Authors: Jacqueline Wilson
âThat's my girl,' says Mum. âHere, budge up, make room for me.'
But as she comes to join me, a man walks out of a room at the back and stares at us.
âGood Lord, where did you spring from?' he says. He glares at me. âYou can't sleep there!'
I jump up off the sofa. He peers at the cushions, as if I might have left muddy marks all over them.
âMy daughter's tired. We'd like a room, please,' says Mum, her chin up.
The man looks at his watch ostentatiously. âOur guests don't usually arrive at this time,' he says.
âWell, we've been to a party,' says Mum. âAnd now we'd like a room.'
He sighs, but turns on his computer. âIs it just for one night?'
âYes please.'
âMay I have your credit card?'
Mum bites her lip. âSurely we pay when we check out?'
âYes, of course, but I need to take your credit card details now.'
âOh, right.' Mum make a pantomime of checking
her bag and her jeans pocket. The man waits impassively. âOh no!' she says. âI can't find it.'
âNow there's a surprise,' says the man.
âI don't know what to do,' says Mum.
âWell, I'm afraid you can't stay here. Goodbye,' says the man.
I grab Mum's hand. I don't want her to bluff any more, it's so awful. But she takes no notice.
âWhere on earth can I have lost it?' says Mum. âI'll have to ring the credit card people in the morning. Can't we simply have a room for the rest of the night and I'll sort out all the financial details later, after breakfast?'
âI'm sorry, it's a strict company rule. Guests have to provide their credit card details when they check in.'
Mum sighs. âWell, can my daughter and I at least use your ladies' room â or is there a strict company rule that says little girls can't use your toilet?' says Mum.
The man taps his fingers on the desk impatiently. âVery well. But be quick about it.'
We aren't quick at all. We don't just use the toilet. We wash our faces in the sink. Mum takes her top off and washes under her arms and soaks her filthy feet. She reapplies her make-up and combs her hair and fixes a fresh new ponytail,
and then brushes mine into place too. We don't have toothpaste or brushes. Mum tries rubbing a tiny bit of soap around her teeth instead but it makes her gag.
âThere, we look a bit better now,' she says. âDo you want to wash your feet too, Destiny? Mine feel so much better now.'
âNo, Mum. We've been ages. That man will come banging any moment. Please let's go.'
âYou're such a little worrypot,' says Mum, giving me a kiss on the end of my nose. Then she has to scrub it with toilet paper because she's left fresh lipstick marks all over it.
âDear, oh dear, we can't have you looking like Rudolph the Red-nosed Reindeer when you meet your father,' she says.
The man is waiting just outside the door of the ladies' toilet, looking grim. He pokes his head inside, obviously checking to see we've not smeared the sinks or peed on the pristine floor.
âI told you to be quick about it. What were you doing, having a bath?'
I snigger anxiously, but he's not being funny.
âNow hop it, both of you.' He glares at Mum. âYou're lucky I haven't called the police.'
âOh, is it a crime now to ask for a room in your
poxy hotel?' asks Mum. âDon't you fret, I wouldn't stay here if you paid me now.'
She takes my hand and marches out in her high heels, ponytail swinging, while I scamper along beside her.
âOh, Mum, you don't think he
will
call the police, do you?' I ask.
âDon't be daft, Destiny. Of course he won't. Cheer up, darling. We're here, in Robin Hill.' She strokes the street sign lovingly, as if it's a cat. âThere! Come on.'
There's a white wooden barrier across the road and a hut beside it, but thank goodness there's no one in it. We walk along the pavement into the Robin Hill Estate, feeling like Dorothy stepping out of her front door into Oz. We're only a few steps away from the busy main road and yet we seem to be right in the countryside: there's a canopy of trees overhead and thick hedges like the grassy path. Birds are already starting to sing in the trees, though there's still no sign of dawn. It's so dark here. I grab Mum's hand and hold it tightly.
