Read Conversations With the Fat Girl Online
Authors: Liza Palmer
"Thanks again." I wave.
"No problem. See you later?" Domenic follows his grandmother to the car.
"Absolutely!" I yell, just that much louder than I should.
He did everything right today. And for once I didn't seem to mess it up.
I watch them drive away, lock up the house, return the moving truck, and
head over to the dog emporium. Solo is incensed. I have left her there
the entire day. She wants me to pay for it. I look at Solo and decide to
go ahead and sign her up for obedience classes even though it's money I
can ill afford. I nervously babble on about her genetics and how she's
always been nervous. The woman behind the counter winces as I fill out
the necessary papers and pay the tuition. She then nods and tells me we
need to come in for an evaluation first. I schedule a time and walk to
the car feeling like a proud and responsible pet owner.
I drive home and don't know what to feel first. Peregrine is right. I
drop the key on my filing cabinet that sits right next to the door. Solo
is wandering around among the boxes smelling the old scents. I wish I
could just talk to Domenic about that night. Ask him what the hidden
track means. Ask him what he was thinking bringing another girl to
Peregrine's party. Ask him to be honest. I feel like so much of my life
is spent hiding what I really feel. That's an exact quote from
Peregrine. I hate that she's right. I hate that even as she stared in a
bathroom mirror think-
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ing up trivia questions about herself-she hit the nail on the head about
my entire life.
Why can't I just thank Domenic and, in a breezy tone, ask him if he'd
like to see a movie. Or ask if I could take him to dinner as a
thank-you. Maybe I can make that a goal for this week.
I need my best friend. I want to tell her all about Domenic, the guy who
just sounded fine to her. I put in a call to Washington, DC. The machine
picks up.
"Hey, Olivia . . . it's meeee . . ." No one answers. I keep talking into
the answering machine.
"Well, I am officially moved. I thought I would give you my new number .
. ."
"Hello? Hello?" It's not Olivia.
"Hello?" I question.
"It's Gwen! Where are you? This is Maggie, right?" There's that
tumbleweed again. I can hear the saloon door swinging behind me as I
reach for my six-shooter.
"Yeah, where's Olivia?"
"Oh, she's here. We're all here. Girl, you are missing out. Olivia?
Olivia? You want to talk to Maggie?" Does she want to talk to me? Who
the hell is she? Gwen puts her hand over the receiver and I hear talking
and laughing. I should just hang up.
"Is this Maggie?" It's still not Olivia.
"Who's this?" How many people are going to get on this phone before the
actual person I called is able to speak to me?
"This is Shawna. Shawna Moss. Olivia works in the office next to me. Oh
my God, she does sounds exactly like Olivia. Olivia? Olivia? She sounds
just like you!" Shawna Moss drops the phone in a fit of laughter. I wait
with my head in my hands.
"What did I tell you, girl! You are missing out. We have champagne and
it is flowwwing!" Gwen toasts the receiver.
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"Hey, Gwen?"
"Yeah? What is it, girl?"
"Hey, can you put Olivia on the phone, please?" Girl?
"Oh. Sure. But you are missing out. Oh, and by the by, we chose the
Bellagio in Las Vegas for the bridal shower. We're planning on tons of
shopping." There are gales of laughter in the background. Gwen
continues, "Can you make the reservations? Olivia and I in one room.
Shawna, Hannah, and Panchali will share another. I hear you're bringing
your sister?"
"Kate?"
"Whatever. You can stay with her. Can you make the reservations?"
"Yeah. Can I talk to Olivia now?" She sets the phone down, and once
again there is distant laughing and talking.
"What up, girl?" It's finally Olivia.
"Hey" I relax.
"Is everything okay? Everyone can't wait to meet you. I can't believe
you couldn't make it."
"I just want to give you my new number."
"Oh, just call back and leave it on the machine." There is an explosion
of laughter in the background. "Hannah? Hannah? What the fuck are you
doing? Gwen! You get that girl under control. Shit, Maggie, I've got to
go." I hear Olivia swigging her champagne.
"Oh, okay" Should I have gone out to DC?
"Call back and leave your new number, kay, and can you make those
reservations? Congratulations on the move. Talk to you later." Olivia
hangs up. She might as well have said, Dismissed. I sit there among my
thirty-six boxes, wringing my hands. Paralyzed by confusion.
I stop staring off into space and find my sheets in a box marked KITCHEN
UTENSILS. I make my bed and set out all of my
149 sundries in the bathroom, the brush and the toothbrush trying to
create some kind of homey feeling. I look in the mirror of the medicine
cabinet and smooth on my moisturizer. I stare some more. I shut the
light off and hear Solo jumping on the bed. She's ready for bed and is
finally calming down. I'll make the reservations for the bridal shower
tomorrow.
150
Texas Steven
T he alarm has been going off for twenty-two minutes. It's amazing the
math you can do on such depleted brain capacity. It is now 9:47 a.m. I
have to be at work by 10 a.m. I should have left two minutes ago. I
brush my teeth and throw my hair, once again, into a ponytail. I'll
stick with the glasses today and forgo the extra mile with my contact
lenses. Some days you're Superman and some days you're Clark Kent.
"Hey there, Maggie." Cole's voice is soft.
"Hey" I rush past him and scoot to the back room for an apron and a peek
at the schedule so I can plan my invitation to dinner with Domenic.
