"This is good," she said over the rim. She sipped again, then leaned her head against the back of the couch. "I'm really so pooped I'm not even hungry."
"You have a right to be," Ilene answered. "You haven't had a week off in the year since you finished The Renegade.
Three pictures, one right after the other, and next week you're starting another.
It's a wonder you haven't collapsed."
Rina looked at her. "I like to work."
"So do I," Ilene replied quickly. "But there's a point where you have to draw the line."
Rina didn't answer.
She sipped at her coffee and picked up a copy of Variety. Idly she turned the page.
She stopped at a headline, read for a moment, then held the paper out to Ilene.
"Have you seen this?"
Ilene glanced down at the paper.
The headline caught her eye.
It was typical Varietese: THE RENEGADE'S BIGGEST HAUL – BOX OFFICE.
In a year filled with cries from moaning exhibitors and anguished producers about the seemingly bottomless pit into which motion-picture grosses are falling, it's encouraging to note one ray of sunshine.
It was reliably learned from informed sources that the domestic gross of The Renegade passed the five-million-dollar mark last week, a little less than one year after release.
Based on these figures, the Rina Marlowe vehicle, with many subsequents still to be played in the U.S. and the rest of the world still to be heard from, can be expected to gross at ten million dollars. The Renegade, a Norman release, was produced and bankrolled by Jonas Cord, a rich young Westerner better known for his record-breaking flight from Paris to L.A. last year, and also features Nevada Smith.
Ilene looked up from the paper.
"I saw it."
"Does that mean everyone got their money back?"
"I guess it does," Ilene said. "That is, if Bernie didn't steal them blind."
Rina smiled.
She felt a surge of relief.
At least, Nevada didn't have to worry now.
She picked up a sandwich and began to eat ravenously.
"Suddenly I'm hungry," she said between mouthfuls.
Silently Ilene refilled her coffee cup, then poured one for herself.
Rina ate quickly and in a few minutes, she had finished.
She took a cigarette from the small box on the table and lit it.
She leaned back and blew the smoke at the ceiling.
A faint touch of color came back into her cheeks.
"I feel better now. We can try on those costumes as soon as I finish this cigarette."
"No hurry," Ilene said. "I have time."
Rina got to her feet. "We might as well get started," she said, grinding her cigarette out in an ash tray. "I just remembered, I have a breakfast layout to do for Screen Stars magazine at six o'clock in the morning."
Ilene walked over to the closet and slid back the doors. Six pairs of circus-style chemise tights, each in a different color, hung there.
Rina took one down and turned to Ilene, holding the brief costume in front of her.
"They get smaller and smaller." Ilene smiled.
"Bernie himself gave the orders for those.
After all, the name of the picture is The Girl on the Flying Trapeze."
She took the costume and held it while Rina began to undress. Rina turned her back as she slipped out of her dress and struggled into the tight-fitting costume. "Whew!" she gasped. "Maybe I shouldn't have eaten those sandwiches!"
Ilene stepped back and studied the costume.
"Better step up on the pedestal," she said. "There are a few things I'll have to do." Quickly she chalked out the alterations. "O.K.," she said. "Let's try the next one."
Rina reached behind her to unfasten the hooks.
One of them stuck.
"You'll have to help me, Ilene. I can't get out of this thing." Rina stepped down from the pedestal and turned her back to Ilene.
Deftly Ilene freed the hook. The cloth parted quickly and her fingers brushed against Rina's naked back.
They tingled with the firm, warm touch of her flesh. Ilene felt the rush of blood to her temples. She stepped back quickly as if she had touched a hot iron.
Too many times had she been tempted to let a thing like this get her into trouble. It had taken too many years to get this job. Rina dropped the top of the costume to her waist and struggled to get the tights over her hips.
She looked at Ilene. "I'm afraid you'll have to help me again."
Ilene kept her face a mask.
"Step back on the pedestal," she said through stiff lips.