She was the first girl I ever dated.  Bucktoothed, goggle-eyed, a misshapen mass of limbs and protuberances, I was a wreck.  Splenda, though, spilled gorgeous all over the place.  I was lured in by her glowing green eyes, and trapped like a mackerel in the seine of purple hair that fell down her back.
She chomped through her burger and grabbed a fistful of fries.  "This is a blind date," Splenda said, "but I ain't blind.  Didn't your parents ever hear of orthodontics?"  I slurped soda through a straw wedged between my incisors.  It was stuck, so I just shook my head.  "And those Coke bottles on your schnoz.  Are they bulletproof?"  She hiccuped and snorted, a waterfall of musical laughter.  
Splenda's razor wit would have sliced me to ribbons were I not wrapped in the chain mail of love at first sight.  "Your brows meet in the middle like U.N. delegates," she cracked.  "Is that Rainier or Everest on your forehead?  I think I see mountain climbers."  I smiled.  She was sharp, deadly, adorable.
"Listen, don't you get it?  You're an ugly freak, and I hate my sister for setting me up with you."  Splenda had broken a few hearts, a few more jaws, and a lot more egos.  "Don't you have any self respect?  Here I am, dragging you all over the carpet, and all you do is stare and smile like a proboscis monkey."  She threw a five dollar bill on the table and snatched up her purse.  Tiny tears were welling up in her eyes, and I thought my heart would fall out of my chest.
"You stupid, stupid..." She couldn't finish the sentence, and stormed out.
I never saw Splenda Hippocampus after that.  But the memory of her beautiful smile, of her beautiful eyes, of her beautiful, beautiful hair, haunts me to this day.
[twenty-eighth in a series]
 
 
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