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Diary of an Ugly Duckling

Page 21

by Langhorne, Karyn


  nose,” he said, brushing at the air around her face in

  demonstration. “You may have to style your hair

  more toward your face in the future. Maybe some

  bangs?” he suggested with the happy hopefulness

  of a wannabe hairstylist. Audra could almost hear

  her mother grumbling, “Don’t know what he’s talk-

  ing about,” as the man continued, “And I’m opti-

  mistic that Dr. Jamison’s treatments will minimize

  any scarring from the nose.”

  The nose. Audra couldn’t understand why he was

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  so excited. She could barely breathe out of the thing,

  packed with cotton as it was. But Dr. Bremmar kept

  bouncing and smiling, then clapped his hands to-

  gether. “I’ve got to say, I’m excited about this Reveal,

  Audra. Very, very excited.”

  “Doc, I got a feeling you say that to all the girls,”

  Audra quipped, her voice sounding nasal and flat in

  her ears, like she had a very bad head cold.

  Dr. Koch snorted.

  “You’re right,” he deadpanned. “He does.” And

  before Dr. Bremmar could object, he continued with,

  “So now it’s time for the fun part.”

  “The fun part? More fun than I’m having right

  now?” Audra lifted her arm to gesture toward her

  heart, disturbing the incisions from the liposuction

  of her upper arms and all along her chest from

  her newly-lifted breasts. Even hopped up with

  painkillers, it hurt with a wrenching ache just bad

  enough to make her wish she hadn’t attempted it.

  “You want to talk about fun, guys, my last trip to the

  bathroom was more fun than I think I can handle.

  I’ve resolved not to drink anything else for the next

  three weeks.”

  “It’s good to get moving, Audra. I know it hurts,

  but—”

  “Do you?” Audra would have liked to quirk a

  doubtful eyebrow at him, but she wasn’t sure if she

  still had any . . . and if she did, where they were.

  “And tell me, Doc. Just how much plastic surgery

  have you had?”

  Dr. Bremmar’s cheeks went a little pink. “My ex-

  perience with my patients gives me a pretty good

  idea of how you’re feeling at this point,” he said

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  quickly, evading the question. “Anyway, what I

  wanted to tell you was, you can go home this after-

  noon.”

  “Home? You mean back to New York?”

  Confusion twisted Dr. Bremmar’s face for a mo-

  ment before he laughed. “No, no. To your condo.”

  “That little joint ain’t anybody’s home,” Audra

  reminded him.

  “True,” Dr. Koch weighed in. “But it’s better than

  this little joint, isn’t it?”

  Audra turned toward the man with fresh appreci-

  ation. “You know something, Doc? You’re ab-

  solutely right. When do I go?”

  “Just as soon as we get all the prescriptions filled.

  You’ll have a home nurse for the first week—mainly

  to help with the drainage from the tummy tuck.

  We’ll see you back here in three days.”

  “What a relief! I’ve spent so much time with the

  two of you over the last few days, I was starting to

  feel like we should all get married.”

  The faint outlines of a smile ghosted Dr. Koch’s

  lips. “I hear Shamiyah’s laying in a supply of classic

  old movies on DVD, to ease your recovery. Now, Voy-

  ager tops the list.”

  “Along with Imitation of Life,” added Dr. Brem-

  mar. “She said to tell you she has both versions, 1934

  and 1950. I’ve never seen it, but I hear it’s appro-

  priate.”

  Audra hesitated. Imitation of Life was the story of a

  light-skinned black woman desperate to pass as

  white in the days before desegregation. Not for the

  first time, a sense of unease stirred deep in Audra’s

  heart, along with the deep desire for a mirror.

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  I’ve got to talk to Dr. Jamison, she thought with a

  panicked determination. I don’t want this lightening

  to go too far . . .

  “Did you hear me, Audra?” Dr. Bremmar was say-

  ing, looking concerned. “You’re not in any discom-

  fort, are you?”

  “Just thinking,” Audra wisecracked. “And usu-

  ally that doesn’t hurt. Much.”

  “And what were you thinking, may I ask?” Dr.

  Koch’s wry eyebrows drew together in anticipation.

  “You got such a funny look on your face.”

  “Like you could tell with all these bandages,” Au-

  dra quipped back. “I was thinking . . . never was a

  woman more blessed than I.” She considered laying

  a dramatic hand over her forehead . . . but the mem-

  ory of her prior attempt at that gesture kept her from

  moving more muscles than it took to speak.

  Dr. Koch’s expression made it clear he didn’t be-

  lieve her, but he chose not to press the point. “Well,”

  he continued in his dry monotone, “if you thought it

  was fun going to the bathroom . . . the process of

  getting you in and out of the car is going be a trip to

  the Comedy Store.”

