Girl, 15: Flirting for England (18 page)

BOOK: Girl, 15: Flirting for England
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‘This is pointless!’ cried Jess, getting up. ‘It was Wales, right? I was a whale!’

‘Typecasting,’ observed Fred teasingly.

‘One moment!’ said Marie-Louise, grabbing her dictionary. ‘Ah! In French, Wales is
Pays de Galles
.’

‘I think, in retrospect, football would have been preferable to charades,’ said Fred. ‘And I say this as a confirmed football-hater.’

‘Nevair mind!’ said Marie-Louise, smiling cheerfully. ‘I sink ze sausages are ready!’ The beans were also bubbling nicely.

‘OK, supper time!’ announced Jodie. ‘We can do some more charades afterwards!’

Sometimes Jodie just didn’t have a clue. She was really getting irritating. Jess sneaked another look at Gerard and, to her amazement, he wasn’t looking at the food, like everybody else. He was looking right at her, and his eyes were kind of smiley and magnetic. Suddenly Jess lost her appetite. Could this be love?

What on earth was going to happen after supper? How were they going to get some time alone together? Jess was beginning to have a burning ambition – to be French kissed by a French boy.

Chapter 24

Supper was great: jacket potatoes, beans and sausages. The jacket spuds had been done in Jodie’s auntie’s oven indoors, which was cheating, really, but who cared? It was all delish. Jess, however, was having problems eating. Despite a lifetime of rampant greed, she now struggled to force down a few mouthfuls. Once or twice she took a quick peep at Gerard.

The first time, he was eating his potato skin whole, and had stuff hanging out of his mouth and a smear of ketchup on his face, but it only made Jess love him more. The second time she looked, she caught his eye, and for a split second there was a flash of electricity between them so powerful, Jess was afraid her eyelashes might have melted and her earrings fused to her lobes.

Everybody carried the dirty dishes indoors to Jodie’s auntie’s kitchen for the washing-up. Mrs Bradshaw herself was sitting in a little office beyond the kitchen, dealing with an enormous pile of paperwork.

‘Take your shoes off!’ she shouted whenever the back door opened. A smelly old sheepdog lay in a basket by the Aga and she wagged her tail lazily whenever anyone arrived, and gave a kind of grunt.

‘This is Betsy,’ said Jodie. ‘She’s retired.’

‘I won’t bother to bark when I’m retired, either,’ said Jess.

The washing-up was all done by Marie-Louise and Edouard. Jodie had worked out a rota. Jodie was due to do the chores tomorrow lunchtime with – guess who? – Gerard. It was kind of pathetic.

But Jess could understand why Jodie was so besotted with him. Whenever Jess heard his name or caught sight of him, her heart kind of exploded secretly. It was so bizarre.

‘So,’ said Jodie as they gathered round the fire again after all the chores were done. ‘Hmmmm, what now? I know! Sardines!’

‘Sardines?’ protested Jess feebly. ‘But we’ve just had supper!’

‘No, it’s a game,’ said Jodie. ‘We used to play it when I was a kid. One person goes off to hide, and the others all look for him. Or her.’

‘What, like hide-and-seek?’ asked Flora.

‘No, it’s the opposite, really, because in hide-and-seek you all go and hide, but in Sardines only one person goes and the rest look for him, and if you find him, you join him and hide with him till, one by one, all the others find you.’

‘Ah! It is vairy amusing play!’ cried Marie-Louise, slapping her hands. She explained it to Edouard, and then they all drew straws for who was going to be the one to hide. (Real straws – another advantage of being on a farm.) It was Gerard who drew the short straw, so he was ‘it’. Had Jodie fixed it, holding the straws in a certain secret way? Almost certainly.

‘OK!’ said Jodie. ‘Gerard, you go off somewhere and hide.’

Gerard shrugged and looked useless, though delicious.


Bof?!
Where?’ he asked, looking round.

‘Anywhere!’ said Jodie. ‘Any of these fields, in the barns, the woods – anywhere you like. My uncle’s got 150 acres,’ she said, sounding posh and rich. ‘We’ll wait for ten minutes. Then we’ll be coming to find you! We’ll all go into the girls’ tent so we can’t see where you’re going.’

Jodie ushered them all into the tent, rather like a sheepdog, and zipped the flap firmly shut.

‘Fred!’ she said. ‘You time us. Ten minutes, OK?’

‘Why me?’ protested Fred. ‘I’m already exhausted.’ He flopped down on Jess’s sleeping bag and closed his eyes. Everybody else sat down. Edouard sneezed, then blew his nose. Marie-Louise cleaned her fingernails and chatted about ‘ze beautifool English countryside’. Flora rubbed some anti-insect cream on her flawless arms. Jess passed the time by choosing a new ringtone – one which sounded like a microscopic Latin American samba band trapped inside a washing machine.

