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Chapter Two
Chapter Three

Author Bibliography

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Books by
Meg Cabot


QUEEN OF BABBLE

QUEEN OF BABBLE IN THE BIG CITY

SIZE 12 IS NOT FAT: A Heather Wells Mystery


SIZE 14 IS NOT FAT EITHER

BIG BONED







QUEEN OF BABBLE
Meg Cabot
William Morrow
Chick Lit
ISBN-10: 0060851996
ISBN-13: 9780060851996

About the Book
Read a Review
Author Interview -- May 26, 2006

Clothing. Why do we wear it? Many people believe that we wear clothing out of modesty. In ancient civilizations, however, clothing was developed not to cover our private parts from view, but merely to keep the body warm. In other cultures, clothing was thought to protect its wearers from magic, while in still others, clothing served merely ornamental or display purposes.

In this thesis, I hope to explore the history of clothing --- or fashion --- starting with ancient man, who wore animal hides for warmth, to modern man, or woman, some of whom wear small strips of material between their buttocks (see: thong) for reasons no one has yet been able to adequately explain to this author.

History of Fashion

Senior Thesis by Elizabeth Nichols

 

Chapter One

Our indiscretion sometime serves us well
When our deep plots do pall
William Shakespeare (1564-1616), British poet and playwright

 

I can't believe this. I can't believe I don't remember what he looks like! How can I not remember what he looks like? I mean, his tongue has been in my mouth. How could I forget what someone whose tongue has been in my mouth looks like? It's not like there've been that many guys who've had their tongues in my mouth. Only, like, three.

And one of those was in high school. And the other one turned out to be gay.

God, that is so depressing. Okay, I'm not going to think about that right now.

It isn't like it's been THAT long since I last saw him. It was just three months ago! You would think I'd remember what someone I've been dating for THREE MONTHS looks like.

Even if, you know, for most of those three months, we've been in separate countries.

Still. I have his photo. Well, okay, you can't really see his face in it. Actually, you can't see his face at all, since it's a photo of his --- oh, God--naked ass.

Why would anyone send someone something like that? I didn't ask for a photo of his naked ass. Was it supposed to be erotic? Because it so wasn't.

Maybe that's just me, though. Shari's right, I've got to stop being so inhibited.

It was just so shocking to find it in my inbox, a big photo of my boyfriend's naked ass.

And okay, I know they were just goofing around, he and his friends. And I know Shari says it's a cultural thing, and that the British are much less sensitive about nudity than most Americans, and that we should strive as a culture to be more open and carefree, like they are.

Also that he probably thought, like most men do, that his ass is his best feature.

But still.

Okay, I'm not going to think about that right now. Stop thinking about my boyfriend's ass. Instead, I'm going to look for him. He has to be here somewhere, he swore he'd be here to pick me up--

Oh my God, that can't be him, can it? No, of course it's not. Why would he be wearing a jacket like that? Why would ANYONE be wearing a jacket like that? Unless they're being ironic. Or Michael Jackson, of course. He is the only man I could think of who would wear red leather with epaulets. Who isn't a professional breakdancer.

That CAN'T be him. Oh, please God, don't let that be him....

Oh, no, he's looking this way...he's looking this way! Look down, look down, don't make eye contact with the guy in the red leather jacket with the epaulets. I'm sure he's a very nice man, it's a shame about his having to shop for coats from the 1980s at the Salvation Army.

But I don't want him to know I was looking at him, he might think I like him, or something.

And it's not that I'm prejudiced against homeless people, I'm not, I know all about how many of us are really only a few paychecks away from being homeless ourselves. Some of us, in fact, are less than a paycheck away from being homeless. Some of us, in fact, are so broke that we still live with our parents.

But I'm not going to think about all that right now.

The thing is, I just don't want Andrew to get here and find me talking to some homeless guy in a red leather breakdancing jacket. I mean, that is so not the first impression I want to give. Not that, you know, it will be his FIRST impression of me, since we've been dating for three months, and all. But it will be the first impression he'll have of the New Me, the me he hasn't met yet....

Okay. Okay, it's safe, he's not looking anymore.

Oh, God, this is awful, I can't believe this is how they welcome people to their country. Herding us down this walkway with all these people LOOKING at us....I feel like I'm personally disappointing each and every one of them by not being the person they're waiting for. This is a very unkind thing to do to people who just sat on a plane for six hours, eight in my case if you count the flight from Ann Arbor to New York. Ten if you count the two-hour layover at JFK--

Wait. Was Red Breakdancing Jacket just checking me out?

Oh my God, he WAS! Red leather jacket with the epaulets totally checked me out!

Oh, God, this is so embarrassing. It's my underwear, I KNOW it. How could he tell? That I'm not wearing any, I mean? It's true I don't have any visible panty lines, but for all he knows, I could be wearing a thong. I SHOULD have worn a thong. Shari was right.

But it's so uncomfortable when they go up your--

I KNEW I shouldn't have picked a dress this tight to get off the plane in --- even if I did personally modify it by hemming the skirt to above the knee, so I'm not hobbled by it.

But, for one thing, I'm freezing --- how can it be this cold in AUGUST?

And for another, this silk is particularly clingy, so there's the whole panty line thing.

Still, everyone back at the shop said I look great in it...though I wouldn't have thought a Mandarin dress--even a vintage one--would actually work on me, seeing as how I'm Caucasian, and all.

But I want to look good, since he hasn't seen me in so long, and I did lose those thirty pounds, and you wouldn't be able to tell I'd lost all that weight if I got off the plane in sweats. Isn't that always what celebrities are wearing when they show up on Us Weekly's "What Were They Thinking?" page? You know, when they get off a plane in sweats and last year's Uggs, with their hair all crazy? If you are going to be a celebrity, you need to LOOK like a celebrity, even when you're getting off a plane.

Not that I'm a celebrity, but I still want to look good. I went to all this trouble, I haven't had so much as a crumb of bread for three months, and ---

Wait. What if he doesn't recognize me? Seriously. I mean, I did lose thirty pounds, and with my new haircut, and all ---

Oh, God, could he be here and not recognize me? Did I already walk right by him? Should I turn around and go back down that walkway thingie and look for him? But I'll seem like such an idiot. What do I do? Oh, my God, this is so not fair, I just wanted to look good for him, not be stranded in a foreign country because I look so different my own boyfriend doesn't recognize me! What if he thinks I haven't shown up and just goes home? I don't have any money --- well, twelve hundred bucks, but that has to last me until my flight home at the end of the month ---

RED LEATHER JACKET IS STILL LOOKING THIS WAY!!! Oh, God, what can he want from me?

What if he's part of some kind of airport white slavery ring? What if he hangs out here all the time looking for naïve young tourists from Ann Arbor, Michigan, to kidnap and send to Saudi Arabia to be some sheik's seventeenth bride? I read a book where that happened once...although I have to say the girl seemed to really enjoy it. But only because at the end the sheik divorced all his other wives and just kept her, because she was so pure, and yet so good in the sack.

Or what if he just holds girls for ransom, instead of selling them? Except that I am so not rich! I know this dress looks expensive, but I got it at Vintage to Vavoom for twelve dollars (with my employee discount)!

And my dad doesn't have any money. He works at a cyclotron, for crying out loud!

Don't kidnap me, don't kidnap me, don't kidnap me--

Wait, what is this booth? Meet Your Party. Oh, great! Customer service! That's what I'll do! I'll have Andrew paged. And that way, if he's here, he can come find me. And I'll be safe from the Red Leather Breakdancing Jacket, he won't dare kidnap me and send me to Saudi Arabia in front of the pager guy ---

"Hullo, love, you look lost. What can I do for you, then?"

