โCelia, stop it. Iโm sick of this conversation. Youโre being a brat.โ
She laughed coldly. โExactly the same Evelyn Iโve been dealing with for years. Nothingโs changed. Youโre afraid of who you are, and you still donโt have an Oscar. You are what you have always been: a nice pair of tits.โ
I let the silence hang in the air for a moment. The buzz of the phone was the only sound either of us could hear.
And then Celia started crying. โIโm so sorry,โ she said. โI should never have said that. I donโt even mean it. Iโm so sorry. Iโve had too much to drink, and I miss you, and Iโm sorry that I said something so terrible.โ
โItโs fine,โ I said. โI should be going. Itโs late here, you understand. Congratulations again, sweetheart.โ
I hung up before she could reply.
That was how it was with Celia. When you denied her what she wanted, when you hurt her, she made sure you hurt, too.
DID YOU EVER CALL HER on it?โ I ask Evelyn.
I hear the muffled sound of my phone ringing in my bag, and I know from the ringtone that itโs David. I did not return his text over the weekend because I wasnโt sure what I wanted to say. And then, once I got here again this morning, I put it out of my mind.
I reach over and turn the ringer off.
โThere was no point in fighting with Celia once she got mean,โ Evelyn says. โIf things got too tense, I tended to back off before they came to a head. I would tell her I loved her and I couldnโt live without her, and then Iโd take my top off, and that usually ended the conversation. For all her posturing, Celia had one thing in common with almost every straight man in America: she wanted nothing more than to get her hands on my chest.โ
โDid it stick with you, though?โ I ask. โThose words?โ
โOf course it did. Look, Iโd be the first person to say back when I was young that all I was was a nice pair of tits. The only currency I had was my sexuality, and I used it like money. I wasnโt well educated when I got to Hollywood, I wasnโt book-smart, I wasnโt powerful, I wasnโt a trained actress. What did I have to be good at other than being beautiful? And taking pride in your beauty is a damning act. Because you allow yourself to believe that the only thing notable about yourself is something with a very short shelf life.โ
She goes on. โWhen Celia said that to me, I had crossed into my thirties. I wasnโt sure I had many more good years left, to be honest. I thought, you know, sure, Celia would keep getting work because people were hiring her for her talent. I wasnโt so sure they would continue hiring me once the wrinkles set in, once my metabolism slowed down. So yeah, it hurt, a lot.โ
โBut you had to know you were talented,โ I tell her. โYou had been nominated for an Academy Award three times by that point.โ
โYouโre using reason,โ Evelyn says, smiling at me. โIt doesnโt always work.โ
IN 1974, ON MY THIRTY-SIXTH birthday, Harry, Celia, John, and I all went out to the Palace. It was supposedly the most expensive restaurant in the world during that time. And I was the sort of person who liked being extravagant and absurd.
I look back on it now, and I wonder where I got off, throwing money around so casually, as if the fact that it came easily to me meant I had no responsibility to value it. I find it mildly mortifying now. The caviar, the private planes, the staff big enough to populate a baseball team.
But the Palace it was.
We posed for pictures, knowing they would end up in some tabloid or another. Celia bought us a bottle of Dom Perignon. Harry put back four manhattans himself. And when the dessert came with a lit candle in the middle, the three of them sang for me as people looked on.
Harry was the only one who had a piece of the cake. Celia and I were watching our figures, and John was on a strict regimen that had him mostly eating protein.
โAt least have a bite, Ev,โ John said good-naturedly as he took the plate away from Harry and pushed it toward me. โItโs your birthday, for crying out loud.โ
I raised an eyebrow and grabbed a fork, using it to scrape a forkful of the chocolate fudge icing. โWhen youโre right, youโre right,โ I said to him.
โHe just doesnโt think I should have it,โ Harry said.
John laughed. โTwo birds with one stone.โ
Celia lightly tapped her fork against her glass. โOK, OK,โ she said. โSmall speech time.โ
She was due to shoot a film in Montana the following week. Sheโd postponed the start date so she could be with me that night.
