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Authors: Tyne O'Connell

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BOOK: A Royal Mess
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ONE
Doing the KR with My Posse

I had my head out the window of the cab and my hair was blowing about my face – only not so much as to blow my tiara off – as we cabbed it down the Kings Road. We were en route to Waterloo for the train, which would take us back to Saint Augustine’s.
This has officially been
the
most awesome half-term break in the history of half-term breaks,’ Georgina declared with that grand English drawl of hers that had once so intimidated me as she gave my hand a squeeze.
We’d bought said tiara for two pounds at Ad Hoc for a laugh in the morning. Immediately after that we piled into the photo booth at the Virgin Mega Store Centre, where havoc and mayhem ensued. This mood had carried us up and down the KR all day, and Indie and I had even been approached by model scouts. She had her security followers politely decline on her behalf. Indie’s security guys are meant to look inconspicuous and follow at a discreet
distance, but the art of blending in seems to elude them. Their idea of a discreet distance and Indie’s are about ten yards apart. Indie is a
real
princess, with her own kingdom, personal zoo and everything, but she’s not a bit affected. They approach me all the time, darling,’ she groaned as the nice model scout was being despatched. They can be soooo annoying, don’t you think?’ she asked, grabbing my arm before it had a chance to greedily snatch at the business cards the model scout was begging us to take ‘just in case.’
I rolled my eyes as if I knew exactly what she meant when inside I was thinking, a real model scout just approached me and said I had the look they were looking for!
I’m not surprised they approach Indie all the time. She is the most beautiful girl I know. She looks like a young Naomi Campbell. I suppose Indie is right, though; the last thing I would want to be is a model because it means basing your entire life on your body image. Plus the camera puts ten pounds on you. And then one day when you don’t have ‘the look’ anymore, your body image must go to pot.
Indie had bought the tiara for me as I was paying for a pair of gorgeous green sequined slippers, turned up at the toe, to replace my Hello Kitty ones. Yes, I had reached that benchmark point when it was time to say a fond farewell to my Hello Kitty stage and leave that innocent babyish period of my life behind. Of course there would be a certain amount of regret and there would always be a place
in my heart for Hello Kitty. I would never give up my Hello Kitty toaster back at home in LA because it toasts little Hello Kitty faces on your bread. It was just that at fifteen – well, two months off anyway – I felt it was time to feng shui my life. To make way for more, well, for more grown-up-ish pursuits. Like boys.
‘Now that you’ve pulled your prince you’ll be needing a crown, darling,’ Indie had teased in a nice piss-take of my American accent, plonking the ghastly purple paste tiara on my head. Once I would have been too embarrassed to walk the street in a paste tiara. Even when I was a little girl playing fairies, dressing up always embarrassed me, mostly because my parents had this little stage built in the living room with curtains and all the trimmings. I’d have to give performances for my two adoring fans who cheered and carried on like I was a superstar.
Can I just say, and I think I speak for a lot of only children here, it’s really, really hard being the object of all that parental love. Bob, that’s what my father likes me to call him, explained he was only trying to support my creative endeavours. Given that my creative endeavours at age five were, for the most part, focused on trying to get my mud pies to taste like chocolate and to defy gravity and fly, all the stages and curtains in the world weren’t going to help me, were they? When I have children, I’ll be much more restrained than Sarah and Bob are with me. I’ll be reasonable and sane and let my children call me Mummy or Mom, like normal children. Mind you, I am soooo glad
that I am NOT a grown-up, because as far as I can tell being a grown-up sucks big-time.
Anyway, while I didn’t say anything to my friends, I couldn’t help this feeling that I had finally arrived. Okay, so I wasn’t a Trustafarian, or a real princess, and the car packed with security guys discreetly following us wasn’t for
my
protection, but I was here. I was on the Kings Road, that HQ of Sloaneishness where all public school girls and boys go to burn Daddy’s plastic, parade with their posses, and meet one another.
By the way, public schools in England are the opposite of public schools in America. They are ancient grand places where the great and the good parents send their children from age eleven (or seven even) to learn what it is to be great and good. My parents are good but not what you’d call great. They packed me off at age eleven to Saint Augustine’s School for Young Ladies because my mom, Sarah, went there and said it was super. My father’s American, but he always goes along with whatever Sarah thinks – actually I think they think with one mind, they are such clones of one another. My first three years at public school in England really sucked (apart from having Star as a best friend). But since working out how the system operates and pulling boys (well, one boy in particular, Prince Freddie, heir to the throne of Great Britain) my life has really been looking up.
If you ever want to go public school spotting, the Kings Road is
the
place to go. You can do the Ken High
(Kensington High Street) as well, but it’s not quite in the same league. The long, narrow traffic-choked street of mostly Georgian buildings that runs from Sloane Square to World’s End, with its boutique shops and chichi High Street brands, is a Mecca for public school spotting. Well,’ as Star says, ‘we need some sort of meeting place when we’re locked up in our boarding schools like prisoners most of the year, don’t we?’
The last time I’d done the KR with Georgina and Star, I still hadn’t shaken my insecurities about being an American outsider taking an illicit peek at a parallel universe. A universe of privileged girls and boys, their names all listed in
Debrett’s Peerage and Baronetage
or, if European, the
Almanach de Gotha
– proving they are someone. You can scan yourself blind poring over
Debrett’s
and the
Almanach,
but you won’t find a Calypso Kelly listed. But these girls and boys, armed with their Trustafarian credentials, rule this part of London, ever mindful that one day they would in all likelihood rule the world.
As Star has always opined in a wonderful piss-take of her own class, ‘Their sort always travel in packs, darling.
