Authors: Jane Wenham-Jones
âWhat about Stanley?'
âHe can come to us after school â Roger can leave work a bit early and hold the fort till we get back.'
âWe?'
âI'm coming to watch.'
âYou don't have to go alone,' sang Clive.
I glared at Charlotte. âYou're not coming because I'm not going. I am too busy, too bad-tempered, too fat, and I haven't got anything to wear. That's the end of it.'
Charlotte was unfazed. âYou've got stacks of stuff â we only went shopping last week. And we can go again this weekend. Stop making excuses. You're boring me.'
âWho'll feed the cat?'
âYou'll be back in the evening.'
âI'm camera shy!'
Charlotte folded her arms. âYou're
really
boring me now â¦'
âI don't care. No!'
âYou'll love it when you get there.'
âI'm
not
doing it.'
âWhy do you have to do it?' Stanley looked at me in disgust. âAnd why Becky's house? She's completely horrible â she always laughs at me.'
âGirls are like that, darling.' I held yet another ghastly garment up against me and looked at it from several angles in the full-length mirror. âJust ignore her. Play with Joe.'
âJoe is seven,' said Stanley wearily.
I threw the dress on the bed and picked up the flouncy grey skirt I'd started with. âWell, Roger says you can go on the PlayStation. It's only for a couple of hours, I'll be back by six.'
âI'll be starving,' said Stanley plaintively.
âCharlotte's leaving snacks for you all and we'll have something fabulous for dinner.' I looked at the fabric in my hands. Maybe I could wear this skirt with a black T-shirt and my wide studded belt? No, damn it, they said no black.
âPizza?'
âOK. Pizza.'
I could wear a red T-shirt, but then red can sometimes make my hair look a funny colour. Depending on what colour my hair is. At the moment, it is grape. Well, the box said “grape” â it started out burgundy and is now a faded shade of prune â¦
âDelivered, not a frozen one.'
âOK.'
The girl on the phone â Toni â said to wear anything I felt comfortable in, as long as it wasn't black or white, or boldly patterned or had stripes. That left one pink dress that would look OK if I lost ten pounds (unlikely in the next three hours), one brown suit I've always hated (bought on Day 23 when judgement impaired), one pair of green trousers that make my arse look huge (a fact kindly brought to my attention by Daniel after I'd been wearing them for several weeks of ignorant bliss) and the aforementioned long, flouncy grey skirt that didn't have a top to go with it.
âStuffed crust.'
âWhat?'
âStuffed crust pizzas delivered.'
âDelivered? They cost a fortune.'
âYou just promised.'
âDid I?'
âAnd I can stay up late.'
âDon't push it. Oh, Stanley,' I wailed. âWhat am I going to wear?'
Stanley screwed up his nose. âI dunno. Why are you doing this anyway? It's stupid you going on TV. You're not even going to win anything.'
âI'm doing it because my friend Clive really needs my help and  it's a bit of an experience and ⦠Charlotte nagged me into it.'
Stanley, who has known Charlotte all his life, nodded.
I didn't tell him it was what Charlotte had said about Daniel that had swung it. I was trying not to talk about his father unless he did â I only chalked up WIT points galore and deepened my scowl lines.
âDaniel thinks,' she'd explained, âthat you're an out-of-control harridan and we know you're not. This is your chance to prove it. You will be sitting there, perfectly poised, looking stunning, speaking intelligently about PMT and how simply everyone who's anyone gets it and it will be very obvious that he is the one who's a total tosser for being so out of step as to not understand â¦'
I love the word “tosser” â it so perfectly conjures up an image of Daniel's ridiculous face when he's gazing like a love-sick bovine at that silly blonde stick-person.
âAnd you can,' Charlotte had said, warming to her theme, âtalk about supportive partners being important and how, while men who are insecure â probably because they have unnaturally small genitalia â might use it as an excuse to go off shagging others, the modern, sensitive man â which Daniel is pretending to be now â will realise it is all part of the raw, primitive passion of woman â¦'
I wasn't instantly converted. âWhat
are
you talking about?' I said crossly. âHe won't be watching daytime TV, will he? He'll be at the office.'
âStanley can show him the video.'
âStanley won't go anywhere near the video. Stanley doesn't approve. And can you blame him? What boy wants to watch his mother discussing periods?'
