Over the Moon Read Online Free Page B

Over the Moon
Book: Over the Moon Read Online Free
Author: Jean Ure
Pages:
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usedto be. But what Mrs O’Donnell said started me furiously thinking, so that that night in bed I lay awake making a mental list of all the boys I knew, scoring them out of ten, trying to decide which one I would pick if I ever got to be selected.
    Jason Francis – not bad. Six or seven.
    Martin Milliband – yuck! Two would be generous.
    Aaron Taylor – OK, but a bit of a dork. Five at the most.
    Christopher Pitts –
the
pits. Zero.
Double
zero.
    Wazir Mohammed – probably wouldn’t come. But five or six.

    Carl Pinter, Mark Aller, Ben Sargent … I think I went through every boy in our year. I’d been out with quite a few of them and I wouldn’t have wanted to invite a single solitary one. I knew who I’d like to invite. I’dknown it the minute I started my list – the minute Mrs O’Donnell asked me. The one boy who made my heart beat faster and turned my insides to jelly …
    There was only one problem: I didn’t know his name. I’d never even spoken to him! But I made up my mind, right there and then: I
was
going to be selected, and he was the one who was going to come with me!
    This is the first entry in my diary which mentions the Gorgeous Mystery Boy:
    Mrs Wymark said to me today that she was really pleased with my progress this term. She said, “There’s been a marked Improvement, Scarlett. Keep it up!” She said she wasn’t the only member of staff to have noticed. They all have! So maybe I was right when I pictured Miss Allen singing my praises in the staff room …
    I really began to feel that all my hard work might be starting to pay off at long last. I said this to Hattie, who said, “I told you so!” Adding rather grimly, however, that it was no excuse for slacking. “You need to keep it up, you still have a long way to go.”

    Honestly! Hattie is so bossy, I’m sure she’ll end up as a head teacher. Either that, or prime minister. I don’t know what I shall end up as. I wouldn’t mind being a fashion model, or a TV presenter. If I was a TV presenter and Hattie was prime minister, I could invite her to come on my show! Butwe wouldn’t talk politics, cos politics are BORING.

    Gorgeous Mystery Boy at the station this morning. He got on the same train as me, but it was so crowded there was a huge wodge of people between us. Really annoying! I wonder if he’s there every day? If he is, then going by train won’t be so bad!!!
    We were four weeks into the winter term when I wrote that. Dad had proved so unreliable about getting me to school on time that now I just got him to drop me off at the station, instead. When I was at Juniors, Mum used to drive me in, but the minute I hit Year 7 she said that I could get there under my own steam.
    “There’s a perfectly good train service. Why not use it?”
    I told her because it was a whole lot of hassle and I’d probably have some ghastly accident and fall on the track. Mum, in her cold unfeeling way, said, “Well, that’s up to you. I don’t propose adding to pollution levels by ferrying an able-bodied twelve year old to and from school five days a week.”
    Was that any way for a mother to talk??? I went grizzling to Dad about it.
    “Mum says she’s not going to take me in any more and I’m going to have all these books and things to carry, cos they give you absolutely
masses
of homework, plus there’s my hockey stick, plus that
stupid
violin, which was Mum’s idea, not mine, plus it takes for ever to get to the station … I’m going to be worn out before I even get there!”

    Dad said we couldn’t have that; he said that he would take me. But Dad isn’t one of the world’s great timekeepers. I don’t think builders are, cos I once heard two woman talking on a bus, saying what a nightmare it was when you “had the builders in”. How they never turned up when they said they would turn up, and never finished a job when they said they’d finish a job, and how they were “all alike … they simply have no concept of
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