Read Five Things They Never Told Me Online
Authors: Rebecca Westcott
I smile at her. âYes,' I nod and give her a thumbs up. The three of us have been friends since preschool and we've had plenty of arguments before. This isn't any different to those times. It'll all be forgotten by tomorrow.
Nat comes back over to me and to show willing I pull off my perfectly fine T-shirt and slip on the green top she is handing me. Then I look in the mirror. I look like the backdrop from
A Midsummer Night's Dream
, which was our school production last year. The top is mostly green but there's something shimmery about the material that
makes it look like a forest. The sparkly silver gems that are scattered over the front make it look like fairies are having a party on my stomach. I look utterly ridiculous.
âWhat do you think?' asks Nat anxiously.
âYeah. No. I'm not loving it,' I tell her, clamping my teeth together to try and stop the scream of horror that I can feel building in my throat. I want this afternoon to go well, I really do, but it all seems to be going a bit wrong and I don't know how to stop it.
âWell, that's because you've got the wrong trousers on,' says Lauren.
Before I can stop them, they have made me change from my old, comfortable, practical-for-a-barbecue jeans into a pair of skin-tight, black leather trousers.
âYes!' exclaims Nat. âDoesn't she look perfect, Loz!'
âYou look great,' Lauren tells me.
âI don't think this is really
me
,' I tell them, my voice sounding strangled, which is odd as it's my waist that is currently being so constricted by the tight trousers that I can barely breathe.
âThat's the whole point,' Lauren says. âThis is the new you!'
âThese trousers look like they've been spray-painted on,' I whimper. âI think they're a bit small for me.'
âThey're meant to be like that,' says Nat. âIt's called fashion! Honestly, Erin, do you walk around with your eyes closed?'
Evidently yes, because I have never seen ANYBODY looking the way I look right now.
âRight, come on!' says Nat. âWe don't want to keep Kieran and Dom waiting any longer.'
âWho's Dom?' I ask as we start down the stairs. âDon't tell me you've got a new boyfriend too!'
Nat laughs. âDom's not my boyfriend, silly! I'm with Ashley â you know, Kieran's friend in Year 11. I told you that on the phone weeks ago! The phone call where you hung up on me, actually.'
âOf course you are,' I mutter, but quietly so that they don't hear me. That must have been the day that I was with Martha in the garden. The day that I left her on her own so I could chat to Nat. The memory makes me feel cold and I push it away. âSo who's this Dom, then?'
âJust someone we think you should meet,' says Lauren from behind me.
I stop exactly where I am and turn round to look up at her.
âOh no,' I tell her, shaking my head. âI don't think so.'
âCome on, Erin!' says Lauren. âWe've spent ages setting this up. It's your birthday surprise! Dom's lovely â he plays football with Kieran and we thought it'd be really nice if we could all hang out together when term starts again.'
âYou're trying to match-make me and you didn't even tell me?' I'm feeling really stupid now and feeling stupid makes me angry. I grip the banister tightly.
âWell, would you have turned up if we'd told you?' asks Lauren. I glare at her and she grins. âThere you go, then.'
I move up a step, ready to push past her and return to the safety of Nat's room and my own clothes, when Lauren deals the killer blow.
âWe just wanted to figure out a way to stay the three of us,' she tells me. âNow I'm with Kieran and Nat's with Ashley. We didn't want you to feel left out. You only have to talk to him. And we've made you a birthday cake and everything.'
I think for a moment. If I leave now I can kiss goodbye to being part of our group. Lauren and Nat are obviously moving on and they're giving me this chance to move on with them. It'd be rude
to walk out when they've gone to so much effort. What's the worst thing that can happen?
Lauren can see that I'm not sure and she takes her opportunity.
âWe've missed you, Erin,' she says. âJust come down and talk to Dom. He's really looking forward to meeting you and we'll be right there with you.'
âYou promise?' I ask her, turning to look at Nat.
âAbsolutely,' says Nat, and Lauren squeezes my shoulder.
I sigh and continue on down the staircase, thankful that at least my feet are larger than Nat's and she had no choice but to let me keep my battered old trainers on. My feet are the only part of me that feel normal right now.
The next two hours pass more slowly than I can believe is possible. I may actually have to pay attention in my next physics lesson to see if there is some kind of phenomenon which means that when you are having the most boring time of your life, the clocks all slow down. I know that sounds super-ungrateful and that I don't deserve to have any friends, but it's just not much fun when all their time is dominated by needy, possessive boyfriends.
The second we emerge through the kitchen door, Kieran pounces on Lauren. It's like he's a cat who's been waiting outside a mouse hole for the poor little mouse to leave its home. Nat dashes off to get more burgers for the barbecue and I am left standing alone and looking everywhere except right next to me where Kieran is slurping at Lauren's face as if she is a Mr Whippy ice cream. It's actually quite disgusting and I admire her self-restraint. If it were me, I would be wiping my mouth with my sleeve.
