Love and Other Drama-Ramas! (9 page)

BOOK: Love and Other Drama-Ramas!
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“I’m afraid the features position has already been allocated, Paddy,” Cliona says quickly, blinking a couple of times.

“Since when?” he asks.

“Since a few minutes ago,” she says. “I’ve just appointed Amber Horsefell.”

“But—” Paddy says.

Cliona puts her hand up to stop him. “I’ve made up my mind. Sorry, Paddy. She’s perfect for the job.”

Cliona turns to Clover. “I’m afraid all the slots on the mag are taken this year. And now I have to run. I’m meeting
Kendall
for lunch.” She gives Clover a smug smile, and for a split second I want to punch her.

Clover looks like she’s about to faint.

Don’t crumble,
I plead under my breath.
Stand your ground, Clover.

But instead of saying anything, Clover staggers sideways. I grab her arm and right her. I have to get her out of there, and quickly.

“Apologies, Cliona,” I say. “We’re in a rush too. We’re meeting Clover’s boyfriend, and we’re already late. He’s in a band. The Golden Lions. You’ve probably heard of them. They’re the next big thing.”

Cliona looks at Clover again. Her eyes are hard to read, but there is some sort of emotion flickering behind them. “Must dash,” is all she says. And then she tinkles her fingers at us and leaves in a waft of musky perfume and hairspray.

“I’m so sorry,” Paddy says as soon as she’s gone. He looks genuinely upset. “I had no idea she’d given Amber that slot. It’s such a shame. The magazine needs a good shake-up. Cliona’s running it into the ground. She’s a good writer when she wants to be, but she always plays it safe. There’s nothing about music or design or cutting-edge street fashion. It’s all university balls and parties. And don’t get me started on the website! She just won’t listen to anyone else’s opinion. I really hope things get better soon. Here.” He hands Clover a smart gray and white business card, and she puts it in her pocket absently.

“Please stay in touch,” he says. “I’m sure Cliona will change her mind. The magazine needs someone like you.”

“She will,” I say, adding, “sorry, Clover hasn’t seen Cliona for a long time, I think she got a bit of a fright.”

“I understand,” he says kindly. “Sounds like Cliona’s changed a lot.”

“Every day,” Clover says softly on the DART home. “I’m going to have to face that witch every single day. And what about
him
? I thought I was over him, Beanie. I’m such a mess.”

“Forget about Cliona,” I say. “And Kendall. They’re not worth it.”

Poor Clover. She’s nervous enough about college without this horror hanging over her head.

She nods and then stares out of the window, her eyes glazed, her mind miles away. I could kill Cliona Bang. Clover’s college career is at stake. I wish there was something I could do. But what?

“Seth, are you all right? You’ve been very quiet all day.” I nudge him gently with my shoulder. It’s lunchtime on Tuesday, and we’re walking toward the pitch — but mentally he’s miles away. Bailey is standing by the wall on the far side of the rugby fields with Annabelle and a gang of D4s and Crombies.

“It’s Bailey,” Seth says, nodding in his direction. “I tried talking to him about Mills earlier, but he just shut me down. Said he didn’t want to discuss it. They were all over each other in Dundrum. I can’t believe he did that to her on Friday night. And with Annabelle Hamilton. I thought he hated the D4s — but look at him now, fawning over them. I don’t get it. It’s all so weird.”

“I know. It doesn’t make sense.” I think back to how he was when I confronted him at the gig. I can still see his eyes now, days later: hurt, dark, afraid. I shake my head. “I just get the feeling there’s something going on with Bailey — something we don’t know about. Have you met his family?”

“No. But I’ve been to his house in Bray. It’s pretty nice, mega kitchen, loads of steel, and this really cool oven thing. He calls his old man “Mac.” He’s a chef. Bailey says the joke is he rarely cooks at home. Said they’d both starve if it wasn’t for the local takeout.”

“And his mum?”

“Didn’t mention her. She certainly wasn’t in the house.”

“Did you not ask him where she was?”

“We’re not all as nosy as you are, Amy. And we were more interested in playing Xbox than in talking about our female parentals.”

I shake my head. Boys really are clueless sometimes. How can you find out about people if you don’t ask questions?

