Girl, 16: Five-Star Fiasco (27 page)

BOOK: Girl, 16: Five-Star Fiasco
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Chapter 33

 

 

 

All the same, she was terrified, of course. Jess lurked in her dressing room, chewing her fingernails.

Occasionally she fired off a text to her mum at front of house.
THEY’RE PILING IN!
Mum reported.
EVERYBODY LOOKS STUNNING! JACK’S BRO AND HIS FRIENDS FROM UNI HAVE COME IN DRAG!

Oh no! Trust George and Co to turn up and try to turn the whole thing into a freakin’ charade! On the other hand, maybe it wouldn’t matter. Maybe it would add to the hilarity of the whole occasion. Jess was dying to take a peep at them, despite all her misgivings. However, she stayed where she was.

There was a knock on her door. Her heart, already hammering with terror, gave a panicky lurch. But it was only Martin.

‘In about two minutes,’ he said, looking at his watch, ‘when we’ve finished this number, Dave will do a drum roll and you should just step into position and do your welcome stuff. Your dad’s fixed you up with a spotlight, so don’t get dazzled and fall off the stage!’

‘You’re such a spoilsport, Martin,’ quipped Jess. ‘How else are we going to get the evening off to a flying start? The band sounds absolutely great, by the way.’

Martin smiled. ‘We’re not bad for veterans,’ he said. ‘I must get back onstage – I’ve got a piano solo coming up.’

He disappeared, and Jess followed, kicking off her shoes and mussing up her hair (result: sparkly hands, but it all seemed to add to the Cinderella look).

She waited in the wings, stage left, her heart hammering even harder. The band’s number finished and straight away there was a drum roll. Whole bucketfuls of adrenalin surged up Jess’s neck. She stepped forward into a pool of light. Now she could see nothing.

‘Please, please!’ she said in a plaintive Cinderella voice. ‘Ladies and gentlemen, don’t tell anybody I’m at the ball! I’m not supposed to be here! My ugly sisters are here somewhere – ah, there they are . . .’ She peered randomly into the blackness. ‘Oh no, sorry, madam, the light is so poor in here!’ This got a laugh, the first one of the evening – always a relief. The audience seemed to be determined to enjoy themselves, which is good news for a comedian.

‘I was supposed to stay at home chopping up rats for the ratatouille,’ Jess went on, to more laughter. ‘But I couldn’t resist creeping in through the back door, because I wanted to catch a glimpse of Prince Charming! Oh, he makes my little heart go pit-a-pat!’ Jess took up a fragile doting pose, hands clasped in adoration at the very thought of royalty. ‘Has anyone seen him yet?’

‘He’s out clubbing!’ shouted a voice from the back of the room.

‘Oh no!’ sighed Jess stagily. ‘I was so hoping to see him! I thought maybe I could pick up a bit of his dandruff – does that count as DNA? – then I could clone my very own prince back home on the windowsill!’

The audience laughed some more, but then Jess saw, out of the corner of her eye, a white shape weaving its way through the tables, towards the stage. What on earth? She peered through the dark. Was it one of George’s stupid jokes . . . ? What! What? Oh no! A huge wave of panic crashed through her body.

It was Fred!

His head was poking out of a sheet on which streaks of green had been painted. What!? Fred sprang into the spotlight beside her and looked confidently out at the audience. Dave improvised a drum roll.

‘My name,’ announced Fred, ‘is Prince Amoeba.’ There was a laugh and a gust of applause. ‘And though I don’t have a backbone, I do at least have the presence of mind to welcome you all to this Valentine’s event. Welcome, my friends, to Chaos!’

The band improvised a little riff of music, and the audience cheered and banged on the tables. Jess was furious. Fred had hijacked her routine! What was all this mad stuff about being an amoeba? She had no idea what Fred would say next – this was so off the wall. And how dare he put her in her place about welcoming people!

‘I don’t suppose many of you know much about amoebas,’ Fred went on swiftly, so Jess didn’t have a chance to open her mouth. ‘I was discovered in 1757 by August Johann Rösel von Rosenhof. This was before the days o
f
TV talent shows
, so unfortunately it didn’t lead to a recording contract.’

There were cries of ‘Shame!’

Jess could only stand there at his side, her mind simultaneously racing, reeling and somehow blank. She couldn’t show her anger – she had to pretend this had all been planned. It was a nightmare. Presumably this amoeba stuff was what Fred had been working away at all week, all by himself on his so-called sickbed. It must have been inspired by Jess calling him an invertebrate. How could she relate it to Cinderella? It was impossible. She just had to stand there like a dummy while Fred ranted selfishly on, stealing her limelight.

‘In potentially lethal environments, such as a dinner dance,’ said Fred, giving her the briefest glance, ‘I roll into a ball and secrete a protective membrane around myself – in fact, I become a cyst.’

‘Well, we all know that,’ snapped Jess drily.

‘I’m hoping to evolve into a higher life form,’ Fred raced on, ‘but it’s still very much at the blueprint stage. It could take me, oh, three million years or so.’ And suddenly, with a flourish, he disappeared from the stage.

Dave improvised another little drum roll, and there was a roar of applause, which should have given Jess a couple of seconds to collect her wits and work out what to say next.

There was a pause, and frantically she tried to remember the next bit of her script – although, would it make any sense after this amoeba garbage? To her horror, her mind went totally blank. There was nothing in her memory banks except a howling blackness. She went hot, then cold. For a moment she thought she was going to faint. The moment seemed to last for hours. Then, somehow, words came to her. She had to carry on where Fred had dumped the routine. Her Cinderella material seemed irrelevant now.

