โPeople.โ
โWhat people?โ
โThey think you wear the pants.โ
My head fell into my hands. โDon, youโre being silly.โ
Another car came up around us, and I watched as they recognized Don and me. We were seconds away from a full page in Sub Rosa magazine about how Hollywoodโs favorite couple were at each otherโs throat. Theyโd probably say something like โThe Adlers Gone Madlers?โ
I suspected Don saw the headlines writing themselves at the same time I did, because he started the car and drove us to set. When we pulled onto the lot, I said, โI canโt believe weโre almost forty-five minutes late.โ
And Don said, โYeah, well, weโre Adlers. We can be.โ
I found it absolutely repugnant. I waited until the two of us were in his trailer, and I said, โWhen you talk like that, you sound like a horseโs ass. You shouldnโt say things like that where people can hear you.โ
He was taking off his jacket. Wardrobe was due in any moment. I should have just left and gone to my own trailer. I should have let him be.
โI think you have gotten the wrong impression here, Evelyn,โ Don said.
โAnd how is that?โ
He came right up into my face. โWe are not equals, love. And Iโm sorry if Iโve been so kind that youโve forgotten that.โ
I was speechless.
โI think this should be the last movie you do,โ he said. โI think itโs time for us to have children.โ
His career wasnโt turning out the way he wanted. And if he wasnโt going to be the most famous person in his family, he surely wasnโt going to allow that person to be me.
I looked right at him and said, โAbsolutely. Positively. Not.โ
And he smacked me across the face. Sharp, fast, strong.
It was over before I even knew what happened, the skin on my face stinging from the blow I could barely believe had come my way.
If youโve never been smacked across the face, let me tell you something, it is humiliating. Mostly because your eyes start to tear up, whether you mean to be crying or not. The shock of it and the sheer force of it stimulate your tear ducts.
There is no way to take a smack across the face and look stoic. All you can do is remain still and stare straight ahead, allowing your face to turn red and your eyes to bloom.
So thatโs what I did.
The way Iโd done it when my father hit me.
I put my hand to my jaw, and I could feel the skin heating up under my hand.
The assistant director knocked on the door. โMr. Adler, is Miss Hugo with you?โ
Don was unable to speak.
โOne minute, Bobby,โ I said. I was impressed by how unstrained my voice was, how confident it seemed. It sounded like the voice of a woman who had never been hit a day in her life.
There were no mirrors I could get to easily. Don had his back to them, blocking them. I pushed my jaw forward.
โIs it red?โ I said.
Don could barely look at me. But he glanced and then nodded his head. He was boyish and ashamed, as if I were asking him if heโd been the one to break the neighborโs window.
โGo out there and tell Bobby Iโm having lady troubles. Heโll be too embarrassed to ask anything else. Then tell your wardrobe person to meet you in my dressing room. Have Bobby tell mine to meet me in here in a half hour.โ