Diary of an Ugly Duckling

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by Langhorne, Karyn

salon. She thought of her mother with a sudden

  longing.

  “Looks like the joint is jumping.” Shamiyah

  sounded neither disappointed nor surprised. “Hope

  we won’t have to wait for too long.”

  Audra glanced at her watch. “I thought you said

  we had an appointment.”

  “We do! But Ishti’s an artist, Audra. She has to

  make every style perfect, and perfection can’t be

  constrained by anything as mundane as time!”

  “I don’t know, Shamiyah . . .” Audra said slowly.

  “Are you sure this Ishti—”

  Shamiyah jabbed her in the ribs hard enough to

  make Audra wince and muttered, “Lower your

  voice. Ishti’s a diva—talented as hell, but a diva from

  the old school, trust me. If she hears you—”

  At that very moment, the voices around them

  suddenly dropped from raucous to whispers.

  Shamiyah’s head snapped toward the center of

  salon with the energy of a young Marine coming

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  to attention in the presence of a commanding

  officer.

  A tall woman with a pair of the highest cheek-

  bones short of Native America strode into the wait-

  ing area. Her hair was piled atop her head in a high,

  sleek beehive of a style, its natural black colored by

  streaks of bright blonde. Her skin was dark: past

  mahogany, past ebony, almost as a dark as night it-

  self. She had fringed her dark brown eyes with

  lashes so long and carefully curved there was no

  way they could have been real, and spangled the

  space between lid and brow with a shimmering

  silvery eye shadow. Added to the dark shade of

  lipstick, Audra quickly surmised that very little

  about this woman was natural . . . if indeed she was

  a woman at all. There was something very “drag

  queen” about the look . . . right down to the silvery

  platform shoes peeking from beneath the hem of a

  pair of carefully frayed jeans.

  “Shamiyah!” Ishti’s voice was a mello contralto

  that didn’t help Audra make any kind of final deter-

  mination of gender. Audra found herself staring at

  the base of the woman’s dark throat, searching for

  the telltale lump of an Adam’s apple instead of lis-

  tening to the woman’s words, when she stretched

  out a much be-ringed hand and said, “And you

  must be Audra.”

  Shamiyah’s demanding elbow lashed out again,

  prompting Audra to tear her thoughts away from

  contemplating Ishti’s throat long enough to accept

  Ishti’s hand. The fingers felt fine-boned but the skin

  was hardened, calloused. Over the years, hairstyling

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  269

  and the chemical processes involved could be hard

  enough on the hands to cause that, Audra knew. She

  sighed, making mental plans to quiz Shamiyah on it

  later, and accepted this unusual specter for the fe-

  male it appeared to be for now.

  “Uh . . . nice to meet you .. . uh . . . Ishti.” The

  words sounded as phony as a twenty-dollar bill

  with Ben Franklin wearing an eyepatch.

  Fortunately, Ishti wasn’t listening. The moment af-

  ter Audra released her hands, she reached for Au-

  dra’s hairline, ruffling her slender, work-worn fingers

  through the soft naps of Audra’s hair, making it stand

  in a fluffy three-inch halo around Audra’s head.

  “And this is totally virgin? Never relaxed?” She

  directed the question at Shamiyah as though Audra

  were too ignorant of the processes of style to know

  the answer. Audra noticed that she spoke with an

  approximation of a British accent that sounded as

  fake as she looked.

  “I had one once, years ago.” Audra answered

  moving slightly to get Ishti’s fingers out of her head.

  “But I didn’t have time for all the curling and

  primping to make it look right, so I—”

  “Audra needs something elegant enough for the

  Reveal, but practical enough for her to work with

  once she gets back home,” Shamiyah explained.

  “She’s a corrections officer at the city prison, so—”

  Ishti waved the rest of Shamiyah’s explanation

  aside with a flutter of her fingers and an impatient,

  “of course, of course,” while she reached again for

  Audra. This time the woman grabbed her shoulders

  and spun her around. Audra felt the woman’s

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  Karyn Langhorne

  breath on the nape of her neck as she inspected her

  scalp.

  “Color first, then extensions,” she pronounced in

  a tone Audra didn’t care for at all, but before

  she could open her mouth in objection, the woman

  was whirling Audra back around. “Thank you,

  Shamiyah,” Ishti said. “This is a worthy challenge. I

  accept. But next time,” and she narrowed her eyes at

  Audra as if her penetrating gaze were sufficient

  force to make any point. “Tell your friend how we

  dress here.” She locked her eyes on Audra, then pat-

  ted her cheek condescendingly. “Style, my dear.

  Style!” She pulled a long piece of black fabric from a

  pocket of her jeans, and waved it at her. “Are you

  ready?”

  “What’s that?” Audra asked skeptically.

  “Blindfold,” Shamiyah said, spinning Audra

  around. “This place is crawling with mirrors.”

