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Secrets

Page 16

by Jacqueline Wilson


  I still love Dad best even now, but I’m going to live with Mum most of the time. I couldn’t live with Dad because he’s renting a studio flat now and it’s much too small. And maybe he doesn’t want me around too much because it would cramp his style with his girlfriends. I think he’s started seeing Suzi. He is totally disgusting. Sometimes I think he almost deserves to go to prison.

  The police let him go after they charged him. Dad’s got a super-sharp lawyer who’s sure he’ll get him off the embezzlement charge, no bother at all. Mum thinks she’ll have to pay his legal bills. I suppose this is very generous of her.

  I asked Mum if she thought Dad had really stolen the money from Major Products.

  ‘Of course not, India! It’s all a ludicrous mistake. Dad got a bit muddled with his accounts, that’s all.’

  But I heard them having heaps of rows about it, night after night before Dad moved out. Mum didn’t say anything about muddles and mistakes. She kept asking him what he’d done with all the money, and had he really just frittered it away on girls and good times?

  I know one thing. Dad didn’t give poor Wanda a good time.

  Wanda disappeared. Mum said she wasn’t very well and had to go to a special clinic for a rest. I think I know exactly what happened at this special clinic. I think they got rid of Wanda’s baby. I said as much to Mum. She said I’ve been watching too many soaps on television and insisted Wanda wasn’t ever pregnant. I don’t believe Mum. I can’t ask Wanda. As soon as she was well enough to leave the clinic she went back to Australia. Mum paid her air fare.

  Mum’s having to sell the house because she’s had to pay for so much. She says it’s time to move on anyway. We’re probably going to live in a flat, just the two of us. Not a Latimer Estate sort of flat. Mum wants us to live in a Victorian mansion block near her work. It’s still quite near here, though it’s too far to go to my school. I’m not sure Mrs Blandford would want me to stay on anyway. It was her idea to send me to the educational psychologist. She obviously thinks I’m some kind of nutcase. Mum does too.

  But Chris says I’m the sanest person he’s ever met. And I’m boasting again now, but he also says I’m one of the brightest. He’s given me an IQ test. It would be gross to tell you the exact number, but if the average IQ is 100 then I have enough intelligence for one and a half people. Mum asked him if I stood a chance of getting a scholarship to one of the posh, big girls’ schools and he said I shouldn’t have any problems at all.

  Chris is the educational psychologist. I see him once a week and it is wonderful. I was dreading seeing him the first time. I thought he’d be some suspicious old man with a funny accent and a probing manner. But Chris is twenty-five and he actually looks a lot younger in his jeans and T-shirt. He’s not really what you might call good-looking. He’s got this really great smile though and freckles all over his face and fuzzy ginger hair. It’s exactly like my hair.

  ‘Hi, Ginger Twin,’ he said, grinning. ‘Now, I’ve always hated my hair but it looks great on you.’

  ‘Do people always think you’ve got a terrible temper?’ I asked.

  ‘You bet. It’s so tiresome. Maybe I’ll get round to doing a special research project on red hair and temperament.’

  If Chris doesn’t do it, I will. I have decided that I’m going to be a psychologist too. We have long, long, long talks on psychology every week. It’s a fascinating way of studying human behaviour. You do it all very scientifically, with experiments. There have been lots and lots of studies on family behaviour and what makes a good or bad parent.

  Although it’s difficult to make up your mind. Perhaps psychology can’t ever be an exact science. Even the worst parent in the world can be good some of the time.

  Anne Frank wrote that she didn’t love her mother at all but when they were in the concentration camp they clung together, inseparable.

  Mum took Treasure and me to see Anne Frank’s house! OK, she was spending a weekend in Amsterdam anyway doing a photo-shoot. Treasure got kitted out in Moya Upton from head to foot. She got made up whiter than ever, with smudged circles under her eyes. She struck scary poses in cobbled streets by the canals while I sat reading an A-level psychology book and eating Dutch apple cake. When Mum and the photographer and the stylist had finished with Treasure at long last, Mum took us to 263 Prinsengracht where Anne hid in the secret annexe. We heard the Westertoren clock strike as we went into the museum, just as Anne describes in her diary.

