This week's Red Writing Hood prompt was to write a first-person piece from the point of view of someone that drives us crazy, really gets under our skin. Thanks to Abbey, I've got Disney princesses on the brain, so I stretched the idea of the prompt and updated a bit of Snow White as the Evil Queen. I guess I should note that all references to Vogue are completely fictional, which is probably obvious, but I thought I'd mention it anyway!
My phone buzzes again and again as I sit in the reclined chair, tiny needles injecting toxins into the almost imperceptible wrinkles only my dermatologist and I will ever see.
My phone buzzes again and again as I sit in the reclined chair, tiny needles injecting toxins into the almost imperceptible wrinkles only my dermatologist and I will ever see.
In the cab, I quickly scan through the text messages, my face either painfully or pleasantly numb; I can’t tell the difference anymore. I don’t even listen to the voice mails, knowing they’re all variations of the same message: Congratulations on the latest Vogue cover.
The magazine hasn’t even gone to print, but word travels fast in a world where what is current changes by the minute.
Bile creeps into my throat.
Delete all.
I haven’t gotten this amount of congratulatory calls in a long time, possibly since my first cover too many years ago. September Vogue might be considered a coup, but I’ve been there before.
Anger pushes the bile back into my stomach, shifting into a cold fist of panic and anxiety.
My hands are shaking as I pull my compact out of the ridiculously expensive satchel on the seat beside me. Helplessly I hold the compact close to my oft-photographed face, turning to let the bright sunlight stream through the dirty filter of the cab’s window.
Thirty, forty, fifty phone calls congratulating me on something that has been my job, my life, for as long as I can remember, something that wouldn’t have been a surprise even two years ago, means only one thing.
Old.
I am getting old.
Staring into the mirror, I can’t see any of the panic that fills my insides, a welcome change from the hollow emptiness that comes from years of coffee breakfasts and diet soda lunches. My doctor is unparalleled, perfectly perched on the Botox scale that so easily tips from unlined to unmoving, toeing the collagen line that divides the lush from the comical. When I shot my first cover, I had never considered letting a needle near the face they were paying me to photograph.
I search the face in the mirror for signs of aging, tiredness, gravity. My face, my livelihood, can’t calm my anxiety. Only thoughts of the Vogue cover, the photo vivid and exquisite in my memory, slow my racing heart.
My phone rings, then stops. Rings again. My agent’s ring tone.
There’s a problem with the cover. It’s not going to run. They’re swapping it for a photo from a small shoot they did yesterday morning, with a young model so fresh her head shot’s not even on her agency’s website. They say her name is Eirwen*; she doesn’t use a last name.
The voice on the phone is reassuring me, but I don’t hear it. Bile rises again, anxiety flamed into anger once again. I hurl the compact against the window, shattering the mirror. Blood pounds in my ears, mocking me: old, tired, hag, finished.
I am twenty-four years old.
*Eirwen is Welsh for "white as snow", at least according to my Google search research
Wow! I love your take on the prompt and making this a very modern Snow White and Evil Queen tale. To have her be 24 years old too, adds some shock at the end.
ReplyDeleteGreat!
OOOH you did again, this is fantastic and sad and humbling.
ReplyDeleteGREAT JOB!!!!!!!
I like your take on the prompt - very literal. You've used imagery really well. It's such a sad but true state of affairs in celebrity culture these days.
ReplyDeleteUgh! Through the whole thing, she was making me anxious, then I got to the last line and was just disgusted with her. Which means you did a great job!
ReplyDeleteYou never cease to amaze me.
ReplyDeleteYou completely pulled me in with this piece.
I love the way you incorporated the name of the young model.
And you made me giggle with your "research" note. ;)
This is really good. What a clever twist to a familiar tale:~) I liked it from beginning to end. I would change anything:~)
ReplyDeleteso well done, and unique to the prompt too. Heartbreaking.
ReplyDeletei could never imagine a life and career that's competitive like this! oh the pressure to be young!
ReplyDeleteOh, poor sad girl! I hung onto every word here; you really drew me in!
ReplyDeleteI loved this line: "Anger pushes the bile back into my stomach, shifting into a cold fist of panic and anxiety." Such genius wording!
I had to look close to read about your research. Does that mean that *I'm* -ahem- getting old?! :)
I really loved how she viewed the 'congratulations' almost as stabs at her and I love how you explained it with this line, "Thirty, forty, fifty phone calls congratulating me on something that has been my job, my life, for as long as I can remember, something that wouldn’t have been a surprise even two years ago, means only one thing.
ReplyDeleteOld.
I am getting old."
I should have used a larger font, sorry!
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you felt sad for her and not just annoyed :) And thank you for the compliment; the imagery in your own writing is always so vivid!
You know things are going downhill for you when you get upset at congratulatory phone calls, right?
ReplyDeleteI am glad I am just imagining it; I wouldn't last two days in that world. You could pack for a two week vacation with the bags under my eyes :)
ReplyDeleteThank you! I've got princesses on the brain thanks to my daughter :)
ReplyDeleteThank you! Can you imagine if the Evil Queen had access to the internet? Her magic mirror had nothing on Perez Hilton.
ReplyDeleteThank you my friend! I wanted a disclaimer, since Google and yahoo answers aren't technically iron-clad sources. As I did it, I cringed, remembering all the times I told my students not to believe everything that Google popped up :)
ReplyDeleteThank you! I am annoyed with her but also sad that she feels so done with life at such a young age.
ReplyDeleteOur society is in love with youth, isn't it? Some days I wish I could keep my kids, especially my daughter, in a little bubble.
ReplyDeleteThank you! Seeing your smiling face (and your kind words) always makes me happy :)
ReplyDeleteIf 24 is over the hill I might as well start looking into retirement homes...
ReplyDeleteAck! Twenty-four and old. Can you imagine (well, obviously you did!) a self identifying career that is over with at such a young age (for a large percentage of the people working in it)?! I felt her panick rising in my chest, so you excellently conveyed her emotion. :>
ReplyDeleteI am glad I only imagined it! It makes me sad :(
ReplyDelete