โI was going to see her. Youโre right.โ
โYou were going to cheat on me?โ
โI was going to leave you,โ I said. โI think you know that. I think youโve known that for some time. I am going to leave you. If not for her, for me.โ
โFor her?โ he said.
โI love her. I always have.โ
Max looked floored, as if he had been pushing me in this game, assuming Iโd forfeit. He shook his head in disbelief. โWow,โ he said. โIncredible. I married a dyke.โ
โStop saying that,โ I said.
โEvelyn, if you have sex with women, you are a lesbian. Donโt be a self-hating lesbian. Thatโs not . . . thatโs not becoming.โ
โI donโt care what you think is becoming. I donโt hate lesbians at all. Iโm in love with one. But I loved you, too.โ
โOh, please,โ he said. โPlease donโt try to make me any more of a fool than you already have. I have spent years loving you, only to find it meant nothing to you.โ
โYou didnโt love me for one goddamn day,โ I said. โYou loved having a movie star on your arm. You loved getting to be the one who slept in my bed. Thatโs not love. Thatโs possession.โ
โI have no idea what youโre talking about,โ he said.
โOf course you donโt,โ I said. โBecause you donโt know the difference between the two.โ
โDid you ever love me?โ
โYes, I did. When you made love to me and you made me feel desire and you took good care of my daughter and I believed that you saw something in me that no one else saw. When I believed you had an insight and a talent that no one else had. I loved you very much.โ
โSo you are not a lesbian,โ he said.
โI donโt want to discuss this with you.โ
โWell, youโre going to. You have to.โ
โNo,โ I said, gathering the letters and envelopes and shoving them into my pockets. โI donโt.โ
โYes,โ he said, blocking the door. โYou do.โ
โMax, get out of my way. Iโm leaving.โ
โNot to see her,โ he said. โYou canโt.โ
โOf course I can.โ
The phone started ringing, but I was too far away to answer it. I knew it was the driver. I knew that if I didnโt leave, I might miss my flight. There would be other flights, but I wanted to catch that one. I wanted to get to Celia as soon as possible.
โEvelyn, stop,โ Max said. โThink about this. It makes no sense. You canโt leave me. I could make one phone call and destroy you. I could tell anyone, anyone at all, about this, and your life would never be the same.โ
He wasnโt threatening me. He was simply explaining to me what was so clearly obvious. It was as if he was saying, Honey, youโre not thinking clearly. That wonโt end well for you.
โYouโre a good man, Max,โ I said. โI can see you being angry enough to try to hurt me. But Iโve known you to at least try to do the right thing most of the time.โ
โAnd what if this time I donโt?โ he said. And there, finally, was the threat.
โIโm leaving you, Max. It either happens now or it happens later, but itโs happening sometime. If you decide you want to try to bring me down over it, then I guess thatโs just what youโll have to do.โ
When he wouldnโt move, I shoved him out of the way and walked right past him out the door.
The love of my life was waiting, and I was going to go get her back.
WHEN I GOT TO SPAGO, Celia was already seated. She was wearing black slacks and a gauzy cream-colored sleeveless blouse. The temperature outside was a warm seventy-eight degrees, but the restaurantโs air-conditioning was on high, and she looked just a little bit cold. Her arms were covered in goose bumps.
Her red hair was still stunning but now clearly dyed. The golden undertones that had been there before, the result of nature and sunlight, were now slightly saturated, coppery. Her blue eyes were just as enticing as they always had been, but now the skin around them was softer.
Iโd been to a plastic surgeon a few times in the past several years. I suspected she had, too. I was wearing a deep-V-necked black dress, belted at the waist. My blond hair, a bit lighter now from the gray that had been creeping in and cut shorter, was framing my face.
She stood when she saw me. โEvelyn,โ she said.
I hugged her. โCelia.โ
โYou look great,โ she said. โYou always do.โ
โYou look just like you did the last time I saw you,โ I said.
โWe never did tell each other lies,โ she said, smiling. โLetโs not start now.โ
โYouโre gorgeous,โ I said.
