Pride & Princesses (36 page)

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Authors: Summer Day

Tags: #juvenile fiction

BOOK: Pride & Princesses
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Jet seemed mildly put out, but then reverted to his usual friendly self. He made sure everyone had soda and snacks and talked soccer with the boys. Mark socialized as well and before we knew it, the barbeque evolved into a full on party that Teegan and Freya would write up in their diaries and turn into another social scandal that wasn’t.

   
After we’d finished swimming and eating the delicious food Jet made, I showered and dried off. When I entered the sitting room Petra was playing the piano, a tune slightly more advanced than I’d been used to hearing,
Allegretto.

   
It was beautiful. When I looked up, Mark was watching me listen to the music. Suddenly I felt embarrassed to be feeling more than I had resolved to feel. It was hard to admit, but perhaps the boys deserved another chance. Mark seemed too proud until he let his guard down and Jet was so amiable as to risk being used for his innate hospitality.

   
We were more than happy to let Teegan or Tory or Brooke or Freya reel them in, using all the scheming dating methods of bygone eras. We only had to get one of them to take us to the ball.
 

   
The game of love was a game of chance and ours to manipulate, or so we thought.

   
I felt stupid and a little bit mean; almost like Teegan, except I was sincerely crushing on Mark and he couldn’t understand why my interest ran hot and cold.

   
‘I know it would be a foolish guy who thought that a simple apology was enough,’ he started, ‘but you know, before I spoke to you I didn’t realize how wonderful you were.’ He said this just as we were about to leave. I was so flattered I could barely speak and almost fell out the door after Mouche went off to say goodbye to Jet who offered to drive us home. But that wasn’t necessary. Teegan’s older sister Missy made an appearance just as Trey buzzed the gate and after speaking to all of us girls quite rudely about not forgetting to shut the pool fence, was all niceness and politeness to Trey, who seemed quite taken with a made-up Missy in her bikini top.

   
‘Oh, Trey, isn’t it?’ Missy betrayed the recognition in her face.

   
‘Hi Missy, I’ve just come to collect Mouche and Phoebe.’

   
‘So, weren’t we sophomores together?’

   
‘Yes, before you left to go to HSYL.’

   
‘School wasn’t the same without you. We should catch up sometime,’ Missy said, not even trying to play hard to get. Missy was one of those girls who sucked up to boys but was mean to other women. Even the Princesses noted this and thought her behaviour completely unnecessary.

   
‘That’d be great,’ Trey replied.

    
Mouche looked at me with an exasperated expression and said, ‘well, must fly, study awaits,’ and dragged Trey unwillingly by the hand as I said ‘thank you’ and ‘goodbye,’ on my way out the door. Mark lounged in the window seat with Freya as I was leaving but got up and stopped me as I walked along the cobbled path to Trey’s car.

   
‘Listen, just an idea, but I thought you and Mouche might want to come horse riding with me and Jet next week.’ Before I could say, ‘I am otherwise engaged,’ as per an old
Ladies Journal of Dating circa 1926 (what to do with disagreeable men)
I’d almost changed my former opinion of Mark and stumbled into the car, as Mouche said, ‘we’d love to.’

   
In the car, Mouche giggled.

  
‘Mark’s not as big a Tool as I thought,’ she said, and we sped off.

Chapter 21

Etiquette

   
After the final dates that night, we consolidated the diary, even adding Trey’s interlude with the snooty Missy. Both Mouche and I made a note that we had broken one of our vital rules regarding last minute invites,
‘always make sure the boy gives you advance notice of a date, otherwise he will just take you for granted. Plus, you need at least a few days to get ready, be prepared and look your best.’

  
That was one rule, even if it was in the interests of spontaneity, that wouldn’t be easily broken again.
 

  
The next day, all the girls gathered after dress rehearsal. The run of
Rocco and Julie
was terrible; everything that could possibly go wrong, did go wrong and I was beginning to think Thom shouldn’t even bother sending a representative from Julliard. Of course, he insisted. (S
ometimes you have to let others believe in you even more than you believe in yourself
or so it says in ‘
A Girls Guide to Etiquette’ -
although Mouche disagrees on that one).

   
‘Besides, a bad dress rehearsal always means a great show,’ Peter enthused.

   
Backstage, during the run, Mark was mouthing the words as I said them. He’d heard them all more than once and I have to admit I was impressed with the gusto and good humor he suddenly displayed. Mark actually seemed humble in this new light.

