The ceremony took place at the Beverly Hills courthouse. Evelyn wore a cream-colored suit. Robert looked dapper in pinstripes. Evelynโs daughter with the late Harry Cameron, Connor Cameron, was the maid of honor.
Shortly after, the three left on a trip to Spain. We can only assume they are off to visit Celia, who just recently bought property off the southern coast.
CONNOR CAME BACK TO LIFE on the rocky beaches of Aldiz. It was slow but steady, like a seed sprouting.
She liked playing Scrabble with Celia. As sheโd promised, she ate dinner with me every night, sometimes even coming down to the kitchen early to help me make tortillas from scratch or my motherโs caldo gallego.
But it was Robert she gravitated toward.
Tall and broad, with a gentle beer belly and silver hair, Robert had no idea what to do with a teenage girl at first. I think he was intimidated by her. He was unsure what to say. So he gave her space, maybe even more of a wide berth.
It was Connor who reached out, who asked him to teach her how to play poker, asked him to tell her about finance, asked him if he wanted to go fishing.
He never replaced Harry. No one could. But he did ease the pain, a little bit. She asked his opinion about boys. She took the time to find him the perfect sweater on his birthday.
He painted her bedroom for her. He made her favorite barbecue ribs on the weekends.
And slowly, Connor began to trust that the world was a reasonably safe place to open your heart to. I knew the wounds of losing her father would never truly heal, that scar tissue was forming all through her high school years. But I saw her stop partying. I saw her start getting As and Bs. And then, when she got into Stanford, I looked at her and realized I had a daughter with two feet placed firmly on the ground and her head squarely on her shoulders.
Celia, Robert, and I took Connor out for dinner the night before she and I left to take her to school. We were at a tiny restaurant on the water. Robert had bought her a present and wrapped it. It was a poker set. He said, โTake everybodyโs money, like youโve been taking mine with all those flushes.โ
โAnd then you can help me invest it,โ she said with devilish glee.
โAtta girl,โ he said.
Robert always claimed that he married me because he would do anything for Celia. But I think he did it, in at least some small part, because it gave him a chance to have a family. He was never going to settle down with one woman. And Spanish women proved to be just as enchanted by him as American ones had been. But this system, this family, was one he could be a part of, and I think he knew that when he signed up.
Or maybe Robert merely stumbled into something that worked for him, unsure what he wanted until he had it. Some people are lucky like that. Me, Iโve always gone after what I wanted with everything in me. Others fall into happiness. Sometimes I wish I was like them. Iโm sure sometimes they wish they were like me.
With Connor back in the United States, coming home only during school breaks, Celia and I had more time with each other than we ever had before. We did not have film shoots or gossip columns to worry about. We were almost never recognizedโand if people did recognize one of us, they mostly steered clear and kept it to themselves.
There in Spain, I had the life I truly wanted. I felt at peace, again waking up every day seeing Celiaโs hair fanned on my pillow. I cherished every moment we had to ourselves, every second I spent with my arms around her.
Our bedroom had an oversized balcony that looked out onto the ocean. Often the breeze from the water would rush into our room at night. We would sit out there on lazy mornings, reading the newspaper together, our fingers gray from the ink.
I even started speaking Spanish again. At first, I did it because it was necessary. There were so many people we needed to converse with, and I was the only one truly prepared to do it. But I think the necessity of it was good for me. Because I couldnโt worry too much about feeling insecure; I simply had to get through the transaction. And then, over time, I found myself proud of how easily it came to me. The dialect was differentโthe Cuban Spanish of my youth was not a perfect match for the Castilian of Spainโbut years without the words had not erased many of them from my mind.
I would often speak Spanish even at home, making Celia and Robert piece together what I was saying from their own limited knowledge. I loved sharing it with them. I loved being able to show a part of myself that I had long buried. I was happy to find that when I dug it up, that part was still there, waiting for me.
But of course, no matter how perfect the days seemed, there was one ache looming over us night after night.