โDitto.โ
I ordered a glass of white wine. She ordered a club soda with lime.
โI donโt drink anymore,โ Celia said. โItโs not sitting with me the way it once did.โ
โThatโs fine. If you want, I can toss my wine right out the window the moment it gets to the table.โ
โNo,โ she said, laughing. โWhy should my low tolerance be your problem?โ
โI want everything about you to be my problem,โ I said.
โDo you realize what youโre saying?โ she whispered to me as she leaned across the table. The neck of her blouse opened and dipped into the bread basket. I was worried it would graze the butter, but somehow it didnโt.
โOf course I realize what Iโm saying.โ
โYou destroyed me,โ she said. โTwice now in our lives. I have spent years getting over you.โ
โDid you succeed? Either time?โ
โNot completely.โ
โI think that means something.โ
โWhy now?โ she asked. โWhy didnโt you call years ago?โ
โI called you a million times after you left me. I practically knocked down your door,โ I reminded her. โI thought you hated me.โ
โI did,โ she said. She pulled back a bit. โI still hate you, I think. At least a little bit.โ
โYou think I donโt hate you, too?โ I tried to keep my voice down, tried to pretend it was a chat between two old friends. โJust a little bit?โ
Celia smiled. โNo, I suppose it would make sense that you do.โ
โBut Iโm not going to let that stop me,โ I said.
She sighed and looked at her menu.
I leaned in, conspiratorially. โI didnโt think I had a shot before,โ I told her. โAfter you left me, I thought the door was closed. And now itโs open a crack, and I want to swing it wide open and walk in.โ
โWhat makes you think the door is open?โ she asked, looking at the left side of the menu.
โWe are having dinner, arenโt we?โ
โAs friends,โ she said.
โYou and I have never been friends.โ
She closed her menu and put it down on the table. โI need reading glasses,โ she said. โCan you believe that? Reading glasses.โ
โJoin the club.โ
โI can be mean sometimes when Iโm hurt,โ she reminded me.
โYouโre not exactly telling me something I donโt know.โ
โI made you feel like you werenโt talented,โ she said. โI tried to make you think you needed me because I made you legitimate.โ
โI know that.โ
โBut youโve always been legitimate.โ
โI know that now, too,โ I told her.
โI thought you would call me after you won the Oscar. I thought maybe you would want to show me, youโd want to shove it in my face.โ
โDid you listen to my speech?โ
โOf course I did,โ she said.
โI reached out to you,โ I said. I picked up a piece of bread and buttered it. But I put it down immediately, not taking a single bite.
โI wasnโt sure,โ Celia said. โI mean, I wasnโt sure if you meant me.โ
โI all but said your name.โ
โYou said โshe.โโโ
โPrecisely.โ
โI thought maybe you had another
she.โ
I had looked at other women besides Celia. I had pictured myself with other women besides her. But everyone, for what had felt like my whole life, had always been divided into โCeliaโ and โnot Celia.โ Every other woman I considered striking up a conversation with might as well have had โnot Celiaโ stamped on her forehead. If I was going to risk my career and everything I loved for a woman, it was going to be her.
โThere is no she but you,โ I told her.
Celia listened and closed her eyes. And then she spoke. It was as if she had tried to stop herself and simply couldnโt. โBut there were hes.โ
โThis old song and dance,โ I said, trying to stop myself from rolling my eyes. โI was with Max. You were clearly with Joan. Did Joan hold a candle to me?โ
โNo,โ Celia said.
โAnd Max didnโt hold a candle to you.โ
โBut youโre still married to him.โ
โIโm filing papers. Heโs moving out. Itโs over.โ
โThatโs abrupt.โ
โItโs not, actually. Itโs overdue. And anyway, he found your letters,โ I said.
