Page 1 of Twenties Girl

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Page 1 of Twenties Girl

<p>ONE</p>

<p>The thing about lying to your parents is, you have to do it to protect them. It&rsquo;s for their own good. I mean, take my own parents. If they knew the unvarnished truth about my finances/love life/plumbing/council tax, they&rsquo;d have instant heart attacks and the doctor would say, &ldquo;Did anyone give them a terrible shock?&rdquo; and it would all be my fault. Therefore, they have been in my flat for approximately ten minutes and already I have told them the following lies:</p>

<p>1. L &amp;N Executive Recruitment will start making profits soon, I&rsquo;m sure of it.</p>

<p>2. Natalie is a fantastic business partner, and it was a really brilliant idea to chuck in my job to become a headhunter with her.</p>

<p>3. Of course I don&rsquo;t just exist on pizza, black cherry yogurts, and vodka.</p>

<p>4. Yes, I did know about interest on parking tickets.</p>

<p>5. Yes, I did watch that Charles Dickens DVD they gave me for Christmas; it was great, especially that lady in the bonnet. Yes, Peggotty. That&rsquo;s who I meant.</p>

<p>6. I was actually intending to buy a smoke alarm at the weekend, what a coincidence they should mention it.</p>

<p>7. Yes, it&rsquo;ll be nice to see all the family again.</p>

<p>Seven lies. Not including all the ones about Mum&rsquo;s outfit. And we haven&rsquo;t even mentioned The Subject.</p>

<p>As I come out of my bedroom in a black dress and hastily applied mascara, I see Mum looking at my overdue phone bill on the mantelpiece.</p>

<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t worry,&rdquo; I say quickly. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to sort that out.&rdquo;</p>

<p>&ldquo;Only, if you don&rsquo;t,&rdquo; says Mum, &ldquo;they&rsquo;ll cut off your line, and it&rsquo;ll take ages for you to get it installed again, and the mobile signal is so patchy here. What if there was an emergency? What would you do?&rdquo; Her brow is creased with anxiety. She looks as though this is all totally imminent, as though there&rsquo;s a woman screaming in labor in the bedroom and floods are rising outside the window and how will we contact the helicopter? How?</p>

<p>&ldquo;Er&hellip; I hadn&rsquo;t thought about it. Mum, I&rsquo;ll pay the bill. Honest.&rdquo;</p>

<p>Mum&rsquo;s always been a worrier. She gets this tense smile with distant, frightened eyes, and you just know she&rsquo;s playing out some apocalyptic scenario in her head. She looked like that throughout my last speech day at school; afterward she confessed she&rsquo;d suddenly noticed a chandelier hanging above on a rickety chain and became obsessed by what would happen if it fell down on the girls&rsquo; heads and splintered into smithereens?</p>

<p>Now she tugs at her black suit, which has shoulder pads and weird metal buttons and is swamping her. I vaguely remember it from about ten years ago, when she had a phase of going on job interviews and I had to teach her all the really basic computer stuff like how to use a mouse. She ended up working for a children&rsquo;s charity, which doesn&rsquo;t have a formal dress code, thank goodness.</p>

<p>No one in my family looks good in black. Dad&rsquo;s wearing a suit made out of a dull black fabric which flattens all his features. He&rsquo;s actually quite handsome, my dad, in a kind of fine-boned, understated way. His hair is brown and wispy, whereas Mum&rsquo;s is fair and wispy like mine. They both look really great when they&rsquo;re relaxed and on their own territory-like, say, when we&rsquo;re all in Cornwall on Dad&rsquo;s rickety old boat, wearing fleeces and eating pasties. Or when Mum and Dad are playing in their local amateur orchestra, which is where they first met. But today, nobody&rsquo;s relaxed.</p>

<p>&ldquo;So are you ready?&rdquo; Mum glances at my stockinged feet. &ldquo;Where are your shoes, darling?&rdquo;</p>

<p>I slump down on the sofa. &ldquo;Do I have to go?&rdquo;</p>

<p>&ldquo;Lara!&rdquo; says Mum chidingly. &ldquo;She was your great-aunt. She was one hundred and five, you know.&rdquo;</p>

<p>Mum has told me my great-aunt was 105 approximately 105 times. I&rsquo;m pretty sure it&rsquo;s because that&rsquo;s the only fact she knows about her.</p>

<p>&ldquo;So what? I didn&rsquo;t know her. None of us knew her. This is so stupid. Why are we schlepping to Potters Bar for some crumbly old woman we didn&rsquo;t even ever meet?&rdquo; I hunch my shoulders up, feeling more like a sulky three-year-old than a mature twenty-seven-year-old with her own business.</p>

<p>&ldquo;Uncle Bill and the others are going,&rdquo; says Dad. &ldquo;And if they can make the effort&hellip;&rdquo;</p>

<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a family occasion!&rdquo; puts in Mum brightly.</p>

<p>My shoulders hunch even harder. I&rsquo;m allergic to family occasions. Sometimes I think we&rsquo;d do better as dandelion seeds-no family, no history, just floating off into the world, each on our own piece of fluff.</p>

<p>&ldquo;It won&rsquo;t take long,&rdquo; Mum says coaxingly</p>

<p>&ldquo;It will.&rdquo; I stare at the carpet. &ldquo;And everyone will ask me about&hellip; things.&rdquo;</p>

<p>&ldquo;No, they won&rsquo;t!&rdquo; says Mum at once, glancing at Dad for backup. &ldquo;No one will even mention&hellip; things.&rdquo;