Excerpt January 2021 Edition
I was looking at my schedule for the week. I had already done three photoshoots so far. Since school hadn't started yet, Lisa was going to book every job possible. I was the It girl at the agency, and it should've felt great. Modeling was a world where people loved me, but only on the outside. "What's on the inside is what counts"—that's what
Mama used to say. When I was at work, no one cared about what was on the inside, and I felt empty inside.
I lay my head on my pillow. Edna used the softest sheets on earth to make my bed. Half the time, I didn’t want to get out of it, especially on Sunday mornings. My cell phone was vibrating.
What are you doing? Sierra texted.
Nothing.
I’m on your block. Coming up, she texted.
Okay. Cool.
A few minutes later, Sierra was at my bedroom door.
“Do you ever wonder what people say about you?” I asked.
“Nice way to greet me. Hello,” she retorted.
"Hi." I hugged her.
“I don’t know. I think people would say you have the best genes ever!” she said.
“People would say you are smart,” I said.
Sierra winced a little.
“Really smart, and pretty. I would want people to say I was smart,” I added.
“I would say you were blithe,” she countered.
“You think I’m cheerful?” I had the image of a cheerleader in my head.
“More like carefree. I mean, you’re a supermodel, and your bedroom is the size of my parents’ bedroom. Plus your boyfriend is super hot.”
“Thanks.” I smiled.
I knew Sierra meant well. I didn't dare to confess that all that glitters isn't blithe.
We were quiet for a moment. She marveled at my room like she did each time she came over. She loved this heart I drew on the wall when I was eight. It was now chest high.
“This is like my heart,” she said.
The names of my family were written on the inside. I had since outlined the outside of the heart with Swarovski crystals, my latest obsession.
I laughed. “You’re way too sweet sometimes,” I said.
“Would you make a new one for us?” she asked.
I went to my desk and pulled out a pen with a feather tip. I drew a heart on the wall next to the old drawing, and inside I wrote, “Milan, Sierra, and Frenchy 4Ever!”
She grinned.“You are beyond awesome.”
“What would I have without you guys?” I asked. “You’re like my sisters.”
Sierra hugged me. I decided to get a little more serious.
“Wouldn’t you like to be described as ‘ardent’?” I asked.
She scoffed. “That’s an SAT word.” She typed the word into her cell’s notepad, her fingers flying as she tapped away. “I’m taking the October test.”
“A photographer said it to me last week,” I said.
She looked up at me. “What does it mean?” she asked.
“Passionate and intense.”
Sierra didn’t understand. I wanted to feel like I was on fire, like a rocket on blastoff. I wanted to really love something, to express the other parts of me no one ever saw.
A look of envy crossed over her face. “I want that as part of my vernacular.” Sierra used air quotes around the word “vernacular.”
“This is not about the SATs,” I said.
“Whatever.”
I barely had time to blink before the topic changed to guys.
“Did you and Merek…you know?” Sierra asked.
What made her ask that?
“Why? You think it’s too soon?” I asked.
“No. I mean, I’m still…you know.” She sighed, defeated. “There are no worthy candidates,” she said.
I rolled my eyes. How long would it be before that got old? It was just sex, not the disarming of an atom bomb. Was it such a delicate subject? A guy needed to be a rocket scientist to pass Sierra's qualifications. Though I must admit, she wasn't half wrong—she wasn't missing much.
“Frenchy told me that Cara told her that she saw you guys walk into the W downtown. Don’t tell that I told you, though,” Sierra said, her eyes wide.
“I wouldn’t,” I promised.
I felt so invaded like someone had seen me getting dressed—or worse. Maybe we were being videotaped.
“I should tell Cara I know I’m being stalked,” I said, acting like I wasn’t bothered.
In reality, I was very angry, but part of me was a little frightened. I hated that I was shaken. I had liked to think of myself as somewhat brave, and the brave part of me would wait before I confronted Cara. All I knew was that she was constantly around because she was involved with my brother. But why did she want to know what Merek and I did? Maybe she was like a school paparazzi. She seemed to know a little something about everyone—just enough to make them like her, or pretend to like her.
“I don’t know what’s up with Frenchy, but she’s mad at you because you didn’t tell us,” Sierra said.
“I was going to.”
I got up and walked into the bathroom. I hadn’t told anyone yet. It was just two days ago. I washed my face, not knowing how I felt about the whole thing. I just wanted it to be my little secret, but that was probably because I liked to keep some special things to myself. Keeping the secret of my deafness from almost the entire world just wasn’t enough.
