The first thing I noticed about her was her red high-heeled shoes as she crossed the hotel lobby toward me. I admired her audacity, her sense of rebelliousness against the dictates of fashion. She walked with an almost impossible cat-like grace in the shoes, the heels like slivers. I watched, mesmerized.
She extended a hand to me in greeting and I grasped it eagerly. Her skin was so warm and soft in stark contrast to my cold rough handshake. I felt self-conscious around her and the need to apologize, even though it was she who was late and had kept me waiting. She smiled when I told her my name and she said it was a beautiful name. "It means child of light, doesn't it?" she asked. Yes, I stammered, suddenly inexplicably tongue-tied. My hand was still enveloped in hers, which I should have thought strange, but didn't.
I managed to sputter out the suggestion of sitting in the hotel restaurant to conduct the interview. It seemed an innocuous place, formal yet comfortable. She seemed unsure. "It gets rather busy at this time. Maybe somewhere quieter?" she asked. My mind went blank and seeing my consternation she suggested we go up to her penthouse suite. Yes of course, I thought, and smiled. And we went.
To say she is beautiful is an incredible understatement. Even in person, away from the camera, she is luminous. I had always envied her shape, hair colour, soft lips and rounded hips in any and all magazine photo I saw, but now I saw up close how much of a disservice the cameras actually did to her. Standing next to her in the regal old elevator as we rode up to the topmost floor, standing shoulder to shoulder, I strangely did not find myself comparing our bodies or our beauty. I simply basked in hers happily.
She smelled of tuberose, heady and full in bloom, the scent intensified in the tropical heat. I felt dizzy suddenly and reached for the brass handrail to steady myself as the elevator lurched between floors. She turned slightly and smiled at me, then wrapped her arm behind me and around my waist to support me. She brushed my check with a kiss and I rested my head on her shoulder. By the time we reached the door of the penthouse suite, my own arm was wrapped around her waist as well. We must have looked like best girlfriends reunited after too long a separation.
Upon entering her suite she started to show me her treasures. The photo of her adopted son, the gigantic bouquet of white roses from her current co-star, the bracelets she had just bought that very morning in the local market. The jade, green as her eyes, was cool to the touch as she slipped the bracelets onto my wrists. "They suit you perfectly," she purred, "you should have them." I started to protest and she laughed that throaty laugh I had until that moment only heard talked about in hushed marvelling tones. It was warm and rich, playful and coy all at once. "I want you to have them," she said, suddenly serious; "Please." I could not possibly refuse.
We got down to business. We each knew our roles in this performance. My queries and her counters, the parry and thrust of two professionals. Standard questions she must have heard a thousand times, but which our readers never tired of reading; and a few questions slipped in that she didn't want to answer. I apologized, genuinely; which was strange, as I have never apologized for any of my questions during any interview I had ever done. Something in her eyes made me want to be kind. She spoke freely of her new movie, her latest heroine and how much she had learned from the character. She deftly deflected questions about her co-star, refusing to add fuel to the rumours already circling her relationship with him. Obliquely I asked if she was in love with anyone at the moment. "Right now?" she asked demurely and looked into my eyes. "Yes, I think I am."
In the heavy silence all I could hear was the hissing whir of my tape recorder and the thudding in my ears of my racing heart. I blinked rapidly under her intent stare. I must have heard wrong, I thought, or am misunderstanding her. But we are women who know the tools and tricks, the strategies and looks. I was sure I did not misunderstand.