Diary of an Ugly Duckling Langhorne, Karyn (reading rainbow books txt) 📖
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have the title ‘producer’ on these programs. Camilla’s
the executive producer who does the work.”
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Karyn Langhorne
“I don’t know anything about television. I’m a
classic movies chick myself.”
“The titles of the producers should be the last
thing on your mind, honey,” Carla said, swabbing a
streak down Audra’s arm with a cotton ball.
“Oh yeah?”
“Yeah,” she gazed earnestly into Audra’s face. “I
just hope you’re not sensitive to criticism.” She
shook her head again, before gazing at Audra with a
look of such intensity the odd, nervous feeling of
grave importance fluttered in Audra’s belly again.
“Why?”
The woman hesitated, and then sighed. “I’ve only
had to sit through one of these kinds of sessions . . .
and”—she paused again, her eyes finding Audra’s—
“they really know how to take people apart, body
part by body part. It’s a little creepy—like sitting
down with Dr. Frankenstein while he assembles his
monster . . .” She shuddered until she felt Audra’s
eyes, wide and nervous, fixed closely on her face.
“But of course, instead of a monster what they end
up with is a beautiful woman. Right?” she added,
struggling to resume her former brightness. “Now
let’s find a good vein and draw this blood.”
Chapter 9
“So which one was it? The Atkins or South
Beach?”
Shamiyah thrust a deli box of salad greens into
Audra’s hands, along with a massive bottle of water.
“Never mind, this should work with either one,”
she continued before Audra even could process the
words.
“You’re talking about my diet, right?” Audra said.
“I really wasn’t following any particular plan. It’s
not like I’ve been living on salads or anything. I
just . . .” and she stopped short, not sure that she
wanted to admit that she really had only given up
candy bars and Oreos, along with the late-night
habit of snacking to the dramas of Betty, Joan and
Barbara. “Cut back. Started lifting a little weight—”
“Well, girl, you better like salads, because if you
come on this show, that’s the bulk of what you’re
gonna be eating for a good three months—”
“Just salads?” Audra spat. “I’m down with the
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slice-and-dice plastic surgery, but salads every day?
That’s near inhuman! What about jerk chicken?
What about fried chicken and macaroni or—”
“Just salads.” Shamiyah said with such finality
that it made Audra’s heart sink. “Remember what I
told you? About being willing to do anything?”
Shamiyah’s eyes searched Audra, assessing her sin-
cerity again.
Audra nodded slowly.
“Just salads,” Shamiyah repeated, then glanced
toward the door, an edge creeping into her voice.
“They’ll be here in a second . . . and a few of them
won’t like seeing you eating, even if it’s only a salad.
Hurry up, all right? Have you got the pictures from
the fashion magazines? The features you like?”
Audra nodded, pulling a wad of ripped pages
from her back pocket. “I got ’em. But I gotta tell you,
Shamiyah, I don’t see how I could ever look like any
of those girls. But I brought a picture of my sister
Petra—” Audra reached for her wallet, flipping to
the wedding photo of Petra and her husband. “I re-
ally think—”
“It’s okay,” Shamiyah said, not even glancing at
the picture. “They probably won’t ask you for that
input today . . . but making sure you’re prepared is a
part of my job. Now, hurry up!” She glanced at
a sporty wristwatch in a candy apple shade of red.
“I swear, she’s fanatical about time . . . and we don’t
have much more of it.”
When the salad and water were consumed,
Shamiyah seated Audra at the head of a long table,
so dark and highly polished that Audra could see
DIARY OF AN UGLY DUCKLING
111
her reflection in its gleaming surface. At the other
end of the room, a large-screen plasma television
hung from the wall, a small laptop computer rest-
ing on a stand just beneath it. Audra glanced
around the rest of the room, but for the most part it
looked like a conference room she might have found
anywhere—nicer than many, but still just a confer-
ence room.
Or it would have, had it not been for the light
poles dotting the carpet, angling their theatrical
lighting implements toward the table from every
conceivable vantage point.
“Are there going to be cameras?” Audra asked,
raising her eyebrows in surprise.
“Is this Hollywood?” Shamiyah shot back and this
time there was no mistaking the anxiety in her
voice. “You read the papers you signed, right? We
tape just about everything—”
“But I thought this was preliminary?”
“If you’re willing to do what they want, it won’t
be,” Shamiyah said cryptically, then took a seat far
away, leaving a gap of at least a half dozen chairs be-
tween them.
Cameras. Audra let the idea sink in. Somehow,
from what Shamiyah had said, she hadn’t expected
there to be cameras at this extremely preliminary
stage . . . but then, as Shamiyah had also said, this
was Hollywood, and Ugly Duckling was a television
show.
“Most of this footage probably won’t get used . . .
but you never know,” Shamiyah said as if she real-
ized the coldness of her earlier comments. “I’d
rather have it than wish I had it, you know? Besides,
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you signed the papers.” She shrugged her shoul-
ders. “We own your image and your story now . . . at
least for a while.”
Audra nodded like she was in the know, even as
another creepy feeling, like a footstep on her grave,
crept down her back. Even the image of her trans-
formed self wasn’t enough to dissipate it. She shud-
dered in spite of herself, searching for an anchor to
banish fear and root her in the present moment.
“Why are you sitting way down there?” Audra
asked, focusing all of her attention on the other
woman. “Did my deodorant quit or something?”
She sniffed at her pits, tossing a smile at Shamiyah.
“I know it’s been a tough morning, but Carla did
douse me in a pool of water just before I came back
up here.”
Shamiyah smiled and opened her mouth like she
was about to answer, but then the door opened and
the sound of other voices filled the room.
The first to enter was a smallish, wiry-looking
white man with dark hair on both his head and his
chin, and a white lab coat over a dress shirt and tie.
His lips quirked
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