โTo Evelyn,โ she said, lifting her glass in the air. โWho has lit up every goddamn room she ever walked into. And who, day after day, makes us feel like weโre living in a dream.โ
* * *
LATER THAT NIGHT, as Celia and John went out to hail a cab, Harry gently helped me put my jacket on. โDo you realize that Iโm the longest marriage youโve had?โ he asked.
By that point, Harry and I had been married for almost seven years. โAnd also the best,โ I said. โBar none.โ
โI was thinking . . .โ
I already knew what he was thinking. Or at least, I suspected what he was thinking. Because Iโd been thinking it, too.
I was thirty-six. If we were going to have a baby, Iโd put it off for as long as I could.
Sure, there were women having babies later than that, but it wasnโt very common, and I had spent the last few years staring at babies in strollers, unable to focus my eyes on anything else when they were around.
I would pick up friendsโ babies and hold them tightly until the very moment their mothers demanded them back. I thought of what my own child might be like. I thought of how it would feel to bring a life into the world, to give the four of us another being to focus on.
But if I was going to do it, I had to get moving.
And our decision to have a baby wasnโt really just a two-person conversation. It was a four-person conversation.
โGo on,โ I said as we made our way to the front of the restaurant. โSay it.โ
โA baby,โ Harry said. โYou and me.โ
โHave you discussed it with John?โ I asked.
โNot specifically,โ he said. โHave you discussed it with Celia?โ
โNo.โ
โBut are you ready?โ he said.
My career was going to take a hit. There was no avoiding it. Iโd go from being a woman to being a motherโand somehow those things appeared mutually exclusive in Hollywood. My body would change. Iโd have months where I couldnโt work. It made absolutely no sense to say yes. โYes,โ I said. โI am.โ
Harry nodded. โMe too.โ
โOK,โ I said, considering the next steps. โSo weโll talk to John and Celia.โ
โYeah,โ Harry said. โI suppose we will.โ
โAnd if everyone is on board?โ I asked, stopping before we got out to the sidewalk.
โWeโll get started,โ Harry said, stopping with me.
โI know the most obvious solution is adoption,โ I said. โBut . . .โ
โYou think we should have a biological child.โ
โI do,โ I said. โI donโt want anyone trying to claim we adopted because we had something to hide.โ
Harry nodded. โI get it,โ he said. โI want a biological child, too. Someone half you, half me. Iโm with you on this.โ
I raised my eyebrow. โYou do realize how babies are made?โ I asked him.
He smiled and then leaned in and whispered, โThere is a very small part of me that has wanted to bed you since I met you, Evelyn Hugo.โ
I laughed and hit him on the arm. โNo, there is not.โ
โA small part,โ Harry said, defending himself. โIt goes against all my greater instincts. But it is there nonetheless.โ
I smiled. โWell,โ I said, โwe will keep that part to ourselves.โ
Harry laughed and put out his hand. I shook it. โOnce again, Evelyn, youโve got yourself a deal.โ
WOULD THE BABY BE RA
ISED by the both of you?โ Celia asked. We were lying in bed, naked. My back was lined with sweat, my hairline damp. I rolled over onto my stomach and put my hand on Celiaโs chest.
The movie she was doing next was making her a brunette. I found myself transfixed by the golden red of her hair, desperate to know that they would dye it back properly, that she would return to me looking exactly like herself.
โYes,โ I said. โOf course. It would be ours. Weโd raise it together.โ
โAnd where would I fit into all of this? Where would John?โ
โWherever you want to.โ
โI donโt know what that means.โ
โIt means that we would figure it out as we go.โ
Celia considered my words and stared at the ceiling. โThis is something you want?โ Celia asked finally.
โYes,โ I told her. โVery badly.โ
โIs it a problem for you that I have never . . . wanted that?โ she asked.