âWell, anyway,' said Charlotte, changing tack, âthe papers will pick up on it â you'll probably be asked to write a think-piece for the
Guardian
. Daniel will jolly well see it then.'
I laughed sourly. âThe
Guardian
? Come off it. What I should be writing is 14 pages of scintillating copy extolling the properties of the new toughened-glass Grow-Bright range of greenhouses and conservatories. Wanted by tomorrow! How come you're not working again?'
Charlotte looked at the clock âBecause I've got half an hour ⦠Shit! No I haven't â I'm supposed to be in Waldron Avenue now. See you later!'
When she'd dashed off, hair and handbag flying, I thought about what she'd said. There was something oddly seductive about her vision of me being interviewed on TV about PMT. Of being a kind of expert. Of my collection of symptoms being acknowledged as a proper syndrome. Of being listened to, my intelligent observations on its devastating effects being taken seriously by millions of daytime viewers.
I didn't know of course, if there were millions. I personally had never even seen this Randolph Kendall and his 9 a.m. show â who gets to watch television then? But presumably someone must do or it wouldn't be on. Charlotte said she'd seen it and he looked a bit smarmy but they'd had a good female psychologist on saying weight was all about what felt good to you and that if you felt sexy at size 16, then by definition you were.
Charlotte is a firm believer in such philosophies â when Daniel moved out she brought round three chocolate cakes, a crate of Kettle Chips and a wine-box. âAt least there's no one to mention the size of your arse now,' she said, before tucking in. âAll that trying to be thin is so bloody tedious.'
Instead of the psychologist, presumably there would be me. I would be able to provide astute insights into the role of progesterone and the function of the pituitary gland (I had already mugged up on Google so I had the facts to hand), the delicate balance of the reproductive hormones and their effect on the female both psychologically and physiologically, leading to a possible fall in the brain chemical serotonin which controls mood â¦
Daniel had summed this up in his own way. âYou're mad,' he'd said.
âIt's quite an honour to be asked,' I said now to Stanley. âImagine â your mother on TV.'
âI am imagining,' he said gloomily.
âWe must get you to school. You'd better clean your teeth if you can't be useful on the clothes front.'
Stanley surveyed the heap on my bed. âThat's too pink,' he said. âThat one makes you look horrible like Connor's mum and I don't think you should wear those trousers.' He looked at me doubtfully. âThe skirt,' he advised. âYou wore that when we went to Grandma's birthday and it didn't look too bad.'
âThank you, darling,' I said, overwhelmed by such sartorial endorsement. âBut what top?'
âAsk Charlotte,' said Stanley, now clearly exhausted by his efforts. âShe,' he added sagely, âwill tell you what to do.'
âI don't think so, love.' Charlotte frowned critically as I put on an olive green scoop-necked number. âWhole effect is a bit too Sunday school teacher for my liking. Hmmm, let's think, what would Joan Bakewell wear?'
âWhat's she got to do with it?'
âI'm thinking erudite,' said Charlotte, âthough â' she paused to look me up and down ââ perhaps we're onto a loser there. Here, what about this orange one?'
âIsn't it a bit bright?' I picked the T-shirt up and held it beneath my chin. âI only got it because they were doing three for the price of two and I'd already got a black and a white one.'
âIt's going to have to do,' she said, looking out of the window. âThe car's here.'
âOh my God, oh my God.' I ran up and down the bedroom. âI'm not ready!'
âWell, hurry up.'
Charlotte opened the window and began gesticulating at whoever was at the front gate as I scurried about in a panic.
âI haven't sorted out a handbag.'
âYou won't have a handbag on TV!'
âWhy not?'
âThey never do. Do you ever see Kaddy with a handbag?'
âShe's doing the weather. Margaret Thatcher used to have one.'
âShe was running the country. Just bring your usual.'
She ran down the stairs and opened the front door. âHello, yes, she's just coming!'
âI haven't got my make-up on,' I said, running down after her.
âThey'll do it.'
âBut I don't want them seeing what I look like without any.'
âCome and get in the car.'
âI'm not sure I've left Boris enough food.'
âHe's got enough to feed every cat in the street â no wonder he's obese.'
âHe is not â he is naturally large. Do you know the vet said he had excellent muscle tone?'
âWhat, round his jaw?'
âShall I put my hair up or leave it down?'
âJust get in the bloody car!'
