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  KISS

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  Also available by Jacqueline Wilson Published in Corgi Pups, for beginner readers: THE DINOSAUR'S PACKED LUNCH

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  CLEAN BREAK

  CLIFFHANGER

  T H E DARE GAME

  T H E DIAMOND GIRLS

  DOUBLE ACT

  DOUBLE ACT (PLAY EDITION)

  GLUBBSLYME

  THE ILLUSTRATED MUM

  JACKY DAYDREAM

  T H E LOTTIE PROJECT

  MIDNIGHT

  T H E MUM-MINDER

  SECRETS

  STARRING TRACY BEAKER

  THE STORY OF TRACY BEAKER

  T H E SUITCASE KID

  VICKY ANGEL

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  JACQUELINE WILSON

  KISS

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  Adobe ISBN: 9781407043173

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  KISS

  A DOUBLEDAY BOOK 978 0 385 61010 0

  Published in Great Britain by Doubleday, an imprint of Random House Children's Books A Random House Group Company

  This edition published 2007

  5 7 9 10 8 6 4

  Text copyright © Jacqueline Wilson, 2007

  Illustrations copyright © Nick S h a r r a t t , 2007

  The right of Jacqueline Wilson to be identified as the author of this work h a s been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

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  To Vicky Ireland

  I h a t e d lunch times. I always missed Carl so much.

  When we were in middle school we spent all our time together. We'd r u s h off t h e m o m e n t t h e bell went, shovel down our school dinners in t e n minutes flat, and t h e n we'd have a whole h o u r j u s t being us. We'd s n e a k off to one of our special favourite places. When it was s u n n y we'd sprawl by the sandpit or sit kicking our legs on t h e wall near t h e bike sheds. We'd lurk in t h e library most of t h e winter. It didn't really m a t t e r w h e r e we were, j u s t so long as we were together.

  Some days we didn't t a l k much; we j u s t read our books, chuckling or commenting every now and t h e n . Sometimes we drew t o g e t h e r or played silly paper games. B u t most days we'd invent another episode of Glassworld. We'd act 1

  it out, though we couldn't do it properly at school the way we could inside t h e Glass Hut.

  The other kids thought us weird enough as it was. If they came across us declaring undying love as King Carlo and Queen Sylviana they'd fall about laughing. We'd m u t t e r under our b r e a t h and make minute gestures and the magic would s t a r t working and we'd be whirled off to the glitter of Glassworld.

  It was always a shock when the bell rang for afternoon school, shattering our crystal crowns and glass boots. We trudged back along the pizza-smelling corridors in our shabby trainers, wishing we could stay in Glassworld for ever.

  I still kept the Glassworld Chronicles up to date in our huge manuscript book, and Carl occasionally added notes or an illustration, but we didn't often act it out nowadays. Carl always had so much boring homework. Sometimes he didn't come to the Glass H u t for days and I'd have to go calling for him.

  It didn't always work then. He'd follow me down through the garden and sit in the h u t with me, but he'd be all quiet and moody and not contribute anything, or he'd be silly and mess around and say his speeches in stupid voices, sending it all up. I could generally get him to play properly eventually, b u t it was very h a r d work.

  'Maybe you shouldn't keep pestering Carl to play with you,' said Mum.

  'But he's my best friend in all the world.

  2

  We always play together,' I said.

  'Oh, Sylvie,' said Mum. She sighed. Nowadays she often sighed when she talked to me. 'You're too old for this playing lark now, making up all these secret imaginary games. It's not normal.

  You're thirteen, for God's sake. When are you going to s t a r t acting like a teenager?'

  'You don't know anything about it,' I said loftily. 'They're not little kids' games. We're writing our own series of books. You wait. They'll be published one day and Carl and I will make millions, w h a t with all the royalties and the foreign rights a n d the film deals.'

  'Oh well, you can maybe pay off the mortgage then,' said Mum. She sighed again. 'Who do you think you are, eh? J. K. Rowling? Anyway, Carl doesn't seem quite so keen on this playing –

  sorry, writing l a r k nowadays. You're both growing up. Maybe it's time to make a few new friends. Isn't there anyone you can make friends with at school?'

  'I've got heaps of friends,' I lied. 'I've got Lucy.

  She's my friend.'

  That was true enough. Lucy and I h a d made friends t h a t worrying first day in Milstead High School. I'd known her in first school and middle school, but I hadn't ever needed to m a k e a proper best friend of any of the girls because I'd always h a d Carl.

  It was h a r d trying to make friends now in Year Nine. Nearly everyone h a d been at our middle school so they j u s t carried on in the 3

  same twosomes or little gangs. There were several new girls in our form, b u t they palled up together. There was also Miranda Holbein in the other Year Nine form, but she
was way out of my league.

