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Taylor Jenkins Reid

The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo: A Novel

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  • Anahas quoted9 months ago
    What follows is an excerpt from my forthcoming biography, The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo, to be published next year.
    I have settled on that title because I once asked her if she was embarrassed about having been married so many times.
    I said, “Doesn’t it bother you? That your husbands have become such a headline story, so often mentioned, that they have nearly eclipsed your work and yourself? That all anyone talks about when they talk about you are the seven husbands of Evelyn Hugo?”
    And her answer was quintessential Evelyn.
    “No,” she told me. “Because they are just husbands. I am Evelyn Hugo. And anyway, I think once people know the truth, they will be much more interested in my wife.”
  • Anahas quoted9 months ago
    “I hate you, you know.”

    Evelyn nods. “Good for you. It’s such an uncomplicated feeling, isn’t it? Hatred?”

    “Yes,” I say. “It is.”

    “Everything else in life is more complex. Especially your father. That’s why I thought it was so important that you read that letter. I wanted you to know.”

    “What, exactly? That he was innocent? Or that he loved a man?”

    “That he loved you. Like that. He was willing to turn down romantic love in order to stand by your side. Do you know what an amazing father you had? Do you know how loved you were? Plenty of men say they’ll never leave their families, but your father was put to the test and didn’t even blink. I wanted you to know that. If I had a father like that, I would have wanted to know.”

    No one is all good or all bad. I know this, of course. I had to learn it at a young age. But sometimes it’s easy to forget just how true it is. That it applies to everyone.

    Until you’re sitting in front of the woman who put your father’s dead body in the driver’s seat of a car to save the reputation of her best friend—and you realize she held on to a letter for almost three decades because she wanted you to know how much you were loved.

    She could have given me the letter earlier. She also could have thrown it away. There’s Evelyn Hugo for you. Somewhere in the middle.
  • Anahas quoted9 months ago
    On the other hand, Connor was growing more and more annoyed by me every day. She found her mother to be the very epitome of embarrassment. The fact that I was a world-renowned film star seemed to have absolutely no effect on just how big of an idiot Connor saw me to be. So I was often happier in L.A., with Celia, than I was in New York, constantly rejected by my own flesh and blood. But I would have dropped it all in a heartbeat if I thought Connor might want even an evening of my time.
  • Anahas quoted9 months ago
    Harry looked as handsome as ever in khaki slacks and an oxford shirt. He had gone almost entirely gray by then, and I actively resented him for growing more attractive as he aged, while I had to watch my value disappear by the day like a molding lemon.
  • Anahas quoted9 months ago
    “Here is what we’re going to do,” Celia said. “You’re going to leave Max. I’m going to call a friend of mine in Congress. He’s a representative from Vermont. He needs some press. You’re going to be seen around with him. We’re going to spread a rumor that you’re stepping out on Max with a younger man.”

    “How old is he?”

    “Twenty-nine.”

    “Jesus, Celia. He’s a child,” I said.

    “That’s exactly what people will say. They’ll be shocked that you’re dating him.”

    “And when Max tries to slander me?”

    “It won’t matter what he’s trying to claim about you. It will look like he’s just bitter.”

    “And then?” I asked.

    “And then, down the line, you marry my brother.”

    “Why am I going to marry Robert?”

    “So that when I die, everything I own will be yours. My estate will be under your control. And you can keep my legacy.”

    “You could appoint that to me.”

    “And have someone try to take it away because you were my lover? No. This is better. This is smarter.”

    “But marrying your brother? Are you crazy?”

    “He’ll do it,” she said. “For me. And because he’s a rake who likes to bed almost every woman he sees. You’d be good for his reputation. It’s a win-win.”

    “All this instead of just telling the truth?”

    I could feel Celia’s rib cage expand and contract underneath me.

    “We can’t tell the truth. Did you see what they did to Rock Hudson? If it was cancer he was dying of, there’d be telethons.”

    “People don’t understand AIDS,” I said.

    “They understand it just fine,” Celia said. “They just think that he deserves it because of how he got it.”

    I rested my head on the pillow while my heart sank in my chest. She was right, of course. The past few years, I’d watched Harry lose friend after friend, former lovers, to AIDS. I’d watched him cry his eyes red out of fear that he’d get sick, for not knowing how to help the people he loved. And I’d watched Ronald Reagan never so much as acknowledge what was happening in front of our eyes.

    “I know things have changed since the sixties,” she said. “But they haven’t changed that much. It wasn’t that long ago that Reagan said gay rights weren’t civil rights. You can’t risk losing Connor. So I’ll call Jack, my friend in the House of Representatives. We’ll plant the story. You’ll shoot your movie. You’ll marry my brother. And we’ll all move to Spain.”

    “I’ll have to talk to Harry.”

    “Of course,” she said. “Talk to Harry. If he hates Spain, we’ll go to Germany. Or Scandinavia. Or Asia. I don’t care. We just need to go somewhere where people won’t care who we are, where people will leave us alone and Connor can live a normal childhood.”

    “You’ll need medical care.”

    “I’ll fly where I need to. Or we can bring people to me.”

    I thought about it. “It’s a good plan.”

    “Yeah?” Celia was flattered, I could tell.