Celia was not well. Her health was deteriorating. She did not have much time.
โI know I shouldnโt,โ Celia said to me one night as we lay together in the dark, neither of us yet sleeping. โBut sometimes I get so mad at us for all the years we lost. For all the time we wasted.โ
I grabbed her hand. โI know,โ I said. โMe too.โ
โIf you love someone enough, you should be able to overcome anything,โ she said. โAnd we have always loved each other so much, more than I ever thought I could be loved, more than I ever thought I could love. So why . . . why couldnโt we overcome it?โ
โWe did,โ I said, turning toward her. โWeโre here.โ
She shook her head. โBut the years,โ she said.
โWeโre stubborn,โ I said. โAnd we werenโt exactly given the tools to succeed. Weโre both used to being the one who calls the shots. We both have a tendency to think the world revolves around us . . .โ
โAnd weโve had to hide that weโre gay,โ she said. โOr, rather, Iโm gay. Youโre bisexual.โ
I smiled in the dark and squeezed her hand.
โThe world hasnโt made that easy,โ she said.
โI think both of us wanted more than was realistic. Iโm sure we could have made it work, the two of us, in a small town. You could have been a teacher. I could have been a nurse. We could have made it easier on ourselves that way.โ
I could feel Celia shaking her head next to me. โBut thatโs not who we are, thatโs not who we have ever been or could ever be.โ
I nodded. โI think being yourselfโyour true, entire selfโis always going to feel like youโre swimming upstream.โ
โYeah,โ she said. โBut if the last few years with you have been any indication, I think it also feels like taking your bra off at the end of the day.โ
I laughed. โI love you,โ I said. โDonโt ever leave me.โ
But when she said, โI love you, too. I never will,โ we both knew she was making a promise she couldnโt keep.
I couldnโt stand the thought of losing her again, losing her in a deeper way than Iโd ever lost her before. I couldnโt bear the idea that I would be forever without her, with no tie to her.
โWill you marry me?โ I said.
She laughed, and I stopped her.
โIโm not kidding! I want to marry you. For once and for all. Donโt I deserve that? Seven marriages in, shouldnโt I finally get to marry the love of my life?โ
โI donโt think it works that way, sweetheart,โ she said. โAnd need I remind you, Iโd be stealing my brotherโs wife.โ
โIโm serious, Celia.โ
โSo am I, Evelyn. Thereโs no way for us to marry.โ
โAll a marriage is is a promise.โ
โIf you say so,โ she said. โYouโre the expert.โ
โLetโs get married right here and now. Me and you. In this bed. You donโt even have to put on a white nightgown.โ
โWhat are you talking about?โ
โIโm talking about a spiritual promise, between the two of us, for the rest of our lives.โ
When Celia didnโt say anything, I knew that she was thinking about it. She was thinking about whether it could mean anything, the two of us there in that bed.
โHereโs what we will do,โ I said, trying to convince her. โWe will look each other in the eye, and w
e will hold hands, and we will say whatโs in our hearts, and we will promise to be there for each other. We donโt need any government documents or witnesses or religious approval. It doesnโt matter that Iโm already legally married, because we both know that when I was marrying Robert, I was doing it to be with you. We donโt need anybody elseโs rules. We just need each other.โ
She was quiet. She sighed. And then she said, โOK. Iโm in.โ
โReally?โ I was surprised at just how meaningful this moment was becoming.
โYeah,โ she said. โI want to marry you. Iโve always wanted to marry you. I just . . . it never occurred to me that we could. That we didnโt need anyoneโs approval.โ
โWe donโt,โ I said.
โThen I do.โ
I laughed and sat up in our bed. I turned on the light on my nightstand. Celia sat up, too. We faced each other and held hands.
โI think you should probably perform the ceremony,โ she said.
โI suppose I have been in more weddings,โ I joked.
She laughed, and I laughed with her. We were in our midfifties, giddy at the idea of finally doing what we should have done years ago.