Oh, the booth guy is so nice! And such a cute accent! Although that tie was an unfortunate choice.

"Hi, I'm Lizzie Nichols," I say. "I'm supposed to be being picked up by my boyfriend, Andrew Marshall. Only he doesn't seem to be here, and--"

"Want me to page him for you, then?"

"Oh! Yes, please, would you? Because there's a guy following me, see him over there? I think he might be homeless, or a kidnapper, or the operator of a white slavery ring--"

"Which one?"

I don't want to point, but I do feel I have a duty, you know, to report Red Leather Breakdancing Jacket to the authorities, or at least to the Meet Your Party booth attendant, because he DOES look very odd in that jacket, and he IS still staring at me, really rudely, or at least suggestively, like he still wants to kidnap me.

"Over there," I say, nodding my head towards Red Leather Breakdancing Jacket. "That one in the hideous jacket with the epaulets. See him? The one staring at us."

"Oh, right." The Meet Your Party booth attendant nods. "Right. Very menacing. Hold on, then, I'll have your boyfriend over here, giving that git the thrashing he so richly deserves, in a second. ANDREW MARSHALL. ANDREW MARSHALL, MISS NICHOLS IS WAITING FOR YOU AT THE MEET YOUR PARTY BOOTH. ANDREW MARSHALL, PLEASE FIND MISS NICHOLS AT THE MEET YOUR PARTY BOOTH. There? How was that?"

"Oh, that was great," I say, encouragingly, because I feel a little sorry for him. I mean, it must be hard to sit in a booth all day, yelling over a loudspeaker. "That was really--"

"Liz?"

Andrew! At last!

Only when I turn around, it's Red Leather Breakdancing Jacket.

Except.

Except that it WAS Andrew, all along.

And I just didn't recognize him, because I was distracted by the jacket--the most hideous jacket I've ever seen. Plus he seems to have had his hair cut. Not very flatteringly.

Sort of menacingly, in fact.

"Oh," I say. It is extremely difficult to hide my confusion. And dismay. "Andrew. Hi."

Behind the glass of the Meet Your Party booth, the attendant bursts into very, very loud laughter.

And I realize, with a pang, that I've done it.

Again

The first woven material was made of vegetable fibers such as bark, cotton, and hemp. Animal fibers were not employed until the Neolithic period, by cultures who --- unlike their nomadic ancestors --were able to establish stable communities, near which sheep could graze, and in which looms could be constructed.contests/Nevertheless, the Ancient Egyptian refused to wear wool until after the Alexandrian conquest, obviously citing its itchiness in warm climates.

History of Fashioncontests/Senior Thesis by Elizabeth Nichols


 

Chapter Two

Gossip isn't scandal and it's not merely malicious
It's chatter about the human race by lovers of the same.
Phyllis McGinley (1905–1978), U.S. poet, author.

Two Days Earlier Back in Ann Arbor
(or maybe three days --- wait, what time is it in America?)


"You're compromising your feminist principles." That's what Shari keeps saying.

"Stop it," I say.contests/"Seriously. It's not like you. Ever since you met this guy--"

"Shari, I love him. Why is it wrong that I want to be with the person I love?"

"It's not wrong to want to be with him," Shari says. "It's wrong to put your own career on hold while you wait for him to finish his degree."

"And what career would that be, Shar?" I can't believe I'm even having this conversation. Again.

Also that she would station herself next to the chips and dip like this when she knows perfectly well I'm still trying to lose five more pounds.contests/Oh, well. At least she's wearing the 50s black and white Mexican swing skirt I picked out for her at the shop, even though she claimed it made her butt look too big. It so doesn't. Except maybe in a good way.

"You know," Shari says. "The career you could have, if you would just move to New York with me when you get back from England, instead of--"

"I told you, I'm not arguing with you about this today," I say. "It's my graduation party, Shar. Can't you let me enjoy it?"

"No," Shari says. "Because you're being an ass, and you know it."

Shari's boyfriend, Chaz, comes over to us and scoops up some onion dip with a barbecue-flavored potato chip.contests/Mmmm. Barbecue-flavored potato chips. Maybe if I just had one....

"What's Lizzie being an ass about now?" he asks, chewing.contests/But you can never have just one barbecue-flavored potato chip. Never.

Chaz is tall and lanky. I bet he's never had to lose five more pounds before in his entire life. He even has to wear a belt to hold up his Levi's. It's a mesh leather weave. But on him, mesh leather works.contests/What doesn't work, of course, is the University of Michigan baseball cap. But I have never successfully managed to convince him that baseball caps, as an accessory, are wrong on everyone. Except children and actual baseball players.

"She still plans to stay here after she gets back from England," Shari explains, plunging a chip of her own into the dip. "Instead of moving to New York with us to start her real life."

Shari doesn't have to watch what she eats, either. She's always had a naturally fast metabolism. When we were kids, her school sack lunches consisted of three peanut butter and jelly sandwiches and a pack of Oreo cookies, and she never gained an ounce. My lunches? A hard boiled egg, a single orange, and a chicken leg. And I was the blimp. Oh, yes.contests/"Shari," I say. "I have a real life here. I've got a place to stay--"

"With your parents!"

" --- and a job I love--"

"As an assistant manager of a vintage clothing store. That's not a career!"

"I told you," I say, for what has to be the nine hundredth time. "I'm going to live here and save my money. Then Andrew and I are moving to New York after he gets his masters. It's just one more semester."

"Who's Andrew, again?" Chaz wants to know. And Shari hits him in the shoulder.

"Ow," Chaz says.contests/"You remember," Shari says. "The R.A. at McCracken Hall. The grad student. The one Lizzie hasn't stopped talking about all summer."

"Oh, right, Andy. The British guy. The one who was running the illegal poker ring on the seventh floor."

I burst out laughing. "That's not Andrew! He doesn't gamble. He's studying to be an educator of youth, so that he can preserve our most precious resource...the next generation."

"The guy who sent you the photo of his naked ass?"

I gasp. "Shari, you told him about that?"

"I wanted a guy's perspective," Shari says, with a shrug. "You know, to see if he had any insights into what kind of individual would do something like that."

Coming from Shari, who'd been a psych major, this is actually a fairly reasonable explanation. I look at Chaz questioningly. He has lots of insights into lots of things --- how many times around Palmer Field make a mile (four--which I needed to know back when I was walking it every day to lose weight); what the number 33 on the inside of the Rolling Rock bottle means; why so many guys seem to think man-pris are actually flattering...

But Chaz shrugs, too. "I was unable to be of any aid," he says, "not ever having taken a photo of my bare ass before."

"Andrew didn't take a photo of his own ass," I say. "His friends took it."

"How homoerotic," Chaz comments. "Why do you call him Andrew when everybody else calls him Andy?"

"Because Andy is a jock name," I say. "And Andrew isn't a jock. He's getting a masters in education. Someday, he'll be teaching children to read. Could there be a more important job in the whole entire world than that? And he's not gay. I checked this time."

Chaz's eyebrows go up. "You checked? How? Wait...I don't want to know."

"She just likes pretending he's Prince Andrew," Shari says. "Um, so where was I?"

"Lizzie's being an ass," Chaz helpfully supplies. "So, wait. How long's it been since you saw this guy? Three months?"

"About that," I say.

"Man," Chaz says, shaking his head. "There is going to be some major bone-jumping when you step off that plane tomorrow."

"Andrew isn't like that," I say, warmly. "He's a romantic. He'll probably want to let me get acclimated and recover from my jet lag in his king-sized bed and thousand thread count sheets. He'll bring me breakfast in bed --- a cute English breakfast with...Englishy stuff on it."