Things get worse when Nat returns with burgers, Ashley and a boy, who I can only suppose, is Dom. On the positive side, even Kieran cannot eat a burger AND slobber all over Lauren, so there is a brief commercial break from the love-fest that they seem to be starring in. On the negative side, Kieran does seem to feel that he is very capable of eating a burger and talking. And everyone always said that boys can't multitask.
After two minutes, the sight of his half-chewed burger swilling around his mouth while he talks/shouts about fascinating details of his life, such as his new football strip and how his mum thinks he should sign up to be a male model, is starting to make me feel sick, so I turn away.
This is a mistake because I manage to turn right into the path of Dom. Who wants to talk. To me. About me. I get the feeling he has taken a class on how to get a girlfriend, but is possibly only on lesson one. He asks me lots of questions but doesn't want to listen to the answers. He also seems to want to make eye contact with me ALL OF THE TIME. Like, if I look away while I'm thinking of what to say, when I look back he is still staring fixedly at me. It's a bit odd and I'm left undecided about whether it's because he's nervous or a bit odd or is just trying to avoid being blinded by the hideous top I'm wearing.
After a while, Kieran has had enough of talking about himself and decides to return to his other favourite hobby. Luckily, this time he has the decency to drag Lauren off to the bottom of the garden.
âSee,' Lauren whispers in my ear as he pulls her past me. âI told you Kieran was lovely. I KNEW you'd love him when you got to know him!'
I just nod and smile when Nat comes over and whispers to me that she'll just be a few minutes and will I be OK with Dom? Then her and Ashley retreat to a couple of chairs on the patio and start kissing. As Ashley hasn't actually said a single
word in the last two hours, I'm sort of relieved to see that his mouth does actually work.
I spend the next ten minutes answering Dom's increasingly bizarre questions about my life.
Then I do a mean thing.
âCould you possibly get me a burger?' I ask Dom.
âNo problem,' says Dom, and off he goes.
And off I go, first into the kitchen where I find a scrap of paper and write a quick note to Nat, telling her that I've had to go but thanks for the party. I put it up on the fridge with the monster magnet that I bought Nat last Christmas and then I creep outside and head straight over to the fence where Picasso is lying in the shade. I quickly untie his lead and without looking back we unlatch the gate and escape down the path.
Dad is surprised to see me when he gets home, but I can tell he's pleased.
âI didn't think you'd be back for hours,' he says, flopping down on to the sofa next to me. I'm glad that I managed to arrive home just before him and change out of Nat's awful clothes. Dad would have had a nervous breakdown on the spot if he'd seen me wearing that stuff. âHow was the party?'
âFine,' I tell him. âThanks for the present.'
He glances up at the shelf where the iPad is sitting in its box. âDid you get it working OK?' he asks.
âYeah, it's great,' I say. âWhat's for tea?'
Dad offers to take me out for a meal but I don't really want to leave the house now I'm home. In the end we settle for pizza delivery and Dad downloads us a film to watch.
âI don't want to be late tomorrow,' I tell him, munching on my stuffed crust and trying not to squirt tomato sauce everywhere.
Dad looks at me. âAbout that,' he says. âI've been thinking. You've done your punishment and you haven't moaned â not too much, anyway! I think you've learnt your lesson. The rest of the summer is yours. You don't have to come back to Oak Hill with me.'
âBut I want to.' The words are out of my mouth before I've even had time to think about what I'm saying. âI can't just abandon Martha, and there's Frog and everything. We've got stuff to do.'
Dad looks surprised but smiles at me and picks up another slice of pizza.
âWell, it's your choice,' he tells me. âJust come in when you want to.'
Later, in bed, I think about today. I've spent the last few weeks thinking that all I wanted was to spend time with Lauren and Nat. But today wasn't that great. They're still my friends and all that, but I didn't feel like I feel when I'm at Oak Hill. Like anything might happen.
Mostly, the problem with today was that I missed Martha. And I missed Frog. And I wished that I was spending my birthday with them.
âAre you one hundred per cent sure about this?' I ask Frog doubtfully.
âTotally,' he tells me. âHow hard can it be?'
I'm not sure what to say to this. There are many answers desperate to fly out of my mouth, including âludicrously hard', âinsanely difficult' and âharder than a hard rock', but I don't think he'd appreciate my lack of team spirit, and he's obviously gone to some effort.
Frog puts his hands on his hips, legs apart and raises his eyebrows at me.
âIs that your
I'm-about-to-dance
pose?' I tease him. âVery convincing!'