âAh that's what I like to see â a vehicle befitting my style and status â¦' Charlotte smiled graciously as she dragged me down the path. âGood morning, again!' she called to the driver, a large handsome guy of about 30 with dreadlocks, dressed in a shirt and tie, who was standing next to the big white Mercedes having a fag. He ground out the end on the pavement and turned a huge grin on us, his teeth matching his dazzling white shirt.
âMorning girls. I'm Kevin â but you can call me Kev.' He winked. âGot your knickers on now?'
âI'm Charlotte,' said Charlotte. âAnd this is Laura, the soon-to-be-star.'
Kev guffawed in a way that did not sound entirely complimentary. âIn you jump,' he said holding the door open.
âOoh look, a drinks cabinet,' said Charlotte when we were settled back in the leather interior and Kevin had started the engine. âWhat have you got in here then, Kev?'
âNo alcohol allowed before filming,' he said. âMy instructions are to get everyone there sober. There's orange juice and water. I'll see what I can find you for the way back,' he added. âYou'll probably need it by then.'
I looked anxiously at Charlotte. She grinned as she snapped the ring pull from a small can of juice. âWe always need it,' she said.
I looked out of the window as we drove up Broadstairs High Street. At the last minute I'd put on a pair of black trousers with the orange T-shirt, on the basis that they could hardly send me back to change and nobody would see much of them if I was sitting down and if they did, at least black was slimming.
Because an outfit that your 11-year-old thought looked OK when you were out with your mother hardly screamed sexy sophistication. Now, however, I was thinking longingly of the grey skirt after all, since the black trousers were already digging into me round the waist where a roll of flab was clearly visible beneath the orange top. Which I still had my doubts about, but which Charlotte had insisted on, saying it would be bright enough to distract the eye from anything else.
âSo,' said Kev, as we stopped at the traffic lights at the Broadway. âGoing on with Randolph, eh?' He looked at me in the rear mirror. âInto the lion's den, huh? Ha ha â¦'
âIt's not that bad, surely,' I said, frowning at Charlotte.
âA right punch-up last week,' Kev continued. âBloke on there says his third kid ain't his: he'd always reckoned his missus was up to no good with the next-door neighbour. She's sitting next to him, like, and the next thing, she's got up and landed him one. He goes to thump her back and the bloke sitting in the row behind leaps over the seats and smashes him in the face. Turns out he
is
the next-door neighbour and he's got his wife with him too, so she's none too pleased. Bedlam it was â all of 'em screaming and crying. Old Randolph thought all his Christmases had come at once. Ratings went right up.'
Charlotte laughed. I didn't. âThis programme's about female hormone issues,' I said stiffly. âIt will just be women discussing their feelings, there won't be anything like that.'
âI wouldn't bet on it,' said Kevin confidently. âRandolph likes to get a bit of confrontation going. âYou divorced, are you?'
âNo, I'm not.'
âWhat's he like, this Randolph?' asked Charlotte hastily. âAlways looks a bit of a creep to me,' she added cheerily.
âHe's all right.' Kevin turned left at the roundabout and took the main road out of town. âI don't see much of him these days. My mate Jerry's the one who drives him mostly. Says he's always on the phone and they have quite a few stop-offs. Likes a bit of extra-curricular himself, if you know what I mean.'
âDon't they all,' said Charlotte. To me, she added conversationally, âI've told Roger if he ever even thinks about it, I'll castrate him with the bread knife.'
âHe wouldn't,' I said. âHe loves you too much and you terrify him.'
Charlotte nodded, satisfied.
She and Kev kept up a conversation for the rest of the journey, while I did what I could with concealer and a tube of “photogenic” foundation I'd got free when I bought that new lip-plumping balm. By the time we were turning off at Teddington, I looked marginally less raddled and we'd heard all about Kev's girlfriend, Cindy, their forthcoming wedding, and the problems they were having with her mother, which were in sufficient quantity to last the entire stretch of the M25.
I stared out of the window and began to feel nervous. Suppose I dried up, suppose I forgot whether it was too much oestrogen or progesterone that caused all the problems and why, exactly, taking fatty acids were such a good idea. I took a swig of water and worried that I might have forgotten to put a drink in Stanley's packed lunch, rendering him dehydrated and unable to concentrate and achieve his potential, leading in turn to feelings of inadequacy, extra WIT points and probably three more years on the couch.