  My heart started beating hard as we went up the narrow stairs and saw the bookcase door. It was all just as I’d imagined it. I stepped into Anne’s bedroom and there were her cards and photos still stuck up on the wall. I cried then. So did Treasure.

  We saw Anne’s red-and-white checked diary too. We couldn’t read her neat Dutch handwriting but we didn’t need to. We know her story off by heart.

  Treasure has a difficult home life, and the story begins with her leaving her mum and violent stepdad to live with her nan, who’s the most supportive member of Treasure’s family. When Terry lashes out at Treasure, what do you think of her mum Tammy’s reaction? Was she right to want to protect her husband, or should her daughter have been her priority? Why do you think she seemed so terrified at Nan’s suggestion that Treasure should go to hospital?

  India loves and looks up to her dad, but like Treasure, she has a very difficult relationship with her mum, Moya. Why do you think this is? What things do they clash about? How do you feel about the way Moya speaks to her daughter?

  As the story progresses, how does India’s relationship with her parents change? Do you think she and her mum will ever be close?

  To the outside world, India has a much nicer home and lifestyle than Treasure – her family is wealthy, she lives in a lovely house and attends a good school – but is she any happier than her new friend? Compare their situations at the start of the story. Which girl would you rather be for a day, and why?

  When the girls first meet, they don’t appear to have very much in common. Why do you think they strike up such a close friendship, so quickly?

  Treasure realises that Wanda is pregnant before India does, and is surprised that her friend has not spotted the signs, saying, ‘India seems so grown-up and she uses all these la-di-da long words but she’s like a little kid really.’ Is this a fair description of India? Which of the girls would you say is more grown-up?

  Was India right to hide Treasure in the attic? Did the girls have any other choice?

  When Treasure comes out of hiding, she tells the police and the newspapers that she wants to live with Nan because she just ‘doesn’t get on with’ Terry – but she never publicly accuses him of hitting her, even though she knows that this would result in him going to prison. Why do you think she decides to do this? Would you have acted differently?

  I hate my dad.

  I know lots of teenage girls say that but they don’t really mean it. Well, I don’t think they do. I don’t really know any other teenage girls. That’s one of the reasons why I hate Dad. He keeps me a virtual prisoner.

  I’m interrogated if I slip down the road to Krisha’s Korner Shop. I’m not allowed to go into town by myself. I can’t go to see any films. I can’t eat in McDonald’s.

  Dad even fussed about me making a simple bus ride by myself to go to Miss Roberts for maths tuition. He took my sister Grace and me out of school ages ago, when I’d just gone into the Juniors and she was still at the finger-painting stage. Dad said he was going to educate us.

  We were left to get on with it for ages, but this summer we had a home visit from a Mr Miles, who was from some kind of education authority. He wanted to know what provision Dad was making for my GCSE coursework. Dad said he didn’t believe in examinations. Mr Miles smiled through Dad’s tirade, obviously having heard it all before. He looked at Grace and me when Dad ran out of steam.

  ‘What do you want to do when you’re older, Prudence and Grace?’ he asked.

  Grace mumbled something about working with animal
s. Dad won’t let us have any proper pets because he says he’s allergic to them. Grace has a lot of secret, unsatisfactory pets, like the blackbird in the garden and the toads in the compost heap and for a while she kept a wormery hidden under her bed. Grace’s pets are not exactly cuddly.

  ‘You’ll certainly need to pass lots of exams if you want to be a vet,’ said Mr Miles.

  Dad snorted. ‘You’ll find our Grace has got no more brains than a donkey,’ he said unkindly. ‘She’ll get a job in a shop somewhere and be happy enough.’

  ‘In your bookshop?’

  ‘She can help sell the books, but I doubt she’s up to the business side of things,’ said Dad. ‘But Prudence can do all the cataloguing and buying and book fairs.’

  ‘Is that what you want to do, Prudence – run your father’s business?’ said Mr Miles.

  I swallowed. ‘I – I’d like to go to art college,’ I said.

  Dad glared at me. ‘For goodness’ sake, I’ve told you to forget that nonsense. You don’t need to go away to college to learn drawing and painting; you can do that already.’