âAre you going to sit there all day or are we going to give this a go?' he asks me.
âSit here all day?' I try, but the scowl on his face makes it clear that this was the wrong answer. âErm â give it a go?' I say and Frog grins.
I sigh, but get up off the bench and walk over to the patch of grass where he's waiting.
âWhat do we do first?'
Frog pauses, his forehead wrinkled up as he tries to remember. âI think we have to face each other and hold hands.'
I surreptitiously wipe my palms on my jeans, just in case they're sweaty. I'm suddenly feeling a bit nervous, even though it's just Frog and we're the only ones here.
âLike this?' I ask, and stretch my hands out towards him. âNow what?'
âWell, we have to move our feet really fast and take lots of tiny steps.'
We start bouncing up and down on the spot. âAnd then I swing you out to the side, like this.'
Frog lets go of one of my hands and pulls me hard with the other hand and I swing out next to him. Not bad for a beginner!
âAnd then you go under my arm and I spin you round and â'
I trip over his foot and go down on to the ground like a sack of potatoes.
âOw!' I shout. âWhy did you do that?'
âAre you OK?' asks Frog, crouching next to me. I'm actually fine but then I take a look at his face with his scruffy hair flopped over one eye. I can see he's trying not to laugh, which makes me cross.
âNo,' I tell him grumpily. âI think I've broken something.'
âLike what? The world record for the shortest jitterbug ever!'
âIt was a stupid idea to begin with,' I tell him, rubbing my elbow. âThere's no way we can learn to jitterbug. And if Martha had seen that little performance she might have actually died laughing. I bet she wouldn't even recognize it as the jitterbug.'
âWe can't just give up,' says Frog. âWe've only just started.'
When I met up with Frog this morning he was buzzing with excitement for his new plan. He dragged me to the computer room at Oak Hill (a tiny cupboard with one computer inside that nobody ever uses) and made me watch a YouTube clip of people doing the jitterbug dance. He said that it'd be really great if we learnt to jitterbug so that we could show Martha and remind her of the good old days. I wasn't convinced but, as I'm starting to discover, Frog is the kind of person it's hard to say âno' to.
Frog stands up and reaches down to me. Reluctantly I take his hand and let him pull me to my feet. I am officially the world's worst dancer and I have a nasty feeling that no good is going to come of this.
âAgain,' he says and assumes his start position. I take hold of both his hands and this time, I manage to bounce on the spot, swing to the side, go under his arm AND kick my leg out to the left before I collapse in a heap.
âWhat happened then?' moans Frog. âWe were getting somewhere that time.'
âI tripped!' I snap.
âWhat on? A blade of grass? Come ON, make a bit of effort, Erin.'
I stand up and glare at him. âIt'd help if we had some music,' I say. âAnd if you could keep your canoe-size feet under control.'
âAgain,' dictates Frog. âAnd one, two, three, four!'
We begin our routine but this time we're stopped before I can gain yet another bruise on my backside. The sound of clapping comes from the path and when I look across I see Beatrice clapping while, in front of her, Martha bangs one hand against her leg, a huge grin on her face.
âLooking good, kids!' calls Beatrice, wheeling Martha over to the bench. I scowl at her and let go of Frog's hand. We walk to the bench and sit down next to Martha.
âI'll be back later,' says Beatrice.
âWe'll bring Martha up to the house in a while,' Frog tells her. âIf that's OK?'
Beatrice glances at Martha and then nods. âDon't stay out too late!' she tells her, and then she sticks her hands in her pockets and strolls back down the path, whistling as she goes.
Martha jerks her head at us and then across at the grass. It's obvious she wants us to tell her what we were doing.
âDon't ask,' I say. âWe're terrible at dancing.'
âWe were trying to learn the jitterbug, so that we could surprise you,' says Frog. âBut it's impossible. I have no idea how you used to do it when you were young.'
Martha grins and I notice that her smile isn't as lopsided as it usually is. Maybe she's actually been doing her exercises. That or I'm just getting used to the way she looks.
âWe've found some clips on YouTube, though, of people dancing the jitterbug. Shall we go inside and you can watch them?'
Martha shakes her head. That would be a definite âno' then. I sink on to the bench. We're going to have to come up with some better ideas if we want to cheer her up and motivate her to get better.
âReally?' Frog is saying. I glance at him and see he is looking at Martha. âI'm not sure that's a good idea.'
Martha is sitting up straight in her chair and is using her left hand to point first at Frog and then at me. And then at the patch of grass where we were dancing.
âOh no,' I tell her. âYou saw us. It's not going to work, Martha.'
Martha scowls at me and points again.
âI think she really wants us to try,' Frog whispers to me.
âI don't care WHAT she wants,' I say loudly. âI am not humiliating myself again, just so that she can have a good laugh.'
