Read Conversations With the Fat Girl Online
Authors: Liza Palmer
you to refer to a goddamn puppy or a kitten.?I am set on protecting my
man. ?Why don't we try not to have a sailor mouth in this family
establishment, young lady,? Cole says. ?Oh, and Scrawny Ass is sweeping
kindergarten classrooms across the nation? Remember? Scrawny Ass? Ass??
?We're not doin' this.?Cole bangs the espresso out of the coffee handle
and turns his back on me a second time.
34 28 Liza Palmer
I stand there one second too long with my mouth open, anticipating
Cole's next move. There isn't one. His next move turns out to be
ignoring me. I storm into the back room in search of chocolate syrup and
to get away from Cole and my hanging, belligerent questioning. ?Did you
get my invite for Movie Night next week? I left it in your cubbie,?
Peregrine says as she sits in the employee smoking section, which
consists of three plastic white chairs and an upturned milk crate just
outside the door to the back room. She extinguishes her cigarette on her
boot and flicks it as far into the night as it can go. The word cubbie
sounds ridiculous coming out of her mouth. Her dyed blue-black hair is
twirled around in twenty buns all over her head. She is wearing a small,
Japanese-style silk shirt with a black leather skirt. Peregrine was born
Leila Williams in a penthouse in Manhattan. She grew up among the
fashion elite, her mother being a celebrated designer. When it was her
turn to take her place next to her mother's fur-clad throne, Leila moved
to LA and renamed herself Peregrine, like the falcon. Peregrine says she
transplanted herself here from New York to pursue a fashion career. No
one ever questions this move, even though moving away from New York and
her mother's connections to pursue a fashion career seems a bit
backward. After ten years, all she has to show for her dream is a
mannequin in her living room sporting the same pinned Eisenhower jacket
she's had on display since she took it out of the moving van. She never
talks about her deferred dream in a negative way, and no one dares to
ask her what's taking so long. Over the years, Peregrine and I have
become friends. Her Movie Nights, Poker Nights, Trivia Parties, and
holiday gettogethers are legendary. She designs her own invitations and
makes all of us feel like the party wouldn't be the same without us.
Peregrine is that person who brings everyone together. But
35 Conversations with the Fat Girl 29
after the cards are dealt and the beers are cracked open, you've got to
be willing to listen. Peregrine will spin yarn after yarn about herself
and never once look up and notice that you've slit your wrists and
scrawled I AM NOT HAPPY in your own blood on the wall behind you. Still,
within minutes you're back to laughing and having a great time. After
the night is through, you walk away remembering the night as the most
fun you've had in a long time. I guess a night with Peregrine is what
I've been told childbirth is like-you forget the pain and just remember
the beauty of it all. ?Yeah, thanks. Can I let you know later if I can
make it? What are you still doing here??I ask, trying to change the
subject. The memory of the last event still has some remnants of pain.
The splendor of selective memory hasn't kicked in yet. ?Getting a smoke
in before the drive home. What was going on out there?? ?Nothing,?I say,
searching for the chocolate syrup. The last thing I want to do is tell
Peregrine about Cole being an asshole to Domenic and have him walk
through the back door. ?Talked about nothing for a good long while.? ?I
just don't like how Cole talks to people sometimes,?I say on tippy-toes.
reaching for the chocolate syrup. ?That's just Cole. He's a cranky son
of a bitch. You can't keep taking it personally lamb. You know, when I
first met Cole he was I t coming off his big knee injury that cost him
his scholarship. Ii talks like that where I know he's just an embittered
little old ?in who is pissed off about everything. It's not just you.?I
know Peregrine is right. This isn't about who's right or wrong. And I
know this conversation will continue until I agree with her. ?I think he
thinks he means it.?I pull down the syrup and ?n to wipe the dust from
the top of the can. I try to make my comment sound as offhanded as
possible.
36 30 Liza Palmer
?Once again, he's an asshole. You just can't take it
personally,?Peregrine says, taking her apron off and going into the back
room, where the smoking employees leave the mouthwash. ?I'm not taking
it personally I just don't like it,?I say over Peregrine's gargles. She
spits. Peregrine stares at me from the bathroom. Silent. I know this
look and I usually don't like the sermon that inevitably follows.
?What?? I blurt, clutching my chocolate syrup to my bosom The sooner we
start this lesson, the sooner it'll be over. ?You've always been so
sensitive. I think it's getting to the point where you've got to grow up
a little. I mean Cole is Cole. I think you're being a little
self-centered.?I can't fathom how I'm being called self-centered while
the person telling me about this character flaw is staring at herself in
the bathroom mirror. Peregrine tears herself away [or one second to
shoot me that matronly smirk of hers. ?For slit's sake, Maggie, get back
behind the counter.?Cole's voice oozes into the back room. I stare at
Peregrine, not even turning around to see Cole. I can feel the back door
swinging wildly from his entrance and exit. My eyebrows are so high they
are now touching my hairline I wait. Peregrine steps out of the bathroom
and straightens her shirt I am holding on to that can of chocolate syrup
like it is my firstborn. And yet I'm a little cocky. How could I not
take that personally? I await her epiphany She purses her lips and looks
off into the distance. ?I'd better get back,?I say, turning. ?Ahhhh,
sweet pea, he's an asshole - you're just so sensitive. Just think about
what I said.?Peregrine sighs. Unbelievable.