"Like stewed tomatoes?" Chaz asks, with feigned innocence.contests/"Nice try," I say. "But Andrew knows I don't tomatoes. He asked in his last email if there are any foods I dislike, and I filled him in on the tomato thing."

"You better hope breakfast isn't all he brings you in bed," Shari says, darkly. "Otherwise, what is the point of traveling halfway around the world to see him?"

That's the problem with Shari. She's so unromantic. I'm really surprised she and Chaz have gone out as long as they have. I mean, two years is really a record for her.

Then again, as she likes to assure me, their attraction is almost purely physical, Chaz having just gotten his masters in philosophy, and thus, in Shari's opinion, being virtually unemployable.contests/"So what would even be the point of hoping for a future with him?" she often asks me. "I mean, eventually he'll start to feel inadequate --- even though he's got his trust fund, of course--and consequently suffer from performance anxiety in the bedroom. So I'll just keep him around as a boy toy for now, while he can still get it up."

Shari is very practical in this way.contests/"I still don't get why you're going all the way to England to see him," Chaz says. "I mean, a guy you haven't even slept with yet, who obviously doesn't know you very well if he isn't aware of your aversion to tomatoes and thinks you'd enjoy seeing a photograph of anyone's naked ass."

"You know perfectly well why," Shari says. "It's his accent."

"Shari!" I cry.

"Oh, right," Shari says, rolling her eyes. "He saved her life."

"Who saved whose life?" Angelo, my brother-in-law, mosies over, having discovered the dip.

"Lizzie's new boyfriend," Shari says.contests/"Lizzie's got a new boyfriend?" Angelo, I can tell, is trying to cut back on his carbs. He's only dipping celery sticks. Maybe he's on South Beach to control his belly fat, which is not enhanced by the white polyester shirt he is wearing. Why won't he listen to me, and stick to natural fibers? "How did I not hear about this? The LBS must be on the fritz."

"LBS?" Chaz echoes, his dark eyebrows raised.

"Lizzie Broadcasting System," Shari explains to him. "Where have you been?"

"Oh, right," Chaz says, and swigs his beer.

"I told Rose all about it," I say, glaring at all three of them. Someday I'm going to get my sister Rose back for that Lizzie Broadcasting System thing. It was funny when we were kids, but I'm twenty-two now! "Didn't she tell you, Ange?"

Angelo looks confused. "Tell me what?"

I sigh. "This freshman on the second floor let her potpourri boil over on her illegal hot plate and the hall filled with smoke and they had to evacuate," I explain.contests/I am always eager to relate the story of how Andrew and I met. Because it's super romantic. Someday, when Andrew and I are married and live in a ramshackle and tomato-free Victorian in Westport, Connecticut, with our golden retriever Rolly and our four kids, Andrew Junior, Henry, Stella, and Beatrice, and I'm a famous --- well, whatever I'm going to be--and Andrew's the headmaster at a nearby boys' school, teaching children to read, and I get interviewed in Vogue, I'll be able to tell this story --- looking funky yet fabulous in vintage Chanel from head to toe--while laughingly serving a perfect cup of French roast to the reporter on my back porch, which will be decorated entirely in tasteful white wicker and chintz.contests/"Well, I was taking a shower," I go on, "so I didn't smell the smoke or hear the alarm going off or anything. Until Andrew came into the girls' bathroom and yelled 'Fire!' and--"

"Is it true the girls' bathrooms in McCracken Hall have gang showers?" Angelo wants to know.contests/"It's true," Chaz informs him, conversationally. "They all have to shower together. Sometimes they soap each other's backs while gossiping about their girlish hijinks from the night before."

Angelo stares at Chaz, bug-eyed. "Are you shitting me?"

"Don't pay any attention to him, Angelo," Shari says, going for another chip. "He's making it up."

"That kind of thing happens all the time on Beverly Hills Bordello," Angelo says.

"We didn't shower all together," I say. "I mean, Shari and I did, sometimes--"

"Tell us more about that, please," Chaz says, opening a new beer with the church key my mom had provided near the cooler.

"Don't," Shari says. "You'll just encourage him."

"Which bits were you washing when he came in?" Chaz wants to know. "And was there another girl with you at the time? Which bits was she washing? Or was she helping to wash your bits?"contests/"No," I say. "It was just me. And, naturally, when I saw a guy in the girls' shower, I screamed."

"Oh, naturally," Chaz said.contests/"So I grabbed a towel and this guy --- I couldn't really see him all that well through the steam and the smoke and all --- goes, in the cutest British accent you ever heard, 'Miss, the building's on fire. I'm afraid you'll have to evacuate.'"

"So, wait," Angelo says. "This dude saw you in the raw?"

"In her nudie-pants," Chaz confirms.

"So by then the halls were all smoky and I couldn't see, so he took my hand and guided me down the stairs and outside to safety, where we struck up a conversation --- me, in my towel, and everything. And that's when I realized he was the love of my life."

"Based on one conversation," Chaz says, sounding skeptical. But then, having a philosophy masters degree, he is skeptical about everything. They train them to be that way.

"Well," I say. "We made out the rest of the night, too. That's how I know he's not gay. I mean, he got a full stiffy."

Chaz choked a little on his beer.

"So, anyway," I say, trying to steer the conversation back on track. "We made out all night. But then he had to leave the next day for England, because the semester was over--"

" --- and now, since Lizzie's finally done with school, she's flying to London to spend the rest of the summer with him," Shari finishes for me. "Then coming back here to rot, just like her--"

"Come on, Shar," I interrupt, quickly. "You promised."

She just grimaces at me.contests/"Listen, Liz," Chaz says, and reaches for another beer. "I know this guy's the love of your life, and all. But you have all next semester to be with him. Are you sure you don't want to come to France with us for the rest of the summer?"

"Don't bother, Chaz," Shari says. "I already asked her eighty million times."

"Did you mention we're staying in a seventeenth century French chateau with its own vineyard, perched on a hilltop overlooking a lush green valley through which snakes a long and lazy river?" Chaz wants to know.

"Shari told me," I say. "And it's sweet of you to ask. Even if you're not exactly in a position to be inviting people, because doesn't the chateau belong to one of your friends from that prep school you went to, and not you?"

"A trifling detail," Chaz says. "Luke would love to have you."

"Ha," Shari says. "I'll say. More slave labor for his amateur wedding franchise."

"What're they talking about?" Angelo asks me, looking confused.

"Chaz's childhood friend from prep school, Luke," I explain to him, "has an ancestral home in France, which his father rents out during the summer sometimes as a destination wedding spot. Shari and Chaz are leaving tomorrow to spend a month at the chateau for free, in exchange for helping out at the weddings."

"Destination wedding spot," Angelo echoes. "You mean like Vegas?"

"Right," Shari says. "Only tasteful. And it costs more than one ninety-nine to get there. And there's no free breakfast buffet."

Angelo looks shocked. "Then what's the point?"

Someone tugs on the skirt of my dress, and I look down. My sister Rose's first born, Maggie, holds up a necklace made of macaroni.

"Aunt Lizzie," she says. "For you. I made it. For your gradutation."

"Why, thank you, Maggie," I say, kneeling down so that Maggie can drop the necklace over my head.

"The paint's not dry," Maggie says, pointing to the red and blue splotches of paint that have now been transferred from the macaroni to the front of my 1954 Suzy Perette rose silk party dress (which wasn't cheap, even with my employee discount).contests/"That's okay, Mags," I say. Because, after all, she's only four. "It's beautiful."

