Until that point, the sounds of the party going on around us had been muted but still distinct. But the minute Ruby said what she said, the minute I heard the word lesbian, my blood started beating so fast that my pulse was all I could hear. I was not paying attention to what was flying out of Rubyโs mouth. I could only catch certain words, like girl and dyke and twisted.
The skin on my chest felt hot. My ears burned.
I did my best to calm myself. And when I did, when I focused on Rubyโs words, I finally heard the other piece of what she was trying to tell me.
โYou should probably get a better handle on your husband, by the way. Heโs in Ariโs bedroom getting a blow job from some harpy from MGM.โ
When she said it, I did not think, Oh, my God. My husband is cheating on me. I thought, I have to find Celia.
EVELYN GETS UP OFF THE sofa and picks up the phone, asking Grace to order us dinner from the Mediterranean place on the corner.
โMonique? What would you like? Beef or chicken?โ
โChicken, I guess.โ I watch her, waiting for her to sit back down and resume her story. But when she does sit, she merely looks at me. She neither acknowledges what she has just told me nor admits what Iโve been suspecting for some time now. I have no choice but to be direct. โDid you know?โ
โDid I know what?โ
โThat Celia St. James was gay?โ
โIโm telling you the story as it unfolded.โ
โWell, yes,โ I say. โBut . . .โ
โBut what?โ Evelyn is calm, perfectly composed. And I canโt tell if itโs because she knows what I suspect and sheโs finally ready to tell the truth or because Iโm dead wrong and so she has no idea what Iโm thinking.
Iโm not sure I want to ask the question before I know the answer.
Evelynโs lips are together in a straight line. Her eyes are focused directly on me. But I notice, as sheโs waiting for me to speak, that her chest is rising and falling at a rapid pace. Sheโs nervous. Sheโs not as confident as sheโs letting on. Sheโs an actress, after all. I should know well enough by now that what you see isnโt always what you get with Evelyn.
So I ask her the question in a way that lets her tell me as much, or as little, as sheโs ready to say. โWho was the love of your life?โ
Evelyn looks me in the eye, and I know she needs one more tiny push.
โItโs OK, Evelyn. Really.โ
Itโs a big deal. But it is OK. Things are different now from how they were then. Although still not entirely safe, either, I have to admit.
But still.
She can say it.
She can say it to me.
She can admit it, freely. Now. Here.
โEvelyn, who was your great love? You can tell me.โ
Evelyn looks out the window, breathes in deeply, and then says, โCelia St. James.โ
The room is quiet as Evelyn lets herself hear her own words. And then she smiles, a bright, wide, deeply sincere smile. She starts laughing to herself and then refocuses on me. โI feel like I spent my entire life loving her.โ
โSo this book, your biography . . . youโre ready to come out as a gay woman?โ
Evelyn closes her eyes for a moment, and at first I think she is processing the weight of what Iโve said, but once she opens her eyes again, I realize she is trying to process my stupidity.
โHavenโt you been listening to a single thing Iโve told you? I loved Celia, but I also, before her, loved Don. In fact, Iโm positive that if Don hadnโt turned out to be a spectacular asshole, I probably never would have been capable of falling in love with someone else at all. Iโm bisexual. Donโt ignore half of me so you can fit me into a box, Monique. Donโt do that.โ
This stings. Hard. I know how it feels for people to assume things about you, to prescribe a label for you based on how you appear to them. I have spent my life trying to explain to people that while I look black, I am biracial. I have spent my life knowing the importance of allowing people to tell you who they are instead of reducing them to labels.