Then I figured since this Friday is Halloween, maybe Lilly’s show was being preempted for coverage of the parade in the Village or something.

  So I’m sitting there, watching the show, and it turns out to be the slumber party episode. You know, the one we taped on Saturday, with all the other girls confessing their French-kissing exploits, and me dropping the eggplant out the window? Only Lilly had edited out any scene showing my face, so unless you knew Mia Thermopolis was the one in the pajamas with the strawberries all over them, you would never have known it was me.

  All in all, pretty tame stuff. Maybe some really puritanical moms would get upset about the French-kissing, but there aren’t too many of those in the five boroughs, which is the extent of the broadcast region.

  Then the camera did this funny skittering thing, and when the picture got clear again, there was this close-up of my face. That’s right. MY FACE. I was lying on the floor with this pillow under my head, talking in this sleepy way.

  Then I remembered: At the slumber party, after everyone else had fallen asleep, Lilly and I had stayed awake, chatting.

  And it turned out she’d been FILMING ME THE WHOLE TIME!

  I was lying there going, “The thing I most want to do is start a place for stray and abandoned animals. Like I went to Rome once, and there were about eighty million cats there, roaming around the monuments. And they totally would have died if these nuns hadn’t fed them and stuff. So the first thing I think I’ll do is, I’ll start a place where all the stray animals in Genovia will be taken care of. You know? And I’d never have any of them put to sleep, unless they were really sick or something. And there’ll just be like all these dogs and cats, and maybe some dolphins and ocelots—”

  Lilly’s voice, disembodied, went, “Are there ocelots in Genovia?”

  I went, “I hope so. Maybe not, though. But whatever. Any animals that need a home, they can come live there. And maybe I’ll hire some Seeing Eye dog trainers, and they can come and train all the dogs to be Seeing Eye dogs. And then we can give them away free to blind people who need them. And then we can take the cats to hospitals and old people’s homes, and let the patients pet them, because that always makes people feel better—except people like my grandmère, who hates cats. We can take dogs for them. Or maybe one of the ocelots.”

  Lilly’s voice: “And that’s going to be your first act when you become the ruler of Genovia?”

  I said, sleepily, “Yeah, I think so. Maybe we could just turn the whole castle into an animal shelter, you know? And like all the strays in Europe can come live there. Even those cats in Rome.”

  “Do you think your grandmère is going to like that? I mean, having all those stray cats around the castle?”

  I said, “She’ll be dead by then, so who cares?”

  Oh, my God! I hope they don’t have public access on the TVs up at the Plaza!

  Lilly asked me, “What part of it do you hate the most? Being a princess, I mean.”

  “Oh, that’s easy. Not being able to go to the deli to buy milk without having to call ahead and arrange for a bodyguard to escort me. Not being able just to come over and hang out with you without it being this big production. This whole thing with my fingernails. I mean, who cares how my fingernails look, right? Why does it even matter? That kind of stuff.”

  Lilly went, “Are you nervous? About your formal introduction to the people of Genovia, in December?”

  “Well, not really nervous, just . . . I don’t know. What if they don’t like me? Like the ladies-in-waiting and stuff? I mean, nobody at school likes me. So chances are, nobody in Genovia will like me, either.”

  “People at school like you,” Lilly said.

  Then, right in front of the camera, I drifted off to sleep. Good thing I didn’t drool, or worse, snore. I wouldn’t have been able to show my face at school tomorrow.

  Then these words floated up over the screen: Don’t Believe the Hype! This Is the Real Interview with the Princess of Genovia!

  As soon as it was over, I called Lilly and asked her exactly what she thought she’d been doing.

  She just went, in this infuriatingly superior voice, “I just want people to be able to see the real Mia Thermopolis.”

  “No, you don’t,” I said. “You just want one of the networks to pick up on the interview, and pay you lots of money for it.”

  “Mia,” Lilly said, sounding wounded. “How can you even think such a thing?”

  She sounded so taken aback that I realized I must have been wrong about that one.

  “Well,” I said, “you could have told me.”