"There you are!" Grandma Nichols teeters towards us. "I've been looking for you everywhere, Anne-Marie. It's time for Dr. Quinn."

"Grandma," I say, straightening up to grasp her spool-thin arm before she can topple over. I see that she has already managed to spill something all down the green crepe de chine 1960s tunic top I got her at the shop. Fortunately the paint stains from the macaroni necklace Maggie made for her are somewhat hiding the stain. "It's Lizzie. Not Anne-Marie. Mom's over by the dessert table. And what have you been drinking?"contests/I seize the Heineken bottle in Grandma's hand and smell its contents. It should, by prior agreement with the rest of my family, have been filled with non-alcoholic beer, then re-sealed, due to Grandma Nichols's inability to hold her liquor, which has resulted in what my mom likes to call 'incidents.' Mom was hoping to forego any 'incidents' at my graduation party by letting Grandma have only non-alcoholic beer --- but not telling her it was non-alcoholic, of course. Because then she would have raised a fuss, telling us we were trying to ruin an old lady's good time, and all.

But I can't tell if the beer in the bottle is of the non-alcoholic variety. We had stashed the faux-Heinekens in a special section of the cooler for Grandma. But she may have managed to find the real thing somewhere. She's crafty that way.
Or she could just THINK she's had the real thing, and consequently thinks she's drunk.

"Lizzie?" Grandma looks suspicious. "What are you doing here? Shouldn't you be away at college?"

"I graduated from college in May, Grandma," I say. Well, sort of, anyway. Not counting the two months I just spend in summer school, getting my language requirement out of the way. "This is my graduation party. Well, my graduation slash bon voyage party."

"Bon voyage?" Grandma's suspicion turns to indignation. "Where do you think you're going?"

"To England, Grandma, the day after tomorrow," I say. "To visit my boyfriend. Remember? We talked about this."

"Boyfriend?" Grandma glares at Chaz. "Isn't that him right there?"

"No, Grandma," I say. "That's Chaz, Shari's boyfriend. You remember, Shari Dennis, right, Grandma? She grew up down the street?"

"Oh, the Dennis girl," Grandma says, narrowing her eyes in Shari's direction. "I remember you, now. I thought I saw your parents over by the barbecue. You and Lizzie going to do that song you always do when you get together?"

Shari and I exchange horror-filled glances. Angelo hoots.

"Hey, yeah!" he cries. "Rosie told me about this. What song was it you two used to do? Like at the school talent show and shit?"

I give Angelo a warning look, since Maggie is still hanging around, and say, "Little pitchers." It's clear from his expression that he has no idea what I'm talking about. I sigh and begin steering Grandma towards the house.contests/"Better come on, Grandma," I say. "Or you'll miss your show."

"What about the song?" Grandma wants to know.

"We'll do the song later, Mrs. Nichols," Shari assures her.

"I'm going to hold you to that," Chaz says, with a wink. Shari mouths In your dreams at him. Chaz blows a kiss at her over the top of his beer bottle.contests/They're so cute together. I can't wait until I'm in London and Andrew and I can be that cute together, too.

"Come on, Grandma," I say. "Dr. Quinn's starting now."

"Oh, good," Grandma says. To Shari, she confides, "I don't care about that dumb Dr. Quinn. It's that hunk who hangs out with her --- him I can't get enough of!"

"Okay, Grandma," I say, quickly, as Shari spurts out the mouthful of Amstel Light she'd just taken. "Let's get you inside before you miss your show--"

We hardly get a few yards down the deck, however, before we're waylaid by Dr. Rajghatta, my dad's boss at the cyclotron, and his pretty wife Nishi, beaming in a pink sari at his side.contests/"Many congratulations on your graduation," Dr. Rajghatta says.contests/"Yes," his wife agrees. "And may we say, you are also looking so slim and lovely?"

"Oh, thank you," I say. "Thank you so much!"

"And what will you be doing now that you have your bachelor's degree in...what is it again?" Dr. R wants to know. It's unfortunate about the pocket protector he's wearing, but then, I haven't been able to wean my own father from the habit, so it's unlikely I'll ever make any headway with his boss.

"History of fashion," I reply.contests/"History of fashion? I was not aware this school offered a major in that field of study," Dr. R says.

"Oh, it doesn't. I'm in the individualized major program. You know, where you make your own major?"

"But fashion history?" Dr. Rajghatta looks concerned. "There are many opportunities available in this field?"

"Oh, tons," I say, trying not to remember how just last weekend I picked up a copy of the Sunday New York Times, and saw that every fashion-related job in the want ads --- besides merchandising --- either didn't exactly require a bachelor's degree, or did require years of experience in the field, which I don't have. "I could get a job in the Costume Institute of the Metropolitan Museum of Art." Sure. As a janitor. "Or as a costume designer on Broadway." You know, if all the other costume designers in the world suddenly died at the same time. "Or even as a buyer for a major high-end fashion retailer like Saks Fifth Avenue." If I had listened to my dad, who'd begged me to minor in business.

"What do you mean, a buyer?" Grandma looks scandalized. "You're going to be a designer, not a buyer! Why, she's been ripping her clothes apart and re-sewing them back together all weird since she was old enough to pick up a needle," she tells Dr. and Mrs. M, who look at me as if Grandma had just announced I like to salsa naked in my spare time.contests/"Huh," I say, with a nervous laugh. "It was just a hobby." I don't mention, of course, that I only did this --- re-invented my clothing --- because I was so chubby I couldn't fit into the fun, flirty clothes in the junior department, and so had to somehow make the stuff Mom got me from the women's department look younger.contests/Which is, of course, why I love vintage clothes so much. They're so much better made --- and more flattering, no matter what your size.

"Hobby my ass," Grandma says. "See this shirt here?" Grandma points at her stained tunic. "She dyed it herself! It was orange, and now look at it! And she hemmed the sleeves to make them sexier, just like I asked!"

"It's a very beautiful top," Mrs. Rajghatta says, kindly. "I'm sure Lizzie will go very far with such talents."

"Oh," I say, feeling myself blush beet red. "I mean, I could never...you know. For a living. It's just a hobby."

"Well, that's good," her husband says, looking relieved. "No one should spend four years at a top college just so that she can sew for a living!"

"That would be such a waste!" I agree, deciding not to mention to him that I'd be spending my first semester out of college continuing in my assistant shop manager position while waiting for my boyfriend to graduate.

Grandma looks annoyed. "What do you care?" she asks, giving me a poke in the side. "You went for those four years for free anyway. What does it matter what you do with what you learned there?"

Dr. and Mrs. Rajghatta and I smile at each other, all equally embarrassed by Grandma's outburst.

"Your parents must be so proud of you," Mrs. Rajghatta says, still smiling pleasantly. "I mean, having the confidence to study something so...arcane when so many qualified young people can't even find jobs in today's market. That is very brave of you."

"Oh," I say, swallowing down the little bit of vomit that always seems to rise into my throat when I think about my future. Better not to think about it right now. Better to think about the fun I'm going to have with Andrew. "Well, I'm brave, all right."

"I'll say she's brave," Grandma chimes in. "She's going to England day after tomorrow to hump some guy she barely knows."contests/"Well, we have to be going inside now," I say, grabbing Grandma's hand, and tugging her along. "Thanks so much for coming, Dr. and Mrs. Rajghatta!"

"Oh, wait. This is for you, Lizzie," Mrs. Rajghatta says, slipping a small, gift-wrapped box into my hand.contests/"Oh, thank you so much," I cry. "You didn't have to!"

