Authors: Nick Sharratt
I felt strange when Nan took me to the school. Patsy's blouse is very tight under my armpits and her pleated skirt shows a lot of my skinny legs. Patsy's only got one school jumper so I wore one of Willie's even though it's way too big. I spent ages puffing out my fringe so that the Terry scar didn't show. The stitches are out now but it still looks a horrible zig-zag mess. Nan watched me combing and looked like she might be going to cry.
âI've a good mind to shop that pig to the police after all,' she said.
âDon't, Nan! He'll only take it out on Mum.'
âNot if he's put behind bars where he belongs.' Nan shook her head. âIt's so
swearword swearword
ironic!'
She closed her eyes tight for a moment to keep the tears in. I patted her gently on her shoulder. Nan's boyfriend Pete â Patsy's dad â
is
behind bars. He's a really lovely, kind man. Even Willie and Loretta think the world of him. Nan's nuts about him. He's crazy about her too. That's how he got into trouble. He got involved in this fight in a bar, getting stuck in to protect my nan because some drunk guy started chatting her up. Pete was holding his glass in his hand and the drunk guy got cut really badly. So badly that he died, so Pete's doing time for manslaughter. Nan goes to visit him every month. She's got half a gold heart locket that she wears round her neck. Pete wears the other half. It's dead romantic. Nan misses him very, very badly but she keeps it all inside most of the time.
I told her she should have a good weep if she wanted as it would do her good to let her emotions out. Nan roared with laughter instead and said I was a scream. At least it cheered her up a bit.
We went off to school, Nan and Patsy and me. Willie goes to the comprehensive and Loretta doesn't go to school at all now she's got Britney. I felt a bit shy when we went into the playground, especially as all Patsy's friends were crowding round and everyone was wondering who I was. The weird kid with the wrong-size clothes.
âThis is my Treasure,' said Nan, like she was really proud of me.
That made me feel great, even though some of the kids sniggered at my name. Nan led me inside the school. Patsy gave me a quick kiss for good luck. Then I was taken to the headteacher, Mrs Parker.
âThis is my granddaughter, Treasure. She's living with me now,' said Nan, giving my shoulder a squeeze. âI've come to enrol her at Latimer.'
I thought I might have to do a test, English and Maths maybe, but Mrs Parker put my name on the register right away and I was given a class. They all stared at me when I walked in. I stared right back, my eyes swivelling round and round. I always look out for someone to be my special friend but I haven't found her yet. The kids at the top of the class with shiny hair and tidy uniform always edge away, like they'll be nibbled by nits if they get near me. The scruffy kids with stains all over their sweatshirts can't stick me either because I'm swotty and they act like they're stupid.
Sometimes the teachers like me. Sometimes they don't. They called me Miss-Know-It-All at my last school. I heard them discussing me in the staffroom. This new teacher Miss Strand is a bit dubious. She thinks I'm thick. She tells me stuff very
s-l-o-w-l-y
and she keeps saying I mustn't worry if I can't do the work. It's a wonder she hasn't stuck me at the back with a colouring book like the kids with learning difficulties.
She had problems with my name too, her lip curling every time she said it, like she was trying not to laugh. The kids are a pain about it too. I have a new
nickname,
not in the least original.
Buried
.
âYou think
you've
got problems with your name, Treasure,' said Willie when we were having tea. âWhat kind of a nut calls their son “Willie”?'
âA
hard
nut, so less of the cheek,' said Nan, pretending to bop him one. âDid those kids really give you a rough time, Treasure?'
âNo, no worries, Nan, I'm used to it. It's always like this when I start at a new school,' I said, wolfing down my egg and bacon and sausage and tomatoes and mushrooms and chips. I can't get over how wonderful the food is at Nan's. She cooks it all herself â no running down to the chippie for
her
. She's teaching me to cook too. I was the sausage girl tonight and Nan said they were perfect, well done but not the slightest bit burnt.
âHow many schools have you been to, Treasure?' Nan asked.
âOh goodness, I don't know, Nan. Heaps,' I said.
Mum's lived all over the place with all different blokes. Each time she gets a new guy there's a new home and a new school. It's awful always being the new girl and never remembering all the names of everyone in my new class. I get to know the girls who start picking on me first. It's never the boys, they leave me alone, but there's nearly always a little group of girls who corner me in the cloakrooms, shove me in the corridors, trip me in the playground.
It's OK. I can cope. I might be puny but I'm POWERFUL. I'm not too great at punching but I can
give
a hard whack if necessary. I mostly just say stuff. I give them a verbal version of the Terry Tortures and they reel backwards. Sometimes they cry, even the really mean tough ones. Then they leave me alone. But that's OK too. It
is
. I like my own company.
School doesn't matter that much anyway. It's home that counts. I get up really, really early sometimes, when everyone else is still asleep, even little Britney. I pad softly round the house in my bare feet, so happy that it's my home and I live here. I stroke the smooth leather sofa in the living room, I rub my cheek on the gold velvet cushions, I curl up my toes in the black and white furry rug, and I run my finger up and down the big yellow lava lamp. I love that lamp and the slow, sure, steady way the oil wafts up and down.
I peep in at everyone while they're asleep. My family. Patsy always curls up in a neat little ball with a blue rabbit on one side and a squat koala on the other. I like it that she's got her cuddly toys. She doesn't really
play
with them though. She hasn't even given them proper names â they are just Bunny and Bear. It's a wonder Patsy doesn't call me âGirl'.