  ‘But I want to go, Dad.’

  Dad was furious with me for arguing in front of Mr Miles, but decided not to pursue it. ‘All right, all right, go to art college, waste three years, see for yourself,’ he said. He nodded triumphantly at Mr Miles. ‘I guarantee she can pass her art GCSE standing on her head.’

  ‘I dare say,’ said Mr Miles. ‘But I think you’ll find art colleges require quite a few GCSEs, plus three good A-levels. You’re going to have to make more provision for your daughters’ education, Mr King, especially now Prudence is fourteen. Otherwise we might have to pursue the matter through the courts.’

  ‘The courts!’ said Mum, panicking.

  ‘You’ve got no power to do any such thing,’ said Dad, hands on his hips, his chin jutting. ‘You can’t stop parents home-educating their children.’

  ‘Not if they’ve been home-educated right from the start. But your girls have attended school in the past, so I think you’ll find we have every power. However, let’s hope we can avoid any unpleasant action. We all want what’s best for Prudence and Grace.’

  Dad seemed sure Mr Miles was bluffing, but nevertheless he fixed up for me to go to this Miss Roberts for maths tuition on Wednesday afternoons.

  I only went once. It was unbearable.

  Miss Roberts used to teach maths at a girls’ school way back in the sixties. She seemed preserved in that time, still teasing her limp grey hair into a bouffant style. Her pink scalp showed through alarmingly. I kept staring at it as she bent over me, trying to explain some supposedly simple point about algebra.

  I couldn’t understand any of it. I wrote down random letters of the alphabet but I couldn’t tease any meaning from them. I expect letters to arrange themselves into words. If I’m doing sums I need numbers – though I’m actually useless with numbers too. I can’t always add up accurately. The shop takings rarely balance on a Saturday when I help out.

  Miss Roberts tried hard to be patient with me. She explained it over and over again, raising her voice and speaking very s-l-o-w-l-y. Then she switched to geometry in despair. I could draw wobbly circles with her old compass and construct reasonable squares and rectangles with my own ruler but I didn’t know what any of them meant.

  I paid her the twenty pounds for the tuition and she gave me a cup of tea (the milk was so old it floated in little flecks on the tan surface) and a stale custard cream.

  ‘Don’t look so woebegone, Prudence,’ she said. ‘Your father says you’re a very bright girl. I’m sure you’ll catch on in no time.’

  I made an extreme effort to swallow the sour milk-biscuity paste in my mouth and thanked her politely.

  I didn’t go back. For the last three Wednesdays I’ve walked into town and spent my tuition fee. Sixty whole pounds.

  I’ve never had so much money in my life before. Dad gives Grace and me one pound every Saturday. He behaves as if he’s bestowing solid gold upon us, and even has the nerve to lecture us, telling us not to waste it on rubbish. I’ve always saved mine up to buy sketchpads and soft pencils and coloured crayons, bought one by one.

  Grace spends hers all at once on sweets – a bar of chocolate or two, and a handful of gummy snakes. She gollops the chocolate in one go but she keeps the snakes, lining them up on the arm of the sofa, red and yellow and green like a slithery traffic light. She plays with them, giving them names and personalities, but she can’t help licking them affectionately so that they all get very sticky. She tries to save them till Sunday, though she sometimes can’t stop herself biting off a head or two on Saturday night.

  Grace isn’t three or four, as you might expect. She is eleven years old and very weird.

  I know I am very weird too. I can’t seem to help it. I don’t know how to be a proper teenager. I bought a couple of teenage magazines out of my stolen tuition money. They were astonishing, especially the problem pages. I knew I didn’t look anything like girls my own age, but I didn’t realize my experiences were so different.

  I’ve had no experiences; they’ve had plenty. The girls writing to the problem pages spoke a different language and behaved as if they were from a totally different planet. They wore astonishing clothes and got up to astonishing things with their boyfriends. I read these letters feeling hot, my heart beating.

  The only letters I could identify with in any way were the ones where the girls moaned about their mums and dads. They said they couldn’t stick their parents. Their mums wouldn’t let them have a nose stud or platform heels; their dads nagged about bad marks at school and got mad if they didn’t come home till midnight.

