‘Stop in the name of pants!’. Louise Rennison
Чтение книги онлайн.
Читать онлайн книгу ‘Stop in the name of pants!’ - Louise Rennison страница 5
One minute later
Perhaps it has grown bigger and bigger in Masimoâs imagination in the week he has been away. He hasnât even got a photo of me to remind him that I am more than just a nose on legs.
Five minutes later
Perhaps because he is foreign he is a bit psychic. Perhaps he has a touch of the Mystic Meg about him and he knows about the Dave the Laugh incident.
One minute later
Jas has probably sent a message via an owl to let him know. Just because she has got the hump with me. AGAIN. About the stupid tent business.
Lying on my bed of pain
8:00 p.m.
And I mean that quite literally because my cat Angus (also known as a killing machine) is pretending my foot is a rabbit. In a sock. If I even move it slightly, he leaps on it and starts biting it.
Also, ouch and double ouch. I canât get into a comfy position to take the pressure off my bum-oley. I think I may have actually broken something in my bottom. I donât know what there is to break, but I may have broken it. I wonder if it is swollen up?
Then I heard the phut phut of the mighty throbbing engine that is my vatiâs crap car. Carefully easing my broken bottom off the bed and slapping at Angus, I went downstairs. Angus was still clinging to my sock-rabbit-foot even though his head was bonking against the stairs.
As I got to the hall I heard the front door being kicked. Oh good, it was my delightful little sister.
âGingey, Gingey, let me in!!! Let me in, poo sister.â
Then there was squealing, like a pig was being pushed through the letter box.
Thirty seconds later
It wasnât a pig being pushed through the letter box, it was Gordy, cross-eyed son of Angus. I could see his ginger ears poking through.
Oh, bloody hell.
I said, âLibby, donât put Gordy though the letter box. Iâm opening the door.â
She yelled, âHe laaikes it.â
When I got the door open, it was to find Libby in Wellington boots and a bikini. Gordy was struggling and yowling in her little fat arms and finally squirmed free and leaped off into the garden sneezing and shaking.
Libby was laughing. âFunny pussy. Hnk hnk.â Then she came up to me and started hugging my knees and kissing them. In between snogging, Libby was murmuring, âI lobe my Gingey.â
Mutti came up the steps in a really short dress, very tight round the nungas. So very sad. She gave me a hug, which can be quite frightening seeing her enormous basoomas looming towards your head. She said, âHello, Gee, did you have a larf camping?â
I said, âOh yes, it was brillopads. We made instruments out of dried beans and Herr Kamyer did impressions of crap stuff with his hands that no one could get except Jas. And, as a pièce de résistance, I fell in a pond and was attacked by great toasted newts.â
She wasnât even listening as usual, off in her own Muttiland.
âWe went to see Uncle Eddieâs gig at The Ambassador last night. It was like an orgy; one of the women got so carried away she stole his feather codpiece.â
Is that really the sort of thing a growing, sensitive girl should have to listen to? It was like earporn.
One minute later
I watched her bustling about making our delicious supper (i.e. opening a tin of tomato soup). She was so full of herself burbling on and on.
âHonestly, you should have been there, it was a hoot.â
I said, âOooooooh yeah, it would have been great to have been there. Really great.â But she didnât get it.
Libby was still kissing my knees and giggling. She had forgotten that they were my knees; they were now just her replacement friends for Josh. But then she had a loversâ tiff with her knee-friends, biffed me on the knee quite hard and went off into the garden, yelling for Gordy.
I said, âMum, you didnât take Libby with you to the baldy-o-gram fiasco, did you?â
âDonât be silly, Georgia, Iâm not a complete fool.â
I said, âWell, actually, you are as it happens.â
She said, âDonât be so rude.â
I said, âWhereâs Dad? Have you managed to shake him off at last?â
And then Vati came in. In his leather trousers. Oh, I might be sick. Not content with the horrificnosity of the trousers, he kissed me on my hair. Urgh, he had touched my hair; now I would have to wash it.
He was grinning like a loon and taking his jacket off.
âHello, no camping injuries then. No vole bites. You didnât slip into a newt pond or anything?â
I looked at him suspiciously. I hoped he wasnât turning into Mystic Meg as well in his old age. I said, âDad, are you wearing a womanâs blouse?â
He went completely ballisticisimus. âDonât be so bloody cheeky! This is an original sixties Mod shirt. I will probably wear it when I go clubbing. Any gigs coming up?â
Mum said, âHave you heard anything from the Italian Stallion?â
Dad had his head in the fridge and I could see his enormous leather-clad bum leering at me. I had an overwhelming urge to kick it, but I wasnât whelmed because I knew he would probably ban me from going out for life.
I gave Mum my worst look and nodded over at the fridge. I neednât have worried, though, because Dad had found a Popsicle in the freezer and was as thrilled as it is possible for a fat bloke in constraining leather trousers to be. He went chomping off into the front room.
Mum was adjusting her over-the-shoulder-boulder-holder and looking at me.
I said, âWhat?â
And she said, âSo⦠have you heard anything?â
I donât know why I told her, but it just came tumbling out.
âMum, why do boys do that âsee you laterâ thing and then just not see you later? Even though you donât even know