â¦
I roll the list into a scroll, tie it with a hair bobble and put it under my bed.
6 p.m.
Gran comes around, fussing about her bowels again. âIâve been lovely and regular and then Istayed one night at Sissyâsâjust one night!âand my body clockâs all gone to pot again,â sheâs saying to my mom in the kitchen. Why are old people like this? If we went on about our poo all day at school weâd get told off for being âcrudeâ and âvulgar,â but once youâre past 70, it seems you can say what you like.
âHow old are you, Gramma?â says Phoebe, who is for some reason painting her Barbie dollsâ eyes black and white, like Marilyn Mansonâs.
âIâm 79 years young, love,â says Gran, like always.
âOh,â says Pheebs sweetly, âdoes that mean youâll die soon?â
6:30 p.m.
I know what will happen when I go down and say hello. âHello, Danielleâhave you done your packet?â she will ask. âPhoebe, Rickâhave youdone your packets?â She means have we done a poo today. She always asks this, even when people are here from school and I have to pretend sheâs talking about sending a parcel to an African charity or something. She really does need her head examining.
Remember I need to put Clearasil on my blackheads.
7 p.m.
Thatâs funnyâMom and Gran are still murmuring in low voices in the kitchen and Mom hasnât even shouted up telling us not to be so rude and come down and say hello to our grandmother. I go into the kitchen. They stop talking immediately. âOh, hello, Danielle,â says Gran absentmindedly. Not so much as a âhow are you?â She didnât even inquire after my packet! I am offended. Old people are so self-obsessed.
7:10 p.m.
Itâs meat-and-potato pie for tea, my absolute favorite, but I inform my mother that I am now vegetarian and that itâs about time she started considering the welfare of animals too.
âAre you going to last more than two days this time?â she says.
I explain that this is a life decision.
âWell, youâll have to make yourself a cheese sandwich then.â
I hate cheese. I also hate vegetables. This is a problem. Maybe I will starve to death. Not that anyone will notice. But imagine how good that would look to Damian as my epitaph: âShe loved animals so much, she perished.â
Sunday
Mom decides we should all go to the park with Simon âas a family.â Rick lies that heâs got mocksto revise for so itâs just the four of us. Thereâs a bit of a kerfuffle when Simon ruins someoneâs picnic by running through the middle of it and stealing the sausage rolls, but after weâve calmed Mr. Angry Middle-Aged Man down itâs quite a nice day all in all. Mom is still being a bit weird and emotional, saying to me and Phoebe stuff like, âYouâre both still my babies, you know. Donât forget that!â
Dad rubs her like sheâs a distressed pony. Phoebe is outraged. âIâm not a baby!â she says. âI wipe myself.â
Monday
Drag Amber to the drugstore with me after school. Have decided that in order to make Damian see sense and prefer me to Treasure I am going to have to change my look. I spend £3.99 on a mascara that promises âtelescopic lashes to get you noticed!â
âYou canât wear it for school,â says Amber, always the goody two-shoes. âMr. Cook [the principal] will just make you scrub it off.â
âLook, if Treasure can get away with it, so can I,â I say. âNow I need some tanning lotion.â Amber says it might be toxic and that I have no idea what Iâll be putting on my skin and why donât we go home and research it on the internet first?
Honestlyâwhat is she like? âEveryone uses it,â I say, and at least Iâm not going on one of those sunbeds that give you