Authors: Connell O'Tyne
Both Georgina and Honey were holding their Louis Vuitton pet carrier bags containing matching super-cute pet rabbits, Arabesque and Claudine. They’d have hated it if they’d known, but I was always stopping by the pet shed to cuddle their rabbits; particularly Georgina’s, Arabesque, who was really adorable and had the sweetest pink eyes and the softest, floppiest ears. Honey’s toffee-coloured rabbit, Claudine, was always biting me (no surprises there).
I would have loved a rabbit of my own, but one of the things about being an American freak at an English boarding school is that you don’t get to have a pet because of the totally cruel quarantine laws. My parents probably saw this as character building, like everything that depresses me.
My parents are big on character.
Both my parents are writers in Hollywood. I long to write myself – only not the sort of dreary stuff they write.
They think of themselves as really hip and liberal because they say I can call them Sarah and Bob (like I’d ever do that!). Besides, they are so
not
cool. For a start, they drive a Volvo and say things like ‘swell’ (Dad) and ‘super’ (Mom). My mom is a senior staff writer on a crappy soap that doesn’t even air in the UK, so no kudos there. My dad is writing the Big One – that’s Hollywood-speak for the script that will finally make his name, but currently brings in no money.
They didn’t think LA was the place to bring up a teenager. They told all their friends that they were afraid I would become ‘too Hollywood.’ They sent me to
Le Lycée Français de Los Angeles
when I was a kid, which is where I picked up my fencing problem. But the real reason I was in this hell was because my mom is British and she went to Saint Augustine’s, and she ADORED it.
‘It’ll be super, darling. You’ll make friends for life – just wait and see,’ she promised me on the flight over three years ago.
All I’d come up with in the friend department so far was Star. She’s the daughter of a rock star who was huge in the eighties and even though he was mega (and is still adored by several million tragic people with bad hair worldwide) and is one of the richest men in Britain, Star was too random and unconventional to be accepted at Saint Augustine’s, or to have any kudos like Antoinette did. Antoinette’s entire family are famous pop stars. Even though Antoinette was in the year below us, she was
considered the trendiest girl in school – unlike Star, who was a total goth with a lot of weird habits: 1) wearing only black, 2) fencing, 3) having a freaky extended family, and 4) being friends with me.
Honey pointed one of her long, French-manicured fingers at the list and said, ‘Oh yaah. But, darling, look, it’s not
just
the American Freak. Guess who else you’ve been roomed with? Only her weird friend, Star!’
Georgina’s eyes almost popped out of their long-lashed sockets. ‘Darling, are you serious? I am so going to get Daddy to complain,’ she declared loudly as she looked despairingly down the list and held her own perfectly manicured hand to her brow.
Honestly, I thought, it’s a wonder these two don’t wear tiaras … whoops – they do on occasion!
This was going to be a great term.
My despair at having to share a room with Georgina was somewhat diluted by the thought of Star being in my room too. I had asked to share with Star, but, as Georgina now knew, you don’t always get to share with your first choice.
Star’s my best friend. As I said earlier, she was my
only
friend on account of us both being the form freaks.
We had bonded the first day of Year Seven (my first year at Saint Augustine’s) in fencing. We spent so many hours alone together in the
salle d’armes
practising (i.e., escaping the other girls and, in Star’s case, fancying Professor Sullivan, our fencing master) that we grew pretty
close – especially when we both chose sabre as our weapon. The other girls were beginners, so had to start on the foil, but because Star and I had been fencing since we were quite young and were showing so much enthusiasm, Professor Sullivan allowed us to advance to
épée
and then on to sabre.
Sabre is the most aggressive of the three fencing weapons; it has a really cool full-fist guard and a flat cutting blade, with a folded-off end rather than the tragic-looking bobble that you have on foil. Sabreurs have a bit of a reputation for being a swashbuckling, ruthless lot.
In our ignorance, Star and I thought ruthlessness and swashbuckling would be agonisingly chic qualities to foster. But that was before we realised that being sabreurs would make us stand out – something that wasn’t done at Saint Augustine’s.
Things that make girls stand out (and therefore make them the object of ridicule and derision) at Saint Augustine’s School for Ladies:
1) Not being willowy and not having really long hair (preferably blonde).
2) Not having a title or at least a double-barrelled surname (although
using
your title was considered tragic).
3) Not owning a massive house in the country and a quite big one in a really smart area of London.
4) Having a spot problem (i.e., any spots whatsoever).
5) Being overweight (i.e., being of average or above-average weight for your height). Note: even bulimia and anorexia were more status enhancing than being a chubba.
6) Having unusual amounts of body hair (i.e., any).
7) Having a funny accent (i.e., any accent that wasn’t madly posh and English).
8) Not being asked to be a debutante (i.e., being presented to the Royal Court). Perversely, actually agreeing to be a debutante marked you out as even more uncool than if you hadn’t been asked in the first place.
9) Not being attractive enough to pull fit boys (preferably older ones) who then went on to leave messages on your mobile for other girls to listen to.
10) Not being completely obsessive about sweets and fags.
11) Having clothes that no one else would buy (i.e., non-designer, like mine).
Number 9 was the clincher.
Pulling fit, older boys is vital for all girls, but especially for girls who live in an all-girls school, where the ability to pull fit boys confers status like nothing else can.
