flipped through them to see the girl under the tree become a young woman, one who grew larger and larger, moving into the house, standing behind the curtainâhalf in the frame, then nothing but shadow.
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TWO DAYS AFTER FINDING
Adventures in Dietland
at Kittyâs office, I had nearly finished reading it. I should have been at the café answering messages, but Iâd abandoned my work for the book. I soaked in a bath while reading, careful not to dampen the custard-colored pages.
Twelve years had passed since I was a Baptist. I had rarely thought of that time over the years, but as I read, the memories of the Baptist Plan came alive in my mind. I could taste the food: the metallic, watered-down tomato of the pizza and pasta, the casseroles that tasted the way carpet cleaner smells. I remembered the Baptist Shakes, their chalky texture, their medicinal, sour aftertaste. When the company closed, I knew only the most superficial details: Verena Baptist inherited the company and as the sole shareholder she had the power to shut it down, which she did within days of her parentsâ fiery car crash. I had hated Eulayla Baptistâs daughter then, but I had never known her name. Now, thanks to the girl, I held her words in my hands.
Verena wrote that after she closed the company, she was left with âgallons of Baptist Shakes, vats of beef stew, and truckloads of chicken breasts slathered in a mysterious goo,â all of which were given to soup kitchens and homeless shelters, âto people who were starving by no choice of their own.â Verena described this as an act of charity, and I supposed the Baptist meals were slightly better than nothing.
I couldnât help but feel disgusted and angry while reading about Eulayla Baptist. Like all Baptists, Iâd been destined to fail, but I blamed myself when I did. I may have hated Eulaylaâs daughter once, but as I read the book I was glad that sheâd exposed her mother. I knew my failure as a Baptist wasnât my fault.
I did wonder why Verena turned on her mother so publicly. Verena slipped through the pages of the book for the most part, but in the first paragraph she was there, most tellingly: âBefore my birth, Mama was a slim young bride. She and Daddy set up house in Atlanta and for one shining year things couldnât have been better. Then one tipsy night after martinis on the veranda with the Ambersons from across the street, Daddy impregnated Mama with a bomb that took nine months to blow up, leaving her fat and scarred, with stretch marks and a waistline that looked like an inner tube.â
That bomb was Verena. She had ruined her motherâs figure, which led to an obsession with dieting, which led to the horror of Baptist Weight Loss being inflicted on the world. I wondered if this was why Verena had decided to disgrace her dead mother in print and reveal her secrets: Sheâd been made to feel guilty for being born.
The book wasnât only about Baptist Weight Loss. Verena attempted to expose the entire weight-loss industry. She wrote extensively about the many weight-loss authors and gurus, diet drugs, even the surgery I was planning to have. She devoted a whole chapter to liberating oneself from what she called Dietland. âDietland is about making women small,â Verena wrote. I thought my mother would enjoy her book. I was sure she would have sent me a copy if she knew of its existence.
Inside the book were photographs of Eulayla, one from her beauty queen days and another from her fat years, as well as the famous photo of thin Eulayla holding up her fat jeans. In one photo, her face was taut and her legs were slim, but she was still slightly roomy in the hips. I looked at the photo and thought that in death, Eulayla had finally achieved what had eluded her in life. As a corpse
Dean Wesley Smith, Kristine Kathryn Rusch
Martin A. Lee, Bruce Shlain