"It's nothing, really," Mrs. Rajghatta says with a laugh. "Just a book light. Your parents said you were going to Europe tomorrow, so I thought, if you are reading, on a train, or something--"

"Well, thank you very much," I say. "That will come in handy, all right. Bye, now."contests/"Book light," Grandma grumbles, as I hurry her away from Dad's boss and his wife. "Who the hell wants a book light?"

"Lots of people," I say. "They are very handy things to have."

Grandma says a very bad word. I'll be happy when I get her safely tucked in front of the rerun of Dr. Quinn.

But before I can do that, there are several more obstacles we have to hurtle, including Rose.

"My baby sister!" Rose cries, looking up from the infant she's got in a highchair by the picnic table, into whose mouth she's shoveling mashed peas. "I can't believe you're graduating from college! It just makes me feel so old!"

"You are old," Grandma observes.

But Rose just ignores her, as is her custom where Grandma is concerned.

"Angelo and I are just so proud of you," Rose says, her eyes filling with tears. It's a shame she didn't listen to me about the length of her jeans. The cropped look just doesn't work unless you've got legs as long as Cindy Crawford's. Which none of us Nichols girls do. "Not just for the graduating thing, but for --- well, you know. The weight loss. Really. You just look terrific. And...well, we got you a little something--" She slips a small, gift-wrapped package in my hand. "It isn't anything much...you know, with Angelo out of work, and the baby in day care, and all....But I thought you might be able to use a book light. I know how much you love to read."

"Wow," I say. "Thank you so much, Rose. That was really thoughtful of you."

Grandma starts to say something, but I squeeze her hand, hard.

"Ow," Grandma says. "Stab me next time, why don't you?"

"Well, I have to get Grandma inside," I say. "Time for Dr. Quinn."

Rose looks down her nose at Grandma. "Oh, God," she says. "She didn't talk about her lust for Byron Sully in front of everyone, did she?"

"At least he's got a job," Grandma begins, "which is more than I can say for that husband of--"

"Okay," I say, grabbing Grandma and heading for the sliding doors. "Let's go, Grandma. Don't want to keep Sully waiting."

"That is no way," I hear Rose wail, behind us, "to talk about your grandson-in-law, Gram! Wait till I tell Daddy!"

"Aw, go ahead," Grandma retorts. Then, as I drag her away, she complains, "That sister of yours. How could you stand her, all these years?"

Before I can form a reply --- that it wasn't easy--I hear my other sister, Sarah, call my name. I turn around, and see her staggering towards us, a casserole dish in her hands. Sadly, she is in a pair of white stretch capris that are far too tight on her.contests/Will my sisters never learn? Some things need to be left a mystery.

But I guess since that's the look that won Sarah her husband Chuck, she's sticking with it.

"Oh, hey," Sarah says, not very distinctly. She's clearly been hitting the Heineken herself. "I made your favorite for you, in honor of your big day." She whisks the plastic wrap off the casserole dish, and waves it under my nose. A wave of nausea grips me.

"Tomato ratatouille!" Sarah shrieks, laughing uproariously. "Remember that time Aunt Karen made that ratatouille and Mom told you you had to eat it to be polite and you threw up over the side of the deck?"

"Yes," I said, feeling like I was about to throw up over the side of the deck all over again.contests/"Wasn't that funny? So I made it for old time's sake. Hey, what's the matter?" She seems to notice my expression for the first time. "Oh, come on. Don't tell me you still hate tomatoes! I thought you grew out of that!"
"Why should she?" Grandma demands. "I never did. Why don't you take that stuff and put it up--"

"Okay, Gram," I say, quickly. "Let's go. Dr. Quinn's waiting...."

I hustle Grandma away before punches are thrown. Inside the sliding doors stand my parents.

"There she is," Dad says, brightening when he sees me. "The first of the Nichols girls actually to finish college!"
I hope Rose and Sarah don't overhear him. Even though it is, technically, true.

"Hi, Dad," I say. "Hi, Mom. Great par--" Then I notice the woman standing next to them. "Dr. Sprague!" I cry. "You came!"
"Of course I came," Dr. Sprague, my college advisor, gives me a hug and a kiss. "I wouldn't have missed it for the world. Look at you, so skinny now! That low carb thing really worked."

"Aw," I say. "Thanks."

"Oh, and here, I even brought you a little going away present...sorry I didn't have time to wrap it," Dr. Sprague says, stuffing something into my hands.

"Oh," my father says. "A book light! Look at that, Lizzie! Bet you'll find a use for that."

"Absolutely," Mom says. "On those trains you'll be taking across Europe. A book light always comes in handy."

"Jesus H. Christ," Grandma says. "Was there a sale on'em somewhere?"

"Thank you so much, Dr. Sprague," I hurry to say. "That was so thoughtful of you. But you really didn't have to."

"I know," Dr. Sprague says. She looks, as always, coolly professional in a red linen suit. Although I'm not sure that particular red is the right color for her. "I was wondering if we could talk privately for a moment, Elizabeth?"

"Of course," I say. "Mom, Dad, if you'll excuse us for a moment...maybe one of you can help Grandma find the Hallmark Channel? Her show is on."

"Oh, God," my mother says, with a groan. "Not--"contests/"You know," Grandma says. "You could learn a lot from Dr. Quinn, Anne-Marie. She knows how to make soap from a sheep's guts. And she had twins when she was fifty. Fifty!" I hear Grandma cry, as Mom leads her towards the den. "I'd like to see you, having twins at fifty."

"Is something wrong?" I ask Dr. Sprague, guiding her into my parents' living room, which has changed very little in the four years since I've been living in a dormitory, more or less down the street. The pair of armchairs, in which my mom and dad read every night --- him, spy novels, her, romance --- are still slipcovered against Molly the sheepdog's fur. Our childhood photos --- me looking fatter in each consecutive one, Rose and Sarah slimmer and more glamorous --- still line every inch of available wall space. It's homey and threadbare and plain and I wouldn't trade it for any living room in the world.contests/With the possible exception of the one in Pam Anderson's Malibu beach house, which I saw last week on MTV Cribs. It was surprisingly cute. Considering.

"Didn't you get my messages?" Dr. Sprague wants to know. "I've been calling your cell all morning."

"No," I say. "I mean, I've been busy running around, helping Mom set up the party. Why? What's the matter?"

"There's no easy way to say this," Dr. Sprague says with a sigh. "So I'll just say it. When you signed up for the individualized major, Lizzie, you did realize one of the graduation requirements was a written thesis, didn't you?"

I stare at her blankly. "A what?"

"A written thesis." Dr. Sprague, apparently seeing by my expression that I have no idea what she's talking about, sinks with a groan into my dad's armchair. "Oh, God. I knew it. Lizzie, didn't you read any of the materials from the department?"

"Of course I did," I say, defensively. "I mean...most of it, anyway." It was all so boring.

"Didn't you wonder why, at Commencement yesterday, your diploma tube was empty?"

"Well, sure," I say. "But I thought it was because I hadn't finished my language requirement. Which is why I took both summer sessions--"

"But you had to write a thesis, too," Dr. Sprague says. "Summarizing, basically, what you learned about your field of concentration. Liz, you haven't officially graduated until you turn in a thesis."

"But." My lips feel numb. "I'm leaving for England day after tomorrow for a month. To visit my boyfriend."

"Well," Dr. Sprague says, with a sigh. "You'll have to write it when you get back, then."

It's my turn to sink into the armchair she's just vacated.contests/"I can't believe this," I murmur, letting all of my book lights fall into my lap. "My parents put on this huge party --- there must be sixty people out there. Some of my teachers from high school are coming. And you're saying I'm not even really a college graduate?"

"Not until you write that thesis," Dr. Sprague says. "I'm sorry, Lizzie. But they're going to want at least fifty pages."

