rule may never recover.
Why couldn't Grandmere just have shot me instead?
Wednesday, January 20,
Gifted and Talented
I couldn't tell him.
I mean, how could I? Especially when he was being so nice to me during lunch. Everybody in the whole school, it seemed, knew that Grandmere had come and taken me away during second period. In her chinchilla cape, with those eyebrows,
and Rommel at her side, how could anyone have missed her? She is as conspicuous as Cher.
Everyone was all concerned, you know, about the supposed illness in my family. Michael especially. He was all, 'Is there anything I can help with? Your Algebra homework, or something? I know it isn't much, but it's the least I can do . . .'
How could I tell him the truth - that my father wasn't sick; that my grandmother had dragged me off in the middle of school
to take me shopping? Shopping for a dress to wear at a ball to which he was not invited, and which was to take place
during the exact time we were supposed to have been enjoying dinner and a space fantasy set in a galaxy far far away?
I couldn't. I couldn't tell him. I couldn't tell anyone. I just sat there at lunch being all quiet. People mistook my lack of talkativeness for extreme mental duress. Which it was, actually, only not for the reasons they thought. Basically all I was thinking as I sat there was I HATE MY GRANDMOTHER. I HATE MY GRANDMOTHER. I HATE MY GRANDMOTHER. I HATE MY GRANDMOTHER.
I really, really do.
As soon as lunch was over, I sneaked off to one of the pay phones outside the auditorium doors and called home. I knew
my mom would be there instead of at her studio because she is still working on the nursery walls. She'd gotten to the third
wall, on which she was depicting a highly realistic painting of the fall of Saigon.
'Oh, God, Mia,' she said, when I asked her if there wasn't something she'd possibly forgotten to mention to me. 'I am so
sorry. Your grandmother called during Ab Fab. You know how I get during Ab Fab.''
'Mom,' I said, dirough gritted teeth. 'Why did you tell her it was OK for me to go to this stupid thing? You told me I could
go out with Michael that night!'
'I did?' My mom sounded bewildered. And why shouldn't she? She clearly did not remember the conversation she'd had
with me about my date with Michael . . . primarily of course because she'd been dead to the world during it. Still, she didn't need to know that. What was important was that she was made to feel as guilty as possible for the heinous crime she had committed. 'Oh, honey. I am so sorry. Well, you're just going to have to cancel Michael. He'll understand.'
'Mom,' I cried. 'He will not! This was supposed to be our first date! You've got to do something!'
'Well,' my mom said, sounding kind of wry. 'I'm a little surprised to hear you're so unhappy about it, sweetheart. You know, considering your whole thing about not wanting to chase Michael. Cancelling your first date with him would definitely fall
under that category.'
'Very funny, Mom,' I said. 'But Jane wouldn't cancel her first date with Mr. Rochester. She just wouldn't call him all the time beforehand, or let him get to second base during it.'
'Oh,' my mom said.
'Look,' I said. 'This is serious. You've got to get me out of this stupid ball!'
But all my mom said was that she'd talk to my dad about it. I knew what that meant, of course. No way was I getting out
of this ball. My dad has never in his life forsaken duty for love.
So now I am sitting here (doing nothing, as usual, because I am neither gifted nor talented), knowing that at some point or another I am going to have to tell Michael our date is cancelled. Only how? How am I going to do it? And what if he's so
mad he never asks me out again?
Worse, what if he asks some other girl to see Star Wars with him? I mean, some girl who knows all the lines you're suppose
to shout at the screen during the movie. Like when Ben Kenobi goes, 'Obi Wan. Now that's a name I haven't heard in a long time,' you're supposed to shout, 'How long?' and then Ben goes, 'A very long time.'
There must be a million girls besides me who know about this. Michael could ask any one of them instead of me and have
a perfecdy wonderful time. Without me.
Lilly is bugging to find out what's wrong. She keeps passing me notes, because they are fumigating the teachers' lounge, so
Mrs. Hill is in here today, pretending to grade papers from her fourth period computer class. But really she is ordering
things from a Garnet Hill catalogue. I saw it beneath her gradebook.
