"The desserts were a foot tall!" Enid said, her instincts having told her that Denise didn't care about pyramids of shrimp. "It was elegant elegant. Have you ever seen anything like that?"
"I'm sure it was very nice," Denise said.
"The Dribletts really do things super-deluxe. I'd never seen a dessert that tall. Have you?"
The subtle signs that Denise was exercising patience— the slightly deeper breaths she took, the soundless way she set her fork down on her plate and took a sip of wine and set the glass back down—were more hurtful to Enid than a violent explosion.
"I've seen tall desserts," Denise said.
"Are they tremendously difficult to make?"
Denise folded her hands in her lap and exhaled slowly. "It sounds like a great party. I'm glad you had fun."
Enid had, true enough, had fun at Dean and Trish's party, and she'd wished that Denise had been there to see for herself how elegant it was. At the same time, she was afraid that Denise would not have found the party elegant at all, that Denise would have picked apart its specialness until there was nothing left but ordinariness. Her daughter's taste was a dark spot in Enid's vision, a hole in her experience through which her own pleasures were forever threatening to leak and dissipate.
:(