"Fifty pages?" She might as well have said fifteen hundred. How am I going to enjoy having English breakfast in Andrew's king-sized bed, knowing I have fifty pages hanging over my head? "Oh, God." Then a worse thought hits me. I'm no longer the first of the Nichols girls actually to finish college. "Please don't mention this to my parents, Dr. Sprague. Please."contests/"I won't. And I'm really sorry about this," Dr. Sprague says. "I can't imagine how it happened."

"I can," I say, miserably. "I should have gone to a small private college. In a huge state university, it's so easy to get lost in the shuffle, and turn out not to have actually graduated after all."

"But an education at a small private college would have cost you thousands of dollars, which you'd have to be worrying about paying back now," Dr. Sprague says. "By attending the huge state university in which your father works, you got a superior education for absolutely nothing, and so now, instead of having to get a job right away, you can flit off to England to spend time with --- what's his name again?"

"Andrew," I say, dejectedly.

"Right. Andrew. Well." Dr. Sprague shoulders her expensive leather purse. "I guess I'd better be going now. I just wanted to drop by to give you the news. If it's any comfort to you, Lizzie, I'm sure your thesis is going to be just great."

"I don't even know what to write it on," I wail.

"A brief history of fashion will suffice," Dr. Sprague says. "To show you learned something while you were here. And," she adds, brightly, "you can even do some research while you're in England."

"I could, couldn't I?" I'm starting to feel a little better. The history of fashion? I love fashion. And Dr. Sprague is right --- England would be the perfect place to research this. They have all sorts of museums there. And I could go to Jane Austen's house! They might even have some of her clothes there! Clothes like they wore in Pride and Prejudice on A&E! I loved those clothes!contests/God. This might even turn out to be fun.

I have no idea whether or not Andrew is going to want to go to Jane Austen's house. But why wouldn't he? He's British. And so is she. Naturally, he's going to be interested in his own country's history.

Yeah. Yeah, this is going to be great!contests/"Thanks for coming by personally to deliver the news, Dr. Sprague," I say, getting up and showing her to the door. "And thanks so much for the book light, too."

"Oh," Dr. Sprague says. "Don't mention it. I shouldn't say this, of course, but we're going to miss you around the office. You always made such a splash whenever you'd show up there, in one of your, um--" I notice her gaze drop to the macaroni necklace and my paint-splashed dress. " --- unusual outfits."

"Oh," I say, with a smile. "Well, thank you, Dr. Sprague. Any time you want me to find you an unusual outfit of your own, just stop by Vintage to Vavoom, you know, over in Kerrytown--"

Just then my sister Sarah bursts into the living room, her anger over the tomato ratatouille incident apparently forgotten, since she's laughing a little hysterically. She's followed by her husband, Chuck, my other sister, Rose, her husband, Angelo, Maggie, our parents, the Rajghattas, various other party guests, Shari, and Chaz.

"Here she is, here she is," Sarah yells. She, I can tell right away, is drunker than ever. Sarah grabs my arm and starts dragging me towards the landing --- the one we used to use as a stage, when we were little, for putting on little plays for our parents. Well, the one Rose and Sarah used to push ME onto, to put on little plays for our parents. And for them.

"Come on, graduate," Sarah says, having a little trouble with the word. "Sing. We all want you and Shari to sing your little song!"

Only it comes out sounding like, Shing! We all want you and Shari to shing your liddle shong!

"Uh," I say, noticing that Rose has Shari in a grip about as tight as Sarah's on me. "No."
"Oh, come on," Rose cries. "We want to see our baby sister and her little fwiend do their song!" And she throws Shari hard against me, so that the two of us stumble and almost fall across the landing.

"Your sisters," Shari grumbles in my ear, "have the worst cases of sibling envy I have ever seen in my life. I can't believe how much they resent you because you, unlike them, did not become impregnated by a bohunk your sophomore year, and have to drop out and stay home all day with drooling sprog."

"Shari!" I am shocked by this assessment of my sisters' lives. Even if it is, technically, accurate.

"All college gwaduates," Rose continues, apparently unaware that she's using baby talk while speaking to adults, "have to shing!"

"Rose," I say. "No. Really. Maybe later. I'm not in the mood."

"All college graduates," Rose repeats, this time with dangerously narrowed eyes, "have to sing!"

"In that case," I say, "you're going to have to count me out."

And then I turn to face thirty dumbfounded expressions.contests/And realize what I've just let slip.contests/"Kidding," I say, quickly.contests/And everyone laughs. Except for Grandma, who's just come in from the den.

"Sully's not even in this episode," she announces. "Goddammit. Who's going to get an old lady a drink?"

Then she topples over onto the carpet, and lets out a gentle snore.

"I love that woman," Shari says to me, as everyone rushes forward to attempt to revive my grandmother, completely forgetting about Shari and me.

"So do I," I say. "You have no idea how much."

Chapter Three

Anyone who has obeyed nature by transmitting a piece of gossip experiences the explosive relief that accompanies the satisfying of a primary need.
Primo Levi (1919–1987), Italian chemist, author.

"I thought that was you!" Andrew gushes, in that cute accent that had all the girls in McCracken Hall swooning --- even if his th's do sound like f's. "What's the matter? You walked right past me!"

"She thought you were a kidnapper," the guy from the Meet Your Party booth explains, between guffaws.

"Kidnapper?" Andrew looks from the guy in the booth to me. "What's he talking about?"

"Nothing," I say, grabbing Andrew's arm and rushing him away from the booth. "Nothing, really. Oh, my gosh! It's good to see you!"

"Good to see you, too," Andrew says, putting an arm around my waist and giving me a hug --- so tight that the epaulets from his jacket dig into my cheek. "You look fucking fantastic! Did you lose weight, or something?"

"Just a little," I say, modestly. No need for Andrew to know that no starch whatsoever --- not so much as a French fry or even a lousy crumb of bread --- has touched my lips since he waved goodbye to me last May.

Then Andrew notices me looking at an older, bald man who has come up to us and is smiling politely at me. He is wearing a navy blue windbreaker and a pair of brown corduroy pants. In August.

This is not a good sign. I'm just saying.

"Oh, right!" Andrew cries. "Liz, this is my dad. Dad, this is Liz!"

Oh, how sweet! He brought his dad to meet me at the airport! Andrew really MUST be taking our relationship seriously, if he would go to so much trouble. I've already forgiven him for the jacket.

Well, almost.

"How do you do, Mr. Marshall?" I say, putting out my hand to shake his. "It's so nice to meet you."

"Nice to meet you, too," Andrew's father says with a nice smile. "And please, call me Arthur. Don't mind me, I'm just the chauffeur."

Andrew laughs. So do I. Except --- Andrew doesn't have his own car?

Oh, but wait, that's right. Shari said things are different in Europe, that lots of people don't own cars because they're so expensive. And Andrew is trying to get by on a teacher's salary....

I've got to stop being so judgmental about other cultures. I think it's just cute as can be that Andrew doesn't have a car. So environmentally conscious! Besides, he lives in London. I imagine lots of people in London don't have cars. They take public transportation, or they walk, like New Yorkers. Which is why there are so few fat people in New York. You know, because they're all such healthy walkers. Probably there aren't many fat people in London, either. I mean, look at Andrew. He's thin as a toothpick, practically.

And yet he's got those marvelous grapefruit size biceps....

Although now that I look at them, they seem sort of more orange-sized.

But how could anybody really tell beneath a leather jacket, anyway?