   
‘Almost like Jesus when he was a carpenter,’ Brooke noted.

    
Even Miss Tartt was a fan (well, obviously, Miss Tartt was a fan). The scene he was lighting for the tech run went something like this:

Julie to the Priest
(in confession)

I am in love with someone...so different from me. I just don’t know what to do. I have this...potion that will put me to sleep, I’m thinking of pretending to be asleep...forever. When we’ve fooled our families Rocco and I can
 
run away together.

Priest

That could create major complications.

Paris walks in

Paris

Julie? Why are you crying? Why is my love in tears?

Paris takes Julie aside (stage whisper)

We are to be married on Thursday, then all of your father’s money will be mine.

Julie

I am
so
not in love with you.

Paris

Is that all you have to confess?

Julie

Also...that I love...someone else.

Julie starts to leave, Paris tries to stop her, she slaps him

Paris

Ah, shrewish...all that will change after Thursday. Where are you going?

Julie

To find Rocco

Paris

 
Are you on drugs?

   
Mark could be heard laughing from the top of the lighting cable at this oh so serious high point in Act Three as Mr Sparks looked on unimpressed. Then I started laughing too. I mean, Mr Sparks was really losing it. The entire third act was laced with lessons about life choices, teen marriage and the perils of alcoholism and drug taking.

   
I’m not sure whether the school censors would be letting Mr Sparks get away with it but you had to hand it to him for trying. And, of course, there was Miss Tartt enabling him, glancing lovingly his way and cheering him on. Why is it women help males shine then end up waving on the sidelines like fans? Is that
enough
for them? Don’t they want to be the driving forces behind their own lives? Or is it just easier to let boys steer the way?
   
The Good Girlfriend Guide
states, ‘
never be jealous of other women. Anger and jealousy are wasted emotions. Find the love in everything and focus on it.

    
Always strive to do what’s right for you without being mean to others – especially other women (because by dividing to conquer, women are busy devaluing other women while men climb the career ladder and let other members of the boys’ club in with them).

   
If the worst happens and another woman ‘steals’ your man consider placing equal blame on both the man and the woman. Ask yourself why your instinct dictates that you should cut the woman out of your life but consider taking the man back? Is the female somehow more culpable than the male...or is she just less valuable
?

  
 
I would never consider men more valuable than women just because
the world sometimes views the status quo
this way.

   
‘Phoebe Harris, if you break out of character again I will consider asking Mr Sparks to replace you!’ Miss Tartt snapped from the sidelines. She’s working as the prompt today because Jet and Mark are fulfilling other duties.

    
Miss Tartt has been unduly mean to me and sometimes even Mouche (her favourite apart from Mark). It has to be said, though, that the woman works hard for Mr Spark’s. Perhaps she needs someone to set her straight. The
Mrs Jones Guide
wouldn’t do her any harm. I could leave it in her bag anonymously. I will highlight the parts about ‘
not allowing men to use your smarts to make themselves look and sound smarter than they are’
and the part about ‘
not feeling so threatened by other females that you have to make life extra hard for them
.’ After all, helping others has to be good karma.

    
When everyone was finishing rehearsals, and after I’d surreptitiously left the
Guide
just under the flap of Miss Tartt’s faux leather handbag and Mr Sparks had given us ‘the talk’ about how ‘we have to mean what we say and feel what we mean,’ and Mouche and Ethan had found some kind of equilibrium playing a delicate tune in tandem on the upright piano, much to Jet’s obvious displeasure, we all dispersed.

    
I saw Miss Love and Mr Frames walking hand in hand towards their car park in the distance from the auditorium windows.

    
‘That’s true love,’ Tory said wistfully as Miss Tartt delegated all the carrying of props to the minions to take backstage. Mouche had gone on ahead with a car stuffed with final costume adjustments. I was the last to lock up. Or so I thought.

   
I was thinking about
Mrs Robinson’s
guide (my favourite) suggesting that ‘
those who can laugh together are made for each other,’
Does this mean I could be made for Mark? Or was it Joel or even Trey I laughed with more? I had to admit, even though Joel had been busy dating Ella and Mouche’s cousin in tandem, we did have some amusing moments together.
 
It was all becoming very confusing as I raced back from my recently fixed car to get the last pages of the
Boy-Rating Diary
that I’d stupidly left in my make-up box in the dressing rooms.

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