Editorâs Note: This is a true story. Names have been changed to protect the author and subject. âVioletâ lives and works in L.A. âLiam Romeroâ is anyoneâs guess…
It was a Friday afternoon in August. I was riding my mustard-yellow vintage âRaleighâ bicycle down Franklin, less than a block away from home. And then it hit me. No really, a car had hit me. An old Chinese man failed to see me turning, plowing straight into me. I flew through the air, clearing the handlebars, but not before one dug into my leg, leaving a 3-inch-wide bruise on my upper thigh.
People stopped, ambulances came, there was blood. I hobbled away slighty scathed, embarking on a one month session of intense couch time with my laptop and DVDs. Thatâs how I discovered Liam Romero. I had picked up his art-house film at the Video Hut that week, and there was something mesmerizing about this actor by which I felt immediately compelled. I hadnât had a crush on a celebrity since I was 13. This was territory not unfamiliar, but more just kind of embarrassing. Over the next week I did some Google âresearchâ on Liam. I read articles about his insanity, narcissism and, God, his pictures were hotâI secretly set his personal website as my homepage. His reputation as a douche bag made me hot.
I watched his other films, I followed his scandalous affair in the tabloids, and I fantasized that one day, yes, one day, I would meet him. He did exist. We could fall in love. Ahh, Liam. MmmâŠ
It was a sunny day in November. The kind that almost makes you believe itâs spring. I was back on my feet, working at a little breakfast nook in the L. Ron Hubbard District, otherwise known as Fountain and Catalina intersection, the Scientology Headquarters adjacent.
It was 10:46 a.m.
The restaurant was empty. Breakfast rush had passed, and we were in the eye of a weekday storm, bracing ourselves for the doctors on their lunch breaks: tall OJ, green tea, can you put a rush on that?
I was out on the patio, killing time chatting up Edgar the busboy, when I saw a beautiful looking homeless person. My eye caught his hair first. It was really unkempt, but almost perfectly so. His gait was confident, his shirt blue. He walked by and did a sort of double take. He had obviously never been here before, and was trying to find the place.
It was Liam Romero.
I rushed inside to continue watching him walk by. Suddenly he reached for the door, pushing it open, and stepped inside.
âHi.â
âHi.â
His ice-blue eyes pierced mine. I led him onto the patio and helped him find a table. He was meeting an old friend. The friend was running late.
âCan I get you anything besides water to drink?â
âDo you squeeze your orange juice fresh?â
âEvery morning!â I said. Then I flexed for him.
âI was young 20 years ago,â he said wistfully.
âI can go squeeze you some. Right now.â
âReally?â
âAnything for youâŠâ
And yes, I really said this.
OMG IâM SQUEEZING LAIM ROMEROâS ORANGE JUICE RIGHT NOW!!!!!!!! FOR HIM!!! HEâS ON THE PATIO!! LIAM ROMERO! OMGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG! WHY ARE YOU LOOKING AT ME CRAZY?!?! ITâS LIAM ROMERO!
As the kitchen staff is questioning my stability, I squeezed a half-pint glass of the freshest glass of OJ in Los Angeles. I began my procession back to his table.
His friend had arrived.
âHere you go,â I said. âJust squeezed.â
âWill you marry me?â
âYes.â
âI wish I could believe you, but every time that happens, I end up reading about what a slut she turns out to be on the internet.â
He gets bacon-cheddar grits and the salmon Benedict. And I end up squeezing him another glass of orange juice. And I donât mind.
Later, as I set down the check, he pulls out his Black Amex: a sure sign that youâre loaded. It weighs about 8 times that of a normal credit card and is made from metal. Itâs amazing.
I run the card, and when I return, he tells me to tip myself whatever I want so I can buy myself something pretty for the next time he comes to see me.
I coyly retort, âIâm going to leave it blank and you can tip me what you want.â
What he doesnât know is underneath the credit card slip Iâve placed my business card featuring a picture of me in a library looking all slutty-librarian with glasses and a shhhhh-face. On the back, I wrote him a haiku. The haiku read:
In vegas or in
The backseat of my new van:
Wanna get fresh-squeezed?
Then I watch him drive away in an amazing yellow vintage American Rambler.
4pm. Same day. Phone rings. Unknown number.
âViolet? Itâs Liam Romero.â
(SHUT UP SHUT UP SHUT UP!!!!!!!!!!!!)
âHi.â
âSo, listen. Do you put out?
âFuck yeah, I put out.â
âReally?â
âYeah.â
We arrange to go for a âdriveâ in my van. He will call me tonight.
Midnight rolls around, and Iâm drunk. Iâve kept my phone on me at the Regina Spektor concert in Hollywood, which ended fairly early, but no calls from Liam yet. The girls and I head over to Johnnyâs apartment for more drinks, and when we get there, I notice a missed call on my cell.
Itâs the worst: an unknown number. Which obviously means itâs Liam. I spend the rest of my night kicking myself for blowing my big opportunity with him. We were gonna do it in my van, dammit! How could I have missed his call?
I keep hope alive, though, and over the next few weeks, I continue to get mysterious missed calls from unknown numbers. It seems to happen every time I accidentally leave my phone in the car or at home. Iâm making an effort to keep it on me at all times, but almost without fail I go somewhere without it and return to the missed call from the unknown number.
