Besides, at one point during
the broadcast I caught sight of Lilly standing in the crowd outside
Office Max on Broadway and Thirty-Seventh, her video camera clutched to
her slightly squished-in face (so much like a pug) as a float carrying
Miss America and William Shatner of Star Trek fame passed by.
So I know Lilly is going to take care of denouncing Macy's on the next
episode of her public access television show, Lilly Tells It Like
It Is (every Friday night
at nine, Manhattan cable channel 67).
12:00 p.m.
Mr. Gianini Junior's sister
arrives with her husband, their two kids and the pumpkin pies. The
kids, who are my age, are twins — a boy, Nathan, and a girl, Claire. I
know right away that Claire and I are not going to get along, because
when we are introduced she looks me up and down the way the
cheerleaders do in the hallway at school and goes, in a very snotty
voice, 'You're the one who's supposed to be a princess?' And
while I am perfectly aware that at five foot nine inches tall, with no
visible breasts, feet the size of snowshoes, and hair that sits in a
tuft on my head like the end
of a cotton bud, I am the biggest freak in the freshman class of Albert
Einstein High School For Boys (made coeducational circa 1975), I do not
appreciate being reminded of it by girls who do not even bother finding
out that beneath this mutant facade beats the heart of a person who is
only striving, just like everybody else in this world, to find
self-actualization.
Not that I even care what Mr.
Gianini's niece Claire thinks of me. I mean, she is wearing a pony-skin
miniskirt. And
it is not even imitation pony-skin. She must know that a horse had to
die just so she could have that skirt, but she obviously doesn't care.
Now Claire has pulled out her
mobile phone and gone out on to the deck where the reception is best
(even though it
is thirty degrees outside, she apparently doesn't mind. She has that
pony-skin to keep her warm, after all). She keeps looking in at me
through the sliding glass doors and laughing as she talks on her phone.
I don't care. At least I am
not wearing the skin of a murdered equine. Nathan - who is dressed in
baggy jeans and has
a pager, in addition to a lot of gold jewellery - asks his grandfather
if he can change the channel. So instead of traditional Thanksgiving
viewing options, such as football or the Lifetime channel's made-for-TV
movie marathon,