โOK,โ I said. โNo more laughing. Weโre gonna do it.โ
โOK,โ she said, smiling. โIโm ready.โ
I breathed in. I looked at her. She had crowโs-feet around her eyes. She had laugh lines around her mouth. Her hair was mussed from the pillow. She was wearing an old New York Giants T-shirt with a hole in the shoulder. Convention be damned, she never looked more beautiful.
โDearly beloved,โ I said. โI suppose thatโs just us.โ
โOK,โ Celia said. โI follow.โ
โWe are gathered here today to celebrate the union of . . . us.โ
โGreat.โ
โTwo people who come together to spend the rest of their lives with each other.โ
โAgreed.โ
โDo you, Celia, take me, Evelyn, to be your wedded wife? In sickness and in health, for richer and for poorer, till death do us part, as long as we both shall live?โ
She smiled at me. โI do.โ
โAnd do I, Evelyn, take you, Celia, to be my wedded wife? In sickness and in health and all the other stuff? I do.โ I realized there was a slight hiccup. โWait, we donโt have rings.โ
Celia looked around for something that might suffice. Without taking my hands from her, I checked the nightstand.
โHere,โ Celia said, taking the hair tie from her head.
I laughed and took mine out of my ponytail.
โOK,โ I said. โCelia, repeat after me. Evelyn, take this ring as a symbol of my never-ending love.โ
โEvelyn, take this ring as a symbol of my never-ending love.โ
Celia took the hair tie and wrapped it around my ring finger three times.
โSay, With this ring, I thee wed.โ
โWith this ring, I thee wed.โ
โOK. Now I do it. Celia, take this ring as a symbol of my never-ending love. With this ring, I thee wed.โ I put my hair tie on her finger. โOh, I forgot vows. Should we do vows?โ
โWe can,โ she said. โIf you want to.โ
โOK,โ I said. โYou think of what you want to say. Iโll think, too.โ
โI donโt need to think,โ she said. โIโm ready. I know.โ
โOK,โ I said, surprised to find that my heart was beating quickly, eager to hear her words. โGo.โ
โEvelyn, I have been in love with you since 1959. I may not have always shown it, I may have let other things get in the way, but know that I have loved you that long. That I have never stopped. And that I never will.โ
I closed my eyes briefly, letting her words sink in.
And then I gave her mine. โI have been married seven times, and never once has it felt half as right as this. I think that loving you has been the truest thing about me.โ
She smiled so hard I thought she might cry. But she didnโt.
I said, โBy the power vested in me by . . . us, I now declare us married.โ
Celia laughed.
โI may now kiss the bride,โ I said, and I let go of her hands, grabbed her face, and kissed her. My wife.
SIX YEARS LATER, AFTER CELIA and I had spent more than a decade together on the beaches of Spain, after Connor had graduated from college and taken a job on Wall Street, after the world had all but forgotten about Little Women and Boute-en-Train and Celiaโs three Oscars, Cecelia Jamison died of respiratory failure.
She was in my arms. In our bed.
It was summer. The windows were open to let in the breeze. The room smelled of sickness, but if you focused hard enough, you could still smell the salt from the ocean. Her eyes went still. I called out for the nurse, who had been downstairs in the kitchen. I think I stopped making memories again, in those moments when Celia was being taken from me.
I only remember clinging to her, holding her as best I could. I only remember saying, โWe didnโt have enough time.โ
It felt as if by taking her body, the paramedics were ripping out my soul. And then, when the door shut, when everyone had left, when Celia was nowhere to be seen, I looked over at Robert. I fell to the floor.
The tiles felt cold on my flushed skin. The hardness of the stone ached in my bones. Underneath me, puddles of tears were forming, and yet I could not lift my head off the ground.
Robert did not help me up.
He got down on the floor next to me. And wept.
I had lost her. My love. My Celia. My soul mate. The woman whose love Iโd spent my life earning.
Simply gone.
Irrevocably and forever.
And the devastating luxury of panic overtook me again.
