all by herself, so she had a cup of coffee and picked up a novel by Evelyn Waugh.
When she heard her mother come in, she was pleased; and excited. The champagne was iced and the potato chips were in a bowl on the cocktail table. Everything was ready.
When Courtney saw her mother as she opened the door, she knew something was wrong. Sondra looked older and tired as she always did when she was upset. Courtney could tell that she had been crying. Immediately she decided against the champagne. She took her motherâs coat.
âMay I get you a drink, Mummy?â That was all she said.
âYes, please, dear.â
Courtney made a Scotch and water, putting in two full jiggers of Scotch and only enough water to disguise the liquor. Then she looked at the color and decided it was safe to put in another splash of Scotch. She muddled the drink with her fingers and sucked the finger, checked the color again and brought her mother the drink.
Then she went back to the kitchen and made herself a Scotch on the rocks because her mother didnât like to drink alone. She came back to the living room and sat down, not saying anything.
âCourtney,â Sondra said finally.
âWhom did he give the part to?â Courtney asked.
âThe studio is about to drop him. Because of those two flops, the ones that I was inâand the TV scare, itâs the same at every studio. So they gave him this one picture, with a very powerful book, as a final test. He canât take another chance.â
âStop excusing him.â
âNo, really, Courtney. He needs a star with a big following, box-office insurance. He canât take a chance.â
âDid he give it to that bitch heâs been sleeping with?â
âCourtney! Donât say things like that!â
âWell, did he?â
âThat doesnât make any difference. The point is, I didnât get it.â
âThe son of a bitch.â
âCourtney,â she said, âHollywood is a tough town. Nick said that to me when I came out here the first time. He was right. Itâs a struggle for survival, and everyone must look out for himself. Thereâs no room for sentiment. You canât ask a man whose own career is in jeopardy to destroy himself to help an actress who is hitting the skids.â
âYouâre not, Mummy!â
âI canât fool myself any longer,â she said wearily. âI didnât tell you this before, because I thought I would get this part and everything would be all right. Weâre in debt to the Garden for over a thousand dollars. Weâve got to move out.â
Courtney didnât say anything, because she didnât want to upset her mother any more. Move out of the Garden! She wouldnât see Al any more around the pool, she wouldnât be able to swim and sun-bathe on the roof . . . there wouldnât be any chance of her seeing Barry Cabot even at Schwabâs or on the street.
âWhere are we going to go, Mummy?â
âThereâs an apartment building on the outskirts of Beverly Hills that a girl of Alâs used to live in. He told me about it. Itâs very cheap, and rather nice. We can get a studio apartment there. Itâs near the Fox lot.â
Near the Fox lot. On that great, cold, broad street with all the gas stations! How horrible.
âWhen are we going,â Courtney said quietly.
âOur week at the Garden ends this Wednesday.â
âWednesday.â Wednesday! Only two more days!
âWeâll still be near Beverly Hills,â her mother said hurriedly, ânear enough so that you can go to Beverly Hills High. And we wonât have to stay there long, only until I get some TV work, you know, thereâs such a demand in TV, only I didnât want to get committed before, thinking Iâd be going into Nickâs picture, but now Iâll really look into it. I have some good connections with NBC, you
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