“I don’t think he’s interested in being friends with me anymore,” Seth adds glumly. “And after what he did to Mills — But do you know something weird? Polly spotted him on Killiney Beach on Saturday afternoon. He was teaching a bunch of kids to surf.”

“Really? Kids? Are we talking about the same Bailey? And he’s never said anything about surfing.”

Seth shrugs. “I know. Strange, isn’t it? Polly was surprised to find him there, all right. She hung around for a while and watched them bodyboarding. Said Bailey looked really happy just messing about in the water with the kids. He saw her and waved. He’s been at our place a few times, and they got on pretty well.”

I smile. “Your mum’s easy to talk to. Did they talk? On the beach, I mean.”

“No. He stayed in the water.”

“It’s just so odd. Bailey’s—”

He cuts me off. “Let’s talk about something else, Amy, OK? I don’t really care about Bailey Otis.” But I can tell from the look in his eyes that he does care — a lot. Seth’s eyes don’t lie. I know he feels hurt and let down. Seth doesn’t make friends easily — he can be quiet and shy with people he doesn’t know. It’s all such a shame.

Mills is miserable too — which is understandable. First thing this morning, Annabelle told almost everyone about her “special” Golden Lions date with Bailey. So I made sure Nina Big-Mouth Pickering knew all about Mills’s starring stage role.

Nina was astounded. “Are we talking about the same Mills? Miss Goody Two-shoes? On stage at a Golden Lions gig? No way!”

I showed her the photos and video clip I’d taken on my iPhone as evidence.

“Unbelievable,” she said. “Annabelle didn’t mention anything about that! She claims Mills saw them smooching in their box and was devastated at being dumped. But Mills hardly looks heartbroken here . . . Wait till I tell everyone that Annabelle’s lying through her teeth. Mills so obviously dumped
him
.” (Nina and Annabelle have a well documented love-hate relationship.)

I smiled to myself as Nina ran off to deliver her breaking news. D4s are so easily duped.

After school a girl in my class called Lucinda Carvery comes up to me and asks, “You looking for Mills? She’s in the top loo. She seems pretty upset.”

“Thanks, Lucinda,” I say, dashing up the corridor.

I shoulder open the door of the loos and call, “Mills? Mills?”

Nothing.

One of the cubicles is locked, and I press my ear against the wood.

“Mills? It’s me, Amy.”

There’s a loud sniff from inside.

“Come on, Mills, open up. Don’t make me crawl under the door.”

There’s no answer, so I get down on my hands and knees and twist my head sideways. I can see Mills’s scuffed ballet flats and sensible navy socks. “Mills,” I say again. “Open up, please. I’m not a circus contortionist — my neck is killing me.” Straightening up, I hit my head on the bottom of the door. “Ow!” I rub the lump.

Mills clicks the latch, and the door swings back. I look at her. Her eyes are ringed with blotchy red circles, and her face is pale apart from a throbbing red nose. She’s rubbing at her eyes with a piece of balled-up toilet paper. She looks terrible.

Squeezing into the cubicle beside her, I put my arm around her shoulders. “He’s not worth it, Mills, honestly.”

“I feel so stupid,” she wails. “I don’t understand what I’ve done. It doesn’t make any sense. I can’t believe he’s hanging out with the D4s now. I’m so ashamed — being dumped for Annabelle! I bet everyone’s laughing at me.” She gives a raggedy sob and dabs her nose with the toilet paper. “I thought he liked me, Amy. I thought he really liked me.”

“I know, hon, so did I. I’m so sorry. But you don’t need to worry about what people think. The story is that
you
broke up with
him,
right before your Golden Lions debut. OK? I have Nina convinced, and hopefully Bailey will keep his mouth shut. And no one believes a word Annabelle says about her love life anymore.” Luckily for Mills, Miss Hamilton is prone to exaggeration. There isn’t a movie star in the land Annabelle hasn’t “kissed” at a film premiere.

I brush her hair off her face and smile gently. “Really, Big-Mouth Nina is bound to tell the whole school, so you have nothing to worry about there.”

“Thanks, Amy,” she says, smiling through her tears. “But I miss him soooo much.”

I hold her as she sobs her little heart out. God, I could kill Bailey Otis.

