THE FIRST INSULT of the art showโbefore all the injuriesโwas placement.
I arrived at the gallery to find my portrait hung in the worst conceivable spotโhalf under a staircase, fully at the back, right near the bathrooms, under an exposed air-conditioning vent that was literally dripping into a bucket. There was a moldy smell to the areaโnot to mention a tinge of Lysol.
Youโd think that a bright, airy, recently renovated art gallery wouldnโt have a dank cornerโbut youโd be wrong.
And thatโs where they stuck me.
At the art gallery equivalent of a restaurantโs sucker table.
Worst of all, the spot was hard to get to, but because of the U-shaped layout of the gallery, it was easy to see. Everybody entering the building could get a full view of my indefensibly tragic situation.
So any and all humiliations to come would be on full display. And there were plenty of humiliations to come.
Starting with the fact that no one was there.
Oh, people were thereโat the show. The show itself was packed. Just
โno one came to my shadowy, mildewy, forgotten corner.
I stood courageously next to my portrait, under the cold, damp, blowing air of that drippy vent, feeling as exposed as a hermit crab out of its shellโ as I watched the entire gallery milling with eager art patrons.
Everywhereโexcept where I was.
No one came up to me and said hello. No one talked to me at all. Only a few freakish outliers even glanced at my portrait, which was clearly, easily,
the big loser of the night from minute one. I scanned peopleโs outfits and hair and gaits for identifying clues, but I did not recognize one person.
The artist closest to me, layout-wise, was a guy named Bradley Winterbottom, whoโd done a portrait of a child on the beach. He had at least twenty people gathered in his areaโchatting companionably about the composition, delighting over the way heโd captured that late-afternoon sunlight, swooning over the sweetness of the childโs face.
I mean, nothing against Bradley Winterbottom, but I really hated that guy right then.
He had more admirers than he deserved. I, in contrast, had zero.
I didnโt even need admirers. I wouldโve been happy for someone to talk to. A person who needed directions, say. A lost hiker.
But no luck. It was just me. Alone.
Nothing to do but panic over life-altering decisions about where to rest my hands. They were too posed and awkward at my sides, but they felt hostile if I crossed them over my chest, and they had too much judgy-mom energy if I rested them on my hips. I just kept shifting them around. Was behind the back too goofy? Was clasped at the pelvis too meek? Was clenched into fists of misery too โฆ honest?
Nothing worked. Every few seconds I tried a new pose. Like an animatronic scarecrow.
To no avail.
I had no idea where to look, either. Looking at the floor would make me seem ashamed. Looking at other people would make me seem needy. Looking at my own portrait on the wall would make me seem like I was fully, heartily giving up on my dreams in real time.
Which I was, by the way.
There is nothingโnothingโmore socially awkward than standing alone in a crowd waiting for someone, anyone, to come and join you.
I cursed Sue for getting kidnapped. And for eloping. And for every Angry Canadian sheโd tossed back.
Then I felt guilty and took it back.
I cursed Joe instead. For everything. Then I felt guilty about that, too.
Then I toyed with cursing myself โฆ before deciding I was cursed enough, already.
THE WHOLE EXPERIENCE was wall-to-wall agony. There were no two ways about it.
I finally set my phoneโs timer for elevenย P.M.โthe moment when the show technically ended, according to the invitationโso that I could stride out, or possibly sprint, the very second I was done.
Only two hours and forty-five minutes left to endure.
For the auction component of the show, each artist had a sleek, Jetsons- style cocktail table next to their portrait with a clipboard on it for patrons to write down their bids.
Bradley Winterbottom had to request an extra bid sheet after his filled upโfront and backโbut do I even need to say how many bids wound up on my clipboard during the entire time that I stood there?
Zero. Thatโs right.
But was that the worst, most insulting part of the evening? Wow. Thatโs a tough call.
Letโs review the options:
There were all the shocked looks people gave my portrait from across the roomโhands over mouths, eyes big with pityโthe way you might rubberneck past a car wreck.
There was the moment when I accidentally knocked over the bucket of A/C drippings and then apologetically mopped it up with paper towels from the bathroom, one drippy bunch at a time, while other artists and patrons glanced over with irritation like I was really bringing everyone down.
There were the endless ten minutes when another finalist, who wore a little porkpie hat, went by the single pseudonym Lysander, and apparently possessed a nervous digestive system, had to work through some brutal digestive issues in the menโs room, which I could of course hear in detail from my primo spot by the bathroom doorsโgrunts, splashes, and all.