Quelle horreur!
that a posh teen be seen out on her own. No, no, no. You never go anywhere without your posse, daaarling.’ Star is rock-star royalty, which is virtually the same as real royalty these days. But even if she weren’t royal, Star is bursting with an energy and self-assurance that doesn’t acknowledge obstacles.
You can always recognise the public school tribes by
their clothes: pashminas, short skirts or jeans, and long, glossy designer-blonde tresses for the girls. Ralph Lauren shirts, thin jumpers, and chinos or Levi’s for the boys. Sunglasses, if worn, are sported on the back of the head, darling, not the front. The girls will all be calling one another daaarling as they air-kiss members of their extended circle in greeting, or furiously text the friends they are already with on their mobile phones. The boys will be laughing loudly with their mateage, listening to their iPods and flicking butts. For some reason they always smoke their cigarettes right down to the filter, if not beyond.
I’ve watched these tribes since I first came to England – the way an anthropologist might observe another culture – and even though I would never have admitted it until a year ago, I had longed more than anything to be like them. Up until last summer, that had seemed an utterly impossible task for an American Freak brim full of insecurities and paranoia like me. But that was then. It seemed a long, long time ago too, because now I
am
one of them. Properly one of them. I had scaled the castle walls (only not literally, because I’m rubbish at climbing and scared of heights) and pulled one of their own; the heir to the British throne, Prince Freddie. Freds to me.
My
Freds. Just thinking about him made me glow.
In fact, apart from the Daddy’s plastic issue – my daddy doesn’t believe in plastic – you couldn’t tell me apart from the rest of the KR Sloanes on parade that day, and believe
me they were all out in force because it was the last day of half term. I was there with my own posse, Georgina (George), Star, Indie and the rabbit George and I own together, Dorothy Parker. We’d been very popular strolling down the KR with our bunny, who is breathtakingly cute. Everyone we met stopped us to chat and stroke her, apart from the horrible people in Pizza Express Pheasantry, who wouldn’t let us in even with her in her pet carrier bag! The pimply maitre d’ had muttered something lame about health and safety regulations but was totally rinsed by Star before the word ‘safety’ was safely out of his prissy mouth.
‘How
dare
you,’ Star had railed. ‘There’s more intelligence in this rabbit’s ear than all your pizza dough brains put together!’
Indie, George and I managed to calm her down and drag her off before she could throw the maitre d’ in the pizza oven. Star can get very passionate about things, which is one of the million reasons she’s my best friend. Apart from Pizza Express, though, all the other non-food shops had insisted we let Dorothy have a little hop on the counter and asked to stroke her and ooohed and aaahed.
‘She’s got star quality,’ Indie explained earnestly as she twisted one of her braids seductively at this fit guy who worked in the magic shop where we all had our astrology charts done. You could tell the guy was mesmerised by her beauty; even I was mesmerised by it.
When he told us that her Jupiter was trined with her
Mercury or something mad like that, Star announced in a bored sort of way, ‘I always suspected that, daaarling!’ and even the fit astrology guy laughed.
Seriously, it was a perfect day, just like in that song by that … that person, you know, thingamee whatsit, the one who sang that song, ‘It’s Such a Perfect Day.’ I just couldn’t wipe the smile off my soul as the cab edged its way slowly from light to light. I arranged my tiara and wondered what Freds was doing before stopping myself. I am determined to be one of those wildly cool girls who doesn’t scramble her brains, txt-ing and obsessing about her boyfriend all the time and neglecting her schoolwork and her fencing. Especially my fencing, because I have
five
tournaments coming up where FIE judges, BFA scouts and other important people of the fencing world will be watching my every move with eagle eyes.
No. As lovely and princely as Freddie is, I was going to be madly cool and mentally collected about our relationship. Even though that would be very difficult because my lips were still quite puffy from all the kissing we’d been doing yesterday, and he is the most distressingly fit boy in all the world. Oh, the bliss! When we weren’t quad bike riding around Star’s estate, we had barely drawn breath. Not just because of all our kissing but because we couldn’t stop talking. I find everything about him interesting and extraordinary, and here’s the maddest thing of all: he says the same about me! On Tuesday he said I was the most exotic creature he’d ever met. That was soooo cool that I
was quite literally gob-smacked, meaning I couldn’t even blurt something stupid back like I normally would.
Yesterday, he went back home to Balmoral or one of his other famous ancient castles. I wasn’t really paying attention to what he was saying, it was just so mesmerising watching the way his lips moved when he spoke. And what are words to soul mates anyway?
It’s true, apart from being the fittest boy God ever breathed life into, Freddie kisses like, well… like a very good kisser. In America we say hot! Thank goodness he isn’t like those sloppy kissers you see on movies that look like they want to swallow one another’s faces and make slurpy slushy noises with their saliva. Star had a sloppy kisser at her house party. I think he was from the village. Clemmie pulled him and then regretted it because his lips roamed all over her face. Luckily Star spotted him and pulled him off to her father’s chill room, where Jim Beam poured out of an angel of death fountain onto a Japanese rock pool.
Star’s father being a madly famous rock star has made their whole house an homage to the rock-and-roll lifestyle as seen on MTVs
Cribs.
I love staying with Star, and even my stricter-than-thou parents are cool with it on account of how Bob is a huge fan of Dirge – that’s Tiger’s band. Tiger is Star’s father, and even though he’s perpetually stoned and calls everyone ‘man’ and goes into unconscious stupors on the floor so that you have to step over him to get your breakfast, he’s wildly cool. As Star says, ‘He’s
incredibly bright and wise occasionally, you know, when he’s more or less conscious.’
BOOK: A Royal Mess
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