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INDEPENDENCE DAY

Tuesday, Fourth of July. The cellular phone: It's Margaret. "Hi, honey. Everybody's going back early, and I don't want to. When are you going back? Can I get a ride?"

"I'm not going back until tomorrow morning," Skipper says.

"Oh. Well, I could go back tomorrow morning. I'll call my office."

"Sure," says Skipper, unhappily.

"Don't you just love the end of the weekend when everyone's left and you're still out here? Let's go to dinner."

"I don't think I can. I promised some friends …"

"No problem," Margaret says lightly. "We'll definitely see each other next weekend. We can plan it in the car tomorrow morning."

Tuesday, early evening. Mr. Marvelous turns his Mercedes into the road where he last saw Audrey. He gets out, opens the trunk, and after a certain amount of struggle, puts on a pair of rollerblades. He takes a couple of turns up and down the road. Then he leans against the side of his car and waits.

13. Tales of the Pretty

On a recent afternoon, four women met at an Upper East Side restaurant to discuss what it's like to be an extremely beautiful young woman in New York City. About what it's like to be sought after, paid for, bothered, envied, misunderstood, and just plain gorgeous—all before the age of twenty-five.

Camilla was the first to arrive. Five feet ten, pale white skin, big lips, round cheekbones, tiny nose—Camilla is twenty-five but says she "feels old." She began modeling at sixteen. When I first met her, months ago downtown, she was doing her duty as a «date» to a well— known television producer, which meant she was smiling and speaking back when someone asked her a question. Other than that, she was making very little effort, except to occasionally light her own cigarettes.

Women hke Camilla don't need to make much effort, especially with men. While many women would have killed to have a date with Scotty, the TV producer, Camilla told me she had been bored. "He's not my type," she said. Too old

(early forties), not attractive enough, not rich enough. She said she'd recently returned from a trip to St. Moritz with a young, titled European—that, she said, was her idea of fun. The fact that Scotty is indisputably one of the most eligible bachelors in New York meant nothing to her. She was the prize, not Scotty.

The other three women were late, so Camilla kept talking. "I'm not a bitch," she said, looking around the restaurant, "but most of the girls in New York are just idiots. Airheads. They can't even carry on a conversation. They don't know which fork to use. They don't know how to tip the maid at someone's country house."

There are a handful of women like Camilla in New York. They are all part of a sort of secret club, an urban sorority, with just a few requirements for membership: extreme beauty, youth (age range seventeen to twenty-five, or at least not admitting to being over twenty-five), brains, and the ability to sit in new restaurants for hours.



The brains part, however, appears to be relative. As one of Camilla's friends, Alexis, said, "I'm literary. I read. I'll sit down and read a whole magazine from cover to cover."

Yes, these are the beautiful girls who throw off the whole man— woman curve thing in New York, because they get more than their fair share. Of attention, invitations, gifts, and offers of clothes, money, private airplane rides, and dinners on yachts in the South of France. These are the women who accompany the bachelors with the boldface names to the best parties and charity events. The women who get asked—instead of you. They have access. New York should be their oyster. But is it?

"LET'S TALK ABOUT SCUMBAGS"

The other women showed up. Besides Camilla, who said that she was "basically single but working on" a young scion of a Park Avenue family, the women included Kitty, twenty-five, an aspiring

actress who was currently living with Hubert, a actor; Shiloh, seventeen, a model who had had a breakdown of some kind three months before and now rarely goes out; and Teesie, twenty-two, a model who had recently moved to New York and whose agency told her that she had to tell everyone she was nineteen.

The girls were all "friends," having met each other several times when they were out in the evenings, and they had even dated "some of the same scumbags," as Kitty put it.

"Let's talk about scumbags," someone said.

"Does anybody know this guy S.P.?" asked Kitty. She had long tumbledown brown hair, green eyes, a little-girl voice. "He's an old, white-haired guy with a face hke a pumpkin, and he's everywhere. Well. One time, I was at Bowery Bar, and he came up to me and he said, 'You're too young to realize that you want to sleep with me and by the time you're old enough to realize it, you'll be too old for me to want to sleep with you. " i

"Men always try to buy you," said Camilla. "Once, this guy said to me, 'Please come to St. Barts with me for a weekend. We don't have to sleep together, I promise. I just want to hold you. That's all. When he got back, he said, 'Why didn't you come with me? I told you we wouldn't sleep together. I said, 'Don't you realize that if I go away with a man, it means I want to sleep with him? "

"Someone at my old agency tried to sell me to some rich guy once," said Teesie. She had tiny features and a long swan neck. "This rich guy was friends with one of the bookers, and she promised him that he could 'have' me." Teesie looked outraged, then quickly motioned for the waiter. "Excuse me, but my glass has a spot on it."

Shiloh, perhaps feehng competitive, piped up: "I've had guys offer me plane tickets, I've had guys offer to fly me on their private jet. I just smile and never talk to them again."

Kitty leaned forward and said, "I had one guy offer me a breast job and an apartment. He said, T take care of my girls even after I break up with them. He was a tiny, bald, Aus-


Date: 2014-12-29; view: 881


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