Willie doesn't sleep curled up and he certainly doesn't have any cuddly toys. He lies flat on his back with his arms flung out and his feet sticking out of the duvet. There's always a fug of old sock in his room so I don't linger long. He'd go berserk if he knew I'd been peeping at him. One time he'd kicked his duvet right off and I saw him in his underpants!
Loretta sometimes sleeps in her underwear too, but
she's
got pretty slinky petticoats so she looks fine, though she's always got black circles from her eye make-up which spoils the effect a bit. Britney sleeps in a cot at the end of her bed. She wears dear little yellow towelling suits with a yellow dummy to match. She makes little sucking sounds every now and then. She's so sweet.
I often tiptoe into the kitchen and make up her bottle for when she wakes, around six. Then I make a cup of tea and take it into Nan. She looks so lovely when she's in bed. Her long blond hair spreads out all over the pillow and she wears fancy black lacy nighties so she looks just like a film star, even though her face has got a few wrinkles.
âMy laughter lines,' says Nan. It's true, she's always laughing. It makes you feel so good, so safe, so happy. When I wake her she never yells at me or pushes me away. She smiles like she's really pleased to see me.
âHello, my little Treasure,' she says.
She props herself up on her pink pillow to sip her tea. I slip in beside her and cuddle up close. I can't understand my mum. Why did she ever want to leave home? Why did she go off with all the horrible boyfriends? She didn't even know my dad properly, so I can't get to know him myself. Not that I care. I haven't liked any of my step-dads so I expect my real dad is just as bad. And Terry is the WORST ever.
I
wish
I could stop dreaming that he's coming to get me.
Six
India
DEAR KITTY
I hate school. I hate all the teachers. I hate all the girls. I particularly hate Maria and Alice.
They raise their eyebrows and then sputter with laughter whenever I go near them. The other girls have started doing it too. And everyone groans whenever I answer in class. I can't
help
knowing lots. What's so
bad
about being clever?
I wish I didn't have to go to school. Maybe I'll bunk off and creep back home and hide in the attic all day like a real Anne Frank.
I got into trouble because of my darling Anne today. I was so excited because we're doing Diaries in English and Mrs Gibbs started talking about Anne
Frank.
She read out an excerpt from the diary. I felt my face flushing as if she were reading out
my
diary. I couldn't stand it that some of the girls were just messing around and not paying attention when they were being introduced to the most important book of the twentieth century. It is so insulting to Anne. I couldn't bear it.
Mrs Gibbs read on, her voice solemn and portentous,
sooooo
wrong for lively, passionate Anne. Some of the girls started
giggling
while I fidgeted miserably to try to distract myself from the Gibbs rendition. I ended up slumped right down in my desk, my hands over my ears.
âIndia?'
I jumped. I'd filtered out her voice a little too effectively.
âWhat's the matter with you? Aren't you even listening?' Mrs Gibbs gave me a wounded look. âI would have thought you of all people would be interested in Anne Frank.'
âI
am
.'
âThen please sit up properly and concentrate.'
Mrs Gibbs trudged on through Anne's delicate prose, selecting the passage which means most to me, the one where Anne desperately longs for a real friend. I listened in agony. Alice whispered some crass remark and Maria spluttered infuriatingly.
âReally, girls!' said Mrs Gibbs, closing Anne's diary with a snap. âCan't you be a little more mature? Maria, it's not funny.'
âI'm sorry, Mrs Gibbs,' said Maria, struggling. âSo what happened to Anne Frank? Did she stay hidden in her secret annexe till the war ended?'
Mrs Gibbs adjusted her glasses, rubbing the lenses with the bottom of her cardigan. Her eyes looked horribly pink and naked without them.
âI'm afraid Anne's story has a sad ending. Her family were caught and sent away to a concentration camp.'
â
This
is like a concentration camp,' Alice hissed.
Maria giggled.
I stood up, cheeks flaming. âHow can you be so
stupid
?' I shouted.
âIndia!' said Mrs Gibbs.
They were all staring at me. I was living up to my red hair at last. I felt as if I was on fire.
âThe concentration camps were the most terrible places ever. Haven't you heard of the gas chambers? Nearly everyone
died
there. You were sent in cattle trucks, stuck in the dark for days. People often died on the journey. When you got there they divided up all the families. Anne wasn't allowed to stay with her father. And you were stripped naked andâ'
âThat's enough, India,' said Mrs Gibbs.
âAnd your head was shaved and then you were kept in terrible, squalid, freezing old huts with hardly any food at all, just rotten scraps, and so everyone got terrible illnesses. Anne's mother died and then her sister Margot died and so poor Anne was all on her own. And she got typhoid too and then
she
died, in agonyâ'
â
India!
' Mrs Gibbs got hold of me by the shoulders and pushed me down in my seat. âWill you be quiet!'
âBut it's true!'
âI know it is. But I don't think we should dwell on things in quite such a ghoulish way. You're upsetting the other girls.'
âBut we
should
feel upset. Anne died. Six
million
Jews died.'
âYes, I know. It was terrible. But it was a long time ago. It's silly to cry about it now.'
I wiped my eyes fiercely with the back of my hand. I stuck my chin out to show I wasn't one little bit ashamed of crying. Mrs Gibbs sighed and then carried on with the lesson. She stopped talking about Anne. She moved hastily on to Samuel Pepys.
When the bell went for hometime she called me back to have a word with her.
âI'm sorry you got so upset in class, India,' she said. âI'm very impressed that you know so much about Anne Frank. You've obviously been very moved by her story. But I can't have you shouting like that in the classroom.'
âBut the others were being so stupid. They were laughing and messing about.'
âI know, India. It's very annoying. But you mustn't
mind
so much. You feel things so intensely, dear. It's a little unnerving.'