City of Girls

City of Girls by Elizabeth Gilbert Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: City of Girls by Elizabeth Gilbert Read Free Book Online
Authors: Elizabeth Gilbert
a costume director, maybe I could work with her? I could be her assistant!”
    Laughter burst out across the room.
    “A costume director !” Gladys said. “What do you think this is, Paramount Pictures? You think we got Edith Head hiding down there in the basement?”
    “The girls are responsible for their own costumes,” Peg explained. “If we don’t have anything that will work for them in our costume closet—and we never do—they have to provide their own outfits. It costs them, but that’s just how things have alwaysbeen done. Where’d you get yours, Celia?”
    “I bought it off a girl. You remember Evelyn, at El Morocco? She got married, moved to Texas. She gave me a whole trunk of costumes. Lucky for me.”
    “Sure, lucky for you,” sniffed Roland. “Lucky you didn’t get the clap.”
    “Aw, give it a rest, Roland,” said Gladys. “Evelyn was a good kid. You’re just jealous because she married a cowboy .”
    “If you’d liketo help the kids out with their costumes, Vivian, I’m sure everyone would appreciate it,” said Peg.
    “Could you make me a South Seas outfit?” Gladys asked me. “Like a Hawaiian hula girl?”
    That was like asking a master chef if he could make porridge.
    “Sure,” I said. “I could make you one tomorrow.”
    “Could you make me a hula outfit?” asked Roland.
    “I don’t have a budget for new costumes,” Olivewarned. “We haven’t discussed this.”
    “Oh, Olive,” Peg sighed. “You are every inch the vicar’s wife. Let the kids have their fun.”
    I couldn’t help but observe that Celia had kept her gaze on me since we started talking about sewing. Being in her line of vision felt both terrifying and thrilling.
    “You know something?” she said, after studying me more closely. “You’re pretty.”
    Now, to be fair,people usually noticed this fact about me sooner.But who could blame Celia for having paid me so little attention up until this point, when she was in possession of that face and that body?
    “Tell you the truth,” she said, smiling for the first time that night, “you kinda look like me.”
    Let me be clear, Angela: I didn’t.
    Celia Ray was a goddess; I was an adolescent. But in the sketchiest ofterms, I suppose I could see that she had a point: we were both tall brunettes with ivory skin and wide-set brown eyes. We could have passed for cousins, if not sisters—and decidedly not twins. Certainly our figures had nothing in common. She was a peach; I was a stick. Still, I was flattered. To this day, though, I believe that the only reason Celia Ray ever took notice of me at all was becausewe looked a tiny bit alike, and that drew her attention. For Celia, vain as she was, looking at me must have been like looking in a (very foggy, very distant) mirror—and Celia never met a mirror she didn’t love.
    “You and me should dress up alike sometime and go out on the town,” Celia said, in that low Bronx growl that was also a purr. “We could get ourselves into some real good trouble.”
    Well,I didn’t even know what to say to that . I just sat there, gaping like the Emma Willard schoolgirl I so recently had been.
    As for my Aunt Peg—my legal guardian, at this point, please remember—she heard this illicit-sounding invite and said, “Say, girls, that sounds fun.”
    Peg was over at the bar again mixing up another batch of martinis, but at that point, Olive put a stop to things. The fearsomesecretary of the Lily Playhouse stood up, clapped her hands, and announced, “Enough! If Peg stays up any later, she will not be the better for it in the morning.”
    “Darn it, Olive, I’ll give you a poke in the eye!” Peg said.
    “To bed, Peg,” said the imperturbable Olive, tugging down her girdle for emphasis. “ Now .”
    The room scattered. We all said our good nights.
    I made my way to my apartment ( my apartment! ) and unpacked a bit more. I couldn’t really focus on the task, though. I was in a buzz of nervous joy.
    Peg came by

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