  “Would you have agreed to it?” Lilly wanted to know.

  “Well,” I said. “No . . . probably not.”

  “There you go,” Lilly said.

  I guess I don’t come off as quite as much of a big-mouthed idiot in Lilly’s interview. I just come off as a whacko who has a thing for cats. I really don’t know which is worse.

  But the truth is, I’m actually starting not to care. I wonder if this is what happens to celebrities. Like maybe at first, you really care what they say about you in the press, but after a while, you’re just like, Whatever.

  I do wonder if Michael saw this, and if so, what he thought of my pajamas. They are quite nice ones.

  Thursday, October 30, English

  Hank didn’t come to school with me today. He called first thing this morning and said he wasn’t feeling too well. I am not surprised. Last night Mamaw and Papaw called wanting to know where in Manhattan they could go for a New York strip. Since I do not generally frequent restaurants that serve meat, I asked Mr. Gianini for a suggestion, and he made a reservation at this semi-famous steak place.

  And then, in spite of my mother’s strenuous objections, he insisted on taking Mamaw and Papaw and Hank and me out, so he could get to know his future in-laws better.

  This was apparently too much for my mother. She actually got out of bed, put mascara and lipstick and a bra on, and went with us. I think it was mostly to guard against Mamaw driving Mr. G away with her many references to the number of family cars my mother accidentally rolled over in cornfields while she was learning to drive.

  At the restaurant, I am horrified to report, in spite of the increased risk of heart disease and some cancers to which saturated fats and cholesterol have scientifically been linked, my future stepfather, my cousin, and my maternal grandparents—not to mention Lars, whom I had no idea was so fond of meat, and my mother, who attacked her steak like Rosemary attacked that raw chunk of ground round in Rosemary’s Baby (which I’ve never actually seen, but I heard about it)—ingested what had to have been the equivalent of an entire cow.

  This distressed me very much and I wanted to point out to them how unnecessary and unhealthy it is to eat things that were once alive and walking around, but, remembering my princess training, I merely concentrated on my entree of grilled vegetables and said nothing.

  Still, I am not at all surprised Hank doesn’t feel well. All that red meat is probably sitting, completely undigested, behind those washboard abs even as we speak. (I am only assuming Hank has washboard abs, since, thankfully, I have not actually seen them).

  Interestingly, however, that was the one meal my mother has been able to keep down. This baby is no vegetarian, that’s for sure.

  Anyway, the disappointment Hank’s absence has generated here at Albert Einstein is palpable. Miss Molina saw me in the hall and asked, sadly, “You don’t need another guest pass for your cousin today?”

  Hank’s absence also apparently means that my special dispensation from the mean looks the cheerleaders have been giving me is revoked: This morning Lana reached out, snapped the back of my bra, and asked in her snottiest voice, “What are you wearing a bra for? You don’t need one.”

  I long for a place where people treat each other with courtesy and respect. That, unfortunately, is not high school. Maybe in Genovia? Or possibly that space station the Russians built, the one that’s falling apart
above our heads.

  Anyway, the only person who seems happy about Hank’s misfortune is Boris Pelkowski. He was waiting for Lilly by the front doors to the school when we arrived this morning, and as soon as he saw us, he asked, “Where is Honk?” (Because of his thick Russian accent, that’s the way he pronounces Hank’s name.)

  “Honk—I mean, Hank—is sick,” I informed him, and it would not be exaggerating to say that the look that spread across Boris’s uneven features was beatific. It was actually a little bit touching. Boris’s doglike devotion to Lilly can be annoying, but I know that I really only feel that way about it because I am envious. I want a boy I can tell all my deepest secrets to. I want a boy who will French-kiss me. I want a boy who will be jealous if I spend too much time with another guy, even a total bohunk like Hank.

  But I guess we don’t always get what we want, do we? It looks like all I’m going to get is a baby brother or sister, and a stepfather who knows a lot about the quadratic formula and who is moving in tomorrow with his foozball table.

  Oh, and the rule of the throne of a country, someday.

  Big deal. I’d rather have a boyfriend.