  “I think this one . . . and this one . . . and this one.

  Jewel tones will really sparkle on your skin tone,” a

  little man wearing a fussy peach ascot said as he

  ripped gowns off the racks so fast, Audra barely had

  time to lift her sunglasses and register their colors

  before she was being pushed into a fitting room . . .

  which, of course, had no mirror.

  It was getting frustrating now: to be able to see

  the lightness of her skin all over her body and to feel

  Ishti’s long, blonde-streaked extensions brushing

  against her shoulder blades, but to not be able to

  get even a glimpse of this final effect that was so

  “breathtaking,” so “beautiful” for herself. Audra

  found herself running her fingers along her chin,

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  271

  her cheekbones, her nose, trying to create a picture.

  But it was useless. She needed to see.

  Audra sighed, slipping the sweats off her hips

  again without disturbing the pin at the waist. As she

  bent for the first dress, a long, curled lock of Ishti’s

  hair extensions, in a golden brownish color that de-

  fied easy description, fell over her shoulders and

  brushed the beige skin of her arms.

  Tomorrow’s tomorrow, she thought, holding the

  curl between fingers she barely recognized as her

  own. Tomorrow’s tomorrow, I meet the new Audra. To-

  morrow’s tomorrow, I get to wipe the slate clean, and

  start all over again. Art Bradshaw is coming . . . day af-

  ter tomorrow, another voice, even more eager, added,
/>
  and Audra shivered a little in a strange blend of an-

  ticipation and fear.

  “My God! What did you do before you came to us?

  Drive trucks? Work construction?” The woman

  threw back her head and laughed a deep-throated

  laugh that many a forties-style actor would have

  paid dearly to learn to imitate.

  Her name was Freda Jasper and her job was sim-

  ple: teaching Audra how to walk and talk and act

  like she was born gliding around Beverly Hills in

  four-inch heels and evening gowns.

  “I’m a corrections officer.”

  Freda nodded. “That explains much. I bet you

  usually walk around in those awful black shoes

  with laces, don’t you?” and she wrinkled her nose.

  She spoke with real humor, not in the condescend-

  ing way of so many of the people Audra had met

  with in these final days of the process.

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  “Give me a pair of regulation blacks and I can

  climb stairs with a book balanced on my head.” Au-

  dra smiled, deciding to like her.

  “By the time I get through with you, you’ll be able

  to balance your ‘regulation blacks’ on your head

  in stilettos. I’m going to teach you how to cross

  those shapely legs of yours in a way that will make

  men stammer and women turn green. I’m going to

  teach you how to sit with the grace of a queen. On

  the stage, for the Reveal, you’re going to move like

  something ethereal—like a goddess come straight

  down from heaven.” She fluttered her fingers a little,

  creating the image for both of them with a sprinkle

  of fairy dust. “But first, we have to teach you the ba-

  sics. And the first of the basics is posture.” She

  snapped her fingers. “Stand up straight, Audra.”

  “I am!”

  “Not like that. Like this. Shoulders,” and she

  grabbed Audra’s shoulders and forced them back,

  thrusting her breasts forward in a manner that re-

  minded Audra of a Barbie doll’s outrageous figure.

  “Stomach in.” She patted Audra’s flat belly as though

  there were something that needed to be sucked in.

  Audra did her best to comply. “Head up,” she in-

  structed and Audra raised her head to a height that

  felt downright conceited. “Now,” she concluded.

  “Walk.”

  Audra strode across the woman’s studio, eyes on

  the space where a mirror should have been across

  the room. But of course they’d covered it with

  cardboard and Audra could see nothing. From her

  point of view, as weird as it felt to walk this way, it

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  273

  probably looked pretty good and she was about to

  say as much, when Freda shook her head.

  “You’re lumbering, Audra.”

  Audra stopped.

  “Lumbering,” Freda continued. “Like an ele-

  phant.” And she imitated—a little overdramati-

  cally, Audra suspected. “The posture is fine, but the

  steps . . . you’re shifting your entire weight from foot

  to foot with each step.”

  “What do you want me to do?”

  “Close your legs, to start with.”

  “What?”

  “Close your legs! Bring your thighs together and

  take smaller steps. You’re walking wide-legged! It

  makes you look a sailor on shore leave, still rolling

  with the wake of the waves—”

  “Hey, I’m enjoying having thighs thin enough not

  to rub together and now you’re telling me that’s a

  good thing—”

  “I didn’t say give yourself a chafing. I said to close

  your legs.” She nodded toward the studio floor.

  “Try it.”

  Audra brought her feet together and concen-

  trated on her thighs. She took a couple of small

  steps toward the mirror before Freda called out,

  “Posture!”

  She remembered her stomach, head and chest and

  took another couple of mincing steps. “Toe first.