โAnd heโs leaving you?โ
โNo, heโs threatening to out me if I donโt stay with him.โ
โWhat?โ
โIโm leaving him,โ I said. โAnd Iโm letting him do whatever the hell he wants. Because Iโm fifty years old, and I donโt have the energy to be controlling every single thing anyone says about me until I die of old age. The parts Iโm being offered are shit. I have the Oscar on my mantel. I have a spectacular daughter. I have Harry. Iโm a household name. They will write about my movies for years to come. What more do I want? A gold statue in my honor?โ
Celia laughed. โThatโs what an Oscar is,โ she said.
I laughed, too. โExactly! Excellent point. I already have that, then. Thereโs nothing else, Celia. There are no more mountains to climb. I spent my life hiding so no one would knock me off the mountain. Well, you know what? Iโm done hiding. Let them come and get me. They can throw me down a well as far as Iโm concerned. Iโm signed on to do one last movie over at Fox later this year, and then Iโm done.โ
โYou donโt mean that.โ
โI do. Any other line of thinking . . . itโs how I lost you. I donโt want to lose anymore.โ
โItโs not just our careers,โ she said. โThe ramifications are unpredictable. What if they take Connor away?โ
โBecause Iโm in love with a woman?โ
โBecause they think both her parents are โqueers.โโโ
I sipped my wine. โI canโt win with you,โ I said finally. โIf I want to hide, you call me a coward. If Iโm tired of hiding, you tell me theyโll take my daughter.โ
โIโm sorry,โ Celia said. She did not seem sorry for what she had said so much as sorry that we lived in the world we lived in. โDo you mean it?โ she asked. โWould you really give it up?โ
โYes,โ I said. โYes, I would.โ
โAre you absolutely sure?โ she asked just as the waiter put her steak down in front of her and my salad in front of me. โI mean absolutely sure?โ
โYes.โ
Celia was quiet for a moment. She stared down at her plate. She seemed to be considering everything about this moment, and the longer she took to speak, the farther I found myself bending forward, trying to get closer to her.
โI have chronic obstructive pulmonary disease,โ she said finally. โI probably wonโt make it much past sixty.โ
I stared at her. โYouโre lying,โ I said.
โIโm not.โ
โYes, you are. That canโt be true.โ
โIt is true.โ
โNo, itโs not,โ I said.
โIt is,โ she said. She picked up her fork. She sipped the water in front of her.
My mind was reeling, thoughts bouncing around my brain, my heart spinning in my chest.
And then Celia spoke again, and the only reason I was able to focus on her words was that I knew they were important. I knew they mattered. โI think you should do your movie,โ she said. โFinish strong. And then . . . and then, after that, I think we should move to the coast of Spain.โ
โWhat?โ
โI have always liked the idea of spending the last years of my life on a beautiful beach. With the love of a good woman,โ she said.
โYouโre . . . youโre dying?โ
โI can look into some locations in Spain while youโre shooting. Iโll find a place where Connor can get a great education. Iโll sell my home here. Iโll get a compound somewhere, with enough space for Harry, too. And Robert.โ
โYour brother Robert?โ
Celia nodded. โHe moved out here for business a few years ago. Weโve become close. He . . . he knows who I am. He supports me.โ
โWhat is chronic obstructiveโ?โ
โEmphysema, more or less,โ she said. โFrom smoking. Do you still smoke? You should stop. Right now.โ
I shook my head, having long ago given it up.
โThey have treatments to slow down the process. I can live a normal life for the most part, for a while.โ
โAnd then what?โ
โAnd then, eventually, it will become difficult to be active, hard to breathe. When that happens, I wonโt have much time. All told, weโre looking at ten years, give or take, if Iโm lucky.โ
โTen years? Youโre only forty-nine.โ
โI know.โ
I started crying. I couldnโt help it.
โYouโre making a scene,โ she said. โYou have to stop.โ
โI canโt,โ I said.
โOK,โ she said. โOK.โ
She picked up her purse and threw down a hundred-dollar bill. She pulled me out of my chair, and we walked to the valet. She gave him her ticket. She put me in the front seat of the car. She drove me to her house. She sat me on the sofa.