  Thursday, October 30, World Civ

  THINGS TO DO BEFORE MR. G MOVES IN

  1. Vacuum

  2. Clean out cat box

  3. Drop off laundry

  4. Take out recycling, esp. any of Mom’s magazines that refer to orgasms on the cover—very imp.!!!

  5. Remove feminine hygiene products from all bathrooms

  6. Clear out space in living room for foozball table/pinball machine/large TV

  7. Check medicine cabinet: Hide Midol, Nair, Jolene—very imp.!!!

  8. Remove Our Bodies, Ourselves and The Joy of Sex from Mom’s bookshelves

  9. Call cable company. Get Classic Sports Network added. Remove Romance Channel.

  10. Get Mom to stop hanging bras on bedroom doorknob

  11. Stop biting off fake fingernails

  12. Stop thinking so much about M. M.

  13. Fix lock on bathroom door

  14. Toilet paper!!!!

  Thursday, October 30, G & T

  I don’t believe this.

  They’ve done it again.

  Hank and Lilly have disappeared AGAIN!

  I didn’t even know about the Hank part until Lars got a call on his cell phone from my mother. She was very annoyed, because her mother had called her at the studio, screaming hysterically because Hank was missing from his hotel room. Mom wanted to know if Hank had shown up at school.

  Which, to the best of my knowledge, he had not.

  Then Lilly didn’t show up for lunch.

  She wasn’t even very subtle about it, either. We were doing the Presidential Fitness exam in PE, and just as it was her turn to climb the rope, Lilly started complaining that she had cramps.

  Since Lilly complains that she has cramps every single time the Presidential Fitness exam rolls around, I wasn’t suspicious. Mrs. Potts sent Lilly to the nurse’s office, and I figured I’d see her at lunch, miraculously recovered.

  But then she didn’t show up for lunch. A consultation with the nurse revealed that Lilly’s cramps had been of such severity, she’d decided to go home for the rest of the day.

  Cramps. I am so sure. Lilly doesn’t have cramps. What she has is the hots for my cousin!

  The real question is, how long can we keep this from Boris? Remembering the Mahler we’d been subjected to yesterday, everyone is being careful not to remark how coincidental it is that Lilly is sick and Hank is missing in action at the same time. Nobody wants to have to resort to the gym mats again. Those things were heavy.

  As a precaution, Michael is trying to keep Boris busy with a computer game he invented called Decapitate the Backstreet Boy. In it, you get to hurl knives and axes and stuff at members of the Backstreet Boys. The person who cuts the heads off the most Backstreet Boys moves up to another level, where he gets to cut off the heads of the boys in 98 Degrees, then ‘N Sync, etc. The player who cuts off the most heads gets to carve his initials on Ricky Martin’s naked chest.

  I can’t believe Michael only got a B on this game in his computer class. But the teacher took points off because he felt it wasn’t violent enough for today’s market.

  Mrs. Hill is letting us talk today. I know it’s because she doesn’t want to have to listen to Boris play Mahler, or worse, Wagner. I went up to Mrs. Hill after class yesterday and apologized for what I said on TV about her always being in the teachers’ lounge, even though it was the truth. She said not to worry about it. I’m pretty sure this is because my dad sent her a DVD player, along with a big bunch of flowers, the day after the interview was broadcast. She’s been a lot nicer to me since then.

  You know, I find all of this stuff about Lilly and Hank very difficult to process. I mean, Lilly, of all people, turning out to be such a slave to lust. Because she can’t genuinely be in love with Hank. He’s a nice enough guy and all—and very good-looking—but let’s face it, his elevator does not go all the way up.

  Lilly, on the other hand, belongs to Mensa—or at least she could if she didn’t think it hopelessly bourgeois. Plus Lilly isn’t exactly what you’d call a traditional beauty—I mean, I think she’s pretty, but according to today’s admittedly limited ideal of what “attractive” is, Lilly doesn’t really pass muster. She’s much shorter than me, and kind of chunky, and has that sort of squished-in face. Not really the type you’d expect a guy like Hank to fall for.

