People literally sell their very souls here and
consider it worth the bargain.” She shook her head.
“I’ve been here for almost eight years . . . and I some-
times wonder if I’m one of them.” Before Audra
could ask her any questions about herself or her
adopted town, the woman frowned. “But you
shouldn’t have needed any money. The room should
have been totally comped—”
“Yeah,” Audra said. “That’s what they told me
when I went to check in. That everything was com-
plimentary . . .” she grinned. “Except the tips.”
“Well, there’s a few things a sister’s gotta handle
100
Karyn Langhorne
on her own. But for everything else”—she gave Au-
dra a cynical eye roll—“there’s an expense account.
Now.” She grasped Audra’s arm again. “Before you
meet everybody, there’s some stuff they want you to
do.”
“What kind of stuff?” Audra asked, suddenly feel-
ing on guard.
“ Medical kinds of stuff,” Shamiyah said, waving
her fingers vaguely as if she weren’t certain of the
details. “Basically they want to do the whole exam,
like you were going to be on the show. It’s pretty
comprehensive—takes hours and hours—so we’d
better get started.”
Shamiyah steered her toward the elevator and along
the third-floor corridor to a glass-encased office. The
words alan bremmar, m.d., and herbert koch,
m.d., graced the door, each man’s moniker followed
by a long line of letters like a perverse alphabet soup.
Through the glass, Audra could see an elegant recep-
tion desk and an even more elegant receptionist.
“These guys are absolutely the best ,” Shamiyah
murmured as though it were a secret, guiding her
through the glass doors with one surprisingly firm
and determined hand. “They’ve done everybody .
More stars than the Walk of Fame . . . Hi Maisy!”
Shamiyah said with a gushing enthusiasm that Au-
dra couldn’t decide was real or fake. “Here she is,
Audra Marks! The Ugly Duckling candidate we’ve
been talking about?”
Maisy stretched her face into a smile, staring at
Audra as though she were some interesting new
species that required great analysis, while Audra
DIARY OF AN UGLY DUCKLING
101
stared back at her with similar interest. Up close,
Maisy had the look of someone who had seen a few
cuts of the surgeon’s knife herself: her eyebrows
were suspiciously high, her nose perfectly straight,
her breasts impossibly perky. Add to that the warm
glow of a paid-for tan, and the perfect lowlights of a
custom dye job and Maisy looked fake right up to
her enhanced eyelashes.
“Nice to meet you,” she said in a voice far too
high and girlish for her years, but pleasant enough.
She stood up, showing them a lean figure clad in a
tight black T-shirt and black pants in some clingy,
sexy fabric that would have shown every bump of
cellulite, if the girl had had any. “Carla—she’s one
of our nurses—is waiting for you in Room One. But
first . . .” She pulled a thick folder full of papers
from the cubby beneath the elegant desk. “Papers to
sign,” she said, handing them to Audra.
“Good grief! More papers?” She shook her head,
turning to Shamiyah in amazement. “My hand still
hurts from the stack you sent over last night.
Haven’t I released you people from all liability for
just about every conceivable accident imaginable?”
“I—I don’t know,” the girl said, looking gen-
uinely confused. “But these are the medical forms
so Dr. Bremmar and the others can do their prelimi-
nary consultation. Did someone already send you
these? Because—”
“No, no,” Shamiyah patted the girl on the arm, re-
assuringly. “The forms she got last night were from
the Ugly Duckling show. Consenting to her appear-
ance on the program, for the use of her image in
promotion, release from libel and slander—stuff like
102
Karyn Langhorne
that. Not the same. She’s got to do these, too.” She
cast a
Amy Star
Jenny Offill
Beth Ciotta
Lawrence de Maria
David Pilling
Mary Fox
Roy Glenn
Eric Walters
Matt Betts
Charles Tang