‘Right!’ said Fred. ‘Time’s up!’

Jess tucked her phone away safely under her pillow, and they all piled out of the tent. For a moment they hesitated. There were so many directions they could take: fields and woods and barns galore – if you like that sort of thing. And right now, Jess couldn’t think of anything more convenient. Within minutes, probably, she would be cuddling up with Gerard under some divine and very private bush.

‘Scatter, scatter!’ cried Jodie, running off up the field towards the house and barns. She sounded like an army captain in the SAS. ‘We’ve got to separate!’

Jess plunged down towards the stream. She was sure Gerard would be down in that direction somewhere. After all, that was where they had flirted with their fingers in the mud. The place was already sacred to her. She would have a plaque put up, nailed to a tree:
HERE JESS JORDAN FELL UNDER GERARD’S SPELL.

Jess arrived at the sacred spot, grabbed the hanging rope and swung across the stream. The other side was quite steep and rocky and led up to an inviting little wood.

Jess was sure Gerard was waiting up there, with open arms. She toiled up the steep bank, breaking into an unattractive sweat. Never mind. Gerard would be sweaty, too. She wouldn’t mind. In fact, she would bottle his sweat and sell it to younger girls. Jess reached the top of the bank, paused, sniffed her armpits suspiciously, and then entered the wood. Thick undergrowth and brambles pulled at her clothes and hair. At first it all seemed part of an enchanted game.

‘Leave me alone, you thorny beasts!’ she giggled. ‘We’re just not meant for each other. You’re a vegetable and, let’s face it, I’m an animal. It would never work. And anyway, I wouldn’t want to have buds till I’d had a career.’

But after about ten minutes it started to get tiresome. By now Jess was out of breath, hot and bothered. She paused, and listened. Birds were singing in the canopy above. But there was no sign of Gerard. Maybe, if Gerard had come this way, he’d have left evidence: a fabulous French footprint in the mud or a path of lucky old crushed undergrowth leading to his hiding place. But there was nothing.

Jess paused. She was beginning to feel really annoyed. She was definitely not going to find Gerard here. In fact, it would be a miracle if she found her way back.

Gerard, you idiot
, she thought.
Why didn’t you hide up here? We could be halfway through our twentieth kiss by now.
Jess turned and floundered among the trees for about twenty minutes.

Suddenly, up ahead, she saw a bush move. She froze. Had she imagined it? She watched. It definitely twitched. Something alive was in that bush. Jess braced herself. Maybe it was Gerard. But maybe it was a fox, badger, deer – whatever wild things hung out here. Jess prepared to be bitten. Preferably by Gerard.

‘Hello?’ she called softly. ‘I can see you!’

The bush shook slightly.

‘’Allo?’ came a reply. It sounded French. Jess’s heart leapt in excitement.

‘Gerard?’ she called again. ‘Is it you?’

The bush shook violently. Somebody backed out in a chaos of crackling branches and twigs. Disaster! It was Edouard.

Chapter 25

‘Edouard!’ cried Jess, trying to hide her total horror and dismay. ‘What are you doing hiding? You’re supposed to be looking for Gerard.’

Edouard frowned at her and shrugged with total blank incomprehension.

‘It’s OK, it’s OK,’ said Jess quickly. It wasn’t his fault he hadn’t understood the game. It wasn’t his fault she had headed straight for his hiding place. It wasn’t his fault he had failed to understand what she’d just said. None of it was his fault. She just might have to murder him all the same, though. Life was tough sometimes.

‘I ham perdu,’ said Edouard. Jess raised her finger to her lips.

‘Shhh!’ she said, and managed to crank up a pretend smile. Why did he have to make conversation at a time like this? Didn’t he realise they were in a deep crisis? They were lost in the wood, for goodness’ sake. This was no time for all that ‘I ham perdu’ business – whatever it meant.

Jess beckoned in pantomime style. There was no point in trying to find Gerard now. He couldn’t possibly have come up this way. They were already miles and miles away from the campfire. Possibly in another county. Possibly in another country. Wales, for instance. And even if they found Gerard, Jess’s chances of a French kissing lesson were nil, now that Edouard was hanging about talking about ham.

There was only one sensible course of action. They had to get back to the campfire and those lovely cosy tents before night fell and the werewolves came out. Jess led the way back in vaguely what she imagined must be the right direction. After a while the ground started to slope a bit again.
This, surely, must lead back down to the stream
, she thought. Jess hated nature now. She just wanted all this vegetation removed and replaced with nice level pavements, pizza parlours and, best of all, a bus route.

BOOK: Girl, 15: Flirting for England
13.35Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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