âIsn't it lovely here?' she whispers. âI knew Danny would live in a wonderful place.'
âDo you really think you'll know which is his house?'
âOf course!' says Mum, but now she doesn't sound so sure.
As we walk on we discover there are many houses, but most of them are hidden away down long gravel driveways. All you can see are big security gates. Mum climbs up a rung or two on one gate to see if she can spot the house and a light comes on out of nowhere, making us both gasp. Mum jumps down and we make a run for it, right up the lane and round the corner. We flatten ourselves behind a tree, hearts thudding, waiting for shouts and running footsteps and police sirens, but the light has gone off now and there is utter silence.
âWhoops!' Mum says, giggling shakily.
âMum, they'll think we're burglars and lock us up!'
âOh, Destiny, stop it, you're doing my head in. I'm trying to stay positive here. I'm pretty sure that wasn't Danny's house. He's got a lovely garden. I've seen photos of him playing with the children in it. He's obviously such a lovely caring dad. Can't you see, you've been missing out all these years, darling. I want him to start caring for you too, just a little bit. It's high time.'
âBut, Mumâ'
âShut
up
, Destiny. Why do you always have to
argue with me? I'm your mother and I know best. Now come along.'
So I walk along beside her, not saying anything. She's starting to limp again, but she keeps her shoes on, wanting to keep her feet clean. She's humming, but so softly I can barely hear her. I don't have to listen to know what tune it is. It's
Destiny
, my song.
We stumble up and down grassy lanes, getting glimpses of huge houses, one with a big lake, one with tennis courts. I imagine Danny rowing, Danny running round with a racket. Another house has a huge Alsatian that leaps towards us as we peer through the gate. It can't get at us but we run anyway, frightened its loud barking will alert someone.
âThat can't be Danny's house. He'd never have a mad dog like that with children around. It would swallow little Ace for breakfast,' Mum pants.
I'm starting to think we'll spend the rest of the night stumbling around Robin Hill, probably going backwards and forwards past Danny's house several times without ever realizing. But right at the end of the lane there's a big gate with limp bouquets of flowers and little teddies tied to it, and all along the wall there are smudges and blobs of writing, though we can't read them in the gloom.
We don't need to. It's obvious they are passionate messages from fans. This
must
be Danny's house.
Mum squeezes my hand tight. âWe've found it, Destiny!' She gives a little chuckle. âThey'll be so surprised when we knock on the door!'
âMum! We can't knock
now
. It's much too early.'
âOh, darling, we can't wait now,' says Mum, pacing up and down in her punishing high heels. âI can't wait, I can't wait!'
âMum, what would we think if there was a knock on
our
door at three o'clock in the morning? It'll worry them so â and they'll get angry too.'
âNot when we explain,' says Mum, but she's started to waver. âMaybe you're right. We'll wait till it's daylight, OK? It'll give us a chance to get a bit of beauty sleep.'
So we sit down on the path and lean against the wall. In spite of the cold and the worry and the excitement we both fall fast asleep.
I wake up early, even though I was awake half the night. Mum and Dad rowed for hours and hours. They were yelling so loudly that Ace woke up and started crying too. I got to him before Claudia and lifted him out of his bed and took him back
into my room. Sweetie came too, burrowing into me with her little sharp elbows and knees, her long hair tangled all over my face.
We lay there uncomfortably while the shouting went on. I tried pulling the duvet up over our heads. I made Sweetie and Ace pretend we were bears in a cave, but it only distracted them for a minute or two and then they got hot and poked their heads out of the duvet again. Mum was screaming now and Dad was shouting very, very rude words. Ace started muttering them too, but I put my hand over his mouth.
âStop it, Ace. You mustn't say that.'
âDad is.'
âDad's being very bad.'
âWhy is he so cross with Mum?' Ace mumbled. âI hate it when Dad's cross.'
âMum's
crying
,' said Sweetie. âShall we go and stop them, Sunset?'
