table and picked them up.
âAn amusing anecdote? The shepherdâs pie against the wall again?â
âIt was lasagne, and no thank you. Something funny, it says.â I looked at her desperately. âWhatâs happened to me thatâs funny?â
âWhat about that time you fell asleep with your head in the trifle?â
â No .â
âOr when you got locked in the loo at Janiceâs hen night. Now that was funnyââ
âNot for me it wasnât â I was in there hours.â
Charlotte waved a hand. âJust make something up.â
âLike what? And, oh God, look at this one: What is your greatest achievement?â
Charlotte considered. âForcing someone to marry you?â
âGetting rid of him again,â I corrected sourly.
âLook,â said Charlotte, putting a pot of parmesan cheese and a pile of cutlery in front of me, âyou just need to make yourself sound as though you can say something witty when asked. If you sound like a dreary old divorced housewife they wonât touch you with a barge pole.â
She sat down opposite me and picked up the pen. âIâll fill it in â you lay the table and get the wine open. I always find a glass of vino inspiring in these situations.â She looked at the paper in front of her. âWho would you love to have dinner with?â
âYou. That gorgeous young bloke whoâs on Strictly Come Dancing . I donât know.â
âWeâll say Jeremy Paxman â they wonât be expecting that. Say you go weak at the knees when the Newsnight theme tune comes on.â
âBut I donât â¦â
âWhat would you spend a million pounds on?
âUm, er, Iâm not sure. Maybe a bigger house. Stanleyâs bedroom is a bit small â¦â
Charlotte wrote rapidly. âDiamonds, fast cars, loose men, and a boob job. What is your favourite party trick?â
âYou canât talk about boobs and I havenât got one.â
She thought for a moment and then bent over the paper once more. âPlaying â the â spoons.â
âCharlotte!â I squeaked. âCome on â I canât do that.â
Charlotte looked up and sighed. âItâs a joke ,â she said wearily. âRemember jokes?â
Chapter Nine
Nope. I canât say I did. Some things just werenât funny.
The rubbish bag splitting as I dragged it from kitchen bin to front door wasnât at all amusing, for example. Particularly when an empty tin of spaghetti hoops bounced out of it and left tomato sauce drips all along the hall carpet. The house being in a mess didnât make me laugh either, nor did discovering Stanleyâs school trousers were totally covered in mud while the other pair were still in the washing machine, or him wailing that he would get detention if he went to school without his tie again and heâd looked everywhere and still didnât know where it was (it eventually turned up beneath Boris).
I didnât smile once when I dropped a cup of coffee and the china not only smashed into a thousand pieces on the quarry tiles but the dregs managed to splash all over the front of every kitchen cupboard and half way up the wall. (How does that happen ? How does a mere inch of liquid left in a cup manage to drench an entire room?)
By the time Stanley and I had finished yelling at each other and Iâd driven him to the bus stop as it was pouring with rain, and given in to his request to pull up round the corner so his friends wouldnât see me in my dressing gown if the bus happened to arrive at the same time as we did, and had narrowly avoided driving into the back of a rubbish truck while I did it, I was at screaming point.
I let myself back into the house and took seven Oil of Evening Primrose capsules â and some vitamin B which is supposed to be good for oneâs nerves. Mine were shredded â it being
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