It's sweet he has such a close relationship with his dad, too. I mean, that he could ask him to come with him to pick up his girlfriend at Heathrow. My dad is always too busy working to take time out for things like that. But then, his job at the cyclotron is very important, since they're always smashing atoms up there, and things. Andrew's dad is a teacher, like Andrew wants to be. Teachers get summers off.

Dr. Rajghatta would laugh his head off if my dad ever asked for a summer off.

Andrew takes my bag, which has wheels, so it's actually the lightest thing I'm carrying. My carry-on is way heavier, since it has all my makeup and beauty supplies in it. I wouldn't mind so much if the airline lost my clothes, but I would totally die if they lost my makeup. I look like a total beast without it. I have eyes that are so small and squinty without liner and mascara, that I actually resemble a pig...even if Shari, whose lived with me for the past four years, swears this isn't true. Shari says I could get away without makeup if I wanted to.

But why would I want to when makeup is such a brilliant and helpful invention for those of us cursed with piggy eyes?

Still, makeup does weigh an awful lot, at least when you have as much of it as I do. Not to mention all of my hair styling equipment and products. Having long hair is no joke. You have to bring about nine tons of stuff with you in order to keep it properly shampooed, conditioned, tangle-and-frizz-free, dry, shiny, and full of body. Not to mention all the different adapters I had to bring for my hair dryer and curling iron, since Andrew was remarkably unhelpful in describing what British electrical outlets look like ("They look like outlets," he kept saying, on the phone. Isn't this just like a guy?) so I had to bring every different kind I could find at CVS.

But maybe it's just as well Andrew is pulling the wheelie bag and not carrying my carry-on. Because then if he asks what's inside and why it's so heavy, I'll have to tell him the truth, as I have resolved this relationship will not be founded on artifice, like the one with that guy T.J. I met at the McCracken Hall Movie Night, who turned out to be a practicing warlock--which would have been all right, I totally respect other people's religions....

Except that he also turned out to be a chubby chaser, as I learned when I caught him making out in the Quad with Amy De Soto (and excuse me, I was never pushing two hundred pounds, like she was, last time I saw her. Talk about someone who should lay off the Froot Loops once in a while). He tried to tell me his familiar made him sleep with her.

Which is why I plan to always tell the truth to Andrew, because T. J. did not give me even that much respect.

But that doesn't mean I'm not going to go out of my way to avoid having to tell him the truth, if I can. Like, there is absolutely no reason he needs to know that the reason my carry-on bag is so heavy is because it's filled with approximately seventy-five billion Clinique cosmetic samples; a container of astringent pads (because I shine so much, thanks to Mom's side of the family); a family size container of Tums (because I've heard English food isn't necessarily the best); a family size container of chewable fiber tablets (because ditto); the aforementioned curling iron and hair dryer; the clothes I wore on the plane before I changed into my Mandarin dress; a Gameboy loaded with Tetris; the latest Dan Brown (because you can't go on a trans-Atlantic flight with nothing to read); my mini-iPod; three book lights; Sun-In for my highlights; I had to repack my sewing kit --- for emergency clothing repairs --- into my suitcase because of the stitch scissors and seam ripper; but I've got all of my pharmaceuticals, such as aspirin, Band-Aids for the blisters I am undoubtedly going to get (from strolling hand-in-hand with Andrew through the British Museum, soaking in all the art), and prescriptions, including my birth control pills and antibiotic acne medication; and of course the notebook in which I've begun my senior thesis.

There is no reason at this point in our relationship for Andrew to find out I wasn't actually born this good looking --- that a great deal of artifice goes into it. What if he turns out to be one of those guys who like naturally pink-cheeked beauties like Liv Tyler? What kind of chance do I stand against an English rose like that? A girl has to have some secrets.

Oh, wait, Andrew is talking to me. He's asking how my flight went. Why is he wearing that jacket? He can't seriously think it looks good, can he?

"The flight was great," I say. I don't tell Andrew about the little girl in the seat next too mine, who ignored me throughout the flight, when I was just wearing my jeans and T-shirt, with my hair in a ponytail. It wasn't until after I came back from doing my hair and makeup and changing into my silk dress a half-hour before we landed, that the kid did a double take, and the next thing I knew, she was asking shyly, "Excuse me. But are you the actress Jennifer Garner?"

Jennifer Garner! Me! This kid thought I was Jennifer Garner!

And okay, she was only like ten or whatever, and wearing a shirt with Kermit the Frog on it (surely she meant this ironically and is not actually a current viewer of Sesame Street, as she seemed a bit old for it).

But still! No one has ever mistaken me for a movie star in my life! Let alone a skinny one like Jennifer Garner.

And the thing is, with my makeup on and my hair done, I guess I do look a bit like Jennifer Garner...you know, if she hadn't quite lost all the baby fat. And had bangs. And was only five feet six.

I guess it never occurred to the kid that Jennifer Garner would hardly be flying coach, by herself, to England. But whatever.

And before I could stop myself, I was going, "Why, yes. I AM Jennifer Garner," because, whatever, I'm never going to see this kid again in my life. Why not give her a thrill?

The kid's eyes practically bugged out, she was so excited.

"Hi," she said, bouncing a little in her seat. "I'm Marnie! I'm your biggest fan!"

"Well, hi, Marnie," I said. "It's nice to meet you."

"Mom!" Marnie turned to whisper to her dozing mother. "It IS Jennifer Garner! I TOLD you!"

And the little girl's drowsy mother looked over at me, her eyes still bleary with sleep, and went, "Oh. Hello."

"Hi," I said, wondering if I sounded Jennifer Garnery enough.

But I guess I did, since the next words out of the kid's mouth were, "I just loved you in 13 Going on 30."

"Why, thank you," I said. "I do consider that some of my best work. Besides Alias, of course."

"I'm not allowed to stay up late enough to watch that," Marnie said, mournfully.

"Oh," I said. "Well, maybe you can see it on DVD."

"Can I have your autograph?" the little girl wanted to know.

"Of course you can," I said, and took the pen and the British Airways cocktail napkin she offered me and scrawled, Best wishes to Marnie, my biggest fan! Love, Jennifer Garner on it.

The little girl took the napkin reverently, as if she couldn't believe her good fortune. "Thanks!" she said.

I just knew she was going to take that napkin back to America when she got home from her fun European vacation, and show it to all of her friends.

I didn't really start feeling bad until then. Because what if one of Marnie's friends has an autograph from the REAL Jennifer Garner, and they compare the handwriting? Then Marnie is going to be all suspicious! And she might even ask herself why Jen wasn't with her publicist, or even why she was flying commercial. And then she'll realize I wasn't the REAL Jennifer Garner, and that I was lying the whole time. And that could shake her faith in the goodness of mankind. Marnie could develop serious trust issues, like the kind I myself developed when my prom date, Adam Berger, told me he had to go home and paint the ceiling instead of taking me to the after-party, when really he went ahead and attended the after-party with skinny-as-a-stick Melissa Kemplebaum after dropping me off.

But then I told myself that it didn't matter, since I'd never see Marnie again. So who even cared?

Still, I don't mention the incident to Andrew, because, seeing as how he's getting a masters in education, I highly doubt he approves of lying to young children.

Also, the truth is, I am feeling kind of sleepy, even though it is eight o'clock in the morning in England, and I am wondering how far it is to Andrew's apartment, and if there's any chance at all he might have some Diet Coke there. Because I could totally use one.

"Oh, not too far at all," is what Andrew's dad, Mr. Marshall says, when I ask Andrew how far he lives from the airport.

It's kind of strange that Andrew's dad answered, and not Andrew. But then again, Mr. Marshall's a teacher, and answering questions is basically their job. He probably can't help it, even when he's off duty.

