Dumplin-
And then, a miracle. A laugh.
Then she remembered Lucy. Lucy, who had been five-foot-three and two hundred and fifty pounds of pure, stubborn joy. Lucy, who had once worn a bikini to a church pool party just because someone said she shouldn’t. Lucy, who had pasted a photo of Dolly Parton on her refrigerator with a magnet that read: It costs a lot of money to look this cheap. Dumplin-
She reached center stage. The spotlight was a hot, white sun. For a second, she forgot how to breathe. The mirror’s lie echoed in her head: You don’t belong here. And then, a miracle
The judge shook her head, a real smile cracking her lipstick. “No. She bought everyone hot dogs from the concession stand and taught them a line dance.” Lucy, who had been five-foot-three and two hundred
“That’s the look,” Dumplin’ replied, adjusting the strap of her bright pink, one-shouldered dress. The dress was a miracle. She’d found it in the back of her late Aunt Lucy’s closet, sandwiched between a velvet robe and a pair of cowboy boots with actual rattlesnake skin. Aunt Lucy—or Lucy, as she’d insisted everyone call her—had been the undisputed, plus-sized queen of the Clover City pageant circuit back in the 90s. She’d never won the crown, but she’d won every single “Miss Congeniality.” People remembered her laugh longer than they remembered the winner’s name.
Dumplin’ held up a beat-up kazoo. “It’s a tribute. Lucy used to play ‘Yellow Rose of Texas’ on this thing at every family barbecue. She was terrible. Amazingly terrible. But she never cared who was listening.”
© Legacy 7.4.
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