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The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo

โ€œEvelyn is upstairs getting ready. Can I get you anything? Water, coffee, tea?โ€

โ€œCoffee would be great,โ€ I say.

Grace brings me into a sitting room. It is bright and airy, with floor-to-ceiling white bookcases and two overstuffed cream-colored chairs.

โ€œHave a seat,โ€ she says. โ€œHow do you like it?โ€

โ€œMy coffee?โ€ I ask, unsure of myself. โ€œWith cream? I mean, milk is fine, too. But cream is great. Or whatever you have.โ€ I get hold of myself. โ€œWhat Iโ€™m trying to say is that Iโ€™d like a splash of cream if you have it. Can you tell Iโ€™m nervous?โ€

Grace smiles. โ€œA little. But you donโ€™t have anything to worry about. Evelynโ€™s a very kind person. Sheโ€™s particular and private, which can take some getting used to. But Iโ€™ve worked for a lot of people, and you can trust me when I say Evelynโ€™s better than the rest.โ€

โ€œDid she pay you to say that?โ€ I ask. I am trying to make a joke, but it sounds more pointed and accusatory than I intended.

Luckily, Grace laughs. โ€œShe did send my husband and me to London and Paris last year as my Christmas bonus. So in an indirect way, yeah, I suppose she did.โ€

Jesus. โ€œWell, that settles it. When you quit, I want your job.โ€

Grace laughs. โ€œItโ€™s a deal. And youโ€™ve got coffee with a splash of cream coming right up.โ€

I sit down and check my cell phone. I have a text from my mom wishing me luck. I tap to respond, and I am lost in my attempts to properly type the word early without auto-correct changing it to earthquake when I hear footsteps on the stairs. I turn around to see the seventy-nine-year-old Evelyn Hugo walking toward me.

She is as breathtaking as any of her pictures.

She has the posture of a ballerina. Sheโ€™s wearing slim black stretch pants and a long gray-and-navy striped sweater. Sheโ€™s just as thin as she ever was, and the only way I know sheโ€™s had work done on her face is because no one her age can look like that without a doctor.

Her skin is glowing and just the littlest bit red, as if itโ€™s been rubbed clean. Sheโ€™s wearing false eyelashes, or perhaps she gets eyelash extensions. Where her cheeks were once angular, they are now a bit sunken. But they have just a tint of soft rosiness to them, and her lips are a dark nude.

Her hair is past her shouldersโ€”a beautiful array of white, gray, and blondโ€”with the lightest colors framing her face. Iโ€™m sure her hair is triple-processed, but the effect is that of a gracefully aging woman who sat out in the sun.

Her eyebrows, howeverโ€”those dark, thick, straight lines that were her signatureโ€”have thinned over the years. And they are now the same color as her hair.

By the time she reaches me, I notice that she is not wearing any shoes but, instead, big, chunky knit socks.

โ€œMonique, hello,โ€ Evelyn says.

I am momentarily surprised at the casualness and confidence with which she says my name, as if she has known me for years. โ€œHello,โ€ I say.

โ€œIโ€™m Evelyn.โ€ She reaches out and takes my hand, shaking it. It strikes me as a unique form of power to say your own name when you know that everyone in the room, everyone in the world, already knows it.

Grace comes in with a white mug of coffee on a white saucer. โ€œThere you go. With just a bit of cream.โ€

โ€œThank you so much,โ€ I say, taking it from her.

โ€œThatโ€™s just the way I like it as well,โ€ Evelyn says, and Iโ€™m embarrassed to admit it thrills me. I feel as if Iโ€™ve pleased her.

โ€œCan I get either of you anything else?โ€ Grace asks.

I shake my head, and Evelyn doesnโ€™t answer. Grace leaves.

โ€œCome,โ€ Evelyn says. โ€œLetโ€™s go to the living room and get comfortable.โ€

As I grab my bag, Evelyn takes the coffee out of my hand, carrying it for me. I once read that charisma is โ€œcharm that inspires devotion.โ€ And I canโ€™t help but think of that now, when sheโ€™s holding my coffee for me. The combination of such a powerful woman and such a small and humble gesture is enchanting, to be sure.

We step into a large, bright room with floor-to-ceiling windows. There are oyster-gray chairs opposite a soft slate-blue sofa. The carpet under our feet is thick, bright

ivory, and as my eyes follow its path, I am struck by the black grand piano, open under the light of the windows. On the walls are two blown-up black-and-white images.

The one above the sofa is of Harry Cameron on the set of a movie.

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