  Toe . . . heel, toe . . . heel . . . toe, heel . . . stop!”

  Audra froze. She turned her head slowly toward

  the woman, awaiting her next instruction, but the

  woman simply handed her the shoes she’d just

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  selected and nodded. “Okay. Put ’em on and let’s see

  what happens.”

  Audra walked the room again, her legs moving

  slowly to the time of a single word repeating itself

  over and over in her brain . . . tomorrow, tomorrow,

  tomorrow . . .

  Chapter 23

  September 21

  Dear Petra,

  Today’s the day. I’ll finally get to see myself top to toe.

  I’m excited and scared and a whole bunch of

  emotions. I wish you were going to be here . . . but I

  console myself with knowing you’ll be back home to

  stay by the time the show airs.

  Thanks for listening. You’ve been the one person I

  knew would be supportive from the very beginning. I

  can’t tell you how much that means to me . . . how

  much you mean to me, Petra. You’re the best sister—

  the best friend—I’ve ever had.

  Now, enough mushy stuff: I’ve got a job to do! I’ve

  got to get to makeup. They’re going to slather on

  whatever it takes to finalize the effect for the TV

  cameras . . .

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  Karyn Langhorne

  I’ll be sending you a picture of the new me in my

  next email, girl.

  Be careful out there,

  Audra

  “Two minutes,” the stage manager hissed, tak-

  ing Audra’s gloved hand and dragging her to

  an X marked in fluorescent tape in the center of the

  stage.

  “Hold still,” the makeup artist hissed, brushing

  what felt like the thousandth coat of powder over

  her nose and cheeks, while the hairstylist fluffed

  Ishti’s extensions and smoothed the bangs over the

  few remaining dark marks of scar tissue on her fore-

  head. The two seemed almost at war for the same

  space on Audra’s face, while somewhere behind her,

  a third black-clad and nearly invisible person

  fussed with the hem of her sapphire gown.

  “One minute!”

  Audra stared at thick red curtain in front of her. In

  less than sixty seconds, she’d strike a pose and the

  curtain would be pulled back, revealing her to the

  experts who had helped to create her and a small

  audience that included her nearest and dearest.

  Within a few minutes thereafter, pauses for com-

  mercial breaks notwithstanding, she’d be placed in

  front of an ornate mirror and finally allowed to see

  herself for the first time.

  From behind the curtain, she could hear the

  voices of her doctors, coaches and trainers.

  “Special concerns of African-American features—”

  she heard. The voice sounded like Dr. Bremmar’s

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  277

  happy confidence, but she lost the rest
until Dr.

  Jamison intoned something about “skin lightening

  medication used to minimize scarring and obtain

  the desired beauty effect.”

  Desired beauty effect? Audra let the words wash

  over her, hearing them but not hearing them, know-

  ing she would see it all later—much later—after the

  Reveal and the lengthy process of editing Shamiyah

  was already complaining about.

  “Thirty seconds.”

  More tugging on her hair, more swishing of the

  dress, another swipe of lip gloss, while from be-

  hind the curtain she heard her own voice from her

  Audition tape, saying: “Just once I’d like to not be

  the tough broad, one of the guys. Just once, I want

  to be the beauty queen. I want to be the one who—”

  “Ten seconds! Curtain ready? Strike your pose!

  Spotlight in five, four—”

  Audra’s right foot shot out behind her, lifting the

  heavy weight of the gown as she pointed her toe and

  balanced seductively on one foot. One gloved hand

  found its way under her chin, the other stretching

  forward, supplicating an unseen lover: Audra

  Marks as Audrey Hepburn blowing a kiss . . . with a

  tan.

  A spotlight hit the curtain, and Audra knew her

  pose was visible in silhouette on the other side. A

  roar went up from the small audience that she knew

  included her family and Bradshaw, but God only

  knew who else.

  “Curtain in five . . . four . . .”

  Audra bent her lips into a smile, a smile it seemed

  like she’d been practicing her entire life. Her heart

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  Karyn Langhorne

  fluttered nervously, and for a second she wondered

  if after all she’d been through, she was going to have

  a stroke and die now, now that it was almost over. It

  would be the ultimate irony to pass out and die right

  here without ever seeing what she’d starved and

  sweated for, cried and wished for . . .

  “Pull curtain!”

  It started to move, slowly at first, in mere inches,

  then more swiftly, until Audra was blinded by the

  spotlight and deafened by a collective gasp of sur-

  prise, followed by the noise of applause.

  “Go!” someone hissed from behind her, and she

  dropped her pose and started to walk, kicking down

  the long red carpet of the stage like a runway model,

  adding a little Bronx-born something something,

  just to make sure the people watching at home

  wouldn’t forget when it got time to make that big

  vote for the Top Three winners.

  Seated at a long table at the end of the red carpet

 

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