Oh. And there was the time when I took a pee break and overheard some judges who seized that moment to dart over and laugh at my work.
Yes, thatโs how close my placement was to the bathrooms. I could literally hear these people talkingย from the stall.
โWhat is happening here?โ Judge 1 asked, in a horrified whisper. โIย know,โ Judge 2 said.
โDid the artist โฆ leave?โ โWouldnโt you?โ
โI never would have shown up at all.โ โShe must have fled.โ
โRight? Off toย not quit her day job.โ โOr to fling herself off a bridge.โ They snickered at that.
โItโs just so bizarre,โ one went on pensively. โThe body and background are so exquisiteโฆโ
โBut then you get to the face.โ
โI keep thinking itโs Carl Sagan.โ โI keep seeing Steve Buscemi.โ
โIt looks like a wolf face, in a way.โ โImpossible. Animals are against the rules.โ โRight? Itโs notย veterinaryย portraiture.โ โWhatever it is, itโs like the face melted.โ
โOr got hit with a pie right before the sitting.โ โOr landed facedown in mud.โ
โOr had a botched cosmetic surgery.โ
โI just donโt understand how this piece is even here.โ โMaybe they notified the wrong artist?โ
โItโs just insulting, more than anything.โ โIt kind of makes me angry.โ
โWhat a waste of a Top Ten spot.โ
โToo bad we canโt give negative points.โ โIsnโt it?โ
At that, Iโd had enough. I pressed the toilet handle with my shoe and held it there.
Mercifully, the blast of the industrial flush was loud enough to startle them away.
In the silence that followed, I washed my hands, smoothed my hair in the mirror, smiled encouragingly at my unintelligible face, stood up straight
like how I imagined a person with some remaining human dignity would, and walked back out to my post.
Just two soul-draining hours to go โฆ
It was okay. It was fine. What was it Joe had said about sitting for the portrait?ย โTrigonometry is hard. Climbing El Capitan is hard. Landing on the beaches of Normandy is hard.โย All I had to do was stand hereโand keep standing hereโuntil my alarm went off.
And then I could go home. And brainstorm a new lifeโs dream.
This was the big break Iโd been working toward for over a decade. This was the moment Iโd been waiting forโdreaming of. This was the life Iโd chosen. This was a competition that if the past five weeks hadnโt happened, Iโd be crushing right now. This was a showcase moment for the thing I was best at in my entire life โฆ Just not anymore.
Could I have used at least one person there with me in that moment? Yes.
And would I have even minded if it was Lucinda? Not at all.
But I got fully stood up. By everyone. Even though my dadโs secretary had put it on his calendar and Lucinda had interrupted my lastโonlyโ night with Joe to give me that news. Even though Iโd been dreading them coming ever since I found out. Even though they were the last people I ever wouldโve chosen.
I was out of choices.
As time wore on and the smile Iโd stapled to my face quivered more and more, I found myself hoping for someone, anyone, to show upโand, if Iโm honest โฆ imagining how great it would be if that someone could be Joe.
It wasnโt impossible, was it? Crazier things had happened, right?
If nothing else, imagining it gave me a nice distraction. Joe: Having an epiphany in line at the airport, abandoning his suitcase, hailing a cab, but then hitting too much traffic, sprinting the final blocks here only to burst through the doors and shove past elderly art critics to my dark corner like it was the only place heโd ever wanted to be โฆ and then breathlessly begging my forgiveness while declaring his undying loveโthereby validating my entire existence for everyone here, including me.
Maybe I should pop out for some air freshener.
Thanks a lot, Lysander.
Anyway. I knew it was impossible. Joe had already refused to be my anybody.
But be careful what you hope for.
I did get an anybodyโat last, two hours in โฆ But it was Parker.
Confirmed: Hope is the worst.
YOU KNOW THAT saying that people look like their pets? Parker slinked over to me like a human Sphynx cat, and I swear her pupils were vertical slits. โAw,โ she said, with delighted faux sympathy. โDid Daddy and Lucinda stand you up?โ
โThey werenโt invited,โ I said. โAnd neither were you.โ
Parker looked at my dress and said, โAre you headed to the prom?โ That was her best insult? It was almost disappointing. โMaybe,โ I said. Then she stage-whispered, โAre you totally alone over here?โ
โNo,โ I said. I clearly was.
Then she looked around theatrically. โLooks like they put you at the sucker table.โ
โItโs mood lighting,โ I said.
โWhy does it smell like diarrhea?โ Parker asked next.