I knew this because of what happened to Octavia, a girl
in the year above me. Octavia had very little social cachet and stood out like a sore thumb with her short, dykey hair. She also had this body hair problem (i.e., she was
covered
in the stuff) that had earned her the nickname Pubes.
Like me, Octavia had been one of the girls who hid in the cupboard at lunchtime to avoid being confronted by her total lack of friends. (Who sits next to whom at lunch says everything about your status at Saint Augustine’s.) Then suddenly after the Christmas break, Octavia was transformed into one of the most popular girls in the school and one of Georgina’s best mates – all because she pulled a Lower Sixth boy from Eades. Eades College is the madly posh school where the world’s grandest boys are educated in privilege and the art of effortless charm (well, that was how Star put it). One exeat (that’s a weekend when you are allowed home) he even came and picked her up on his Ducati motorbike. We never saw her again.
You could fail every other test, but developing a reputation for never pulling boys was the end. Like providing the alcohol at social events, pulling boys was always the girl’s responsibility and consequently we talked of little else. When I say ‘we,’ I mean the cool girls – not me, but the girls I wanted to be like.
Failing to share stories about the boys you had pulled was as bad as not sharing your tuck. It was vulgar.
Over Easter, I tried to explain the imperative of pulling a boy by the time I was fifteen, but my parents went totally ballistic about it – as if I’d said I wanted to start having sex.
Naïvely imagining that it would calm them down, I explained what pulling actually meant, i.e., kissing and that sort of thing. I mean,
hello
! They work in Hollywood for goodness’ sake! Kissing is PG-13 there! But instead of saying something sensible like, ‘Oh, yes, darling, of course we understand. Get on to that pulling business right away! If there’s anything we can do to help, just let us know, dear,’ they delivered this really long dissertation about how you can get mono (glandular fever) from kissing. Until eventually I nodded off into my carb-free meal.
As an American with parents who have virtually impoverished themselves (in Hollywood terms, not real terms, obviously – I mean, they could still afford to pay for the fees, the flights and the tragic uniform; it just meant they had to do without a pool) in order to send me to boarding school in England, I pretty much flunked all eleven tests. I suppose I am tall and thin and my hair is blondish (if I spray myself stupid with Sun-In). But it’s not sleek and straight like the cool girls’ hair; it’s wavy and has little fluffy bits at the front that stick up like horns no matter how much I try to stick them down.
In Year Seven when we were all eleven, the dorm bedrooms had six or more girls in them, but as the years went on, the number of girls per bedroom was getting smaller and smaller, and it became harder and harder to hide what a freak I was compared with all the other girls who were pulling boys left, right and centre.
Years Nine and Ten were housed in shared bedrooms of
three per room in a building called Cleathorpes. It was an ancient house with a gabled roof and mullioned windows. In some ways I guess it looked kind of spooky and Addams Family-ish, but I had always longed to be roomed there. It was away from the main building where all the other dorms were.
Cleathorpes had good points and bad points:
Good points:
It was away from the main building and meant we could sneak out at night through the bursar’s window, which was conveniently never locked. This meant that IF we could dodge the guard dogs and armed security guards, slip through the electric, barbed-wire fence and sprint through the woods (where it was rumoured flashers and rapists lurked) and take the 23:23 train to London, we could go clubbing at one of the really cool London clubs like Fabric (that is, if you knew someone who knew someone who knew the doormen). Not that anyone in my year had done anything as cool as that yet, but all the Lower Sixth girls claimed they had done it all the time when they were in Cleathorpes.
Bad points:
The House Mother (or as we referred to her, House Spinster) was the horrible Miss Cribbe. Not only was she bearded and mad and always trying to get all chummy with us like we were her real children or something, but she had a disgusting incontinent springer spaniel called Misty, who was constantly sneaking into the dorms and weeing on our duvets.
All Miss Cribbe ever said was, ‘Oh, Misty, you are a naughty little doggins, aren’t you.’ (Miss Cribbe always spoke to Misty in a baby voice.)
The whole of Cleathorpes smelled of wee, even though we all made a concerted effort to get Misty to run away by spraying her with Febreze.
I lugged my trunk up the narrow, dimly lit, oak-panelled stairwell that wound around the central hall. Each of the cold stone stairs had been hollowed in the centre from about two hundred years of wear. As I struggled alone, behind all the parents, guardians and valets carrying up the other girls’ trunks, I took in the smell of beeswax and floor cleaner.
The stained-glass window depicting Saint Theresa doing something miraculous cast a wintry half-light on the stairwell, even when it was fabulously hot and sunny outside. Bent double under the weight of my trunk, the strap of my fencing kit cutting into my shoulder, I looked up at her peaceful features – and wished she’d do something miraculous for
me
, like carry my wretched trunk up these stairs.
My parents lived in LA, so I suppose they couldn’t accompany me every time, but also they claimed lugging a five-thousand-tonne trunk on my back was character building. Clearly the fact that I was going to end up looking like a hunched-up old woman by the time I was eighteen didn’t concern them in the least.
Georgina’s full title is The Honourable Georgina Castle Orpington, but she was far too grand to use it (as I explained, using your title was considered vulgar). So she went by Georgina Castle Orpington. Obviously, though, Georgina was not so grand that she didn’t want everyone to
know
that she was titled and grand and should be treated as such.
By far the best bed in the room was the one by the window. It had drawers underneath and a view over the ancient oak woods (known as Puller’s Woods) where all the illicit high jinks went on.