“Do you have any idea how many calories are in a tub of this stuff?” Clover holds up the Ben & Jerry’s carton and starts scanning the side. She’s dropped by so we can go through a
Goss
letter together. The house is empty apart from us. I can’t remember the last time I walked into a quiet, empty house after school. It’s blissful. No Mum to quiz me about homework or poke in my bag to see if I’ve eaten my sandwich, and no rug rats pulling at my skirt or slapping sticky hands on my skin. Score! After the day I’ve had, with both Seth and Mills wiped out by the Bailey virus, I deserve it.

I put my hand over the list of ingredients. “I don’t want to know, Clover. Anyway, you’re always telling me that dieting is pointless.”

“You’re right.” And dipping her spoon in again, she starts shoveling ice cream down her throat like there’s no tomorrow. “I don’t know what’s wrong with me, Beanie,” she says between mouthfuls. “One minute I have no appetite at all, and the next I’m ravenous. My energy levels are all over the place.”

“I’m not surprised if you’re not eating properly. Did you have any lunch?”

She thinks for a second. “Actually, no.”

“Right, read me this letter while I make you a toasted sandwich.”

“I’m not really hungry, Beanie. And I feel a bit sick from all that ice cream.”

“You’re having a toastie and that’s that.”

“Fine. You get more and more like your mother every day.”

I ignore her and start slicing cheese.

“I guess it’s all the walking,” she says after a few minutes. “And you can’t eat in the Dead Zoo.”

I stop slicing and look at her blankly.

“I’ve been strolling around Saint Stephen’s Green Park at lunchtime,” she admits. “Or visiting the Dead Zoo. I tried the National Gallery, but that was snoozeville. I really don’t understand what you see in galleries, Beanie. Stuffed animals are far more interesting.”

I’m about to ask why she hasn’t been eating lunch at college when it dawns on me — she’s afraid of bumping into Cliona or Kendall.

“You have to eat, Clover. You’ll get sick.”

She nods glumly. “I know.”

I decide not to press her. Right now, she could do without a lecture. “So what about this letter, then?” I ask instead.

She delves through her bag — a leopard-skin Mulberry satchel, the
Goss
fashion cupboard strikes again — and pulls out a folder. “This poor soul sounds in an awful state.”

I get back to sandwich making while she reads the letter to me.

Dear Clover and Amy,

You are probably going to think this is the weirdest, saddest letter that has ever landed on your desk. I have a problem. A BIG problem.

I live in Greystones with my mum. She’s a flight attendant, and because she’s away a lot of the time, I’ve been at boarding school — Rathmore Abbey. But here’s the thing: Tuesday’s my last day.

Mum has just come off the transatlantic flights. She’s shifting to the European routes instead — so I don’t have to board anymore. She says she needs to get her life back. I think she’d actually like to meet someone, someone who isn’t a married pilot.

She’s had a rotten time with men. There was this one guy, Dermott, who had a wife and a baby at home. Mum was devastated when he finally told her. And he only came clean because Mum invited him to spend Christmas with us and couldn’t understand why he claimed he was tied up on Christmas Day.

Anyway, Mum has found me a place in Lakelands Secondary School in Bray, starting next week — a week! I’m TERRIFIED, girls, utterly heart-thumpingly petrified.

I have three days to get ready — buy the uniform, check what extra books I need — but I know nothing can prepare me for the biggest difference of all . . . You see Rathmore is all girls, and Lakelands is mixed. Please don’t laugh — but I’ve never really spoken to a boy my own age before, not properly. I have no brothers, no cousins, no male neighbors, nothing. My life is a boy wasteland.

All my friends are girls, and I never meet any boys. If I walk into a shop and there’s a guy behind the counter, I blush and stammer. It’s so embarrassing — I’m sure they think I’m some sort of freak. I can’t go into Xtravision anymore ’cause I get so tongue-tied — there are loads of cute boys working in there. I have to send Mum in now to get movies for me.

I really don’t know what to do. I’ve tried talking to Mum about it, but she says that in time I’ll get used to sitting beside boys every day. But I even blushed when she said this — I had no idea I’d have to sit beside them! Don’t all the girls sit together? If I have to sit beside a boy, I really am doomed.

Please help! I’m seriously freaking out here!!!

Eloise Oliphant, 13

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