Martha sniggers silently. I've had quite enough of being laughed at for one day. I turn on her.
âI CANNOT DANCE!' I say very slowly and loudly, as if I'm talking to someone who doesn't understand English. âI don't DO dancing. I tried. I failed. End of conversation.'
Martha drops her head and looks up at us through her eyelashes. Her eyes look all pleading and she reminds me of Picasso when he wants me to throw him a ball.
âCome on, Erin,' says Frog. âIt'll make her happy.'
âShe's manipulating us,' I tell him, and turn to her. âI know exactly what you're doing and it won't work. You might as well get up and dance with Frog yourself.'
âErin!' Frog sounds shocked but I ignore him. I'm too busy looking at the steely glint in Martha's eyes and as I watch she yanks at the blanket that is tucked over her legs and throws it on the ground, scattering her notepad on to the ground.
Frog spins round at the sound and together we stare as Martha swings first one leg and then the other off the footrest of her wheelchair. Then, using her left hand, she braces against the side of the chair and pushes herself up to a standing position.
Frog and I both surge forward at the same time but she jerks her head at us and it's easy to tell that she wants us to stop.
We hover, either side of her, close but not touching, as she lets go of the chair and pulls herself upright. She takes one step forward and wobbles. I hear myself gasp and I desperately want to hold on to her arm, but I don't. Instead, I watch as she takes a second step and then another. Then her left arm rises and she turns her head to look at Frog.
Frog is frozen in position. Martha smiles at him and he doesn't move until I hiss âFrog!' at him. Then he springs into action, moving in front of Martha and reaching out to take her hand. I can tell that he's taking quite a lot of her weight because both of their knuckles are clenched and white, but neither of them speak as Martha moves slowly forward and then under Frog's arm. Every single step she takes is laborious and considered â it looks as if she's having to force her brain to
send the right messages to her feet, but at the same time she somehow manages to look graceful. She moves out to the side and Frog copies her and in that instant, their arms outstretched and heads turned looking towards each other, I can see Martha the dancer. I can imagine her doing these moves, but sped up about twenty times, and I can see the energy and enthusiasm and passion that she would have had.
And then her right leg starts to shake and I grab the wheelchair and quickly push it up behind her and Frog helps lower her down until she's safely sitting on the chair. I breathe out loudly and realize that I'd been holding my breath since she stood up.
âAre you OK?' Frog asks her, worry seeping out through his voice.
âI'm SO sorry,' I tell her, coming round in front of her wheelchair and looking down. âI didn't mean to sound unkind.'
âAre you OK?' repeats Frog, and Martha nods. Then she looks over and points at me.
âI know,' I tell her. âI AM sorry.' I can feel tears prickling at the backs of my eyes and then, before I can do anything to stop them, they start overflowing and trickling down my cheeks.
I turn away quickly, desperate to hide, but it's too late. I feel Frog's hand on my shoulder but I can't turn to face them. I can't believe that I taunted Martha and nearly made her fall over AGAIN. It's like the only thing I can ever do is get everything wrong.
âIt's OK, Erin,' Frog whispers gently. âCome on, just look at her.'
I shake my head and rub furiously at my eyes. Frog puts both hands on my shoulders and twists me round and when I look at Martha I can see a big grin covering her face.
âI'm sorry,' I repeat and she shakes her head, as if these aren't the words she was looking for.
âCome on, Erin. No cry face,' says Frog. âMartha isn't telling you off. She's asking you to do something.'
I watch as Martha, her eyes never leaving mine, jabs her finger at me again and then at Frog and then back at the grass.
âYes!' I say, feeling my body sag in relief. âI'll dance if you really want me to.'
Frog wheels Martha's chair under the shade of a tree and I take a moment to compose myself, my mind working overtime to figure out what just happened. I'm not proud of myself for
provoking her but look what Martha just did! She stood up and walked and everything! I think that, massively by mistake, we might have just discovered the way to get Martha working on her recovery. Maybe she needs a bit of that
tough love
that people go on about.
âShe can't resist a challenge!' I whisper to Frog as we walk across to the grassy area. âWe can totally use that to get her talking and using the right side of her body.'
We stand facing each other and Frog reaches out to take my hands. Martha bangs the side of her chair and moves her right hand to the side.
âAre you saying that we need to stand further apart?' I call. She nods and we both take a few steps back. âThis would be a lot easier if you could just tell us,' I shout to her.
âSeriously, Erin, you're playing with fire,' hisses Frog. âMy nerves can't stand another “Martha Challenge” right now.'
I grin at him and turn back to where Martha is sitting.
âJust don't expect anything great. Or coordinated. Or that looks like actual dancing,' I tell her. âBecause I am NOT a good dancer.'