  It was a great relief when Lucy asked if I'd sit next to her and acted friendly. She was a giggly girl w i t h very pink cheeks, as if she was permanently embarrassed. She sang in the choir and was always very good. She h a d pageboy h a i r and always h a d a shining white school shirt and never hitched up h e r knee-length skirt and wore polished brown lace-up shoes.

  She looked almost as babyish as I did. So we sat next to each other in every lesson and shared chocolates and crisps at break. We chatted about ordinary h u m d r u m things like television programmes (she liked anything to do with hospitals and wanted to be a nurse when she grew up) and pop stars (she loved several members of boy bands in a devoted little-sisterly fashion, knowing off by h e a r t their b i r t h signs a n d favourite food a n d every single number one on their albums, in order).

  Lucy was fine for an everyday friend. I would never ever count her as my best friend, of course. She lived j u s t round the corner from school so she went home at lunch time. I lived too far away. Anyway, my m u m was busy working at the building society, not home to cook me egg and chips like Lucy's mum. I was stuck for company each lunch time. We weren't 4

  allowed mobile phones at school b u t I mentally sent Carl text messages: I MISS U. TALK 2 ME. C U

  IN G H 2NITE?

  We used to pretend we were so in t u n e with each other we were telepathic. Maybe our psychic brainwaves weren't wired up for new technology. Nothing went ching-ching in Carl's head. If he ever tried to send me similar messages I didn't pick t h e m up, though I waited tensely enough, eager and alert.

  I asked Carl over and over w h a t he did during his lunch times at Kingsmere G r a m m a r but he was unusually uncommunicative. He ate. He read.

  'Oh, come on, Carl. Tell me everything,' I said.

  'Elaborate. I want detail.'

  'OK. You want me to describe my visit to the boys' toilet in elaborate detail?'

  'Stop being so irritating. You know w h a t I mean. Who do you talk to? W h a t do you do?

  What do you think about?'

  'Maybe you'd like to follow me around with a webcam,' said Carl. He suddenly grinned, and switched to manic TV-presenter mode. 'Here is our unwitting suspect, Carl Johnson. Let's hone in on him. Ah! What is he up to now? He's lifting a finger. Has he spotted us? Is he about to remonstrate? No, he's picking his nose. Let's have a close-up of the bogey, guys'

  Tuck!'

  'Oh, Carl's close friend Sylvie is making a pithy comment. Let's focus on little Sylvie. Smile 5

  at the camera, babe,' he said, sticking his squared fingers right in front of my face.

  I stuck my tongue out.

  'Keep it out, keep it out, that's the girl! We're now switching to our all-time favourite Live Op Channel. Ms Sylvie West has suffered all her childhood from Sharp Tongue Syndrome but the eminent ear, nose and throat specialist, Mr Carl Johnson, is about to operate. Scissors please, nurse!'

  'Yes, here are the scissors,' I said, snip-snapping my fingers. 'But we've switched to the Mystery Channel now and I'm playing a scary girl driven bonkers by her mad best friend so she decides to – stab – him – to – death!'

  I m a d e my scissor fingers strike Carl's chest while he shrieked and staggered and fell flat at my feet, miming a bloody death. He did it so well t h a t I could almost see a pool of scarlet blood.

  I b e n t over him. He lay very still, eyes half open b u t staring past me, unblinking.

  'Carl? Carl!' I said, giving his shoulder a little shake.

  He didn't stir. My heart started beating faster. I crept closer, hanging my head down until my long hair tickled his cheeks. He didn't flinch. I listened.

  He didn't seem to be breathing.

  'Stop it, Carl, you're frightening me!' I said.

  He suddenly sat bolt upright so t h a t our h e a d s bumped together. I screamed.

  'Ah, I'm glad I'm frightening you because 6

  we've switched to the Horror Channel now and I am a ghost come back to haunt you. Be very afraid, Sylvie West, because I am going to get you!'

  His h a n d s clutched my neck but I wrestled with him. I was small and skinny but I could fight like a wildcat when I wanted. We tussled a bit b u t then Carl's fingers started tickling my neck. I creased up laughing and then tickled him in turn. We lay flat on our backs for a long time, giggling feebly. Then Carl reached out and held my h a n d in the special best-friendship clasp we'd invented way back when we were seven. I held his hand tight and knew t h a t we were best friends for ever. More t h a n best friends. We'd played weddings together when we were little. Carl used to make me rings out of sweet wrappers. Maybe he'd give me a real ring one day.

  How could I ever compare my bland little conversations with Lucy to the glorious fun I always h a d with Carl?

  There weren't really any other girls to go round with at lunch time. I got on with nearly everyone, but I didn't want to foist myself upon them. One time when I was sitting in the library Miranda Holbein sauntered in and waved her fingers at me. I was so startled I looked round, convinced she m u s t be waving to someone behind me.

  'I'm waving at you, silly!' said Miranda.

