significant glance at Audra. “Just skip all the
financial and insurance information. Write Ugly
Duckling . They know where to send the bills.”
“So basically, I’m giving these docs permission to
kill me and your production company permission to
film it.” Audra quirked an eyebrow at Shamiyah. “Is
that about right?”
For once, Shamiyah seemed to forget to smile.
“Yes, that’s about it,” she said levelly, meeting Au-
dra’s eyes. “You’re cool with that, though, right?”
For the first time, a current of the seriousness of
this undertaking charged the air between them like
ions before a lightning storm. Audra grabbed the
edge of the reception desk, steadying herself.
The whole point was to remake herself . . . and
she was actually here, in Los Angeles, to find out
if—and how—it could be done. She imagined her-
self transformed into a swan of unimaginable
beauty, and inhaled.
“Ice-cold chilly,” Audra told the woman, clench-
ing and unclenching her fist, making ready for the
work at hand. She grabbed the folder, crossed the
room and threw herself into a nearby chair, feigning
exhaustion. “I’m gonna need surgery for carpal tun-
nel by the time you guys get done with me.”
“Carpal tunnel?” The blonde’s confusion seemed
to deepen even further. “I don’t think Dr. Bremmar
does that . It’s somewhere in the foot, right?” She
smiled and continued before either Shamiyah or
Audra could respond. “Can I get you ladies some-
thing? Espresso? Latte?”
“Double skim latte sounds great to me,” Shamiyah
DIARY OF AN UGLY DUCKLING
103
breathed. “You’re a life saver, Maisy. Just a life saver!
Audra?”
A Snickers bar would really hit the spot , Audra
thought, but she decided against saying that out
loud in this company. Instead, she shook her head,
“No, thanks.”
“We also have all kinds of fruit juices,” Maisy
tempted, as though it were specifically in her job de-
scription to make sure every guest had a cup of
something. “Papaya? Kiwi? Guava?”
Audra grimaced. “No, thanks,” she insisted and
watched the girl’s face crumple in disappointment.
“Are you sure?”
“How about just a bottled water?” she said to
keep the girl from feeling like a failure, and watched
a smile twitch Maisy’s lean face again. “Okay, so
that’s one double skim water”—she slapped herself
on the forehead—“Double skim water! I mean,
latte—and a water.” She nodded. “When you finish
with those”—she nodded at the forms—“Room One
is the first one on the left. Go on in, she’s expecting
you. I’ll be back in a flash with your drinks.”
“Thanks, Maize,” Shamiyah said, already pulling
Audra down the hall. The second they were out of
earshot, she murmured, “You can do those forms
later. And don’t mind her . She’s nice enough . . . but
she’s not here for her brains. She’s a walking adver-
tisement for Bremmar and Koch’s work. Nose, eyes,
chin, boobs, lipo—you name it.”
Audra nodded. “I suspected as much.”
They stopped outside a door upon which a silver
1 had been affixed. Shamiyah lay her hand on the
knob, then paused, staring hard into Audra’s face.
104
Karyn Langhorne
“I’m not supposed to tell you this,” she said at last,
“but I really want you to have this chance, Audra.
The rest of the candidates won’t do this step until
we bring them here in three weeks. We’re doing this
now for you, because, of all the tapes we got from
African-American women—and there weren’t that
many, I’m sorry to say—yours was absolutely the
best .” She lowered her voice. “But these docs,
they’ve got real concerns about whether they can
make your transformation work. The only way I
could convince them to consider you was with this
advance consultation to work out the . . . details. But
you can never tell anybody about it and . . .”—she
leaned closer, her eyes
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