Chapter One

God, I wish I were thin.

I wish I were thin, gorgeous, and could get any man I want. You probably think I’m crazy, I mean here I am, sitting at work on my own with a massive double-decker club sandwich in front of me, but I’m allowed to dream aren’t I?

Half an hour to go of my lunchbreak. Half an hour in which to drool over the latest edition of my favourite magazine. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t read the features, why would I? Thousands of words about how to keep your man, how to spice up your sex life, how to spot if he’s being unfaithful are, quite frankly, irrelevant to me. I’ll be completely honest with you here, I’ve never had a proper boyfriend, and the cover lines on the magazines are not the reason I buy them.

If you must know, I buy them, all of them, for the pictures. I sit and I study each glossy photograph for minutes at a time, drinking in the models’ long, lithe limbs, their tiny waists, their glowing golden skin. I have a routine: I start with their faces, eyeing each sculpted cheekbone, heart-shaped chin, and I move slowly down their bodies, careful not to miss a muscle.

I have a few favourites. In the top drawer of my chest of drawers in my bedroom at home is a stack of cut-out pictures of my top super models, preferred poses. Linda’s there for her sex appeal, Christy’s there for her lips and nose, and Cindy’s there for the body.

And before you think I’m some kind of closet lesbian, I’ve already told you the one thing I would wish for if I rubbed a lamp and a gorgeous, bare-chested genie suddenly appeared. If I had one wish in all the world I wouldn’t wish to win the lottery. Nor would I wish for true love. No, if I had one wish I would wish to have a model’s figure, probably Cindy Crawford’s, and I would extend the wish into having and keeping a model’s figure, no matter what I eat.

Because, tough as it is to admit to a total stranger, I, Jemima Jones, eat a lot. I catch the glances, the glares of disapproval on the occasions I eat out in public, and I try my damnedest to ignore them. Should someone, some ‘friend’ trying to be caring and sharing, question me gently, I’ll tell them I have a thyroid problem, or a gland problem, and occasionally I’ll tack on the fact that I have a super-slow metabolism as well. Just so there’s no doubt, just so people don’t think that the only reason I am the size I am is because of the amount I eat.

But you’re not stupid, I know that, and, given that approximately half the women in the country are a size 16 or over, I would ask you to try and understand about my secret binges, my constant cravings, and see that it’s not just about food.

You don’t need to know much about my background, suffice to say that my childhood wasn’t happy, that I never felt loved, that I never got over my parents’ divorce as a young child, and that now, as an adult, the only time I feel really comforted is when I seek solace in food.

So here I am now, at twenty-seven years old, bright, funny, warm, caring and kind. But of course people don’t see that when they look at Jemima Jones. They simply see fat.

They see my enormous breasts – particularly bloody builders, it’s got to the stage where I actively avoid walking past building sites of any description – they see my large, round stomach, the thighs that rub together when I walk.

Unfortunately they don’t see what I see when I look in the mirror. Selective visualization, I think I’ll call it. They don’t see my glossy light brown hair. They don’t see my green eyes, they don’t see my full lips. Not that they’re anything amazing, but I like them, I’d say they were my best features.

They don’t notice the clothes either, because, despite weighing far, far more than I should, I don’t let myself go, I always make an effort. I mean, look at me now. If I were slim, you would say I look fantastic in my bold striped trousers and long tunic top in a perfectly matching shade of orange. But no, because of the size I am people look at me and think, ‘God, she shouldn’t wear such bright colours, she shouldn’t draw attention to herself.’

But why shouldn’t I enjoy clothes? At least I’m not telling myself that I won’t bother shopping until I’m a size 12, because naturally my life is a constant diet.

We all know what happens with diets. The minute you cut out certain foods, the cravings overtake you until you can’t see straight, you can’t think properly, and the only way to get rid of the craving is to have a bite of chocolate, which soon turns into a whole bar.

And diets don’t work, how can they? It’s a multi-million-dollar industry, and if any of the diets actually worked the whole caboodle would go down the toilet.

If anyone knows how easy it is to fail it’s me. The Scarsdale, the High Fibre, the F-Plan, the six eggs a day diet, Slimfast, Weight Watchers, Herbalife, slimming pills, slimming drinks, slimming patches. You name them, I’ve been the idiot that tried them. Although some have, admittedly, been more successful than others.

But I have never, even with the help of all these diets, been slim. I have been slimmer, but not slim.

I know you’re watching me now with pity in your eyes as I finish my sandwich and look furtively around the office to see whether anyone is looking. It’s okay, the coast is clear, so I can pull open my top drawer and sneak out the slab of chocolate hiding at the back. I tear the bright orange wrapper and silver foil off and stuff it into the dustbin beneath my desk, as it’s far easier to hide a slab of dull brown chocolate than the glaring covering that encases it.

I take a bite. I savour the sweet chocolate in my mouth as it melts on my tongue, and then I take another bite, this time furiously chewing and swallowing, hardly tasting a thing. Within seconds the entire bar has disappeared, and I sit there feeling sick and guilty.