  He wasn’t lying. Who knew that the process of bend-

  ing to sit in an automobile used every single muscle

  in the body? It hurt four times as much as her leg-

  endary trip to the bathroom. Audra’s new-sculpted

  thighs screamed, her reshaped arms ached and every

  muscle in her recently tucked tummy protested with

  every nerve ending in their entire surface. By the time

  she was settled in the front seat beside the driver,

  there were tears rolling down Audra’s face.

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  Oh, God, she prayed. Let me stay in this car for-

  ever . . . because I don’t think I can stand the process of

  getting out.

  “It’s normal to feel depressed after surgery, Audra.

  You know that, right?” Dr. Goddard sat in the chair

  at the edge of the bed, staring at her from behind

  her square, black spectacles.

  “I’m not depressed,” Audra muttered. “I’m in a

  funk. Literally. I haven’t a shower in almost a week.”

  “Clever,” Dr. Goddard nodded, acknowledging

  the pun. “But you know there are some very good

  reasons for that. The doctors don’t want you to

  change those bandages for at least forty-eight hours

  to help prevent infection—”

  “I know, I know. They’ve explained it a thousand

  times,” Audra said irritably. “It’s just annoying.”

  “It’s a disruption of your routine. That’s part of

  what makes people depressed after surgery—that

  they can’t do what they would normally do. And

  the fact that, at first anyway, you don’t look better.

  You look worse.”

  “I wouldn’t know,” she gestured around them.

  “No mirrors, remember?”

  “Which is also depressing.”
Dr. Goddard seemed

  determined to diagnose depression whether Audra

  wanted to admit it or not. “Not having control of

  something as basic as being able to see yourself in

  the mirror.”

  “Well, I guess, then, I’m what you’d call ‘surren-

  dering to the process,’ right?” Audra quipped,

  knowing full well she hadn’t done any such thing

  with this talking-to-the-shrink part. She heard

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  Shamiyah’s admonitions in her mind, heard her

  own promise to make every effort . . . but time and

  time again, she found herself vehemently resistant.

  She wanted nothing more than to get through this

  fifty minutes and be left to her too-dark lair in peace.

  “It’s got to be difficult. Especially for a woman

  with a job like yours. A woman who’s used to be-

  ing an authority figure. Used to being in charge of

  others.”

  “I don’t really see it that way,” Audra mumbled.

  The bandage packing in her nose from the rhino-

  plasty made it hard to talk and breathe, but this

  woman didn’t seem to care about Audra’s comfort.

  She wanted to talk and wasn’t going to quit until her

  time was up.

  “Then how do you see it? Why did you choose

  such a masculine profession, Audra?”

  “I’ve always been interested in criminal justice,”

  Audra answered quickly. “There’s nothing deeper

  to it than that!”

  Dr. Goddard was silent for a long time. Audra felt

  the woman’s eyes on her, studying her carefully.

  “I don’t entirely believe that,” she said at last.

  “Well, whether you believe it or not, it’s the

  truth.”

  Another long silence punctuated the space be-

  tween them, the woman said in a low and careful-

  sounding voice, “It seems to me you’ve got all

  kinds of issues around your femininity, your ap-

  pearance . . . even your identity.”

  Audra froze. Oh shit, she thought. Oh shit, oh shit . . .

  “How long have you suspected your mother’s for-

  mer husband wasn’t your father?”

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  That child’s too ugly to be mine . . . The words echoed

  in Audra’s brain and she closed her eyes tight against

  them. Too ugly to be mine . . . At the time, it had

  seemed like a good idea, but now, she regretted hav-

  ing used those words in her audition tape. These peo-

  ple seemed too determined to make a big issue out it.

  “You’ve seen the pictures,” Audra replied, her jaw

  clenched tight. “The differences in coloring . . . in

  body type . . .” She opened her eyes, fixing the other

  woman with a determined stare. “Look, doc. I know

  what you want me to say—and I know this is going

  to bring the powers that be down on me big time,

  but . . .” She shook her head. “I’m not outing my

  mother like this. I might be mad as hell at her, in my

  way. But I’m not accusing her of adultery. Not on na-

  tional television.”

  “All right,” Dr. Goddard said, as though she

  weren’t disappointed in the slightest. She uncrossed

  and recrossed her legs. “So how did it feel to grow

  up the darkest one in the family?”

  “Listen, Doc, I’m really, really tired. I don’t want

  to talk about this right now.”

  “That’s why we’re talking about it, Audra. It’s at

  the core of what’s driving you—”

  “All that’s driving me right now is pain!” Audra

  snapped. “I can barely breathe. Everything from my

  neck to my kneecaps hurts—”

  “And so does everything inside you, Audra.” Dr.

  Goddard leaned forward again, giving Audra her

  most concerned doctor look. “Listen to me. You will

  never be happy with what you see on the outside if

  you’re constantly running from the wounds on the

  inside.”

