the soft dough and gently mix them in. When Mom isnât looking, I pop some chips into my mouth.
I watch the spoonfuls of warm batter spread into shapes in the oven. Oh no! They look like blobs. I snap the oven door shut.
Soon a sweet chocolaty smell fills the kitchen, and I pull the cookies out to cool.
âYouâre being very strong about this,â says Mom.
âIâm determined to lose weight, and nothing will stop me. Not even chocolatechip cookies.â
âIâm sure one cookie wonât spoil your diet,â says Mom.
âMom! Donât tempt me!â I say. âI have to be strict about this diet or it wonât work.â
âIâm sor r y, Eve. Iâm on your side. I shouldnât have suggested the cookie.â
Why am I annoyed with my mother? She bought a whole fridge-full of fruit and vegetables to help me. She didnât force me to eat a quarter of a chocolate bar or the handful of chips. Maybe all the fruit and vegetables are making me insane! I need more protein, but I canât have that till day five of my diet.
After a supper of cooked carrots (no butter), steamed potatoes (no butter), spinach (no butter), lettuce and tomato salad (no dressing), I head to my room to work on my math homework. Ms. Murray is zipping through the material so quickly my head spins.
Soon I hear Momâs book-club friends come in. They comment on the delicious smell lingering through the house.
âIt smells like chocolate perfume in here,â says one of momâs friends.
Yes! Chocolate is the best perfume in the world. They should bottle it. Then I could just dab it on my skin and not eat it. But Iâd miss eating it. It takes all my willpower not to charge into the kitchen and grab a cookie.
âEve baked the cookies.â I hear Mom tell her friends.
âWhat a lovely girl,â says one of Momâs friends. âMy Zoe never helps out. She does nothing at home but text message her friends.â
Zoeâs mother is in my momâs book club! Iâm not stepping out of my room till they leave. I do not want to meet Zoeâs mom. What would I say? Your daughter is obnoxious. She humiliates people. I hate her.
I start working on math. I can only figure out eight of the twelve questions. I stare at the four I canât figure out, but nothing comes to me. I pull out my chocolate bar. Maybe a little chocolate will help me think better. I take a bite, then another. I figure out one of the four questions. Maybe the chocolate is helping!
I eat some more. Iâve finished three quarters of the bar, but Iâm still no further ahead with the other three math questions.
I stare at the questions for another twenty minutes and then give up. Iâll ask the teacher tomorrow. I pull out the rest of the chocolate bar and eat the last few pieces as a reward for my efforts.
I enjoy every rich, melt-in-your-mouth bite, but when I finish I check the wrapper. I have just consumed three hundred and fifty calories. I can feel my gut getting blobbier by the minute.
âI keep trying to lose weight, but it keeps finding me.â
âAuthor Unknown
chapter nine
I meet Carolyn on the way to school. Denise is sick with the flu. We talk about our art projects. Carolyn pulls out her ad for hot dogs to show me. Itâs great.
She has a man walking a dog down the street. A woman watches him while grilling sizzling hot dogs. The woman is grinning. The ad says:
Enjoy a hot dog today. One dog you donât have to walk.
âMs. Holmes cracked up when she saw it,â she says.
I tel l Carolyn the slogan for my chocolate-bar ad.
âFabulous,â she says. âHowâs your diet going?â
âNot so fabulous. I got through day one, which was all fruit, and day two, which was all vegetables. Today I can eat a mix of fruit and vegetables, and Iâll be fine. But tomorrow will be hell. Tomorrow I can only eat bananas and drink