And Then I Turned Into a Mermaid. Laura Kirkpatrick
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Название: And Then I Turned Into a Mermaid

Автор: Laura Kirkpatrick

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Учебная литература

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isbn: 9781405295178

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ the idea, though, because Margot suddenly looked serious for the first time in her natural-born life. ‘Hey, it’s weird how Myla’s leaving, right?’

      Molly shrugged. Myla, who was in her final year of sixth form, had an interview at Cambridge next month. ‘She might not get in.’ Molly knew that wasn’t true. Myla would get into NASA, if they hired seventeen-year-olds.

      ‘She’ll get in somewhere, though.’ Margot stared at her own hotdog with a strange look on her face. Almost . . . wistful? ‘Kinda sucks that everything’s going to change soon.’

      Molly was going to protest, to say that it wouldn’t change that much, but she didn’t have the heart to lie to Margot. Since Minnie was born five years ago, there had always been five Seabrook sisters in Little Marmouth. There’s no way it wouldn’t feel different once Myla left.

      Molly vowed there and then to make the most of this birthday, no matter how fishy. After all, it would be the last one they’d all be around for. Things were changing – fast – and soon Molly would look back and wish she’d appreciated her bonkers family while they were all still together. Fish and all.

      ‘Love you, Margs,’ Molly mumbled, fighting the urge to reach over and squeeze her sister’s hand.

      ‘That’s disgusting,’ Margot replied, and shoved a pipe cleaner up Molly’s nose.

       CHAPTER THREE

       Cake for Dinner

      The semicircular kitchen at Kittiwake Keep was a chaotic hodgepodge of tables, chairs and sideboards, with an ancient, aubergine-coloured Aga laid flat against the only straight wall.

      The swordfish-printed wallpaper was peeling away. There were windows all around the curve of the lighthouse, so there was always light flooding in. Mum complained about this frequently, since it only served to illuminate the stacks of dirty dishes piled high next to the sink. Their dishwasher had been broken ever since Molly could remember, and their mum never had the cash to fix it.

      Tonight, as part of a Seabrook birthday tradition Molly didn’t actually mind, the five sisters were making cake for dinner while their mum single-handedly ran the fish ’n’ chip shop. Since it was Molly’s birthday, she got to choose the flavour, and she opted for the same kind she always did: white chocolate and raspberry.

      Molly often thought she’d quite happily drown in melted white chocolate, and was known for always carrying Milky Bar buttons with her everywhere she went. The best time for them was in the summer, when they went all gooey and stuck together in one giant blob. Molly enjoyed putting the blob in the fridge to solidify, then gnawing on the entire thing like a beaver with a piece of tree bark.

      Since she was the resident expert on the matter, Molly was in charge of melting the white chocolate over the stove, slowly so she didn’t burn it, while Myla weighed the dry ingredients. Margot and Melissa were blending everything together, and somehow Minnie had been entrusted with whisking the eggs. The radio blared out an upbeat pop song on the windowsill, and the kitchen was warm from the Aga’s heat.

      Myla, the seventeen-year-old super-genius, cleared her throat importantly. ‘Did you know that it actually wasn’t Marie Antoinette who said, “Let them eat cake”?’

      Myla mistook the silence for awe, not disinterest. ‘Honestly, it wasn’t! Most people believe she said it on the eve of the French Revolution in 1789, but actually it was Maria Theresa of Spain, the wife of Louis XIV. She said it a hundred years before Antoinette. Crazy, right?’

      Molly stifled a laugh as she stirred the glossy chocolate. ‘Mmm. Crazy.’

      ‘What do nets have to do with anything?’ Margot asked innocently.

      Myla stared at her sister as though she were the stupidest person in the whole of Europe. ‘Antoinette.’

      Margot met Molly’s eye, and they both had to press their lips together to prevent the giggles from escaping. Margot tossed an extra pinch of salt in the batter for good luck.

      ‘Anyone else got any cake trivia?’ Myla asked earnestly, oblivious to her sisters’ mockery.

      Melissa wrinkled her nose as she used a wooden spoon to mix the butter and the sugar together. ‘This is so unhealthy. For my birthday, I want a fruit salad.’

      ‘Imagine living in Melissa’s head,’ Molly muttered to Margot. ‘I bet she wants to ban fairgrounds for being too fun.’

      But Margot didn’t hear her, because she’d stuffed a raspberry in each ear to block out the impromptu history lesson.

      They popped the delicious white chocolate and raspberry concoction in the Aga. While they waited for the magic to happen, they started the washing-up so their mum didn’t have to come home to a messy kitchen. Of course, the kitchen was always messy, so it was a little like rearranging deckchairs on the Titanic, but it was the thought that counted.

      Molly dunked her finger in the cake-batter bowl. ‘Hey, remember the time we went to see that unicorn show at the theatre for Melissa’s birthday?’

      ‘And Minnie stormed the stage?’ Margot wrestled the bowl from Molly and shoved her entire face in it to lick the last scraps. Melissa rolled her eyes.

      Molly chuckled. ‘And started kissing the pink unicorn to death.’

      ‘Hey!’ Minnie said, indignant. ‘It did not die. Not like Granny Bettie. She’s dead.’

      Molly couldn’t help it then. Minnie’s morbid exclamations made her snort with laughter every time. She was always pointing at stationary objects and insisting they were dead: rocks, street lamps, Margot during a particularly heavy sleep.

      Myla smiled wistfully. ‘Or what about when Dad was still around, and we went bowling? And he . . . he . . .’

      As Myla trailed off, Melissa shot a worried look at Molly and Margot. Myla was the only one old enough to have any real memories of their father – he left right after Molly was born. Minnie had a different father altogether, who wasn’t in the picture either. Which meant Myla often felt alone in missing their dad, and struggled to talk about him with her sisters.

      This made Molly feel a bit guilty. What you’ve never had, you don’t miss, and yet it would’ve been nice for Myla to have someone to share the heartache with. There had always been a kind of distance between Myla and the rest of them, and Molly suspected this was partly why, though there was the whole super-genius thing too. Once, on the plane journey to their one and only foreign holiday in Majorca, Molly had asked if it got dark above the clouds. Myla had never looked at her the same since.

      ‘Oh no!’ Minnie wailed.

      ‘What is it, scampi?’

      ‘I forgots to put the egg in. Sorry.’ СКАЧАТЬ