Read Boys for Beginners Online
Authors: Lil Chase
Boys for Beginners
Lil Chase
First published in Great Britain in 2011 by Quercus
21 Bloomsbury Square
London
WC1A 2NS
Copyright © Lil Chase, 2011
The moral right of Lil Chase to be
identified as the author of this work has been
asserted in accordance with the Copyright,
Design and Patents Act, 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication
may be reproduced or transmitted in any form
or by any means, electronic or mechanical,
including photocopy, recording, or any
information storage and retrieval system,
without permission in writing from the publisher.
A CIP catalogue reference for this book is available
from the British Library
ISBN 978-0 85738 482 9
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters,
businesses, organizations, places and events are
either the product of the author's imagination
or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to
actual persons, living or dead, events or
locales is entirely coincidental.
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Typeset by Nigel Hazle
Printed and bound in Great Britain by Clays Ltd, St Ives plc.
For my mum: who may not think she's in
this book, but she's in every letter of every
word, and all the spaces in between
.
Boys for Beginners
Why are boys so completely stupid?
My mate Paul and me are chatting as we wait for the bus to school. It's the usual stuff about the latest Xbox game and who's going to win the FA Cup. In other words: normal.
The next minute, he suddenly starts showing off about how many goals he scored at the match we played at the weekend, and how he would have punched some bloke's head in but the referee was watching.
Stupid.
âIt was that massive kid from the year above. I would have punched him. I had him in a headlock with my fist readyâ'
âWhat are you talking about?' I ask.
Paul barely stops for breath. âBut of course the ref, who usually never sees anything, had to catch me at it.' He stops suddenly as if it is a
natural place for his sentence to end and leans back against the bus stop behind him. âOh, hi, Jenny. Didn't see you there.'
It's Goldilocks and her three brain cells, aka Jennifer Gregson, aka Paul's new girlfriend. That explains it. Paul is saying stupid stuff to make himself sound tough. Which he's not. I was at that game and I scored more goals than Paul did, but by the sound of him he was Wayne flipping Rooney playing at his best.
âHi, Paaaaul,' she drawls, as if she is Marilyn Monroe or something. âI missed you.'
Paul and Jenny Gregson started going out just before the Easter holidays and then she went away for the whole time. It's the first day back today so really they've only been going out for forty-eight hours. I'm hoping it's one of those phase things that Paul will grow out of.
âDid you get into a fight on Saturday?' she asks.
He shrugs. âI nearly did. The rest of the team had to hold me back.' He says it as calmly as if announcing he ate breakfast this morning; no big deal.
âThat's not what happened,' I correct him. âHe fell into you and you called him a knob, and
then he said your Mum was a knob, and that was it. End of story.'
âOh, heya, Gwendolyn, how's it going?' Jenny Gregson gives me this giant smile that is so fake it almost hurts the air between us. âGwynnie,' she says, chirpy as a cartoon character, âdid you do the homework for math?'
âWe call it maths in England,' I point out. Jenny went to America. She's obviously trying to remind us all by using American words.
Paul sees Ranjit on the other side of the bus stop and walks over to him. I think he wants to know whether he watched the football last night, which I want to know as well, but I have been roped into talking to Paul's girlfriend. Paul is so selfish sometimes.
I start to tell Jenny my brilliant plan to get out of maths homework. âI'll just say to Mrs Jakesâ'
But Jenny cuts me off. âPaul is so selfish sometimes!' she says, which I think is really cheeky. Paul is pretty OK as it happens, even for a Chelsea fan. âYou're pals, aren't you, Gwynnie?'
âWe're mates, yeah. I've known him forâ'
âWell, I'm supposed to be his lady and he fully ignores me when we're out together.'
âI don't know about that.'
âI mean, take a look at him now. Talking to other people while I'm left on my own talking to no one!'
Good to know she values my company.
âWill you speak to him for me?'
âAbout what?'
She leans in a little and lowers her voice. âTell him that when we're together he must have his arm around my shoulders at all times. It shows that he's protective of me. I don't feel like he's being overprotective or possessive enough.' She starts counting off a list on her fingers: the boyfriend commandments. âIf I'm wearing my Jimmy Choos,' (Her Jimmy
Who
's?) âthey make me a teensy bit taller than him, so he can put his arm around my waist then.' Am I supposed to be taking notes? âWhen we are walking it's uncomfortable to have someone's arm around me, so he'll need to hold my hand. Or take my arm like an old-fashioned gentleman. Will you tell him all that, please?'
âErm.'
âIt's really awesome for me to have a boyfriend with a female friend that I have
absolutely
no worries about him ever falling for.' I'm not sure
if I like what she's getting at there. âThanks, Gwynnie, you're a doll.'
âMaybe you should speak to him yourseâ'
Jenny looks panic-stricken. âHe's coming over. Don't say anything.'
âI couldn't if I wanted to.'
Paul comes over with Ranjit. I ask Ranjit about the match.
But just as we're talking about something interesting, some friends of Jenny's â Kimba O, Melissa Rix, Tanya Dawson and Elizabeth Phillips â come rushing over. âOhmygodohmygod!' they screech. âDid you hear the latest?' I can't tell which of them is speaking. It's a blur of red lipstick and gold hoop earrings. âThere's a new boy starting Year 10 today . . .'