Is your dad super-sick? Lilly's latest note reads. Are you going to have to fly back to Genovia?
No, I wrote back.
Is it the cancer? Lilly wants to know. Did he have a recurrence?
No, I wrote back.
Well, what is it, then? Lilly's
handwriting was getting spiky, a sure sign she was becoming impatient
with me.
Because, I wanted to scrawl back, in big capital letters, the truth will lead to the imminent demise of my
romantic relationship with your brother, and I couldn't bear that! Don't you see I can't live without him?
But I couldn't write that. Because I wasn't ready to give up yet. I mean, wasn't I a princess of the royal house of Renaldo?
Do princesses of the royal house of Renaldo give up, just like that, when something they hold as dearly as I hold Michael
is at stake?
No, they do not. Look at my ancestresses, Agnes and Rosagunde. Agnes jumped off a bridge in order to get what she
wanted (not to be a nun). And Rosagunde strangled a guy with her own hair (in order not to have to sleep with him).
Was I, Mia Thermopolis, going to let a little thing like the Contessa Trevanni's black-and-white ball get in the way of my
having my first date with the man I love?
No, I was not.
Perhaps this, then, is my talent. The indomitability that I inherited from the Renaldo princesses before me.
Struck by this realization, I wrote a hasty note to Lilly:
Is my talent that I, like my ancestresses before me, am indomitable?
I waited breathlessly for her response. Aldiough it was not clear to me what I was going to do if she replied in the positive. Because what kind of talent is being indomitable? I mean, you can't get paid for it, the way you can if your talent is playing
the violin or songwriting or producing cable access television programmes.
Still, it would be good to know I'd figured out my talent on my own. You know, as far as climbing the Jungian tree to self-actualization went.
But Lilly's response was way disappointing:
No, your talent is not that you're indomitable, dinkus. God, U R so dense sometimes. WHAT IS WRONG
WITH YOUR DAD?????
Sighing, I realized I had no choice but to write back,
Nothing. Grandmere just wanted to take me to Chanel, so she made up the thing about my dad being sick.
God, Lilly wrote back. No wonder you're looking like you ate a sock again. Your grandmother sucks.
I could not agree more. If only Lilly knew the full extent of just how much.
Wednesday, January 20,
Sixth Period, Third-floor Stairwell
Emergency meeting of the followers of the Jane Eyre technique of boyfriend-handling. We are, of course, in peril of
discovery at any moment as we are skipping French in order to gather here in the stairwell leading to the roof (the door
to which is locked: Lilly says in the movie of my life, the kids got to go on the roof of their school all the time. Just another example of how art most certainly does not imitate life), so that we can lend succour to one of our sisters in suffering.
That's right. It turns out that I am not the only one for whom the semester is off to an inauspicious beginning. Not only did
Tina sprain her ankle on the ski slopes of Aspen -no, she also got a text message from Dave Farouq El-Abar on her new mobile phone in fifth period. It said, U NEVER CALLED BACK. AM TAKING JASMINE TO RANGERS GAME.
HAVE A NICE LIFE ;-)
I have never in my life seen anything so insensitive as that text message. I swear, my blood went cold as I read it.
'Sexist pig,' Lilly said, when she saw it. 'Don't even worry about it, Tina. You'll find somebody better.'
'I d-don't want someone b-better,' Tina sobbed. 'I only want D-Dave!'
It breaks my heart to see her in such pain - not just her emotional pain, either, because it was no joke trying to get up the third-floor staircase on her crutches. I have promised faithfully to sit with her while she works through her anguish (Lilly is
taking her through Elisabeth Kubler-Ross's five stages of grief: Denial - I can't believe he would do this to me; Bargaining — Maybe if I tell him I'll call him faithfully every night, he'll take me back; Anger -Jasmine is a cow who Frenches on the first
date; Depression - I'll never love another man again; Acceptance - Well, I guess he was kind of selfish). Of course, being
here with Tina, instead of in French class, means I am risking possible suspension, which is the penalty for skipping class
here at Albert Einstein.
But what is more important? My disciplinary record or my friend?
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