โThat you donโt want children?โ
โYes.โ
โNo, I suppose not.โ
โIs it a problem for you that I cannot . . . that I cannot give you that?โ Her voice was starting to crack, and her lips were starting to quiver. When Celia was on-screen and needed to cry, she would squint her eyes and cover her face. But they were fake tears, generated out of nothing, for nothing. When she really cried, her face remained painfully still except for the corners of her lips and the water brimming in her eyes that stuck to her lashes.
โHoney,โ I said, pulling her toward me. โOf course not.โ
โI just . . . I want to give you everything youโve ever wanted, and you want that, and I canโt give it to you.โ
โCelia, no,โ I said. โItโs not like that at all.โ
โItโs not?โ
โYou have given me more than I ever thought I could have in one life.โ
โYouโre sure.โ
โIโm positive.โ
She smiled. โYou love me?โ she said.
โOh, my God, what an understatement,โ I told her.
โYou love me so much you canโt see straight?โ
โI love you so much that when I sometimes get a look at all the crazy fan mail you get, I think, Well, sure, that makes sense. I want to collect her eyelashes, too.โ
Celia laughed and ran her hand across my upper arm as she stared at the ceiling. โI want you to be happy,โ she said when she finally looked at me.
โYou should know that Harry and I will have to . . .โ
โThereโs no other way?โ she asked. โI thought women were getting pregnant by men just using their sperm now.โ
I nodded. โI think there are other ways,โ I said. โBut Iโm not confident in the security of the situation. Or, rather, I donโt know how to ensure that no one finds out thatโs how we did it.โ
โYouโre saying youโre going to have to make love to Harry,โ Celia said.
โYou are the person Iโm in love with. You are the person I make love to. Harry and I are merely making a baby.โ
Celia looked at me, reading my face. โYouโre sure about that?โ
โAbsolutely positive.โ
She looked back up at the ceiling. She didnโt talk for a while. I watched her eyes as they moved back and forth. I watched her breathing as it slowed. And then she turned to face me. โIf itโs what you want . . . if you want a baby, then . . . have a baby. I will . . . we will figure it out. I will make it work. I can be an aunt. Aunt Celia. And Iโll find a way to be OK with it all.โ
โAnd Iโll help you,โ I said.
She laughed. โHow do you suppose youโll do that?โ
โI can think of one way to make it all a bit more palatable for you,โ I said, kissing her neck. She liked to be kissed right below and just behind her ear, where her earlobe hit her neck.
โOh, you are too much,โ she said. But she didnโt say anything else. She did not stop me as I moved my hand across her breasts, down her stomach, between her legs. She moaned and pulled me closer to her, and she ran her own hand down my body. She touched me while I touched her, soft at first and then harder, faster. โI love you,โ she said, breathless.
โI love you,โ I said back to her.
She looked into my eyes and made me feel rapture, and that night, in giving of herself, she gave me a baby.
PhotoMoment
May 23, 1975
EVELYN HUGO AND HARRY CAMERON HAVE A BABY GIRL!
Evelyn Hugo is finally a mother! At the age of 37, the stunning bombshell is adding โparentโ to her rรฉsumรฉ. Connor Margot Cameron, 6 pounds, 9 ounces, was born late last Tuesday at Mount Sinai Hospital.
Dad Harry Cameron is said to be โover the moonโ about the little bambina.
With a string of hits behind them, Evelyn and Harry are sure to consider the littlest Cameron their most exciting coproduction yet.
I WAS IN LOVE WITH Connor from the moment she looked at me. With her full head of hair and her round blue eyes, I thought, for a moment, she looked just like Celia.
Connor was always hungry and hated being alone. She wanted nothing more than to lie on me, quietly sleeping. She absolutely adored Harry.
During those first few months, Celia shot two movies back-to-back, both out of town. One of them, The Buyer, was a movie I knew she was passionate about. But the second, a mob movie, was exactly the sort of work she hated. On top of the violence and darkness, it shot for eight weeks, four in Los Angeles and four in Sicily. When the offer came in, I was expecting her to turn it down. Instead, she took the part, and John decided to go with her.
