"First she makes me do homework. Then she rips the homework up. Then she gives me sitting lessons. Then she has all my hair dyed a different color and most of it hacked off, makes someone glue tiny surfboards to my fingernails, buys me shoes that cost as much as small animal surgery, and clothes that make me look like Vicky, the captain’s daughter in that old seventies series
The Love Boat. "Well, Dad, I’m sorry, but I’m not Vicky, and I never will be, no matter how much Grandmère dresses me up like her. I’m not going to do great in school, be supercheerful all the time, or have any shipboard romances. That’s Vicky. That’s not me!"
My mom was coming out of her bedroom, putting the last touches on her date wear, when I screamed this. She was wearing a new outfit. It was this sort of Spanish skirt in all these different colors, and a sort of off-the-shoulder top. Her long hair was all over the place, and she looked really great. In fact, my dad headed for the liquor cabinet again when he saw her.
"Mia," my mom said as she fastened on an earring, "nobody is asking you to be Vicky, the captain’s daughter."
"Grandmère is!"
"Your grandmother is just trying to prepare you, Mia."
"Prepare me for what? I can’t go to school looking like this, you know," I yelled.
My mom looked kind of confused. "Why not?"
Oh my God. Why me?
"Because," I said, as patiently as I could, "I don’t want anyone at school finding out I’m the princess of Genovia!"
My mom shook her head. "Mia, honey, they’re going to find out sometime."
I don’t see how. See, I have it all worked out: I’ll only be a princess in Genovia, and since the chances of anybody I know from school ever actually going to Genovia are like none, no one here will ever find out, so I’m totally safe from being branded a freak, like Tina Hakim Baba. Well, at least not the kind of freak who has to ride in a chauffeured limo to school every day and be followed by bodyguards.
"Well," my mom said, after I’d told her all this. "What if it’s in the newspaper?"
"Why would it be in the newspaper?"
My mom looked at my dad. My dad looked away and took a sip from his drink.
You wouldn’t believe what he did next. He put down his drink, then he reached into his pants pocket, took out his Prada wallet, opened it, and asked, "How much?"
I was shocked. So was my mom.
"Phillipe," she said, but my dad just kept looking at me.