  So what do a girl like Lilly and a guy like Hank have in common, anyway?

  Oh, God, don’t answer that.

  HOMEWORK

  Algebra: pg. 123, problems 1–5, 7

  English: in your journal, describe one day in your life; don’t forget profound moment

  World Civ: answer questions at end of Chapter 10

  G&T: bring one dollar on Monday for earplugs

  French: une description d’une personne, trente mots minimum

  Biology: Kenny says not to worry, he’ll do it for me

  Thursday, October 30, 7 p.m., Limo back to the loft

  Another huge shock. If my life continues along this roller-coaster course, I may have to seek professional counseling.

  When I walked in for my princess lesson, there was Mamaw—Mamaw—sitting on one of Grandmère’s tiny pink couches, sipping tea.

  “Oh, she was always like that,” Mamaw was saying. “Stubborn as a mule.”

  I was sure they were talking about me. I threw down my bookbag and went, “I am not!”

  Grandmère was sitting on the couch opposite Mamaw, a teacup and saucer poised in her hands. In the background, Vigo was running around like a little windup toy, answering the phone and saying things like, “No, the orange blossoms are for the wedding party, the roses are for the centerpieces,” and “But of course the lamb chops were meant to be appetizers.”

  “What kind of way is that to enter a room?” Grandmère barked at me in French. “A princess never interrupts her elders, and she certainly never throws things. Now come here and greet me properly.”

  I went over and gave her a kiss on both cheeks, even though I didn’t want to. Then I went over to Mamaw and did the same thing. Mamaw giggled and went, “How continental!”

  Grandmère said, “Now sit down, and offer your grandmother a madeleine.”

  I sat down, to show how unstubborn I can be, and offered Mamaw a madeleine from the plate on the table in front of her, the way Grandmère had shown me to.

  Mamaw giggled again and took one of the cookies. She kept her pinky in the air as she did so.

  “Why, thanks, hon,” she said.

  “Now,” Grandmère said, in English. “Where were we, Shirley?”

  Mamaw said, “Oh, yes. Well, as I was saying, she’s always been that way. Just stubborn as the day is long. I’m not surprised she’s dug her heels in about this wedding. Not surprised at all.”

  Hey, it wasn’t me they were talking about after all. It was—


  “I mean, I can’t tell you we were thrilled when this happened the first time. ‘Course, Helen never mentioned he was a prince. If we had known, we’d have encouraged her to marry him.”

  “Understandably,” Grandmère murmured.

  “But this time,” Mamaw said, “well, we just couldn’t be more thrilled. Frank is a real doll.”

  “Then we are agreed,” Grandmère said. “This wedding must—and will—take place.”

  “Oh, definitely,” Mamaw said.

  I half expected them to spit in their hands and shake on it, an old Hoosier custom I learned from Hank.

  But instead they each took a sip of their tea.

  I was pretty sure nobody wanted to hear from me, but I cleared my throat anyway.

  “Amelia,” Grandmère said, in French. “Don’t even think about it.”

  Too late. I said, “Mom doesn’t want—”

  “Vigo,” Grandmère called. “Do you have those shoes? The ones that match the princess’s dress?”

  Like magic, Vigo appeared, carrying the prettiest pair of pink satin slippers I have ever seen. They had rosettes on the toes that matched the ones on my maid-of-honor dress.

  “Aren’t they lovely?” Vigo said, as he showed them to me. “Don’t you want to try them on?”

  It was cruel. It was underhanded.

  It was Grandmère, all over.

  But what could I do? I couldn’t resist. The shoes fit perfectly, and looked, I have to admit, gorgeous on me. They gave my ski-like feet the appearance of being a size smaller—maybe even two sizes! I couldn’t wait to wear them, and the dress, too. Maybe if the wedding was called off, I could wear them to the prom. If things worked out with Jo-C-rox, I mean.

  “It would be a shame to have to send them back,” Grandmère said with a sigh, “because your mother is being so stubborn.”

  Then again, maybe not.

  “Couldn’t I keep them for another occasion?” I asked. Hint, hint.