Authors: Jacqueline Wilson
It got darker and darker, later and later. My heart thudded when I thought of Mum. Dad would be coming home soon. If I wasn't back then he'd call out one of his police cars and start a search for me.
âI think I'll have to go home now, Jasmine.'
âNo, please. Not yet. We're having fun,' said Jasmine. âLook, I want to play you some of my other albums and show you all my drawings and stuff. Please stay.'
âI want to,' I said desperately, âbut it's really really late. I know it sounds pathetic but my mum will be so worried. You know what mums are like.'
Jasmine pulled a face, pursing her soft lips. âNope. Not my mum.' She said it very lightly but her voice thickened, almost as if she was going to cry.
âYour mum doesn't worry?' I said.
âOh, she worries all right. You should see her before a first night or a telly show. You can't go near her. And she has all these little rituals. She has to wear a particular lipstick and line up her little glass animals in a certain way and swallow three sips of wine, like she's totally nuts. This isn't just when she's got a main part, she gets just as fussed if she's a fairy godmother in some silly panto or a rubbish role in a soap. And she worries about her hair and her wretched highlights and her botox injections and her tummy tuck and her boob job. She goes on and on about herself, and does she really look thin and should she go to power yoga or pilates classes?' Jasmine was spitting out the words now, her fists
clenched. âShe worries all the time but she doesn't worry about me. Well, she worries that her new guy makes too much fuss of me. He's a creep, I can't stick him, he dyes his hair blond and wanders round posing all the time, you've never seen such a plonker, and yet Miranda's nuts about him. So she shoves me in boarding school out of the way, and she doesn't even listen when I phone and tell her how I hate it. Thank God Dad rescued me.'
âAnd are you happy now, with your dad?' I whispered.
âYeah, of course. It's great. I love my dad. He's a truly super guy, not a bit
like
a dad. He doesn't get all heavy or tell me what to do and he acts like he's glad to have me around â but he's not here often enough. It's not his fault, he can't help it with his job. He's offered to fix me up with some sort of babysitter but I can't stand that idea. I'm fine by myself. It's not like he ever stays out all night, he always comes home, though sometimes it's not till around midnight and it can get a bit weird just sitting all by myself. I know it's daft but I get kind of . . . scared.'
I gave her a big hug. Her long golden hair brushed my shoulders as if it was my hair too.
âI'd get scared. Anyone would. Look, I'd give
anything
to stay with you, Jasmineâ'
âBut you have to go.'
âMaybe I can stay later another time. Even sleep over,' I promised wildly. I gave her another hug and she hugged me back really hard, clinging to me.
âWe really are friends, aren't we, Violet?'
âOf course we are.'
âBest friends?'
âBest friends,' I said.
The two words flickered in my head like Jasmine's fairy lights, glowing in jewel colours.
Dear C.D.,
I wonder what it's like for you, drawing and painting your magic world all day long, fairies and phantoms flying above your head? You must lose all touch with reality.
How do you cope when you come back to the real world?
Maybe your real world is magical too. I know you're very rich. I wonder what sort of house you live in now? Perhaps it's a gothic castle like the one in your pictures? You won't have pairs of disembodied hands to bring you wine and platters of fruit and draw you baths and bring you fine robes â but you'll have ordinary servants, I expect. And the blonde lady.
With love from
Violet
XXX
â
DON'T BE SCARED
now, promise,' I said, holding Jasmine's hand.
We hugged each other goodbye and then I set off. I started running as I went down the stairs, hurtling down them two or three at a time. I rushed out of the mansion block and through the landscaped gardens, slipping on the damp grass, dodging bushes and branches.
I
was the one who was scared.
I'd never been out after dark by myself. I ran nearly all the way home, hardly able to breathe when I got to my own house at last. The porch light was on. Dad was standing there at the door, arms folded.
I wanted to run right past.
There was no chance of that.
âWhere the hell have you been, young lady?' he
bellowed, seizing me by the wrist and jerking me indoors. His big red fist was like a handcuff. I couldn't shake myself free. I stood blinking in the harsh light of the hall. Mum stood nervously in the background, gnawing on the back of her knuckles. She gave a little cry when she saw me. Will was sitting in the shadows halfway up the stairs. I could see the gleam in his eyes.
âViolet?' Dad shook me. âCome on, explain yourself. You've scared us all witless. Do you have any idea what the time is?'
âLook, I think you're over-reacting. It's not
that
late. I'm fine. No need to make such a fuss,' I said, raising my eyebrows, Jasmine-style.
Will snorted, appreciating my performance.
âWe thought you'd been abducted,' said Mum. âI didn't know what to do. Will said you'd gone off with this girl from school so I phoned Marnie, I phoned Terry, but they didn't seem to know where you were.'
âHe was obviously telling us a whole tissue of lies,' said Dad, glaring at Will. âYou weren't out with any girl, were you, Violet? Come on, tell the truth. I
know
you were off playing fast and loose with some boy.'
âI was with a girl, Dad. Jasmine, she's in my class.'
âThe one with all the hair?' said Will. âIs she only your age?'
