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Authors: Karyn Langhorne

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moving through the pedestrian traffic on Sixth Av-

enue, pushing herself through the doors of Macy’s

and heading determinedly for the women’s section,

pushing aside her dread of the fitting room and

50

Karyn Langhorne

wishing for the thousandth time she’d stuck to her

New Year’s Resolution diet.

Only there was nothing that said “fancy and hip”

in the way Audra defined them. Sure, there were

hip, casual clothes galore in the larger sizes (boot-

cut jeans and bohemian tops, big, fringed poncho

shawls, rhinestone-studded denim jackets) and a se-

lection of fancy ones (dresses as wide as muumuus,

mostly in dark colors, of a cut and style guaranteed

to make any woman look like the mother of the

bride) but nothing that spoke of youthful fanciness.

Nothing in the entire store . . . and Audra traipsed

across it repeatedly, searching rack after rack with

uncharacteristic diligence.

She abandoned Macy’s for Bloomingdale’s and

then Lord & Taylor, and then gave up the depart-

ment stores for the large-sized boutiques, meeting

with disappointment after disappointment. About

the only thing that came close was a partly sheer,

yellow chiffon shawl of a top that, with its fringe

and assymetrical cut, had a light, party feel . . . but it

showed a hefty chunk of chubby shoulder, too.

“Pork loin in a yellow blanket.” Audra grimaced

at herself, shrugging it off and vowing to search on.

As the sun sank into afternoon, Audra headed

across town to where the fancy boutiques were

clustered in row after row on Madison Avenue, still

hoping to find the outfit that would capture Art

Bradshaw’s imagination, the look that would kick

fat, black and ugly to the curb, if not forever, at least

for a night.

And sure enough, in the window of Marciella’s

Audra found it: the perfect top, draped over the

DIARY OF AN UGLY DUCKLING

51

shoulders of a mannequin. It was a sleeveless, sil-

very, glittering thing with a deep V-neckline that

scooped just enough to show a little cleavage, but

not enough to scare anybody. Like the yellow shawl,

it graced the mannequin’s hips in a diagonal line.

Audra imagined it thrown almost casually over a

nice pair of black pants and coupled with a pair of

strappy sandals.

“Hello, hip and trendy,” she murmured, her nose

nearly pressed against the window. Only . . .

Audra could tell just by looking at it that it was

expensive—probably as much as she made in a

month. She hesitated, intimidated by the top, the

store, and the idea of spending thousands of dol-

lars on a single garment—but then she thought of

the divas of old with their gorgeous costumes and

changed her mind. Hell, even fickle old Scarlett

O’Hara had known that sometimes a woman had to

have a new dress to send the right signal.

“Thank God for MasterCard,” she muttered, fold-

ing her lips determinedly and yanking the handle

on the boutique’s heavy glass door.

A series of chimes sounded as she stepped inside,

her feet landing soundlessly on a spotless white car-

pet. The air smelled of some gentle perfume, and

soft romantic music played at a volume just above

noticeable. And the place was completely empty.

“May I help you?”

A skinny white girl not much older than twenty

or twenty-one appeared at Audra’s side like a man-

nequin coming to life. She wore a tiny pair of black

pants and a little top with a pair of slim spaghetti

straps not quite appropriate for the cool of the

52

Karyn Langhorne

March day, balancing herself atop a pair of ridicu-

lously high heels. She looked cool and chic and com-

pletely sophisticated.

A deep feeling of inadequacy and an awareness of

her own imperfection swept over Audra as she

stared at the girl. The sudden irrational urge to run

out the door seized her heart and she had to remind

herself that any woman tough enough to stare down

a bunch of convicts day after day could probably

handle buying a top from a high-end Manhattan

boutique.

Probably.

“May I help you?” the girl repeated, since Audra

hadn’t said a word yet, just stood there staring at her

with her mouth open like some oki hick come to the

Big City. “Do you need directions—”

“I’m looking for something for a party,” Audra

said, donning a crisp, arch, cosmopolitan voice that

sounded suspiciously like Bette Davis in her ears.

“And that top”—she jerked her head toward the

display behind them—“looks perfect. Very trendy.

Very hip.”

“Yes . . . yes it is . . .” the girl murmured, eyeing

Audra from head to toe. “Uh . . .” She licked her lips a

couple of times, then stuttered, “We—we might be

able to help you, b—but . . .” she looked around ner-

vously and lowered her voice, even though they were

the only two people in the store. “Well, if you don’t

mind my asking, what size are you?” Watching Au-

dra’s face change, she added quickly, “I ask because

we only carry up to size twelve. The designer is

launching a plus-size line in the fall, but right now—”

“Are you calling me fat?” Audra snapped at the

DIARY OF AN UGLY DUCKLING

53

girl, her good mood quickly slipping away. Audra

thought back: the woman on the subway hadn’t

been small . . . but now that she thought about it,

she’d been a heck of a lot smaller than Audra. A sud-

den embarrassment swept through Audra like a rag-

ing forest fire. Of course this was a smaller-size

store. What on earth had she been thinking—

But then again, the top in the window looked like

it might be cut a little on the roomy side . . .

“No ma’am,” the young woman was stammering

in front of her. “ It—it’s just . . .” she hesitated, and

then spoke quickly, as though the speed of her de-

livery would make the words somehow less upset-

ting. “I don’t mean to offend you . . . but I really

don’t think it’s going to fit and these are very expen-

sive garments. If you rip it—”

“It won’t rip. And if it does, I’ll buy it,” Audra

snapped at her with a force she hadn’t fully in-

tended. The girl’s eyes widened and she backed

away from Audra, putting her hands up to her chest

as though she were afraid she’d have to use them in

self-defense.

“I didn’t mean to offend you—”

“I know. I’m sorry,” Audra said, and meant it.