It's such a good thing there are men like Andrew and his dad who are willing to undertake the education of our youth. The Marshalls are truly a dying breed. I'm so glad I'm with Andrew and not, say, Chaz, who chose to pursue a philosophy degree solely so that he could argue more effectively with his parents. How is that supposed to help future generations?

Whereas Andrew has purposefully chosen a career that will never make him much money, but that will ensure that young minds don't go unmolded.

And isn't that the noblest thing you've ever heard of?

It's a long, long way to Mr. Marshall's car. We have to go through all of these hallways where, along the walls, are advertisements for products I've never heard of. Chaz had been complaining, last time he'd gone to visit his friend Luke --- the one with the chateau --- about the Americanization of Europe, and how you couldn't go anywhere without seeing a Coca-Cola ad.

But I don't see any Americanization here in England. So far. I don't see anything even vaguely American. Not even a Coke machine. Not even one selling Diet Coke.

Not that this is a bad thing. I'm just saying. Although a Diet Coke wouldn't be so bad, right about now.

Andrew and his dad are talking about the weather, and how lucky I am to have come at a time when it's so nice out. But when we step out of the building and into the parking garage, I realize it's maybe sixty degrees, at most, and that the sky --- what I can see of it at the end of the garage level--is grey and overcast.

If this is good weather, what do the British consider bad? And, granted, it's certainly cold enough for a leather jacket. But that doesn't excuse the fact that Andrew is wearing one. Surely there's some rule somewhere --- like the one about no white pants before Memorial Day --- about no leather in August.

We're almost to the car --- a small red compact, exactly what I'd expect a middle-aged teacher to drive --- when I hear a shriek, and look around to see the little girl from the plane standing next to an SUV with her mother and an older couple I can only assume are her grandparents.

"There she is!" Marnie is screaming, pointing at me. "Jennifer Garner! Jennifer Garner!"

I keep walking, my head down, trying to ignore her. But both Andrew and his father are looking over at her, bemused smiles on their faces. Andrew does look a bit like his dad. Will he, too, be totally bald when he's fifty? Is baldness a trait passed on by the mother's side of the family, or the father's? Why didn't I take a single bio course while I was designing my own major? I could have squeezed in at least one....

"Is that child speaking to you?" Mr. Marshall asks me.

"Me?" I glance over my shoulder, pretending to notice for the first time that a small child is shrieking at me from across the garage.

"Jennifer Garner! It's me! Marnie! From the plane! Remember?"

I smile and wave at Marnie. She flushes with pleasure and grabs her mother's arm.
"See?" she cries. "I told you! It really is her!"

Marnie waves some more. I wave back, while Andrew wrestles my suitcase into the small trunk, swearing a bit. Since he's been wheeling it along the whole time, he had no idea how heavy it is until he bent to lift it.

But really, a month is a long time. I don't see how I could have packed less than ten pairs of shoes. Shari even said she was proud of me for being sensible enough not to bring my lace-up platform espadrilles. Although I did manage to squeeze them in at the last minute before I left.

"Why is that child calling you Jennifer Garner?" Mr. Marshall wants to know as he, too, waves at Marnie, whose grandparents, or whoever they are, still haven't succeeded in herding her into the car.

"Oh," I say, feeling myself begin to blush. "We sat next to each other on the plane. It's just a little game we were playing, to pass time on the flight."

"How kind of you," Mr. Marshall says, waving even more energetically now. "Not all young people realize how important it is to treat children with respect and dignity instead of condescension. It's so important to set a good example for the younger generation, especially when one considers how instable many of today's family units really are."

"That's so true," I say, in what I hope sounds like a respectful and dignified manner.

"Christ," Andrew says. He's just tried to pick up my carry-on bag from where I've set it on the ground. "What have you got in here, Liz? A dead body?"

"Oh," I say, my respectful and dignified demeanor threatening to crumble. "Just a few necessities."

"I'm sorry my chariot isn't more stylish," Mr. Marshall says, opening the driver's door to his car. "It's certainly not what you're used to, I'm sure, back in America. But I hardly use it, since I walk to the school where I teach, most days."

I am instantly charmed by the vision of Mr. Marshall strolling down a tree-lined country lane in a herringbone jacket with leather elbow patches --- rather than the extremely uninspired windbreaker he is currently wearing--and perhaps a cocker spaniel or two nipping at his heels.

"Oh, it's fine," I say, about his car. "Mine isn't much bigger."

I wonder why he's just standing there by the door, instead of getting in, until he goes, "After you, er, Liz."

He wants me to drive? But...I just got here! I don't even know my way around!

Then I realize he isn't holding open the driver's door at all...it's the passenger side. The steering wheel is on the right side of the car.

Of course! We're in England!

I laugh at my own mistake and sit down in the front seat.

Andrew slams down the trunk and comes around to see me sitting in the passenger seat. He looks at his dad and says, "What, I'm supposed to sit in the boot, then?"

"Mind your manners, Andy," Mr. Marshall says. It seems so strange to hear Andrew called Andy. He is such an Andrew to me. But evidently not to his family.

Although truthfully, in that jacket, he looks a bit more like an Andy than an Andrew.

"Ladies in the front seat," Mr. Marshall goes on, with a smile at me. "And gentlemen in the back."

"Liz, I thought you were a feminist," Andrew says (only it comes out sounding like, Liz, I fought you were a feminist). "Are you going to stand for this kind of treatment?"

"Oh," I say. "Of course. Andrew should sit in front, he's got longer legs--"

"I won't hear of it," Mr. Marshall says. "You'll muss your pretty Chinese dress, climbing about." Then he shuts my car door, firmly, for me.

Next thing I know, he's come around the right side and is holding the driver's side seat back for Andrew to crawl behind. There's a brief argument I can't really hear, and then Andrew appears. I don't really know any other word I can use to describe the expression on Andrew's face, except for peevish.

But I feel bad for even thinking Andrew might be feeling peevish about me getting to sit in the front seat. Most likely he's just embarrassed about not having his own car to pick me up in. Yes, that's probably it. Poor thing. He probably thinks I'm holding him to American standards of capitalist materialism! I'll have to find some way to assure him that I find his poverty extremely sexy, seeing as how all the sacrifices he's making, he's making for the children.

Not Andrew Junior, Henry, Stella, and Beatrice, of course. I mean the children of the world, the ones he'll be teaching someday.

Wow. Just thinking about all the little lives Andrew's going to improve with his sacrifices in the teaching profession is making me kind of horny.

Mr. Marshall climbs into the driver's seat and smiles at me. "Ready?" he asks, cheerfully.

"Ready," I say, and I'm filled with a spurt of excitement, despite my jet lag. England! I'm in England, at last! I'm about to be driven along the English countryside, into London! Maybe I'll even see some sheep!

Before we're able to pull out, however, an SUV drives up behind us, and a back window powers down. Marnie, my little friend from the plane, leans out the window to yell, "Goodbye, Jennifer Garner!"

I roll down my own window, and wave. "Bye, Marnie!"

Then the SUV pulls away, Marnie beaming happily in the back.

"Who in heaven," Mr. Marshall asks, as he backs out, "is this Jennifer Garner?"

"Just some American film star," Andrew says, before I can say anything.

Just some American film star? Just some American film star who happens to look exactly like your girlfriend, I want to shriek. Enough so that little girls on airplanes want her autograph!

But I manage to keep my mouth shut for once, because I don't want Andrew to feel inadequate, knowing he's dating a Jennifer Garner lookalike. That could be really intimidating, you know, for a guy. Even an American one.

Excerpted from QUEEN OF BABBLE © Copyright 2008 by Meg Cabot. Reprinted with permission by William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers. All rights reserved.

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