โCan you handle this?โ she said.
โWhat do you mean?โ I asked her. โOf course I canโt handle it.โ
โIf you can handle this,โ she said, โthen we can do this. We can be together. I think we can . . . we can spend the rest of our lives together, Evelyn. If you can handle this. But I canโt, in good conscience, do this to you if you donโt think youโll survive it.โ
โSurvive what, exactly?โ
โLosing me again. I donโt want to let you love me if you donโt think you can lose me again. One last time.โ
โI canโt. Of course I canโt. But I want to anyway. Iโm going to anyway. Yes,โ I said finally. โI can survive it. Iโd rather survive it than never feel it.โ
โAre you sure?โ she said.
โYes,โ I said. โYes, Iโm sure. Iโve never been more sure about anything. I love you, Celia. Iโve always loved you. And we should spend the rest of the time we have together.โ
She grabbed my face. She kissed me. And I wept.
She started crying with me, and soon I couldnโt tell whether the tears I was tasting were hers or mine. All I knew was that I was once again in the arms of the woman I was always meant to love.
Eventually, Celiaโs blouse was on the floor and my dress was hiked up around my thighs. I could feel her lips on my chest, her hands on my stomach. I stepped out of my dress. Her sheets were stark white and perfectly soft. She no longer smelled like cigarettes and alcohol but like citrus.
In the morning, I woke up with her hair in my face, fanned across the pillow. I rolled to my side and curved my body against the back of hers.
โHere is what weโre going to do,โ Celia said. โYouโre going to leave Max. Iโm going to call a friend of mine in Congress. Heโs a representative from Vermont. He needs some press. Youโre going to be seen around with him. Weโre going to spread a rumor that youโre stepping out on Max with a younger man.โ
โHow old is he?โ
โTwenty-nine.โ
โJesus, Celia. Heโs a child,โ I said.
โThatโs exactly what peopl
e will say. Theyโll be shocked that youโre dating him.โ
โAnd when Max tries to slander me?โ
โIt wonโt matter what heโs trying to claim about you. It will look like heโs just bitter.โ
โAnd then?โ I asked.
โAnd then, down the line, you marry my brother.โ
โWhy am I going to marry Robert?โ
โSo that when I die, everything I own will be yours. My estate will be under your control. And you can keep my legacy.โ
โYou could appoint that to me.โ
โAnd have someone try to take it away because you were my lover? No. This is better. This is smarter.โ
โBut marrying your brother? Are you crazy?โ
โHeโll do it,โ she said. โFor me. And because heโs a rake who likes to bed almost every woman he sees. Youโd be good for his reputation. Itโs a win-win.โ
โAll this instead of just telling the truth?โ
I could feel Celiaโs rib cage expand and contract underneath me.
โWe canโt tell the truth. Did you see what they did to Rock Hudson? If it was cancer he was dying of, thereโd be telethons.โ
โPeople donโt understand AIDS,โ I said.
โThey understand it just fine,โ Celia said. โThey just think that he deserves it because of how he got it.โ
I rested my head on the pillow while my heart sank in my chest. She was right, of course. The past few years, Iโd watched Harry lose friend after friend, former lovers, to AIDS. Iโd watched him cry his eyes red out of fear that heโd get sick, for not knowing how to help the people he loved. And Iโd watched Ronald Reagan never so much as acknowledge what was happening in front of our eyes.
โI know things have changed since the sixties,โ she said. โBut they havenโt changed that much. It wasnโt that long ago that Reagan said gay rights werenโt civil rights. You canโt risk losing Connor. So Iโll call Jack, my friend in the House of Representatives. Weโll plant the story. Youโll shoot your movie. Youโll marry my brother. And weโll all move to Spain.โ
โIโll have to talk to Harry.โ
โOf course,โ she said. โTalk to Harry. If he hates Spain, weโll go to Germany. Or Scandinavia. Or Asia. I donโt care. We just need to go somewhere where people wonโt care who we are, where people will leave us alone and Connor can live a normal childhood.โ