“It’s just . . . I’ve been dealing with a lot of negativity

lately about my size,” she admitted. “And there’s

this guy at work.” She sighed. “This really, really

good-looking guy. The strong, silent type who

knows old movies. He’s got these eyes . . .” She

sighed again. “And he asked me to a party. Okay, it’s

last minute, but still, he asked
me
, and I’ve got to be

hip and fancy and I’ve been looking all day . . .” She

blew out a heavy exhale. “I can’t help the fat and

54

Karyn Langhorne

black parts, but . . . I just don’t want to look ugly,”

she said, more to herself than the salesgirl.

To her surprise, the girl touched her arm in conso-

lation. “I understand totally,” she said gently. “The

dressing room is behind the curtain . . . over there,”

she said, pointing to a dramatic black curtain near a

platform lined with mirrors. She hurried to a

counter and squatted. “Let me find the twelve . . .”

she murmured, and disappeared.

Audra heard the rattling of cardboard, then the

girl reappeared with a series of flat red boxes.

“Thank you,
darling
,” Audra drawled and swag-

gered toward the curtain as though she were really

Bette and this were really a movie scene.

Audra avoided the mirror as she stripped off her

sweatshirt, sick of the image of herself she knew

she’d find there. There was too much skin, too many

rolls.
I’m not eating until after the party is over
, she told

herself.
And Monday morning, I’m back on my diet
, she

vowed, imagining herself svelte and sexy on Art

Bradshaw’s arm by the end of the summer. In the

tiny fitting room, the image seemed possible, proba-

ble, attainable—but then, there weren’t any Oreos

lying around back here to tempt the resolution.

But Art won’t care, either way. He sees the real me . . .

my true beauty
, she added mentally and dismissed

the planned day-long fast almost as quickly as she’d

embraced it.

She lifted the frothy, silvery top out of the box

with a sigh of appreciation. It was so soft, so shim-

mering, so beautiful, so fine . . . and had no price

tag—no tags of any kind—except for a tiny label

stitched into the side seam with the designer’s

DIARY OF AN UGLY DUCKLING

55

name. Eager for the feel of the fabric on her skin,

Audra slipped it over her head.

She got one arm through, too, before she got

stuck, her other arm wedged trapped in the seam,

bound tight to a roll of flesh at her side. She strug-

gled with it, gently, but it didn’t give. She pulled

harder, unwilling to give up . . . and made it worse.

She was wedged into the fabric now, too in to get

out, too out to get in.

“Uh . . . help!” she called. “Help!”

The curtain parted. For an instant, the girl’s eyes

rolled upward in an expression Audra instantly in-

terpreted as “I told you so,” making the movie-star

attitude Audra had adopted now nothing more than

a useless ruse. But the girl said nothing. Instead, she

stepped toward Audra and began pulling gently on

the fabric, trying to ease Audra’s left arm through

the armhole.

“Just . . . a . . . little more . . .” Audra encouraged,

feeling her fingers stretching for light and air. “A lit-

tle more . . .”

“I don’t want . . . to rip it . . .” the salesgirl grunted,

still working the fabric. “Maybe if you suck in a

little . . .”

Audra complied. Her arm popped through the

sleeve . . . but as soon as she exhaled the fabric

stretched extremely tight over her breasts and stom-

ach, revealing every bump and roll of flesh. Audra

panted, afraid to breathe, lest the delicate side seams

pop. She stared into the mirror, seeing an effect far

different from the one on the mannequin. The woman

in the mirror looked like a plump sausage wrapped

in a casing, a silvery, gauzy wrapper.

56

Karyn Langhorne

“Oh dear,” the sales clerk breathed, shocked.

“I . . . I don’t think it suits you . . .”

Audra wanted to agree, wanted to rip the thing

off and run as fast as her legs would take her from

Madison Avenue, fancy boutiques, and any hope of

glamour. But that was impossible now.

“I don’t think I can get it off,” she admitted, no

longer Bette Davis, but an embarrassed fat woman in

a shirt far too tight. Her eyes found the salesgirl’s,

seeking assistance. “Please help me out of this . . . If I

rip it”—she sighed, dropping the façade totally—“I

really can’t afford to pay for a top I can’t even wear.”

She left out that part of the story when her mother

came in from her day at the Goldilocks salon—along

with the details of her meeting with Woodburn—

concentrating instead on the magical moment when

Art Bradshaw had invited her to his daughter’s

sweet sixteen.

Edith stared at her for a long moment. “Sounds to

me like you got a date with the daughter,” she said

at last.

Audra rolled her eyes, her voice rising, ready to

re-enter the fray. “Didn’t you hear what I told you he

said? About wanting me to come? Needing me to

come—”

“Yeah, but I don’t know how you get a date out of

that—”

Audra opened her mouth to explain, but her

mother waved the opportunity away.

“It doesn’t matter, Queenie D.” She sighed. “I

been thinking about last night . . . and I’ve decided I

ain’t arguing with you no more. You want to run

DIARY OF AN UGLY DUCKLING

57

headfirst into a brick wall, you go ahead. Just don’t

expect me to pick you up when you get your feelings

hurt.” She shook her head. “ ’Cause I’m tired. I’m

just too damn tired.”

“Me, too, Ma,” Audra told her, settling deeper

into the couch and returning to the mystical magic

of
Breakfast at Tiffany’s
currently playing on the Clas-

sic Movie Channel. “And the only thing that hurts

my feelings is that you don’t think anyone can love

me just the way I am.”

Her mother hesitated a moment, then murmured,

“I’ve never said that, Audra,” and then hurried to

her room and closed the door.

Chapter 5

Saturday, March 31

Dear Petra,

Do you really think that I go out of my way to antago-

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