Dietland

There was a phantom woman in my mind that I was comparing myself to, and I had to force her from the dressing room. When she was gone, I looked at my body, the body that had kept me alive for nearly thirty years, without any serious health problems, the body that had taken me where I needed to go and protected me. I had never appreciated or loved the body that had done so much for me. I had thought of it as my enemy, as nothing more than a shell that enclosed my real self, but it wasn’t a shell. The body was me. This is your real life. You’re already living it. I removed the clothes and stood naked before the mirrors, turning this way and that. I was round and cute in a way I’d never seen before.

 

I told Desiree I would take the red-and-white dress and the trousers and the blouses. On the racks I found a scratchy oatmeal skirt that I adored and I took that, too, along with three more knee-length dresses, one that was dark brown and printed with violet stars, another in emerald, and one that was white with colorful poppies sewn into the neckline and hem. I bought the basic necessities, too—tights and underwear, track bottoms and T-shirts to wear around the house. I also treated myself to a new satchel.

 

Desiree rang up my purchases and I realized that I was buying more than I’d intended, given my ballooning body, but I decided it didn’t matter. Alicia had a wardrobe of fashionable clothes, and Plum deserved one too. Still, as I watched Desiree fold the colorful items, I worried that I might lose my courage once I left the store and not wear what I’d bought. After I paid I went to the dressing room and put on the red and white dress and red tights. I slipped the beige shift and black leggings that I had been wearing into the trash can.

 

At first, when I walked outside with my shopping bags, it was like one of those naked-in-public nightmares. I felt exposed and visible, with nowhere to hide. People stared at me, but then they always stared. I realized it didn’t matter what I wore.

 

On the side of a bus, a pair of breasts whizzed by.

 

As I walked I steadied myself, raising my chin confidently, daring someone to say something. People had always insulted me by calling me fat, but they couldn’t hurt me that way, not anymore. I was fat, and if I no longer saw it as a bad thing, then the weapon they had used against me lost its power.

 

I was wearing bright colors, refusing to apologize for my size. The dress made me feel defiant. For the first time, I didn’t mind taking up space.

 

 

 

After all that walking and shopping, I was hungry. I stopped at a diner on Twenty-Third Street and ordered a Denver omelet with hash browns. When I was finished with that I wanted more, so I ordered a grilled cheese with extra fries. Two teen girls in the booth across from mine stole glances, whispering to each other and laughing. I knew they were laughing at me, at the way I barely fit into the booth, at my red and white dress and my pudgy fingers holding the sandwich. I’d been feeling exhilarated by my triumph with the clothes, but they were trying to ruin it. How dare they. My anger snapped like a rubber band pulled too tight. I wanted to reach over and rip off both their heads.

 

“What the hell are you staring at?” I said loudly, my lips slick with oil. My vehemence surprised me. The words slipped out of my mouth, bypassing the filter that had always been there.

 

The girls didn’t reply, but looked away. Other diners turned in my direction. A waiter came and stood between my booth and the girls’ booth. “We got a problem here?” he said in a dad voice.

 

“No problem,” I said. “Bring me a slice of lemon meringue pie, please.”

 

While I waited for the pie, I turned my body in the direction of the girls, fixing my gaze on them. I watched everything they did, sometimes chuckling to myself. For several minutes I kept my eyes on them. They did everything they could to avoid looking in my direction and they pretended they were unaffected, but unlike me, they didn’t know how to react while under constant surveillance. Finally, they fumbled with their wallets, gathered up their shopping bags and purses, and left the diner.

 

My pie arrived and I savored it, my anger deflating. When the waiter brought the bill I opened my backpack to get my wallet and noticed a paper slipping out of an internal pocket. It was the check for $20,000. I had placed it in the pocket for safekeeping and forgotten about it.

 

I took note of the Baptist name at the top of the check. I could have deposited it, but something stopped me. I was entitled to the money, having completed every task of the New Baptist Plan, but Verena had said that her plan would leave me completely transformed. She had guaranteed it. But after the ups and downs of the day, I couldn’t be sure—was I completely transformed?

 

 

 

I wandered for a few blocks. Glancing at the window display of a boutique, I caught sight of myself in a window and at first I didn’t recognize the woman in the colorful dress as me.

 

On the side of a bus, a pair of breasts whizzed by.

 

I spotted a shoe store and decided to replace my black flats. I browsed the pumps and heels, the slip-ons and sneakers. There was nothing I wanted to try on, but then at the back of the store I noticed boots, furry ones and rubbery white ones with stiletto heels. Tucked into a corner was a pair of black combat boots. The salesman leaned lazily against the wall nearby; I told him I wanted to try the boots on.

 

Sarai Walker's books