‘Well, that’s my little pet amoeba,’ she said, her voice shaking slightly. ‘He only consists of one cell, but hey! Who’s counting?’

This got a slight titter, but nothing like the big laughs Fred had managed.

‘Of course, I haven’t got a ticket,’ Jess went on, recovering her senses and remembering she had introducing to do, ‘but I did overhear somebody backstage say that our DJ tonight is gorgeous Gordon Smith.’ Another drum roll, a round of applause. ‘And the band performing is The Martin Davies Quartet! A buffet supper will be served at 8.30 by Polly Put The Kettle On and her team of cute chefs!’ There was clapping and cheering. ‘But don’t all rush – I’ll tell you when it’s time to grab your grub! Till then, enjoy yourselves. I must go off and defrost the chandeliers!’

Jess turned and ran backstage, hearing the comforting sound of the band striking up behind her. She headed for the sanctuary of her little dressing room, slammed the door behind her, slumped down in her chair, buried her head in her hands and shuddered. That terrible split second when her mind had gone blank! It was one of the worst moments of her entire life, and it was all Fred’s fault. It was a good job he wasn’t here – she might actually have hit him.

After a few minutes there was a knock on the door. Jess whirled round in indignation, but it was only Mum with Ben Jones.

‘You were brilliant, love!’ said Mum. ‘And trust Fred to take a really original approach!’

‘Yes,’ said Jess uneasily. She couldn’t bear to reveal what had actually happened: that Fred had ruined her routine, the evening and possibly her life.

‘Is he going to be an amoeba all night?’ asked Ben.

‘Ah!’ said Jess, heroically managing a tight little false smile. ‘You’ll just have to wait and see.’

The awful thing was that she would just have to wait and see, too. She couldn’t go out and track Fred down for a showdown in front of everybody – all the guests had to think the double act was supposed to be like that. And clearly Fred’s stupid amoeba idea had been a great hit. Jess remembered the applause he’d got – warmer, more excited applause than hers. She felt bitterly, bitterly betrayed and stupidly jealous.

Soon it was time for the buffet to be announced. Polly came round to Jess’s dressing room and told her everything was ready. By now the bar was heaving, the joint was jumping and Dave had to roll his drums like a thunderstorm to get everyone to be quiet. Once again Jess stepped out into the spotlight. She glanced around. No sign of Fred. Then there were giggles from the back of the room, strange sounds, a kind of hurly-burly. Chairs were being moved about, and there was laughter and some good-natured hilarious screaming. Jess peered into the dark, inconveniently dazzled by the spotlight. Somebody in a monkey suit was rampaging around the tables. Oh no, what next?

It had to be Fred. He grabbed a woman and hauled her to her feet. Her hair came off – oh no, it was George Stevens, with a blonde wig and a red satin ball gown. He hoicked its straps back up on to his brawny rugby-player’s shoulders, and screeched. The ape embraced him, then raced up to the stage.

‘I see you’ve evolved a bit since we last met,’ said Jess sourly, abandoning her Cinderella character and all its wonderful jokes.

‘I wish I could say the same for you,’ said Fred. He tilted the ape’s head back so his own face was visible.

‘I don’t need to evolve,’ Jess retorted. ‘I’m perfect already.’ She was managing to improvise, thank goodness, but it felt really lame compared to her lovely Cinderella script.

‘Nobody’s perfect!’ Fred insisted. And there was a little
ta-tum
on the drums because that was a famous quote, the last line of the wonderful film
Some Like It Hot
, which, annoyingly, was Jess and Fred’s favourite movie.

‘That’s not what Prince Charming told me,’ said Jess, trying desperately to reintroduce a vague hint of Cinderella. ‘He came round to my dressing-room door with a bunch of red roses and a bottle of champagne just now, and asked me to be his valentine.’ There were whoops of excitement from the crowd.

‘Poor innocent child,’ said Fred. ‘You shouldn’t let your head be turned by these Hooray Henrys. Place your trust in an ape – you know it makes sense.’

‘But I can tell your affections are otherwise engaged,’ said Jess crisply. ‘I saw you flirting with that blonde lady at the back of the room.’

‘That was no lady – that was my wife,’ said Fred, leaning forward conspiratorially. Another
ta-tum
from the drums – Dave was very quick to respond whenever he heard a corny old joke.

‘Anyway, ladies and gentlemen, it is now officially feeding time,’ announced Jess. ‘Please queue for the buffet at your convenience.’

‘Funny place for a buffet,’ commented Fred. ‘Not very hygienic, I’d have thought. Well, folks, enjoy your supper. I’m off to guzzle a banana in my nest of leaves. I’m hoping to evolve into Homo sapiens by the end of the evening, but I can see that some of you have a lot further to go than that.’ He threw this remark to the back of the hall, where George’s table was. They raised a cheer, and people started to get up. Jess could see there was no need for her to say anything more, so she slipped back to her dressing room again, feeling desperate and defeated.

There was a knock on the door – it was Flora and Jack.

‘Come out and have some supper, Jess!’ suggested Flo. ‘That buffet looks amazing – and you haven’t got any more hosting to do till the end, have you?’

‘No, I suppose not,’ said Jess, wriggling back into her shoes. ‘Is Fred out there?’

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