  I waggled my fingers back foolishly and then gathered up my books a n d rushed for t h e door. I 7

  didn't w a n t to annoy Miranda. We'd only been at the school a few weeks but she already had a serious reputation. She could m a k e mincemeat of you if she didn't like your looks.

  I didn't like my looks. I was so tiny people couldn't believe I was in Year Nine at high school. I looked the youngest of all the girls in my class. They all called me Little Titch. I didn't exactly get teased. I was looked on as the class mascot – quite cute, b u t not to be t a k e n seriously.

  Everyone was in total awe of Miranda. She looked much older t h a n me, much older t h a n any of us. She seemed at least sixteen, even in her bottle-green school uniform. She h a d bright magenta-red hair, obviously dyed, though this was strictly against school rules. She cheerily lied to Miss Michaels, swearing t h a t every startling strand of hair was n a t u r a l . It swung down p a s t her pointed chin b u t she often plaited it in little rows, fastening each end with tiny beads and ribbons.

  When her form teacher complained about their gaudiness she came to school the next day with green beads and ribbons to match our uniform. This was preposterous, b u t Miss Michaels let her get away with it!

  Miranda seemed born to break every rule going. She was the girl everyone longed to look like b u t she wasn't really pretty a n d she wasn't even ultra-slim. She didn't seem to mind a bit t h a t she was a little too curvy. In fact she 8

  seemed particularly pleased with herself, often standing with her h a n d s on her hips, showing off h e r figure. The girls in h e r form said she never hid u n d e r h e r towel after showers.

  Apparently she stood there boldly, totally bare, not caring who stared at her.

  She was clever and could come top in class if she bothered to work hard, but she generally messed around and forgot to do her homework.

  She knew all sorts of stuff and apparently chatted away to the teachers about painting or opera or architecture, but no one ever teased h e r for being a swot. She didn't even get teased for being posh, though she spoke in this deep fruity voice t h a t would normally have been cruelly mimicked. It helped t h a t she swore a great deal, not always totally out of earshot of the teachers. She told extraordinary anecdotes about the things she did with h e r boyfriends.

  She was nearly always surrounded by squealing girls going 'Oh, Miranda!'

  I wandered into the girls' toilets this lunch time and there was a huddle of girls goggling at Miranda. She was perched precariously on one of the wash basins, swinging h e r legs, her feet in extraordinary buckled boots with long pointy toes.

  She was in the middle of a very graphic description of w h a t she h a d done with h e r boyfriend l a s t night. I stopped, b l u s h i n g furiously. The other girls giggled and nudged Miranda, who h a d n ' t
paused.

  9

  'Shut up, Miranda. Look, there's the Titch.'

  'Hi, Titch,' said Miranda, giving me a wave again. Her fingernails were bitten but she'd painted each sliver of nail black, and inked artistic black roses inside each wrist. Then she carried on with her detailed account.

  'Miranda! Stop it! The Titch h a s gone scarlet.'

  M i r a n d a smiled. ' P e r h a p s it's time she learned the facts of life,' she said. 'OK, Titch?

  Shall I enlighten you?'

  'I know the facts of life, thanks,' I said.

  I was starting to want to go to the loo r a t h e r badly now but I didn't want to go into a cubicle with t h e m all listening to me.

  'Ah, you might have a sketchy knowledge of the basic facts, but I doubt you've put them into practice,' said Miranda.

  'Stop teasing the Titch, Miranda!'

  'As if t h e Titch would ever have a boyfriend,'

  said Miranda, rolling her eyes at them.

  'I do so have a boyfriend,' I said, stung. 'You shouldn't j u m p to conclusions. You don't know anything about me.'

  T h e girls t e n s e d excitedly. People didn't usually snap back at Miranda. I was astonished I'd done it myself.

  Miranda didn't seem at all annoyed. 'I want to know all about you,' she said. 'And your boyfriend. Tell me all about him.'

  'He's called Carl,' I said.

  'And?' said Miranda. 'Come on, Titch. What does he look like?'

  10

  'He's very good looking. Everyone says so, not j u s t me. He's fair. His hair's lovely, very blond and straight. It flops over his forehead when it needs cutting. He's got brown eyes and he's got lovely skin, very clear – he never gets spots.

  He's not very tall but he's still quite a bit taller t h a n me, obviously. He doesn't bother much with his clothes and yet he always looks j u s t right, kind of cool and relaxed.'

  'Wow!' said Miranda. She was sort of sending me up, and yet she seemed interested too. 'So what's he like as a person? I find all the really fit-looking guys are either terribly vain or they've got this total personality bypass.'

  'No, Carl's not a bit like t h a t . He's ever so funny a n d great at making stuff up and invent-ing things. He's very clever, much brainier t h a n me. He knows j u s t about everything. He'll go on and on about some subject he's truly interested in but he's never really boring.'