skin like an old tortoise. Except that I donât have enough money left for a whole bottle.
âGood, letâs go home,â says Amber. But then I spot some little sachets of âself-tan toweletteâ which cost 99p each. Amber thinks theyâll be rubbish, but I tell her to shush and lend me a pound so I can buy three. I will apply it tomorrow when Mom is at the pub quiz with Auntie Karen.
Tuesday
Amber comes around at 6 p.m. to do the deed and we tell Dad we are going upstairs to do our history homework. âIâm glad one of Danniâs friends is having a good influence on her,â he says. Amberâs face goes all pink and guilty-looking. She really is a hopeless liar.
Simonâs head is resting cutely on his âgirlfriend.â When Dad tries to pull Momâs Ugg boots away from him he growls and buries them under his front legs like heâs hugging them. They cost £100 and are now covered in slobber.
âIt says you have to exfoliate first,â says Amber, squinting through her glasses at the packet.
âWhat does exfoliate mean?â I say.
âI donât know,â she says.
âJust ignore it then,â I say, and start taking off my school uniform.
âAre you sure Damianâs worth all this trouble?âshe says. âI sometimes think he seems, you know, a bit up himself.â
Poor Amberâshe just doesnât understand boys.
Iâm going to do my face and neck and Amberâs doing my legs and arms. It just feels like one of those wet serviettes you sometimes get at the end of a meal in a Chinese restaurant. It says it will make me look âtanned, healthy and glow with summer radianceâ within 12 hours. Amber looks doubtful and says it seems a bit cheap. Sheâs such an old woman, that girl. We rub it on and then I hear Dad bringing Phoebe upstairs to bed. She wants to come in my room, like always, to be with the big girls. I shove a T-shirt and some jeans on and tell my dad she can come in for ten minutes, tops, because weâve got a lot of Roundheads and Cavaliers to get through, actually.
Phoebe plays with my pencil case, pulling things out and saying, âI have this?â and, âI keep this?â while me and Amber run around destroyingthe self-tanning evidence. Amber says sheâd better be off home and scuttles out of the house. Honestly, sheâs such a wet sometimes.
âYou smell funny,â says Phoebe, climbing on to my knee and sniffing my face like Simon does when Iâve got strawberry lip gloss on. It is true that the tanning towelettes do whiff a bit like smokey-bacon chips, but thatâs not a bad thing, is it? I tell her to button it or I wonât read
Room on the Broom
to her for the 472nd time.
Wednesday
7 a.m.
Wonder what Iâll look like? I donât expect to look exactly like Treasure, but at least Iâll be brown like one of those contestants on
Celebrity Love Island
. I look in the mirror in my room, ready to drink in my bronzed loveliness. OH. DEAR. GOD. ABOVE. It looks like Iâve turned into an elephantine rasherof streaky bacon. My face is striped like a bumble bee and my hands are so smeared it looks liked Iâve wiped my bum with them.
Luckily Mom is still in bed because sheâs tiredâagainâbut Rick sees me when I go down for breakfast. âHa! Youâve been Tangoâd,â he says.
I try covering it up with Momâs foundation cream, but the orange streaks show through. My dad says I could always pretend I was using Phoebeâs wildlife face paints and it all went wrong. Phoebe, quite seriously, asks if I want to borrow her pussycat ears.
Dad seems to think this is hilarious until he realizes it wonât wash off. âGet to school before your mother sees you,â he says. Iâll have to save the mascara for another day.
8:25 a.m.
Iâm waiting at the bus stop wearing a duffle coat with the hood up and a scarf