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  “It’s not painful,” Audra shot back and crossed her

  arms over her chest, ignoring discomfort so intense

  that it made her eyes water. “These ‘wounds’—if they

  ever were that—healed a long time ago. There’s no

  point to re-opening them now—”

  “Then why are you here, Audra?” Dr. Goddard’s

  eyebrows shot up with an infuriating significance.

  “If you recreate yourself—if you completely reshape

  your face and body—aren’t you erasing your par-

  ents, your heritage, your past?”

  If she could have gotten up and stormed out of the

  room, she would have . . . but as achy and tired as

  she was, that was damn near impossible. Besides,

  this was her space. Let the doctor leave.

  “I hate that you listen to my private phone calls,”

  Audra hissed instead at the woman. “Don’t you

  think this would be more productive if you let me

  bring up what I want to bring up on my own time?”

  “But that’s just it, Audra. You’re an Ugly Duck-

  ling. You have no privacy . . . and we don’t have any

  time.” She sighed. “Look, Shamiyah told me about

  your reluctance—”

  “Great,” Audra muttered. “That’s just great.”

  Dr. Goddard waved Audra’s indignation away. “It

  doesn’t matter. What matters is that you acknowl-

  edge that this decision—this life change—goes

  deeper than wanting a boyfriend, more than want-

  ing to know what it feels like to be one of the ‘pretty

  girls.’ You don’t know who you are, Audra. And un-

  less you’re willing to explore that question, all you’re

  accomplishing is moving from a very plain, very

  lonely and very insecure woman to a very pretty,

  very lonely and very insecure woman.”

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  Audra glared at her. “You know, I really don’t like

  you.”

  Dr. Goddard pushed her severe glasses higher up

  on her long nose and smiled. “Yes. I get that a lot.

  Now, I think a journal might be helpful here, so . . .”

  She thrust a book covered in a plain dark fabric into

  Audra’s hands. “Talk to it—”

  “I don’t have anything to say.”

  Dr. Goddard sighed. “Just try it, Audra. It won’t

  bite you.”

  Audra eyed her suspiciously. “Are you going to

  read it, Big Brother . . . or should I say, Big Sister?”

  “It depends. Are you going to talk to me?”

  Audra frowned, but didn’t answer. Instead she

  stared at the book and the neat gold-leaf pen the

  woman had clipped to its surface.

  Dr. Goddard rose. “Why don’t you write down all

  those caustic things that are going through your

  brain right now? Get them out on paper, if you don’t

  want to say them.” She patted Audra on her foot as

  if she knew it was the only safe part of her whole

  body. “You’re doing well, Audra. Do you realize you

  haven’t cracked a joke or mentioned a movie in t
his

  entire session? I consider that progress.”

  She reached for a large leather carry tote, nodded

  at the nurse and paced the few short steps toward

  the door. “Oh, Audra . . .” She leaned back into the

  room. “I almost forgot. Who is Art Bradshaw?”

  Audra felt a flush coming to her cheeks and for

  the first time felt grateful for the bandages.

  “Just a co-worker,” she answered. “Why?”

  The good doctor smiled. “No reason,” she said

  DIARY OF AN UGLY DUCKLING

  221

  sweetly, then opened the door and disappeared into

  the hallway.

  “I think it could be a good idea.” Bradshaw’s voice

  rumbled over three thousand miles to her, offering

  calm support. To her surprise, he’d actually called

  back, a couple of times. He usually didn’t say much,

  just asked how she was doing and then, after a long,

  painful silence, hung up.

  But tonight, Audra was boiling over with anger,

  and the bubbles spilled over onto Bradshaw. She let

  the whole story of the session with Dr. Goddard

  come tumbling out . . . or almost all of it. For some

  reason, she still couldn’t tell Bradshaw about the

  lightening drugs.

  I don’t want them using that stuff on TV, she told

  herself, thinking of her mother, of Petra and Kiana. I

  don’t want to give them any more ammunition than they

  already have . . . But she knew it was deeper than that.

  She didn’t want Bradshaw to know . . . at least not

  yet.

  “Might turn up something,” Bradshaw was say-

  ing. “Something that really helps you get a new han-

  dle on your life,” he said.

  “It seems kinda . . . stupid to me. Writing down

  my feelings and stuff. How’s that going to help? I al-

  ready know how I feel about”—she paused, editing

  herself before she mentioned anything about skin

  lightening or her parentage—“being the family ugly

  duckling. And . . .” She sighed. “I’m not much of a

  writer, Bradshaw. Or a feeler if you want to know

  the truth.”

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  “Not all that crazy about it myself,” he offered af-

  ter another of his signature pauses. “When you’re a

  guy of my size, people think you’re invincible. A big

  block of flesh that don’t feel nothing. They say all

  kinds of things, act all kinds of ways, because you’re

  supposed to be so big . . . so tough . . .” He paused

  for a long moment, as though reliving a memory he

  chose not to relate. “Bought that bullshit myself for a

 

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