âNo, then they'll be cross with us. Shh now.'
âI want Mum!' Ace said.
âWell, you've got me just now. Come here, little Aceman Spaceman. Time to dream your way over the moon and in and out the stars.'
I stroked his hot head and his silky straight hair while he nestled close, and in a few minutes he was breathing deeply, fast asleep.
âHe didn't do a wee in his pot,' Sweetie whispered. âWatch out, Sunset, he'll wet the bed.'
âNo he won't,' I said firmly, though I worried she might well be right.
The bed's still dry now, and I should lift him out quick and put him on his pot, but if he wakes up he'll wake everyone and it's so quiet and peaceful. Sweetie's stayed in my bed too. She's stretched out like a starfish, taking up most of the space. She's still got purple shadow on her eyelids. I stare at my sister, sighing. It's so unfair. Why can't
I
be little and pretty. I'd give anything to be tiny and blonde and beautiful like Sweetie. She doesn't have to bother to be nice to people all the time. Everyone likes her just because she
looks
lovely. I comb her long locks gently with my fingers and put my head very close to hers so that
I
have long fair hair falling past my shoulders.
Sweetie murmurs in her sleep and pushes me away.
âExcuse me, but this is
my
bed,' I mutter, but she doesn't budge.
So I slide right out of the bed and stand and stretch. Then I tiptoe across the carpet and carefully open the doors to Wardrobe City. I have a white fitted wardrobe the whole length of one wall, but I've managed to squash all my boring dresses
and jackets and tops and trousers up at one end. That means I can use more than half of it for Wardrobe City.
It started off with my doll's house.
Hi! Magazine
gave it to me when Sweetie was born. They did a twelve-page photo feature on Mum and Dad and their new baby girl. They showed Mum in bed with Sweetie (in her bunny sleeping suit) and Dad bringing Mum breakfast on a tray; Mum and Dad lying back on the bed with Sweetie in their arms; Mum working out while Dad cradles Sweetie; Mum and Dad in party clothes sitting on the big velvet sofa with Sweetie in a long white christening robe on Mum's knee; Sweetie in her own fairy-tale rocking cot with Mum and Dad kissing her goodnight. I'm in that one too, with my finger up to my lips, saying shush (teeth hidden). Then they wanted a photo in my bedroom with me sitting on the floor with Sweetie on my lap and all my teddies sitting in a ring around us, but they felt the wall looked a bit white and bare so they
sent out for a large doll's house
to fill in the blank space!
I don't think I'd ever even seen a doll's house before. I forgot all about my new baby sister and just wanted to kneel in front of this wonderful pink and white house with its glossy white-tiled roof and white pillars and three little white steps
up to the rose-coloured front door. It had a tiny brass lion-head knocker that you could really tap, and a little letterbox slit for fingernail-sized envelopes. The door was hinged so a small doll could knock and then slip indoors. I longed to squeeze through the front door myself. I crouched down to peer through the lattice windows to see if I could spot any dolls inside, waving tiny pink plastic fingers at me.
âDo you want to see inside?' said Mark, the photographer's assistant. He touched a hook on the side of the house. It swung right open, exposing all three storeys of the doll's house, rudimentarily furnished â a bed here, a rug there, a stove in the kitchen and a tiny toilet with a little seat in the bathroom.
I fetched my smallest thumb-sized bear and walked her round the doll's house, laying her down on the bed, sitting her on the rug, standing her by the stove to cook porridge and then squatting her on top of the toilet. I forgot all about my teeth. I was smiling from ear to ear.
Sweetie had got bored by this time and the nanny (not Claudia â was it Rhiann or Agnieszka or Hilke then?) fed her so I could play undisturbed for twenty minutes. That teddy was called Furry and had always been the baby of the bear family,
but she grew up rapidly in the doll's house and became Mrs Furry, proud owner of a miniature mansion. I fashioned her a little apron out of a tissue and she bustled about the house, diligently dusting with her paw.