âYou've never mentioned a Jasmine before,' said Mum.
âYou haven't got any Jasmine in your class. Stop lying, Violet. I'm trained, I can tell. Look at you, all red and shifty-eyed!'
I forced myself to look Dad straight in the face. âJasmine joined my class today, Dad. Come and inspect the register tomorrow if you really don't believe me. Hook me up to a lie detector, why don't you?'
âLess of the lippy attitude, madam,' said Dad. âSo what were you doing with this girl, then? Why in God's name didn't you phone home and put your mother out of her misery? You made enough fuss to be given that mobile phone so why didn't you use it?'
âThe battery's flat,' I lied. âAnd I asked to use Jasmine's phone but they've only just moved into the flat so they're still waiting to get a land-line installed.'
Will shook his head at my fluent lies. Mum and even Dad seemed on the brink of believing me. I gabbled on, telling them all about Jasmine's parents, making out they were still together and that I'd met both of them.
âI think I
know
Miranda Cape. Didn't she use to be in
EastEnders
? The blonde one who caused all the trouble?' said Mum. âSo what's she really like, Violet? Does she talk really common?'
âNo, no, that's all an act, she's ever so posh. And so's Jonathan, Jasmine's dad. He's in
San Francisco
, that's a musical at the Rialto.'
âI saw the advert for it. I was going to get your dad to take me for our anniversary. Good lord, fancy you knowing them! And what about this Jasmine? Is she a showy little thing?'
âShe's the most beautiful girl I've ever seen,' I said.
âListen to you!' said Dad. âStop looking all moony, you
stupid girl. It's still no excuse staying out half the night and worrying us all to death.'
But the force had gone out of his bluster. He nagged on for ten minutes, and I meekly did the âYes, Dad, no, Dad, never again, Dad' routine. He subsided at last, cracking open a can of beer and settling down to watch
The Bill
on television, yelling insults at the screen whenever he felt they'd got it all wrong.
Mum asked me endless questions about Miranda and whether her hair looked naturally blonde and had she put on any weight at all and what sort of clothes was she wearing? I made it up as I went along and it seemed to keep her happy.
Will had sloped off up the stairs to his room. I sidled quietly up to my room too. I threw myself on my boring pink flowery duvet, staring up at the fairies dangling above my head. I wondered where I could find an embroidered Indian veil and a string of Christmas tree lights.
My door suddenly opened and Will walked straight in, knocking as an afterthought.
âDo you
mind
?'
âI knocked.'
âYeah, and you gave me a lot of time to respond, didn't you?'
âSo what are you up to that's so secret, eh? Writing to your precious Casper Dreamboat? Oh C.D., darling, I'm so sad and lonesome, poor little yucky me.'
âHave you been reading my letters?' I said furiously.
âHow sad is it, writing hundreds of letters to a
man you've never met â and you don't even send them!'
âIt's even sadder sneaking into someone's room and reading their private stuff. I think that's despicable,' I said.
â
I
think it's despicable betraying someone's birth secrets,' he snapped back, leaning against my door.
Oh god. He
had
heard. I stared at his ears, marvelling at their ability to hear a whisper at twenty paces. They were strange ears, a little pointed at the top.
âYou and your Mr Spock ears,' I said weakly. I paused. âWill, I'm sorry. I know I shouldn't have told her.'
Will shrugged. âYou can tell her what you like.'
I couldn't believe he was so cool about it. I held my hand up, high-five style. He held his hand up too and we did our old complicated slap and wave routine. Will taught it to me when I was six, when we had our own special Will-and-Violet club.
âJasmine is my best friend now,' I said shyly. âBut she'll never be friends the way
we're
friends.'
âYuck! Stop being so sticky and sentimental. I feel like I'm drowning in treacle,' said Will, miming scraping himself clean, but he grinned at me before walking out of my bedroom.
I couldn't be bothered to do anything boring like homework. I leafed through my Casper Dream flower fairy book instead. It was like Jasmine had flown right out of his fairyland. There were fragments of her on every page. The Bluebell Fairy had her eyes; the Gardenia Fairy had her white skin, the Water Lily Fairy her slender limbs; the Laburnum Fairy had her long fair
hair. I wondered if Casper Dream made his fairies up, drawing them from his imagination, or did he have a series of elfin models tiptoeing round his studio, waving their arms and pointing their toes? Were they all one girl? Was she his girlfriend?
I looked at the dark photograph on the dust jacket. They used the same photo on every Casper Dream book, a portrait in heavy shadow, so that you could only see his eyes and his long nose and the elegant curve of his lip. It was impossible to work out how old he was. I liked to think he wasn't
too
old. If he'd created
The Smoky
Fairy Book
just out of art school, when he was twenty-one or twenty-two, he could still be in his twenties now. When I was in
my
twenties the age difference would be minimal.
I didn't want to bother with silly boyfriends. I wanted to wait for the only man for me.
I asked Jasmine the next day if she'd ever had a boyfriend.
âNot exactly,' she said, giggling. âI've let boys kiss me at parties and they've sent me Valentines and I've hung out at McDonald's with a whole bunch, you know, that sort of stuff.'