âHe's starting late because his dad's like some important diplomat or something.'
Me and Paul and Ranjit look at each other like,
So what?
âSo what?' I say.
They direct their answer to Jenny, who hates to be the last to know anything. âHis name is Charlie Notts and he is
fully
gorgeous!'
âI bet he isn't,' says Jenny, who seems a little bit narked. âHave any of you even seen him?'
âNo,' says Kimba. âBut Francesca Ramsgate has, and she says he's H.O.T.' Kimba casts a mean eye over to Paul, who was only vaguely listening up until this point and has now wandered off again with Ranj. âI'm going to get the new hot guy to be my boyfriend and you can't have him.'
Jenny looks upset, and weirdly I find myself sticking up for her because I'm sort of sticking up for Paul. âJenny already has a boyfriend anyway. What does she care about this Charlie Notts bloke?'
Kimba laughs at me like I'm a Year 8. âOh, Gwynnie, you are
so
naive! This new guy is in Year 10. He's going to be
so
mature! Not like that Year 9 imbecile.' We look over at Paul and Ranjit. Paul is trying to step on Ranjit's undone shoelace while Ranjit pulls his foot away. He does look like a bit of an imbecile as it happens.
Jenny is seething. âWhat does Francesca Ramsgate know anyway?'
Turns out that Francesca Ramsgate knows everything. About two seconds later the hottest Year 10 anyone has ever seen walks over. All the girls go silent and stare at him. Even I go a little girlie. He's tall, with longish blondish hair that flops over his eyes. If we lived in Victorian
times I'm sure I would have swooned right now. Instead I turn red. I look at the other girls and fortunately they have turned red too. Charlie Notts has created a blushing epidemic.
Suddenly Paul succeeds in his mission and lands on Ranjit's shoelace just as Ranj is pulling his foot back. Ranjit falls on his bum.
Everyone turns to look at Paul while he raises his arms in the air and does a rubbish sort of victory dance. He repeats, âPaul is the king and you know it!' over and over again while circling his bum round and round in a properly foolish way.
This makes me laugh and I let out a snort like a pig. I have Charlie Notts's attention. He looks at me like I'm a complete lunatic. I go from Red Alert to Def Con 4. This is the first crush I have ever had and he's already heard my brilliant impression of a wild boar.
âWhy don't you go and celebrate with your immature boyfriend, Jenny?' whispers Kimba, loudly enough so that everyone can hear.
Jenny looks angry and turns to me. âTell Paul that I'm walking to school. If he can't pay me any attention then I might as well be on my own.'
She storms off. Paul sees her leave and shouts,
âWait, Jenny! You're the lucky girl who gets to walk with the king!'
Kimba's right. Paul is completely immature. I bet you wouldn't catch Charlie Notts saying stupid things like that to his girlfriend.
Suddenly Charlie Notts looks at me. He smiles. I'm probably just mental, he's probably got something in his eye, because I think he just winked at me.
Big. Fat. Swoon!
Me, Paul and Jenny ended up walking to school â with Paul pulling silly faces at Jenny to make her laugh so she wouldn't be angry with him any more. Most people say sorry with flowers, Paul says it with gurning.
We get to Northampton Hill High at about ten to nine. Late, in other words. âWe'd better go straight to assembly,' I say. âWe don't want to incur the wrath of the Dazzler.'
We call our headmaster â Mr Roberts â
The Dazzler
or
Bobby Dazzler
because of his insanely white teeth. He tells these rubbish jokes and then laughs at them as if they were the funniest thing in the world. Which they aren't. I've heard funnier jokes at funerals.
We have to walk into assembly with everyone watching. The Dazzler stops in the middle of his sermon so that we know that he knows we're late.
âGlad you could join us,' he says. âLate on the first day back â impressive. Did you forget what time school starts, or just forget your watches?' He laughs, but he's the only one laughing.
I go the colour of the Arsenal strip, which I hate, and not just because I hate Arsenal. I look around to see if that new boy is in the hall. This will be the second time he's seen me and the second time I've gone bright red.
But Jenny loves it. âSo sorry we're a teensy bit late, Mr Roberts, sir. Paul and I just lost track of time.' The whole school erupts into wolf whistles and laughter. It's Paul's turn to blush, but Jenny just grins.
As we walk over to sit by the other Year 9s Jenny, very slowly, takes off her jacket as if it's the most natural thing in the world. Everyone in the school, including me, gasps. Jenny Gregson has ginormous breasts! When did that happen? They are massive! You could hardly notice under her jacket, but with this little top on you can't miss them. No one can pull their eyes away.
Not only are we mesmerized by her properly huge boobs, but also she's wearing a crop top that shows her bare stomach and she's had her belly-button pierced. The belly-button ring is a big blue
diamond thing. All the girls start whispering to each other, saying how they want one, or they are going to get one, or that they wanted to get one first but their mums wouldn't let them.
This term is going to be Jenny's term, I can tell.
âChildren . . .'
So here we are in assembly, the whole school staring at Jennifer Gregson's boobs, when Mr Roberts says, â. . . that reminds me . . .' He seems to have noticed Jenny's huge knockers (how could he miss them?) and her new piercing. âI am to inform you that the board is thinking of implementing a school uniform, which willâ'