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Lucie Yi Is Not a Romantic
Lucie Yi Is Not a Romantic
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Author(s): Ho, Lauren
ISBN No.: 9780593422267
Pages: 416
Year: 202206
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 23.80
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Chapter 1 That Saturday, Lucie Yi headed to the pastel world of So Bébé, fully intending to purchase just a pair of lightweight summer booties and maybe a matching bobble hat for each of her best friend Weina Ling''s newly minted triplets. She didn''t think she was extravagant. Fall had arrived, bringing bone-stinging rain. Although it was still early, in this cobblestoned stretch of Tribeca, the doors were already open, the shops warm with money. Lucie, wearing worn running sneakers, her hair in her usual low ponytail, swept past the cafés touting seasonal lattes and hot buttery things. She had a mission-So Bébé, which didn''t do anything as tacky as sales, ever, was having a special Fall-in-Love Fair. Fifteen percent off everything, no fine print. Hence the excitable queue even before the store had opened, and by the time Lucie hurried inside, So Bébé heaved with bargain hunters in designer dresses scything through packed aisles, elbows out like knives.


The air stank of credit cards and cold ambition. Lucie hugged the sides of her puffer jacket close. Truth be told, she had considered buying everything online, but the pull of a leisurely walk with a spiced latte after shopping proved too difficult to resist. So here she was in this foreign land, and here was the saleswoman, Erin, a ponytailed strawberry blonde, who had somehow steered her from a rack of baby wear to a display of high-tech fabric body cocoons that would "totally displace traditional swaddling blankets one day" and "would you believe how soft the de-stressed organic cotton fibers feel," having never seen the inside of an office? Lucie shook her head to clear her thoughts and regarded the MamaOneWrap, basically a Velcro-fastened straitjacket for babies. Had the saleswoman really said "de-stressed" or "distressed"? And where could you get an adult size? She could use a swaddle. Her last stretch of unbroken sleep was two nights ago. "I''m just here for booties," she mumbled. Erin leaned close, conspiratorial advice forthcoming.


"But if you sign up as a So Bébé member today, everything is twenty percent off," she said. "That means the MamaOneWrap, which never goes on sale, would be a steal ." Lucie didn''t have the heart to tell Erin that she could probably buy something similar on Zhaobao at a quarter of the price. "But what does it do?" "What does it do!" Erin exclaimed. "What doesn''t it do? Hold on." Erin groped the arms of the cocoon, and alarmingly, the wrap started to vibrate, and a melancholic tune that Lucie would never have picked for a lullaby played. Erin smiled. "That''s Tchaikovsky.


" Lucie''s brow started to sweat. It didn''t happen often, but sometimes she got triggered by piano music and words that sounded like "Kumon." "That''s . nice." "It''s revolutionary. Babies can''t resist dreamland. And-voilà!" Erin, sensing weakness, was now detailing the removable padding, the windproof, Oeko-Tex-certified stain-resistant outer fabric with sparkly eyed enthusiasm. Lucie rubbed her temples.


She had a call in-she checked her watch-ninety-five minutes. "The contraption looks really uncomfortable. Too restrictive." Consternation at Lucie''s use of the word "contraption," a hard, unlovely word for such a cuddly store. Erin blinked, recovered. "Oh, babies love it. It''s like being back inside the womb," Erin said, with the privilege of one who had been loved without conditions. Lucie-claustrophobic and seasonably matricidal-shuddered.


"That sounds terrible." They''d just escaped, after all. Erin would not be dissuaded. "The MamaOneWrap is like a mother''s embrace, only better, because it will always be there, no matter what." Lucie peered at the price tag and was glad for her poker face. The RoboCop swaddle was close to $120 a pop. Didn''t cloth swaddles cost a tenth of that? But this one simulated a mother''s hug! And-Erin''s sales pitch was subtext heavy-if it would prevent the kids from needing therapy in the future . She sighed.


Now that she''d seen the MamaOneWrap, heard the spiel, the booties and hats seemed so basic-even the oatmeal cashmere pixie hats by the window, which were from a "proudly child-labor-free co-op." (As opposed to what?) "I''ll take six," she said. "Six!" Erin said, joyous. Her smile could have warmed the sun. "Oh, then you''ll have to get them in different colors. They have such a pretty selection. There''re even limited-edition prints! I''ll bring the swatches so you can see it on a doll." She took out a large, startled doll with a headful of wheatish hair and blue eyes.


