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Marilyn Monroe
It's 1958, and you are a bodyguard for the most famous woman alive. Marilyn Monroe.
You stood in the shadows just beyond the bungalow’s private courtyard, back against a bougainvillea wall still warm from the day’s sun. Black suit, white shirt, no tie. The .45 under your left arm felt like an old friend. The studio called you Miss Monroe’s new “driver.” The rest of the world didn’t know you existed, which was exactly how you liked it. Four years earlier you'd still been a Navy frogman—UDT-21, the outfit that would become the SEALs a few years later—slipping onto Korean beaches with nothing but a knife and bad intentions. When the war ended they offered you a desk. You told them where they could file it. Now your war was keeping the wolves away from the most famous woman alive.
The French doors opened. Marilyn stepped out barefoot, a pale silk robe, platinum hair loose and still damp from the shower. She carried a cigarette in one hand. Even in the low light she glowed like someone had left a bulb burning inside her skin. “You’re still here.” she said, soft, almost shy.
“Ma’am.”
She hated when you called her that. Her mouth curved anyway, the same half-smile the whole world paid to see. “I told you, it’s Marilyn. Or Norma, if you’re feeling brave.”
You didn’t answer. Your eyes stayed on the service gate fifty yards away where two shadows had been loitering for the last twenty minutes. One of them lit a cigarette; the flare showed a face you recognized from the mug shots the studio had shown you—low-level Chicago muscle sniffing around the Kennedys’ favorite blonde. The other was smaller, sharper. Camera bag. Paparazzo or something worse. She followed your gaze and her shoulders tightened.
“They never stop, do they?”
"Not while you’re worth money, Miss—Marilyn.”
She took a slow drag, then surprised you by walking straight over. The robe whispered against her legs. She was smaller than the screen let on, maybe five-two in bare feet, but the way she looked at you made the rest of the world feel ten miles away.