films, but it was like Iâve known him my whole life, and he said he wants to help me, though God knows what that means, and he had asked the maître dâ about me, then came downââ
âThis is going to change your life,â Carrie said in a low serious tone, her blue eyes searching mine to see if I understood.
âWell, I donât know about that.â The color on my face deepened. âI mean, okay, he said he wanted to help me, which is really sweet, but what can he do? Pay for some classes? Which would be great actually, but I mean, you know, heâs just some Hollywood actor movie star person.â
âJust some movie star person,â Carrie yelled, making the cat run under the couch. âHoney, Andrew Madden is also a producer and a director; heâs won Academy Awards; runs a studio; and hereâs where you come in, heâs also a renowned collector of contemporary art.â
âOh.â
âOh, yes.â Carrie stood up and seemed to tower over me even fromher shorter height. âAndrew Madden is not just some stupid movie star, honey; heâs practically his own industry.â
âOh.â I had to look away from her, as if the key to my understanding all this was on the other side of the room, but Carrie kept staring at me so I met her eyes again. âWow.â
âExactly. Here.â Carrie picked up the bottle of wine and handed it me. I looked at it for a moment before realizing I needed a glass. I went to the kitchen for the one I had moved with, had packed among my socks and underwear. I had also brought a fifth of Jack Danielâs and a bottle of Kahlúa that my cousin Renée and I made one afternoon from vodka and coffee. It was weeks after I unpacked that it struck me I must have thought it would be hard to find liquor stores, but in the neighborhood I had moved into, there was one practically on every corner.
âTell me, tell me, tell me. I want to hear everything,â Carrie said as I came back in the living room and sank onto the couch. She had refilled her glass and lit a fresh cigarette from an almost empty pack.
âWell, I was standing in the coat-check room and suddenly he was just there, saying my name, asking what Iâm doing, and telling me to call him tomorrow at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel.â Telling Carrie, finally saying it out loud, made it real. Real in my apartment and in my life, and not just in my head.
âYouâve been discovered,â Carrie squealed, and her cat ran out from under the couch and flew out of the room.
Like America. I just hoped with the same lasting results.
9
The next day Carrie was meeting friends at the Cloisters, thank God, because the last thing I wanted was her on the other side of the curtain that I used as a bedroom door, listening to my conversation with Andrew so she and I could talk about it more easily afterwardâher suggestion. I assured her I could never make the call that way but promised Iâd remember every detail. Ruth was at a rehearsal for a showcase she was doing in Queens. Whenever I imagined her singing, it was always with an immobile smile on her face and her arms high in a triumphant V before she moved into the next lyrically specific choreography.
I sat down in my tiny room on the twin bed, the only size that would fit in the space, with the telephone book on my lap. I had decided to call Andrew at two. It definitely felt like an afternoon thing to do. One oâclock seemed desperate and three, lazy; so I picked two. Or ten after. On the hour would appear too obvious. It was almost ten after, soI decided to give it just a few more minutes. And hopefully breathe for a bit, too.
I tried to think about how he had looked standing in front of me at the coat-check counter, to see if that would make calling him easier, make it feel like a normal thing to do, but that only made my heart beat faster.
Okay, it was time. As I looked up the
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