  ‘They should try having my mum and dad,’ I muttered, as I flicked through them by torchlight under the bedcovers.

  ‘What?’ Grace said blearily, propping herself up on one elbow. ‘Are you still awake? What are you doing?’

  ‘Just reading my book. Go back to sleep,’ I said. But Grace has bat ears. She heard the rustle of the pages. ‘That’s not a book, it’s a magazine! Let me see!’ She leaned over from her bed. She leaned far too eagerly and fell out with a yell.

  ‘Shut up, Grace!’

  ‘Ouch! I’ve banged my elbow – and my knee!’ Grace whimpered.

  ‘Ssh!’

  ‘It hurts,’ she whispered. She came scrabbling into my bed. ‘Please let me see, Prue.’

  ‘You won’t tell Mum?’ I hissed.

  Grace sometimes has terrible attacks of conscience when she worries and frets about some tiny little thing she’s done wrong and then suddenly blurts it all out to Mum when they’re having a cuddle. Grace is far too big for cuddles now but she still wants them. She’s like a large lollopy dog, desperate to be patted all the time.

  I didn’t waste my breath warning her not to tell Dad. Even Grace isn’t that mad.

  ‘I swear,’ she said. Then she whispered all the worst words she knew, swearing like a trooper. We might live like princesses locked in a tower but you can’t go down the street without hearing boys blinding away and drivers yelling. Also, very strangely, Dad sometimes swears when he’s in one of his tempers, foul words frothing out of his mouth. If Mum or Grace or I ever said just one of those words he would murder us.

  I showed Grace the magazines. She handled them reverently, as if they were the finest first folios, easing over the pages and smoothing them out. She looked at all the photos of teenage girls and stroked their clothes longingly. She started reading the problem page and then snorted with shocked laughter.

  ‘Ssh!’

  ‘What’s this girl going on about? What does she mean?’

  ‘Oh, for heaven’s sake, Grace, you know the facts of life,’ I said, although I wasn’t clear what a lot of it meant either.

  I had secretly looked at several volumes of Victorian erotica which Dad bought in a book auction, presumably by mistake. I found them right at the bottom of the box, under a Norton set of the Brontë sisters. They featured a bizarre vicar, Re
verend Knightly, with a large congregation of ever so lusty ladies. There were extraordinary colour plates showing the vicar cavorting in his dog collar and very little else. I found them comical but not particularly disturbing. They were adults, figments of someone’s imagination, and one hundred and fifty years old. The girls in these magazines were real.

  ‘Oh I wish I had a boyfriend,’ said Grace. ‘Do you think Dad will ever let us go out with boys, Prue?’

  ‘I don’t want to go out with boys,’ I said, not entirely truthfully.

  For years and years I’d had a private pretend friend, an interesting and imaginative girl my own age called Jane. She started when I read the first few chapters of Jane Eyre. She stepped straight out of the pages and into my head. She no longer led her own Victorian life with her horrible aunt and cousins. She shared my life with my demented father.

  Jane was better than a real sister. She wasn’t babyish and boring like Grace. We discussed books and pored over pictures and painted watercolours together, and we talked endlessly about everything. Sometimes we didn’t talk silently enough. I knew my lips moved and occasionally I started muttering without realizing. Grace knew I made up imaginary games inside my head and resented it.

  ‘You’re doing it!’ she’d say when I muttered, giving me a nudge. ‘Tell me, Prue, go on. Make it up for me.’

  ‘Make up your own games,’ I said, which was unfair, because she wasn’t much good at it.

  I’d started up a new and even more private pretend game recently, after Dad had taken Grace and me on an educational trip to the National Gallery in London. Dad had an old guidebook to the gallery and was all set to inform us relentlessly, but the gallery had long since rearranged all its rooms. Dad couldn’t match up the text in his guidebook with any of the paintings and became more and more frustrated and irritable.

  Grace barely looked at each painting, trudging with bent head, her feet dragging on the floor. She murmured obediently whenever Dad seemed to demand a response, but that was all.

 

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