Now This
July 5, 2000
SCREEN QUEEN CELIA ST. JAMES HAS DIED
Three-time Oscar-winning actress Celia St. James died last week of complications related to emphysema. She was 61 years old.
From a well-to-do family in a small town in Georgia, the red-haired St. James was often referred to as the Georgia Peach early in her career. But it was her role as Beth in the 1959 adaptation of Little Women that brought her her first Academy Award and turned her into a bona fide star.
St. James would go on to be nominated four other times and take home the trophy twice more over the next 30 years, for Best Actress in 1970 for Our Men and for Best Supporting Actress for her role as Lady Macbeth in the 1988 adaptation of the Shakespearean tragedy.
In addition to her remarkable talent, St. James was known for her girl-next-door allure and her fifteen-year marriage to football hero John Braverman. The two divorced in the late 1970s but remained friendly until Bravermanโs passing in 1980. She never remarried.
St. Jamesโs estate is to be managed by her brother, Robert Jamison, husband of actressโand St. Jamesโs former costarโEvelyn Hugo.
CELIA, LIKE HARRY, WAS BURIED in Forest Lawn in Los Angeles. Robert and I held her funeral on a Thursday morning. It was kept private. But people knew we were there. They knew she was being laid to rest.
When she was lowered to the ground, I stared at the hole in the earth. I stared at the glossy sheen of the wood of her casket. I could not keep it in. I could not keep my true self from coming out.
โI need a minute,โ I said to Robert and Connor and then I turned away.
I walked. Farther and farther up the winding hillside roads of the cemetery, until I found what I was looking for.
Harry Cameron.
I sat down at his tombstone, and I cried out everything within me. I cried until I felt depleted. I did not say a single thing. I did not feel any need. I had talked to Harry in my head and my heart for so long, for so many years, that it felt as if we transcended words.
He had been the one to help me, to support me, through everything in my life. And now I needed him more than ever. So I went to him the only way I knew how. I let him heal me as only he could. And then I stood up, dusted off my skirt, and turned around.
>
There, in the trees, were two paparazzi taking my photo. I was neither angry nor flattered. I simply didnโt care. It cost so much, caring. I didnโt have any currency to spend on it.
Instead, I walked away.
Two weeks later, after Robert and I had gone home to Aldiz, Connor sent me a magazine with the image of me at Harryโs grave on the cover. She had attached a note to the front. It said, simply, โI love you.โ
I pulled off the note and read the headline: โLegend Evelyn Hugo Weeps at Harry Cameronโs Grave Years Later.โ
Even long past my prime, people were still easily distracted from seeing how I felt about Celia St. James. But this time was different. Because I wasnโt hiding anything.
The truth had been there for them to grab if theyโd paid attention. I had been my truest self, searching for the help of my best friend to ease the pain of the loss of my lover.
But of course, they got it wrong. They never did care about getting it right. The media are going to tell whatever story they want to tell. They always have. They always will.
It was then that I knew that the only time anyone would know anything true about my life was when I told them directly.
In a book.
I saved Connorโs note and threw the magazine in the trash.
WITH CELIAโS PASSING AND HARRY gone and myself finally in a marriage that, while chaste, was stable, my life officially became entirely void of scandal.
Me. Evelyn Hugo. A boring old lady.
Robert and I lived a friendly marriage for the next eleven years. We moved back to Manhattan in the mid-2000s to be closer to Connor. We refinished this apartment. We donated some of Celiaโs money to LGBTQ+ organizations and lung disease research.
Every Christmas, we threw a benefit for homeless youth organizations in New York City. After years on a quiet beach, it was nice to be members of society again in some ways.
But all I really cared about was Connor.
She had worked her way up the ladder at Merrill Lynch, and then, shortly after Robert and I moved back to New York, she admitted to him that she hated the culture of finance. She told him she had to leave. He was disappointed that she hadnโt been happy with what had made him happy; that was obvious. But he was never disappointed in her.