nize Ma? Because I really don’t see it that way—not
at all.
Besides, I don’t want to talk about her, or her
secrets or any of that stuff right now—not on the day
of my big night out!
You’ll be happy to know that after the embarrass-
ment in Marciella’s, I pulled some kind of outfit to-
gether. It’s not as glamorous as I would have liked, but
it’s nice, I think. Of course, I’ll still be the fat chick, but
I’m going to try hard to look as good as I can. Fortu-
nately, I also have my sparkling personality to rely on—
along with a fantastic repertoire of scenes from
Hollywood’s greatest!
Still . . . I’m nervous, P. Really nervous. I think he
DIARY OF AN UGLY DUCKLING
59
may really like me. God, I hope so. But the things Ma
says get under my skin sometimes and make me
doubt myself. And it doesn’t help that I have that trou-
ble brewing at work, either. Sometimes it feels like
everything’s always against me and it will take a mon-
umental change to turn it around . . .
Or maybe I just need to eat a few more Oreos!
Wish you were here,
Ugly Sister
Too trendy for words.
That’s what the place was, considering it was
in a basement, sandwiched between an Indian
restaurant and an art gallery in a “transitional”
neighborhood in Brooklyn.
It’s at least aptly named
, Audra thought, studying
the bright neon script spelling out the word: Caverna.
A cinnamon-skinned teenager with long, black
hair, wearing a tiny beaded halter, stood just outside
the entrance dragging determinedly on a cigarette
and pretending not to shiver while a not-quite-
spring breeze caught the smoke and bore it away. A
short, older-looking white kid stood near her, talk-
ing excitedly, but the chick barely seemed to be listen-
ing. As Audra descended the five steps toward the
bar’s entrance, the odd couple fixed their collective
gaze on Audra, making her feel self-conscious all
over again: Her nicest black pants were tighter than
she would have liked, and the yellow-shawl-like top
from the plus-size store that had been her second
choice flapped in the breeze like a tent. The pointy
toes of her new shoes pinched her feet. Audra
60
Karyn Langhorne
wished there were time for one last check of the
makeup slathered on her face like a mask by a deter-
mined beauty consultant a few hours ago, but there
wasn’t. She was here now . . . and acne or no acne,
running mascara or lipsticked teeth, her look would
have to be good enough.
Still, if she weren’t mistaken, the kids were giving
her that same folded-lip look her mother had given
her just before she’d walked out the door . . . and to
make matters worse, she thought she heard the
smoking girl burst into a twitter of sudden laughter
in the space between the time Audra’s foot crossed
the threshold of the club and the second after, when
the door thudded closed behind her.
She shook off the sound with difficulty and
looked around her.
The owners of Caverna had taken the cave thing
literally. It was dark except for a few torch-shaped
sconces set strategically around the room. The ceil-
ing dripped with stalactites and the tables and
chairs were designed so they looked like stalagmites
growing up from the cave floor. Audra thought she
heard the sound of dripping water under the pump-
ing rhythm of hip-hop music, but could not locate
its source among the crowd of youthful bodies jam-
ming every square inch of the place.
Sleek girls in slim, short skirts and high heels,
showing brown midriffs from tiny halters danced
with boys in low-slung pants and slick-patterned
shirts. Other girls were more conservative in their
strapless, gauzy chiffon and flouncy, asymmetrical
hems, but all of them were so attractive and ener-
getic that Audra hesitated, the worst memories of
DIARY OF AN UGLY DUCKLING
61
herself as an uncool high schooler returning with a
vengeance.
This was a mistake
, a voice from deep inside her an-
nounced, flashing back to many a high-school
dance, when Audra’s only companion had been her
own isolation, her own loneliness.
There’s nothing for
you here
. Audra’s feet seemed inclined to agree. They
were already shuffling her backward away from the
dancing and the music and the whole party scene.
This isn’t high school. He invited me and we’re going
,
Audra told her juvenile self, pulling the mantle of
dead Hollywood dames around her consciousness
like a shield. She strode deeper into the place, her
too-round hips bumping and jostling against the
sharp angles of the dancing young people, scanning
the corners of the room for her host’s broad-
shouldered silence. She had already decided: She’d
greet him with that famous line from
All About Eve
:
“Fasten your seat belts. It’s going to be a bumpy
night!” and see what developed from there.
“Marks!”
Audra turned toward her name and saw him,
standing in a dark crevice of the room where
the stone bar curved toward darkness. “Marks!”
Bradshaw shouted again over the music, waving his
arm. “Here!”
The sound of his voice erased her carefully pre-
pared dialogue, but the awkward memories of
teenageness also dissipated, so Audra wasn’t en-
tirely mad at him. Her heart skipped a quick beat
as a feeling of excitement and eagerness replaced
the unease that had been there a moment before.
She waved back, smiling, and began her approach,
62
Karyn Langhorne
moving determinedly through the dancing bodies
toward the rear of the room.
He looked delicious: like the sweetest bar of milk
chocolate, luscious from the gleaming skin of his
head to the tips of his toes, and Audra could imag-
ine gobbling him up in a single serving as she took
in the pure sexiness of the man. He looked like he’d
just stepped out of a magazine, from his crisp
seventies-style butterfly-collared shirt in a soft fab-
ric that looked like linen, opened to the smooth
mocha of his perfect throat. He wore dark slacks
and shoes. But it was his face that most capti-
vated Audra’s attention: those liquid eyes, strong
cheekbones—and those lips! Audra imagined her-
self getting a nibble of those beautiful bow-shaped
lips and just the thought of it was better than the
thought of a bag full of Oreos—with a candy bar on
the side.