"This is Ri, one of our gender-neutral, life-sized dolls approximating a three-month-old." Gender-neutral, sure, but still very white. "We also have Avi, which is more, ah, pigmented." Erin''s face was flushed. "Ri is fine," Lucie said, distracted by the bland smoothness between the doll''s legs and the weird, flickering eyelids. Erin exhaled. "OK, let me get the sample swaddles!" Then she was gone. The lone MamaOneWrap lay, a puffy shell, on the counter.


A passing shopper in her seventies stopped to check out the MamaOneWrap. "I''ve heard of these." She wrinkled her nose. "Bit of overkill, isn''t it?" "It vibrates," Lucie said tiredly. "There''s just so much overengineered nonsense out there," the shopper said. "In my day we just stuck the kid in a diaper, and if it made it through the day, it was a keeper." She pointedly picked up a swaddle pack from a nearby rack. Lucie dropped her gaze.


She wasn''t going to argue with someone who thought Panic! at the Disco was a breaking news story. Erin was back. She fanned all the designs out on the counter. The baby straitjackets came in the usual white, pink, blue, pastels, gray, with a selection of cute animal and fruit prints. Lucie picked out two prints (hippo and pineapples) and a plain, dove-gray one. "Two of each please." Lucie handed her credit card over to Erin. Erin nodded.


"Brilliant choice. Let me get Frieda"-signaling to a lurking staffer with close-cropped bronze curls, also smiling- "to ring these up for you while I put one on. You''re going to see how cute the baby will look when it''s swaddled." You knew the place was fancy when customer service reassured you on the validity of your choices, even after you''d paid. Lucie let Erin put the doll into the pineapple-printed one and press the swaddled doll into Lucie''s arms. "Hold it. It''s about the right weight, too." Lucie held Ri close to her chest.


Its almost cobalt-blue eyes were fixed on her, the blinking stilled. She closed her eyes and breathed. The swaddle or the doll had been scented with something milky and soothing, chamomile and talc and bergamot. "This isn''t too bad," she said, wondering how Weina was coping, breast-feeding three of these at a go. She was always saying that she was too old for her surprise triplets and she had only that one pair of boobs and the babies were sweet but so, so needy; they were always hungry and she was so, so bone tired; she sometimes confused the babies and had to write their names on their fists, their soft, dimpled baby-fatted fists. Lucie started to shake. "Are you all right?" Erin said from far away, because Lucie was laughing-and weeping. Loud sobs rattled from her chest without hope of concealment.


"Yes," Lucie replied when she finally could. Snuffling hard, wiping stray tears away with the back of her hand, she struggled to speak in her normal voice. "I-I just had Lasik done and my eyes are s-so . so dry ." Erin whisked Ri out of Lucie''s arms, ducked behind the counter, and started pulling tissues out of a box so fast she could have been a magician''s assistant. If she didn''t buy the Lasik excuse, she did not show it. "Here," she said, pressing them into Lucie''s hand. "Take them.


" Lucie blew her nose in a series of honks. "Thanks. I''m sorry." "Don''t be," Erin said, as though (a grown woman) sobbing in a high-end store for children was a quotidian occurrence. "It happens more often than you think." Maybe it did. She reached out to give Lucie a hug, which the latter folded into with an uncharacteristic lack of resistance. "And considering everything that''s happened in the last two years-perfectly normal behavior.


" Normal. What is normal these days? Lucie thought, as Erin rubbed her back and made shushing noises. She was thirty-seven, and she had no idea. Chapter 2 Lucie wound her way toward her apartment in a daze, her haul from So Bébé in two cotton tote bags, spiced latte forgotten. She was mortified. What had prompted that meltdown? That was so unlike her. She was always in control, or appeared to be, anyway. Hey, she was RoboCop.


She stopped by the park to watch her favorite dance collective practice in the Bosque Fountain area of Battery Park. The instructor, Sangwany, always waved her over to join them, and she always declined. It was almost a tradition now. Lucie sat by the sidelines as the dancers spun and warped their bodies into shapes that were both familiar and not. Watching them always soothed her; today, it did nothing. She got up after a few minutes and headed home. She made it back with thirteen minutes to spare before her Zoom call, one of only two on that Saturday. The client, CEO of a buzzy polymer company, was interested in optimizing their European structure''s tax compliance in light of new legislation.


Her firm had secured the client because Lucie had deep experience in international tax restructuring. It was all her. Repeating this fact to herself.


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