sighing.
âGrace! Donât make it all messy,â said Mum. âDo your name again, and try to keep your writing neat. Look, itâs all over the place. Make it smaller, to fit on the line.â
âIt wonât go smaller,â said Grace, gripping her pen so tightly her knuckles went white. She stuck her tongue out as she wrote, concentrating fiercely. Then she peered at my form. âOh no! Iâve done my address wrong. Iâve mixed up the postcode letters,â she wailed. âShall I copy it out?â
âNo, itâll look even more of a mess. Just leave it. As if it matters!â I said, though Iâd written mine in my neatest printing, using my fine-line black drawing pen.
A smart blonde woman in a black trouser suit and high-heeled boots walked past us into the headteacherâs office without even knocking.
âWhat a nerve! We were here first,â said Mum. âDo you think sheâs his secretary?â
She wasnât the secretary. She put her head back round the door in two minutes and beckoned us in. She was the headteacher, Miss Wilmott.
âWe didnât think youâd be a woman,â Mum said stupidly.
âWell, I promise you Iâm not a man in drag, Mrs King,â she said.
Mum looked dreadfully embarrassed. Grace and I sniggered uncomfortably.
âWelcome to Wentworth,â said Miss Wilmott. âWeâre all new girls together. Iâve only been here since the beginning of term.â
She indicated three chairs in front of her desk. She sat behind it, resting on her elbows, her hands crossed in front of her. They were very pretty hands with beautifully shaped nails, pink with bright white tips, as perfect as a porcelain doll.
Mum hid her own bunch-of-bananas hands in her floral lap. Grace sat on her own bitten fingernails. I made myself sit with my hands by my sides, pretending to be relaxed. I looked past Miss Wilmott at the paintings on her wall. They were mostly creation myths, but I recognized one Nativity scene, with a host of angels flying round above the stable, playing a heavenly version of âRing-a-ring-a-rosesâ. The painting had been in the same room as Tobias and his angel.
Miss Wilmott saw me staring. âDo you like my painting? Itâs Italian, by Bellini.â
âNo, it isnât!â I said, astonished. âItâs a Botticelli. He paints very differently, in a very poetic and ethereal way. I just adore his work.â
âIâm so pleased,â said Miss Wilmott, though she didnât sound pleased at all.
âSheâs very into art, our Prudence,â said Mum. âMy husband takes both girls to all the galleries, fills them in on all the details. Heâs taken such pains with them.â
âExcellent,â said Miss Wilmott briskly. âWell, Iâm determined thereâs going to be a big emphasis on the arts in Wentworth. Iâm sure your daughters will appreciate their art lessons.â
âOh, not me!â said Grace. âI donât want to do art, thanks, because Iâm useless at it. Iâll just do English and history and geography and some nature stuff, but not anything hard.â
âYouâll be given a timetable, Grace,â said Miss Wilmott. âYouâll find youâll be doing all sorts of subjects. But first of all, Iâd like both of you to do a little test for me so we can sort out which year group to put you in.â
âI canât do tests,â said Grace anxiously, seemingly determined to convince Miss Wilmott she was totally bonkers.
âShe panics,â Mum said. âSheâs not really that clever â she takes after me, poor girl.â She laughed a false little ha-ha-ha. âPrudence is the bright one,â Mum continued. âSheâll be top of her class, no problem.â
Miss Wilmottâs smile was getting strained. âWeâll have the girls do their assessment
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