During the time they were gone, Harry and I lived almost exactly like a traditional married couple. Harry made me bacon and eggs for breakfast and ran my baths. I fed the baby and changed her nearly hourly.
We had help, of course. Luisa was taking care of the house. She was changing the sheets, doing the laundry, cleaning up after all of us. On her days off, it was Harry who stepped in.
It was Harry who told me I looked beautiful, even though we both knew Iโd seen better days. It was Harry who read script after script, looking for the perfect project for me to take on once Connor was old enough. It was Harry who slept next to me every night, who held my hand as we fell asleep, who held me when I was convinced I was a terrible mother after I scratched Connorโs cheek giving her a bath.
Harry and I had always been close, had long been family, but during that time, I truly felt like a wife. I felt like I had a husband. And I grew to love him even more. Connor, and that time with her, bonded Harry and me in ways I could never imagine. He was there to celebrate the good and support me during the bad.
It was around that time that I started to believe that friendships could be written in the stars. โIf there are all different types of soul mates,โ I told Harry one afternoon, when the two of us were sitting out on the patio with Connor, โthen you are one of mine.โ
Harry was wearing a pair of shorts and no shirt. Connor was lying on his chest. He hadnโt shaved that morning, and his stubble was coming in. It had just the slightest gray patch under his chin. Looking at him with her, I realized how much they looked alike. Same long lashes, same pert lips.
Harry held Connor to his chest with one hand and grabbed my free hand with the other. โI am absolutely positive that I need you more than Iโve ever needed another living soul,โ he said. โThe only exception beingโโ
โConnor,โ I said. We both smiled.
For the rest of our lives, we would say that. The only exception to absolutely everything was Connor.
* * *
WHEN CELIA AND John came home, things went back to normal. Celia lived with me. Harry lived with John. Connor stayed at my place, with the assumption that Harry would come by days and nights to be with us, to care for us.
But that first morning, just around the time Harry was due for breakfast, Celia put on her robe and headed to the kitchen. She started making oatmeal.
I had just come down,
still in my pajamas. I was sitting at the island nursing Connor when Harry walked in.
โOh,โ he said, looking at Celia, noticing the pan. Luisa was washing dishes in the sink. โI was coming in to make bacon and eggs.โ
โIโve got it,โ Celia said. โA nice warm bowl of oatmeal for everybody. Thereโs enough for you, too, if youโre hungry.โ
Harry looked at me, unsure what to do. I looked at him, equally uncertain.
Celia just kept stirring. And then she grabbed three bowls and set them down. She put the pot in the sink for Luisa to wash.
It occurred to me then how odd this system was. Harry and I paid Luisaโs salary, but Harry didnโt even live here. Celia and John paid the mortgage on the home Harry lived in.
Harry sat down and grabbed the spoon in front of him. He and I dug into our oatmeal at the same time. When Celiaโs back was to us, we looked at each other and grimaced. Harry mouthed something to me, and even though I could barely read his lips, I knew what he was saying, because it was exactly what I was thinking.
So bland.
Celia turned back to us and offered us some raisins. We both took her up on it. And then the three of us sat in the kitchen, eating our oatmeal quietly, all aware that Celia had staked her claim. I was hers. She would make my breakfast. Harry was a visitor.
Connor started crying, so Harry took her and changed her. Luisa went downstairs to grab the laundry. And when we were alone, Celia said, โMax Girard is doing a movie called Three A.M. for Paramount. Itโs supposed to be a real art-house piece, and I think you should do it.โ
I had kept in touch with Max, on and off, since he directed me in Boute-en-Train. I never forgot that it was with him that I was able to catapult my name to the top again. But I knew Celia couldnโt stand him. He was too overt in his interest in me, too salacious about it. Celia used to jokingly call him Pepรฉ Le Pew. โYou think I should do a movie with Max?โ
Celia nodded. โThey offered it to me, but it makes more sense for you. Regardless of the fact that I think heโs a Neanderthal, I can recognize that the man makes good movies. And this role is exactly your thing.โ