans, T-shirt, and blazer. I dressed with the intention of staying here all day and all night, if need be. If she keeps talking, I will be here, listening.

โ€œSo,โ€ I say.

โ€œSo,โ€ Evelyn says, her voice daring me to go for it.

Sitting at her desk while she is on the couch feels adversarial somehow. I want her to feel as if we are on the same team. Because we are, arenโ€™t we? Although I get the impression you never know with Evelyn.

Can she really tell the truth? Is she capable of it?

I take a seat in the chair next to the sofa. I lean forward, with my notepad in my lap and a pen in my hand. I take out my phone, open the voice memo app, and hit record.

โ€œYou sure youโ€™re ready?โ€ I ask her.

Evelyn nods. โ€œEveryone I loved is dead now. Thereโ€™s no one left to protect. No one left to lie for but me. People have so closely followed the most intricate details of the fake story of my life. But itโ€™s not . . . I donโ€™t . . . I want them to know the real story. The real me.โ€

โ€œAll right,โ€ I say. โ€œShow me the real you, then. And Iโ€™ll make sure the world understands.โ€

Evelyn looks at me and briefly smiles. I can tell I have said what she wants to hear. Fortunately, I mean it.

โ€œLetโ€™s go chronologically,โ€ I say. โ€œTell me more about Ernie Diaz, your first husband, the one who got you out of Hellโ€™s Kitchen.โ€

โ€œOK,โ€ Evelyn says, nodding. โ€œItโ€™s as good a place to start as any.โ€

Poor Ernie Diaz

MY MOTHER HAD BEEN A chorus girl off Broadway. Sheโ€™d emigrated from Cuba with my father when she was seventeen. When I got older, I found out that chorus girl was also a euphemism for a prostitute. I donโ€™t know if she was or not. Iโ€™d like to think she wasnโ€™tโ€”not because thereโ€™s any shame in it but because I know a little bit about what it is to give your body to someone when you donโ€™t want to, and I hope she didnโ€™t have to do that.

I was eleven when she died of pneumonia. Obviously, I donโ€™t have a lot of memories of her, but I do remember that she smelled like cheap vanilla, and she made the most amazing caldo gallego. She never called me Evelyn, only mija, which made me feel really special, like I was hers and she was mine. Above all else, my mother wanted to be a movie star. She really thought she could get us out of there and away from my father by getting into the movies.

I wanted to be just like her.

Iโ€™ve often wished that on her deathbed sheโ€™d said something moving, something I could take with me always. But we didnโ€™t know how sick she was until it was over. The last thing she said to me was Dile a tu padre que estarรฉ en la cama. โ€œTell your father Iโ€™ll be in bed.โ€

After she died, I would cry only in the shower, where no one could see me or hear me, where I couldnโ€™t tell what were my tears and what was the water. I donโ€™t know why I did that. I just know that after a few months, I was able to take a shower without crying.

And then, the summer after she died, I began to develop.

My chest started growing, and it wouldnโ€™t stop. I had to rifle through my momโ€™s old things when I was twelve years old, looking to see if there was a bra that would fit. The only one I found was too small, but I put it on anyway.

By the time I was thirteen, I was five foot eight, with dark, shiny brown hair, long legs, light bronze skin, and a chest that pulled at the buttons of my dresses. Grown men were watching me walk down the street, and some of the girls in my building didnโ€™t want to hang out with me anymore. It was a lonely business. Motherless, with an abusive father, no friends, and a sexuality in my body that my mind wasnโ€™t ready for.

The cashier at the five-and-dime on the corner was this boy named Billy. He was the sixteen-year-old brother of the girl who sat next to me in school. One October day, I went down to the five-and-dime to buy a piece of candy, and he kissed me.

I didnโ€™t want him to kiss me. I pushed him away. But he held on to my arm.

โ€œOh, come on,โ€ he said.

The store was empty. His arms were strong. He grasped me tighter. And in that moment, I knew he was going to get what he wanted from me whether I let him or not.

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