    “The student has become the master,” I said.
  • Anahas quoted9 months ago
    “I have chronic obstructive pulmonary disease,” she said finally. “I probably won’t make it much past sixty.”

    I stared at her. “You’re lying,” I said.

    “I’m not.”

    “Yes, you are. That can’t be true.”

    “It is true.”

    “No, it’s not,” I said.

    “It is,” 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. “I think you should do your movie,” she said. “Finish strong. And then . . . and then, after that, I think we should move to the coast of Spain.”

    “What?”

    “I have always liked the idea of spending the last years of my life on a beautiful beach. With the love of a good woman,” she said.

    “You’re . . . you’re dying?”

    “I can look into some locations in Spain while you’re shooting. I’ll find a place where Connor can get a great education. I’ll sell my home here. I’ll get a compound somewhere, with enough space for Harry, too. And Robert.”

    “Your brother Robert?”

    Celia nodded. “He moved out here for business a few years ago. We’ve become close. He . . . he knows who I am. He supports me.”

    “What is chronic obstructive—?”

    “Emphysema, more or less,” she said. “From smoking. Do you still smoke? You should stop. Right now.”

    I shook my head, having long ago given it up.

    “They have treatments to slow down the process. I can live a normal life for the most part, for a while.”

    “And then what?”

    “And then, eventually, it will become difficult to be active, hard to breathe. When that happens, I won’t have much time. All told, we’re looking at ten years, give or take, if I’m lucky.”

    “Ten years? You’re only forty-nine.”

    “I know.”

    I started crying. I couldn’t help it.

    “You’re making a scene,” she said. “You have to stop.”

    “I can’t,” I said.

    “OK,” she said. “OK.”

    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.

    “Can you handle this?” she said.

    “What do you mean?” I asked her. “Of course I can’t handle it.”

    “If you can handle this,” she said, “then 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 can’t, in good conscience, do this to you if you don’t think you’ll survive it.”

    “Survive what, exactly?”

    “Losing me again. I don’t want to let you love me if you don’t think you can lose me again. One last time.”

    “I can’t. Of course I can’t. But I want to anyway. I’m going to anyway. Yes,” I said finally. “I can survive it. I’d rather survive it than never feel it.”
  • Anahas quoted9 months ago
    “I’m filing papers. He’s moving out. It’s over.”

    “That’s abrupt.”

    “It’s not, actually. It’s overdue. And anyway, he found your letters,” I said.

    “And he’s leaving you?”

    “No, he’s threatening to out me if I don’t stay with him.”

    “What?”

    “I’m leaving him,” I said. “And I’m letting him do whatever the hell he wants. Because I’m fifty years old, and I don’t have the energy to be controlling every single thing anyone says about me until I die of old age. The parts I’m being offered are shit. I have the Oscar on my mantel. I have a spectacular daughter. I have Harry. I’m a household name. They will write about my movies for years to come. What more do I want? A gold statue in my honor?”

    Celia laughed. “That’s what an Oscar is,” she said.

    I laughed, too. “Exactly! Excellent point. I already have that, then. There’s 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? I’m done hiding. Let them come and get me. They can throw me down a well as far as I’m concerned. I’m signed on to do one last movie over at Fox later this year, and then I’m done.”

    “You don’t mean that.”

    “I do. Any other line of thinking . . . it’s how I lost you. I don’t want to lose anymore.”

    “It’s not just our careers,” she said. “The ramifications are unpredictable. What if they take Connor away?”

    “Because I’m in love with a woman?”

    “Because they think both her parents are ‘queers.’ ”

    I sipped my wine. “I can’t win with you,” I said finally. “If I want to hide, you call me a coward. If I’m tired of hiding, you tell me they’ll take my daughter.”

    “I’m sorry,” 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. “Do you mean it?” she asked. “Would you really give it up?”

    “Yes,” I said. “Yes, I would.”

    “Are you absolutely sure?” she asked just as the waiter put her steak down in front of her and my salad in front of me. “I mean absolutely sure?”
  • Anahas quoted9 months ago
    “I can be mean sometimes when I’m hurt,” she reminded me.

    “You’re not exactly telling me something I don’t know.”

    “I made you feel like you weren’t talented,” she said. “I tried to make you think you needed me because I made you legitimate.”

    “I know that.”

    “But you’ve always been legitimate.”

    “I know that now, too,” I told her.
  • Anahas quoted9 months ago
    I ordered a glass of white wine. She ordered a club soda with lime.

    “I don’t drink anymore,” Celia said. “It’s not sitting with me the way it once did.”

    “That’s fine. If you want, I can toss my wine right out the window the moment it gets to the table.”

    “No,” she said, laughing. “Why should my low tolerance be your problem?”

    “I want everything about you to be my problem,” I said.

    “Do you realize what you’re saying?” 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 didn’t.

    “Of course I realize what I’m saying.”

    “You destroyed me,” she said. “Twice now in our lives. I have spent years getting over you.”

    “Did you succeed? Either time?”

    “Not completely.”

    “I think that means something.”

    “Why now?” she asked. “Why didn’t you call years ago?”
  • Anahas quoted9 months ago
    My mother has gotten lost in New York a number of times, not just once. And it’s always because she refuses to take a cab. She insists that she can navigate public transportation, even though she was born and raised in Los Angeles and therefore has no real sense of how any two modes of transportation intersect.
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