I glanced over at Lysander, now back at his station. But I said to Parker, โMust be your perfume.โ
At that, Parker turned her attention to the portrait and studied it a good while.
โWhoโs it supposed to be?โ she asked at last. โThe guy fromย The Hobbit?โ She shifted her stance. โWaitโis it John Denver?โ Then she took a step back. Then like sheโd nailed it at last: โHold up!ย Danny DeVito.โ
โDonโt you have anythingย at allย better to do?โ I asked. โThereโs nothing better than this.โ
โKnow what your being here right now tells me?โ โThat Iโll always win?โ
I gave it a beat. โThat you still donโt have any friends.โ โI donโt need friends. I stole yours.โ
โYes, you did. But you didnโt get what you wanted.โ โNeither did you.โ
She wasnโt wrong.
Parker looked around the room. โThis is so brutal,โ she said then. โYour painting sucks, your dress is awful, Iโm pretty sure youโre being shunned by the art world, and your nemesis is right here, gloating.โ
โParker?โ I said. โGet out.โ โNo.โ
โGet out before I call security.โ
But Parker just smiled. โYou wonโt do that. Youโre already at maximum humiliation.โ
โJokeโs on you. I donโtย haveย maximum humiliation.โ
But did the universe hear me right then and think,ย Challenge accepted?
Because we were about to redefine maximum humiliation. โParker,โ I said, โjust go.โ
โNo way. I want to savor every minute.โ
โWhy are you the worst person in the world?โ I asked, like she might try to answer.
โOh my god. Youโre always the victim, arenโt you?โ โWell, whose fault is that?โ
โYou just have to blame me for everything.โ
โI donโt blame you for everything. You actuallyย doย everything.โ But she leaned in. โYour persecution complex is unreal.โ
โI donโt have a persecution complex!โ I said. โI am literally being persecuted.โ
โItโs not my fault your mother died,โ Parker said then. โItโs not my fault your dad married my mom. Itโs not my fault we sold our house, and I gave up my room, and we got thrown together every minute of every day. I didnโt ask for that, and I certainly didnโt ask for you. I was not consultedโabout any of it! And yes, I did all those terrible things! I framed you and lied about you and coaxed them both into pushing you away. But your dad not loving you? Thatโs not my fault, either. He stopped loving you well before we met. You lost him all on your own. And you want to know how you did that? Because youโโand here she seemed to rise up on her dragon haunchesโโare the reason that your mother died.โ
I guess our voices had accidentally gotten loud.
When she stopped talking, there was not a sound in the gallery. I could hear the A/C dripping into my bucket.
I could hear a toilet flush.
And I could hear all those people whoโd been ignoring me earlier suddenly taking a new kind of interest.
I lowered my voice, in a comical shot at privacy. โWhat are you talking about right now?โ
โI overheard them talking one nightโDad and Lucinda. He told her what happened. That your mom had a messed-up blood vessel in her brain. That heโd begged her to get surgery to fix it. But she refused. She put it off till summer. The two of you had planned a spring break trip, to go visit some artistโs museum, and she wasnโt going to disappoint you. Your dad told her to cancel the trip. Heย beggedย her. But she wouldnโt listen. She went anyway. And then one week later, she collapsed.โ
What was she saying?
I felt a weird pain in my chest, like the shell of my heart was cracking. โThatโs what he said that night,โ Parker went on. โThat it was your
fault. That try as he might, he couldnโt help but blame you. I heard him say those words out loud. So you can stop thinking I ruined your relationship with your father. Itโs not my fault he doesnโt love you. Itโs not my fault you lost your family. You did all that to yourself.โ
Was something going on with the floor? It felt like the room was shaking.
So much for staying until the end.
I looked up for an escape route, and thatโs when I saw my father. I knew it was him at a glance from that navy polka-dot bowtie heโd been wearing to fancy events ever since I was little. And Iโd know his stanceโnot to mention his outlineโanywhere. And there he stood, a forgotten bouquet of grocery store flowers in his non-bandaged handโwatching us, his sheer motionlessness telegraphing that heโd just witnessed the whole thing.
And that it was true.
I didnโt even bother to walk closer. There were no secrets with this crowd now.
โIs she lying?โ I said to my father. โOr is it true?โ My dad took a half step forward, then paused.
I stood up straighter. โTell me sheโs lying,โ I said. Then, yelling: โTell me sheโs lying!โ
Where the hell was Joe when I needed him to flip the breaker and save me?
Oh, well.
I guess Iโd have to save myself.