When I first started modeling, I hadn’t told anyone at school about my new “job.” I had all types of friends then. I was just a junior with no stake in the A-list at school. Now, I was at the top of the A-list. After word got out that I had just signed for one of the nation’s largest modeling companies, I was suddenly popular. Did it mean I was more interesting than the five hundred other students at school? Did it mean they would be whispering about me and Merek? I never truly paid attention to what the other students gossiped about; I wondered if they talked about the A-listers. If my high school had its own version of People magazine, we would be on the front cover.
Before I could fully emerge from the bathroom, Sierra was standing by the door, staring at me.
“Did it hurt?” Sierra asked.
"I can't even...uhh!" I said.
Sierra was one of those people who said whatever she was thinking. We had all thought that before when someone told us they'd done it for the first time. But I was always too shy to actually ask.
I walked over to my dresser and picked up a
hair tie. I pulled my hair into a ponytail. I was stalling, of course. Part of me was pissed she would even consider asking that question—after all, it was my business? Why did she care what I did with my body and with the boy I was seeing? Besides, I wasn't ready to talk about it like that. But she was standing over me for an answer. After I had done it, I knew I could never love him like I loved Noel. Part of me had already known that even before we had sex. When Merek and I were doing it, it was like my entire relationship with Noel flashed before my eyes. I'm pretty sure it's not normal to think about someone else when you're having sex with a guy. Should I tell her that what she thought it was, it wasn't?
"Is that the vibe I'm giving? We're best friends who else would you tell? I would totes tell everything!"
"Cringy."
"What?"
I turned around and donned my best fake smile, the one she could never see-through. "It was perfect." I sighed for dramatic effect. "He was sweet. And it did hurt right at first. Facts."
I pursed my lips shut, hoping she could see I didn’t want to discuss it anymore, hoping that answer would be good enough.
"Hmm," she said, twirling a strand of hair around her finger.
"Let's do a movie." "What's playing?" I said.
Oh, god. I hated going to the movies. Going to the movies translated into intense lip-reading for two hours.
"Something good should be on Prime," she said.
And like that, Sierra was staying for the night. Sometimes I thought she liked my house better than her own. Whenever we were over at her house, she was always angry at her mom. But she would never tell me why. At least, it didn’t feel like I was getting the whole story—something about her mother not treating her dad right. In my house, it had always been the other way around, so that threw me for a loop. I tried not to think about it. But the idea slipped into my mind anyway. I would trade places with her any day. If I had Mama back, I would never be mad at her.
Give a Gift & Get a Gift
Try our Holiday Eyeliner Kit or Our Glow Up Glitter Sticks. Have Dry Winter Lips? Try our Lip Duo. Holiday Beauty Solutions are our Specialty
About Beauty and the City!
Beauty and the City is THE online shop to bring out your inner “It Girl”
From personalized beauty boxes to make-up kits that highlight your skin, eyes, lips to our style blog, everything you need is in one place to show off and step out as the beauty in your city!
We are so excited to debut our beauty kits. In our Beauty and the City Chapter Magazines, The Squad is all about quick beauty on the go so they can spend more time with their baes and enjoying their city. We transformed those inspirations into special kits worthy of love from any beauty on the go.
Xoxo, BNTC
**All of our Beauty and the City products are ALWAYS paraben-free, hypoallergenic, cruelty-free, and made with natural ingredients like peppermint oil, coconut oil, rosemary oil, and more. We believe it is important to do good on purpose. So we donate 1% of all sales to charity.
Here's How It All Begins:
The beginning of the end started the summer before senior year. Seventeen years old—a record year for me. I was just a girl. The only Milan on Manhattan’s Upper East Side. Being the only anything in New York was rare. Like all girls, I had a secret. Being deaf was something I found easier to deal with when fewer people knew, so just before starting a new high school and after Mama’s accident, I reinvented myself. I left my hearing aid at home permanently, which made it difficult at times because I only had partial hearing in one ear to start with. Without my hearing aid, I really was in complete silence. Yet I had other skills that allowed me to communicate just fine. It wasn’t too soon after I started high school that I began modeling, and, well, the world looked at me in a way I sort of liked. But love—that was what confused me the most. I had found myself in a boy craze of the most peculiar predicament, in a tangled web that nearly took me under. They never warn you about love, and no magazine could ever do it justice.
No comments:
Post a Comment