and yet sheâd been in Kittyâs office. I hadnât seen her since then, so I wondered if her little game was finished.
Ever since Iâd laid my eyes on the book, and the name Verena Baptist, Iâd been transported to Harper Lane. The girl couldnât have known anything about my past, or that Iâd been a Baptist, but thanks to her I couldnât stop thinking about that time, when I was the age of Kittyâs girls. I pushed my laptop aside and began to read again. The memories werenât welcome, but the book pulled me back.
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I became a Baptist during the spring of my junior year of high school. I was sick with the flu and stayed home from school for three days, doing nothing but watching television. The personalities that populated the daytime airwaves were unfamiliar to me, particularly the smiling spokespeople advertising products I hadnât known existed. I had never heard the name Eulayla Baptist before, but she appeared in a series of commercials for Baptist Weight Loss. I had never heard of that, either.
In each commercial, an old photograph of Eulayla Baptist filled the screen. She was enormous in a pair of faded jeans, trying to shield her face from the camera. In a voiceover, she said: âThat was me, Eulayla Baptist. Back then I was so fat, I couldnât even play with my daughter.â Sad violins swelled in the background, reaching a crescendo as thin Eulayla burst through the photograph, ripping it to shreds. She stood in a
ta-da!
pose, her arms extended toward the heavens.
Cut to Eulayla sitting at a sun-dappled kitchen table covered with a red-checkered tablecloth: âBy choosing to eat the Baptist way, youâll never have to starve yourself again. For breakfast and lunch, enjoy a Baptist Shake, flavored with real Georgia peaches. For dinner, the possibilities are endless. Right now, Iâm enjoying chicken ânâ dumplings.â Eulayla, her blond hair in a tight French twist, her ever-present gold cross around her neck, set down her fork and stared into the camera, which moved in for a close-up. âOn the Baptist Plan, thereâs no need to grocery shop or cook. My program provides you with everything you need, except for willpower. That special ingredient has to come from you.â
Every twenty minutes or so this woman appeared on the screen, bursting through her enormous jeans. She was accompanied in the ads by other successful photo-bursters. There was Rosa, age twenty-three: âIf I had to look fat in my wedding dress, then Iâd rather die an old maid.â Sad violins, then
Burst!
Rosa was thin. Marcy, age fifty-seven: âMy husband wanted to take a cruise, but I said âNo way, buster! These thighs arenât getting into a pair of shorts.ââ Sad violins, then
Burst!
Marcy was thin. Cynthia, age forty-one: âAfter my husband was killed on American Airlines Flight 191, I ate at least ten thousand calories a day. If Rodney were still alive, he would have been so ashamed of me.â Sad violins, then
Burst!
Cynthia was thin.
For hours I watched TV, waiting for the ads, mesmerized. I dug out my yearbook from tenth grade, looking at a snapshot of me on page 42. The caption read: âAlicia Kettle works on her science project in the library.â I imagined seeing that photo on TV, me in my ever-present black dress, the roll of fat under my chin.
Burst!
Iâd obliterate that hideous girl.
I wrote down the toll-free number, determined to become a Baptist, though I knew my mother would try to stop me. She had a play-the-cards-youâre-dealt mentality when it came to matters of the body, be it height or weight or hair color. She saw these things as fixed, for the most part. âYouâre beautiful the way you are,â she would always say, and it seemed as if she meant it. Once when we argued about dieting, she said, âYou look like Grandma,â meaning: âYou look like Grandma
and