suppose that is one option.โ
โAnd the other?โ
โI really like you, Evelyn.โ
I looked at her sideways.
She laughed at me. โI know thatโs probably not something most actresses mean in this town, but I donโt want to be like most actresses. I really like you. I like watching you on-screen. I like how the moment you show up in a scene, I canโt look at anything else. I like the way your skin is too dark for your blond hair, the way the two shouldnโt go together and yet seem so natural on you. And to be honest, I like how calculating and awful you kind of are.โ
โI am not awful!โ
Celia laughed. โOh, you definitely are. Getting me fired because you think Iโll show you up? Awful. Thatโs just awful, Evelyn. And walking around bragging about how you use people? Just terrible. But I really like it when you talk about it. I like how honest you are, how unashamed. So many women around here are full of crap with everything they say and do. I like that youโre full of crap only when it gets you something.โ
โThis laundry list of compliments seems to have a lot of insults in it,โ I said.
Celia nodded, hearing me. โYou know what you want, and you go after it. I donโt think there is anyone in this town doubting that Evelyn Hugo is going to be the biggest star in Hollywood one of these days. And thatโs not just because youโre something to look at. Itโs because you decided you wanted to be huge, and now youโre going to be. I want to be friends with a woman like that. Thatโs what Iโm saying. Real friends. None of this Ruby Reilly, backstabbing, talking-about-each-other-behind-our-backs crap. Friendship. Where each of us gets better, lives better, because we know the other.โ
I considered her. โDo we have to do each otherโs hair and stuff like that?โ
โSunset pays people to do that. So no.โ
โDo I have to listen to your man troubles?โ
โCertainly not.โ
โSo what, then? We choose to spend time together and try to be there for each other?โ
โEvelyn, have you never had a friend before?โ
โOf course Iโve had friends before.โ
โA real one, a close friend? A true friend?โ
โI have a true friend, thank you very much.โ
โWho is it?โ
โHarry Cameron.โ
โHarry Cameron is your friend?โ
โHeโs my best friend.โ
โWell, fine,โ Celia said, putting out her hand for me to shake. โI will be your second-best friend, next to Harry Cameron.โ
I took her hand and shook it firmly. โFine. Tomorrow Iโll take you to Schwabโs. And afterward, we can rehearse together.โ
โThank you,โ she said, and she smiled brightly, as if sheโd gotten everything sheโd ever wanted in the world. She hugged me, and when we broke away, the man behind the counter was staring at us.
I asked for the check.
โItโs on the house,โ he said, which I thought was the dumbest thing, because if there is anyone that should be getting free food, it isnโt rich people.
โWill you tell your husband I loved The Gun at Point Dume?โ the man said as Celia and I got up to leave.
โWhat husband?โ I said as coyly as possible.
Celia laughed, and I flashed her a grin.