37
Me and Marcus Aurelius
After Cal, I was accepted at San Francisco State University's museum
studies program. I'd majored in art history at Cal and was so dedicated
to the restoration and preservation of great art that I decided to make
that my career. I was good at it. My obsessive attention to detail and
ability to work long hours, without interruption, put me at the top of
my class. I went back to Pasadena after those years excited and ready to
take my place in the working world. I found the job at Joe's a few weeks
after my return from the Bay Area. I told myself I would apply to jobs
in my field throughout that summer and be out of there by fall. I
applied over and over again and was rejected. I kept going to Interviews
and sending resumes, but I was still working at Joe's as I celebrated
Thanksgiving with my family I gave up easily and far too soon. Joe's was
just easier. The coffeemaker begins brewing as I wake up the next
morning. I feel relieved that it's my day off, but dread that it will be
spent sifting, cleaning, and readying for the big move. 1 start n the
kitchen, the room with the most things I can live without
38 32 Liza Palmer
for the next few weeks. I decide to pick up a paper this afternoon and
start the phone calls to prospective landlords. I pack various cabinets
of pots, pans, cookie sheets, and most of the dishes. I am beginning to
get into the deeper recesses of the cabinets. 1 find old tape recorders,
videotapes, and other knickknacks 1 can't remember having. After finding
enough stuff I haven't seen in forever, I go outside, drag in a plastic
trash can, and begin to maniacally toss everything I haven't used in the
past year. I feel lighter but sad for a bygone era that is now being
dragged out trash can by trash can. In another cabinet, I find shoe
boxes of pictures that tumble out at my feet I have apparently been
stuffing them in the cabinet and not in the shoe boxes for some time
now. To open or not to open? That is the question. A shoe box filled to
the rim with old pictures and memorabilia is an invitation to open
Pandora's box. I pull off my head the old baby hat that I've been
wearing since I packed the ?hat drawer?earlier this morning and settle
in. Old school pictures and candid photographs take me back to a time I
don't want to relive, just as I knew they would. Flipping through them,
I feel teleported to that world: Olivia and I the day she got her first
car, our college graduation from Cal, and the day Olivia, my sister, and
I went up to the mountains when we saw it snowing on the news-we just
packed up and started driving. Pictures of Olivia and I in our early
twenties in San Francisco and Washington, DC, take up most of this shoe
box: Olivia and I at one of our many outings at the Golden Gate Bridge.
Olivia and I lunching in Tiburon. Olivia and I toasting with Blue
Hawaiians at a Georgetown bar. I remember that night-the Blue Hawaiian
night-the first time I stayed with Olivia and Adam in their apartment.
39 Conversations with the Fat Girl 33
I was deep into my third year of the master's program at San Francisco
State and trying to get used to a San Francisco without Olivia. I met
Olivia and Adam at a Spanish tapas bar in DC for dinner after flying in
that afternoon. As I walked into the restaurant, I couldn't miss the two
of them. She was stunning in her white pantsuit with bright yellow
pointy heels, but she paled in comparison to how impossibly beautiful
Adam was. That night, he was wearing a black suit with a brilliant blue
buttondown shirt, which opened to reveal his perfect chest. His golden
hair was cut short and moussed to perfection. Upon my arrival, Adam
stood to greet me. I remember my breath catching. I'd forgotten how tall
he was. When I gathered my wits again, I ordered a sautéed mushroom
appetizer. I remember thinking that if I just ate the mushrooms, I would
not officially be going off whatever diet I was on that night. The
mushrooms tasted great, and I felt even better for sticking to this new
mysterious mushroom diet I'd discovered. After dinner, Olivia, Adam, and
I moved to a bar in the Foggy Bottom district. I bought drinks we heard
other people ordering and then we saw them. Two girls, who looked like
they were having the best time, had beautiful neon-blue drinks in huge,
oversize hurricane glasses in front of them. Olivia and I got the
bartender's attention, pointed to the girls, and babbled something like,
?Gimme, gimme, them blue drinkies.? He presented us with two of our very
own Blue Hawaiians. We toasted, giggled like schoolgirls again, and I
drank. And drank. They tasted like candy, so I ordered more. And more.
The only thing I really remember is getting up early the next morning to
the undeniable gurglings of a hangover. I was in Olivia and Adam's tiny
apartment sleeping in the living room on a camping mattress Adam had
loaned me. Olivia and Adam slept in the only bedroom, which I had to
quietly pass through to get to the only
40
bathroom. As the hangover found its legs, I found I was losing any
control over holding anything down. In a panic, I decided to take a
shower, figuring I could throw up all I wanted and they wouldn't hear. I
creaked open the bedroom door to find Olivia sleeping in a queen-size
bed all by herself and her brand-new fiancé, Dr. Adam Farrell, sleeping
in another queen-size bed right next to it. There was a large sleeping
bag clipped to the window blocking all natural light. Adam lay there
with blankets pulled to his perfectly chiseled chin, bright orange
earplugs tucked tight, and a black sleeping mask. I was paralyzed, hut I
feared that throwing up while staring at the sleeping couple might be a
little unnerving for all of us. I padded through the bedroom toward the
bathroom, where I vowed never to drink again. At breakfast that morning
at a local coffee shop, Adam left Olivia and me at the table in search
of a Washington Post. 1 stirred my coffee, pushed up my glasses, and
never made eye contact with Olivia. My head was killing me. I felt
almost too nauseous to drink coffee, which has never since happened,
thank God. Olivia smirked across the table and busted me about my ?rough
morning.?I smiled. It hurt. She showed no signs of our previous night.
Thinking back, I was the only one ordering the blue drinkies. That would
explain this morning. I apologized for bothering their sleep, even
though they had not awakened. I thought she might offer some explanation
for their bizarre sleeping arrangement if she knew I'd seen them. I
could hear my spoon hitting the sides of the coffee mug as we sat in
silence. ?He needs his sleep, you know,?Olivia said, cutting her muffin
into eighths. ?Oh. Is that what the. ?The beds? Yeah. He can't waste one
night sleep, you
know. It's so rare that he gets a full night, he just needs to make the