She pulled at the yellow shawl, baring a bit more
rounded, ebony shoulder, and willed the butterflies
in the pit of her stomach to stillness as a wide,
happy grin spilled across her face.
“Hi, Bradshaw—”
“Art,” he corrected, blessing her with a curve of
those luscious lips.
Audra’s heart did another desperate flutter up
her windpipe and then down to her kneecaps before
she panted out, “Art.”
“Glad you could make it. You look . . .” his eyes
swept over her. Audra gave the yellow top another
tug, showing even more plump shoulder, before he
finished, “nice.”
“Thanks. So do you.” She glanced around. “Looks
DIARY OF AN UGLY DUCKLING
63
like your daughter has a good turnout.” She peered
around the dance floor. “Which one is she—?”
A woman approached them, gliding confidently
up to Bradshaw and slipping her arm through his
with a certain possessiveness that couldn’t be mis-
taken for anything else. At first, Audra thought she
must be Bradshaw’s daughter, but in another instant
she realized her mistake.
Her skin was the shade of roasted almonds—fair
and smooth. Her hair, long and dark, burnt straight
and smooth by the latest chemical process, gleamed
off her forehead until it disappeared down her back
in a tumbling wave that brushed against the soft
fabric of her blouse. Audra’s breath caught in her
throat: She was wearing the same top Audra had
struggled so mightily to fit into the day before, but
clearly, based on the delicate bones of her shoulders
and the thinness of her, in a very much smaller size.
A tiny flare sprang to life in Audra’s soul, burning
with the unfairness of it all . . . and then the woman
locked eyes with her.
“Audra Marks,” Art Bradshaw turned toward the
woman, his eyes shining with an emotion Audra
thought must be desire, but she couldn’t be certain
in the low lights. “I’d like you to meet Esmeralda
Prince.”
Esmeralda Prince. Esmeralda Prince. The name
tripped off the tongue, made little skipping sounds
through the mind. It was a pretty name . . . one that
suited her, conjuring as it did the very kind of
smoky, distant beauty this woman was in possession
of. Audra stared at her, drinking in every detail of
her features, from the perfect café au lait of her skin
64
Karyn Langhorne
to the sculpted bones of her cheeks and the way the
designer blouse hung as perfectly off her shoulder
as it had on the boutique mannekin. Audra realized
that the top she’d wanted to buy wasn’t a top at all,
but a tunic—and Esmeralda wore it like a dress,
with nothing beneath it but a pair of stiletto heels.
Audra watched her green eyes, shadowed with dra-
matic makeup as they flickered with some unspo-
ken thought and wondered if there were enough
makeup on the planet to make her own face look
like that.
Esmeralda Prince appraised Audra dispassion-
ately as she quirked an exquisitely shaped eyebrow
over a lovely sea-green eye, then shook her dark
tresses.
“Nice to meet you,” she said in a husky, sexy
voice.
With a fresh stab of ugliness, Audra felt the con-
trast. Standing side by side, Esmeralda was like a
sunrise and Audra the deepest midnight; Esmeralda
was a leggy twig . . . and Audra a dumpy donut, a
hole in her center where her heart should have been.
But it wasn’t the voice or the woman’s obvious
beauty that made a sharp pain skewer her heart like
a shish kebab. It was the way Art Bradshaw’s hand
curved over the woman’s shoulder, the way his eyes
locked on her face when she spoke, even though she
wasn’t looking at him.
Art Bradshaw was completely in this elegant
woman’s thrall . . . in the same fascinated way Au-
dra was in his.
Queen of Denial
. . . her mother murmured in her
ear.
Queenie D
. . .
DIARY OF AN UGLY DUCKLING
65
Looking at the two of them was like a rock in the
face of her perfect fantasy. Audra watched her illu-
sions fracture and shatter like so much glass.
But there they were, staring at her, waiting for her
to say something. Audra suppressed the thousand
needles of mortifications prickling beneath her skin,
and tossed her head, diva-style.
“Charmed, darling,” she purred, offering a limp
hand in perfect imitation of the silver screen legend.
“Bette Davis,” Bradshaw said immediately, his
smooth low voice rumbling over the hip-hop beat
surrounding them. To Esmeralda: “Audra’s a fan of
the old movies.”
Esmeralda’s eyebrow arched even higher as she
said in a not entirely pleasant tone: “You two would
be perfect for each other.” She reached for a small,
shimmery handbag resting on the table. “I’ll be in
the ladies’.”
There was an awkward pause as she shrugged
Bradshaw’s hand from her shoulder and stalked
away.
Art Bradshaw frowned. “Don’t mind her,” he be-
gan, his eyes following the sway of the woman’s
hips as she disappeared. “She’s—”
“Rude,” a youthful voice completed the sentence,
replete with attitude.
Bradshaw turned toward the table behind him. In
the dim candlelight, a teenage girl in a relatively de-
mure black dress hunched over a soda, her shoul-
ders drawn tight to her shoulders, as though trying
to blend into the scenery.
“Cut it out, Penny,” Bradshaw said, warning in
his tone.
66
Karyn Langhorne
“But it’s true, Dad—”
“No, it’s not—”
“She only gets away with it because she’s pretty,”
Penny insisted. “The rules are always different if
you’re pretty enough—”
“That’s enough, Penny,” Bradshaw snapped,
sounding at the crust of his patience. “Now come
and say hello to Ms. Marks.”
“Do I have to?”
“Now!” Bradshaw barked, making it clear that
that remaining crust of his patience had now been
consumed. Even over the loud music, several youth-
ful heads turned toward them.
Penny slid out of her chair, rolling her eyes. “Gee,