Christina is bending over the sink washing her newest batch of dirty dishes.
"What happened to you the other night? At Peregrine's party, you know?
On Thursday?" Christina asks.
"Yeah, I know which night and which event. I went home." "You were taken
home . . . what's, like, up with you?" Christina inches up her pants.
"Nothing. What's up with you?" A little reverse psychology and she'll be
talking about herself in 5 . . . 4 . . . 3 . . .
151 "I met this guy over at this frozen yogurt place in Old Town the
other night, well, it was like Thursday night. Funny, huh? We left the
party pretty much right after you did. It was pretty fun, but then it
wasn't, so we decided to leave, you know?"
"You guys left right after me?" I ask.
"Erin stayed, but me and Cheyenne left. That's where we met up with
these guys at the yogurt place. It was perfect because there were like
two of them and like two of us. It totally worked out."
"Erin stayed?"
"Her and Domenic totally hit it off. Which is cool, but I think Cheyenne
might have liked him first. I'm not sure Erin really should have gone
for him, you know? Anyways, she, like, waited around for him, and . . .
well, you know, he never came back."
"Cheyenne liked him first?" I ask.
"Oh, yeah. She met him the other day out in front. You know, of the
coffeehouse?" Christina points toward the front of the coffeehouse. She
waits for me to acknowledge. I nod. She continues, "She thought he was
cool. He's not all that hot, so I don't know." Christina still uses the
word hot. She tends to drag the o out like a Canadian adolescent.
"Yeah, he's not that . . . hot."
"I guess Domenic and Erin went out again last night." "Last night?"
"Yeah, Erin called me first thing. She couldn't call Cheyenne, could she?"
"No. No, she sure couldn't. I'd better get out there, you know Cole." My
stomach lurches.
The rest of the day is a blur of downward spiraling and knocking my head
against any hard surface. How could I have thought for one instant that
Domenic would actually be inter-
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ested in me? This is classic Maggie-falling so hard and falling so fast
and never asking any serious questions. It's me on the monkey bars
again. I jump from an offhand glance in my direction to marriage and
babies. I had convinced myself that Domenic had a "nervous energy"
around me. Then I ran with the "nervous energy" idea and concocted whole
scenarios about him liking me and the fantasy was born. In reality, he's
dating this Erin girl and we're just friends . . . again.
I should be spending my time finding someone more suitable for me.
Someone more mature and ready to be in an adult relationship. Someone
who is not already dating shredded-wheat-haired girls named Erin.
Texas Steven.
I could be spontaneous and call him right now, out of the blue. I'll
show Olivia and her fantasy theory and Domenic and his misleading
nervous energy. It's been months since we spoke, and Steven called me
last. Why didn't I think of this before? I don't care what Kate says
about Steven being a loser; I just don't want to be waiting around when
Domenic and Erin send out their wedding invitations.
On the way home from work, I dig my cell phone out of the bottom of my
purse. The battery is dead as usual. Why do I even have one of these
things? I find the charger, plug the lifeless phone into the power
outlet, and scroll through the saved phone numbers to find Texas
Steven's. Ahh, that's why. A cell phone really is just an expensive
address book.
What's the worst that can happen? I'll have a harmless dinner or a
meaningless drink with an old friend. No, the worst that can happen is I
call this number and leave a funny, heartwarming message and never, ever
get a call back. He would just never get around to it. Okay, back to the
best that can happen. Sparks. Fireworks. Exploration. Slow dancing with
my head on
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his chest in the city hall gardens under strands and strands of Italian
cafe lights.
"Hello?" Steven answers quickly
"Steven? It's Maggie." I hold the cell phone to my ear with my shoulder
as I park in my assigned space.
"Heeeeeeyyyyy." His voice is warm and happy. That twang makes my knees
weak every time.
"What have you been doing with yourself these days?" Just being breezy
"I started another internship. This one is at a production office over
in LA. Nothing big. What about you?"
"1 just moved into a fabulous little cottage," I say, fumbling with the
key to the front door.
"What are you doing right now?" Besides being in my fabulous little cottage?
"Nothing." I need to stop saying the things that come naturally to me. I
need to rethink every single word that comes out
of my mouth. Nothing? You can't say nothing. You're burning CDs with
hidden tracks and calling them albums. You're in the
middle of your book club and it's your turn to discuss theme and
symbolism. You've hired a stripper for the evening on a whim and he's
standing naked and aroused before you.
"I was about to head out to a late movie. You up for something like that?"
"What time?"
"The movie starts at ten fifty. Can you get there in time?" "I'll meet
you out front."
We work out the details and as usual he signs off by saying, "Late."
"Okay, bye!" I beep my cell phone off and look at the shambles of my
house, dishes and everything still in boxes.
The only art I've hung up are my three favorite pieces over the
154 148Liza Palmer
fireplace. Everything else is blank. I think of Domenic moving all my
furniture into this tiny space. He looked so right in this house. He
played Rock, Paper, Scissors with Bella and never threw Scissors. What
am I doing here? Why am I not calling Domenic and asking him to go to a
movie? Why aren't I lying to Domenic about strippers and book clubs?
Because, I remind myself, he's probably out with Erin again.
I try to put together some kind of outfit. Have I gained or lost weight
since I've last seen Steven? Who can really tell anymore? Have I gotten
to the point where I'm so far from my Goal Weight that I'm now making
deals with myself that I just won't get any bigger? I put on a pair of