Itâs been a month since the first encounter. Iâve lost hope this will ever come to fruition. I go over to my next door neighborâs apartment and watch some weird British mystery. Itâs dragging on, and Iâm nodding off. It ends, and I head back to my place. What do I see?
NEW VOICE MESSAGE!!!
Oh, who called?
UNKNOWN NUMBER!!!
OMG THIS IS IT THIS IS TOTALLY IT.
Violet, itâs Liam Romero.
Isnât it odd he always refers to himself in by full name?
Iâm at a friendâs dinner party, but give me a call back.
I write down his numberâI finally have his number!âand muster all the balls I have, and dial.
He picks up. I ask him if he wants me to pick him up in my van. Instead, he suggests I come over to his hotel room.
Hotel room?
âYeah, I live at the Roosevelt.â
He scoffs that I donât know where that is.
âItâs on Hollywood Blvd. You know where the In and Out on Sunset is?â
So classy.
It doesnât stop me, though. Alright. Mission: Hotel Roosevelt. I have about an hour to meet him there. Iâm freaking out.
I try to wake myself up and make myself look hot for Liam-fucking. I end up in tight jeans with a blue and brown striped tank top under a grey wife-beater, my cowboy boots, and a cardigan. Itâs showtime.
The ride to the Roosevelt is surreal. I notice parts of Hollywood I never knew existed. Shops, neon signs, side streets.
By the time I park and get to the hotel, Iâm not sure which way is up or down. I have a slight fear Iâm being set up, but that canât be. I just talked to him on the phone. It was definitely him.
I wait by the elevator for someone to get on in order to get to the penthouse suites. The corridors were grey, quiet, and plush. I followed them like a maze and make my way to his room: number 1652.
I knocked.
I tried to look casual.
But beautiful.
He pulled the door open.
And there he was. Faded blue v-neck t-shirt. Impeccably tousled hair. Liam. Romero.
âHi.â
âHiiiii.â
We hug. WE HUG!
His suite was sparse. In fact, the only things in it was an Armani catalogue, two day-planners, fancy bottled water, and Evian in a can. I wonder what itâs for⊠face? Hair? Whatever it was, it worked.
We ventured to the couch overlooking South LA. Itâs beautiful, all lights. He doesnât seem to care.
He tells me all of a sudden that he thought I tricked him.
âWhat?!?â
âYou never called me back.â
âYou never left a number to call you back!â
âI called you, like, 5 times.â
âI knew it was you!â
âYou did? How?â
âI just knewâall the missed calls from unknown numbers. I just knew it was you.â
âBut I left my number tonight.â
âFinally,â I winked.
He tells me he likes my stripes. Then he tells me he likes my socks, polka dots. He says he likes patterns. Iâm starting to feel like Iâm talking to a distracted child, and a very sleepy one. Or a heroin addict. They have a way of saying the most hair-brained yet charming things.
Weâre slouched on his couch, talking about nothing, but itâs ok. Itâs surprisingly mellow and comfortable. Then suddenly he gets up and walks to the bedroom. He flops down on the bed. I follow.
âSorry I invited you over and Iâm all tiredâŠâ
Heroin?
âItâs ok.â
âI feel like I should know you better to feel this comfortable with you. Close your eyes.â
âHuh!?â
âIâm gonna take my clothes off, but you have to close your eyes.â
So I do. And he does. Then he slides under the covers.
He tells me to go stand in front of the window, where the only light from outside is streaming in. He wants me to de-robe there.
âWhoa, no bra?â he asks.
I go back to the bed.
âPerky boobs, perky boobsâŠâ he chants.
He sings in weird childlike repetition.
âYou have old-timey boobs,â he says, touching them.
I have to laugh. What is going on?
After a brief fondling, heâs passed out cold. I sneak out of the bed to pee. In the bathroom is where I discover the canned Evian. Not even a tooth brush, just canned Evian.
I tiptoe out.
Heâs awake.
âShut that bathroom door! The people next door smoke pot.â
I go back and shut it.
And weâre back in bed, and heâs asleep again. I stare at his silken hair, like Jesus. Like Jesus in Armani on heroin.
I slept maybe a total of 1 hour, spread out in intervals. It was like trying to sleep while youâre waiting for Santa Claus. Sweaty, expectant, giddy.
I finally got up and dressed at an ungodly hour, right after sunrise. The room was stiflingly hot, and he was dead to the world. I left a note and left.
The next day I had to shoot an episode of my friendâs show. We were shooting in a parking lot just south of the Roosevelt. Of course, his window was in plain view, just taunting me, overlooking us. I wondered what he made of it all. I didnât really know what to make of it myself.
I was a little disappointed, honestly. I was totally ready to get wild and crazy! Famous guy! Sluts, booze!
Whatever it was, whatever he was, it was as mystical as I had hoped. And different.
Itâs two weeks later. I enter the Roosevelt lobby. My palms are sweating. I donât belong here. I meander around until I find the concierge.
âHi,â I say, âcan you have this sent to room 1652?â
âRoom 1652? Sure.â
I hand over a 5â cube cardboard box.
âSure.â
The concierge and her friend smile in a have a nice day get out way.
I rush out of the hotel and donât look back. I make it back to my van. I breathe. I look at my dash. The sticker from the navel orange is stuck there. I kept it as a souvenir. On the orange, with a black magic marker, Iâd written one sentence: Wanna get fresh squeezed?