I also feel relieved. My bad food for today has just been eaten, which means that there’s none left. Which means that tonight, when I get home and have a salad, which is what I’m now planning to eat for dinner, I can feel good, and I can start my diet all over again.

I finish reading my magazine, then tuck it into my bag, ready to attack the pages with scissors when I’m safely at home in my bedroom, and I glance at the clock and sigh. Another day in my humdrum life, but it shouldn’t be humdrum. I’m a journalist, for God’s sake. Surely that’s a glamorous, exciting existence?

Unfortunately not for me. I long for a bit of glamour, and, on the rare occasions I do glance at the features in the magazines I flick through, I think that I could do better.

I probably could, as well, except I don’t have the experience to write about men being unfaithful, but if I had, Jesus, I’d win awards, because I am, if I say so myself, an expert with words.

I love the English language, playing with words, watching sentences fit together like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle, but sadly my talents are wasted here at the Kilburn Herald.

I hate this job. When I meet new people and they ask what I do for a living, I hold my head up high and say I’m a journalist. I then try to change the subject, for the inevitable question after that is ‘Who do you work for?’ I hang my head low, mumble the Kilburn Herald, and, if I’m really pushed, I’ll hang it even lower and confess that I do the Top Tips column.

Every week I’m flooded with mail from sad and lonely people in Kilburn with nothing better to do than write in with questions like, ‘What’s the best way to bleach a white marbled lino floor that’s turned yellow?’ and ‘I have a pair of silver candlesticks inherited from my grandmother. The silver is now tarnished, any suggestions?’ And every week I sit for hours on the bloody phone ringing lino manufacturers, silver-makers, and, apologizing for taking up their time, ask them for the answers.

This is my form of journalism. Every now and then I have to write a feature, usually a glorified press release, a bit of PR puff that has to be used to fill some space, and oh how I revel in this seemingly unexciting job. I pull the press release to pieces and start again. If my colleagues, the news reporters and feature writers that mill around me, bothered to read what I’d written they would see my masterful turn of phrase.

It’s not as if I haven’t tried to move up in the world of journalism. Every now and then when boredom threatens to render me completely incompetent, I drag myself into the editor’s office and squeeze into a chair, producing these few cuts and asking for a chance. In fact today yet another meeting is due.

‘Jemima,’ says the editor, leaning back in his chair, putting his feet on the table and puffing on a cigar, ‘why would you want to be a news reporter?’

‘I don’t,’ I say, restraining myself from rolling my eyes, because every time I come in here we seem to have the same conversation. ‘I want to write features.’

‘But Jemima, you do such a wonderful job on Top Tips. Honestly, love, I don’t know where we’d be without you.’

‘It’s just that it’s not exactly journalism, I want to write more.’

‘We all have to start at the bottom,’ he says, the beginning of his regular monologue, as I think, yes, and you’re still there, this isn’t the Guardian, it’s the Kilburn bloody Herald.

‘Do you know how I started?’

I mutely shake my head, thinking, yes, you were a bloody tea boy for the Solent Advertiser.

‘I was a bloody tea boy for the Solent Advertiser.’ And on, and on, and on he goes.

The conversation ends the same way too. ‘There may well be a vacancy on features coming up,’ he says with a conspiratorial wink. ‘Just keep on working hard and I’ll see what I can do.’

And so I sigh, thank him for his time and manoeuvre myself out of the narrow chair. Just before I get to the door, the editor says, ‘By the way, you are doing that course aren’t you?’

I turn to look at him in confusion. Course? What course? ‘You know,’ he adds, seeing I don’t know what he’s talking about. ‘Computers, Internet, World Wide Web. We’re going on the line and I want everyone in the office to attend.’

On the line? Doesn’t he mean online, I think as I walk out with a smile on my face. The editor, desperate to show off his street credibility, has once again proved he’s still living in the 1980s.

I march back to my desk, idly wondering why he won’t give me a chance. It’s fine for me to do a stupid bloody computer course, but it’s not fine for me to use my brain. Go figure.

I pass the news reporters, all busy on the phone, my eyes cast downwards as I pass my secret heart-throb. Ben Williams is the deputy news editor. Tall, handsome, he is also the office Lothario. He may not be able to afford Armani, this being, as it is, the Kilburn Herald, but his high street suits fit his highly-toned body, his muscular thighs so perfectly, they may as well be.

Ben Williams is secretly fancied by every woman at the Kilburn Herald, not to mention the woman in the shop where he buys his paper every morning, the woman in the sandwich bar who follows his stride longingly as he walks past every lunchtime. Yeah. Don’t think I hadn’t noticed.

Ben Williams is gorgeous, no two ways about it. His light brown hair is floppy in that perfectly arranged way, casually hanging over his left eye, his eyebrows perfectly arched, his dimples when he smiles in exactly the right place. Of course he is well aware of the effect he has on women, but underneath all the schmooze beats a heart of gold, but don’t tell him I told you. He wouldn’t want anyone to know that.

He is the perfect combination of handsome hunk and vulnerable little boy, and the only woman who isn’t interested in him is Geraldine. Geraldine, you see, is destined for greater things. Geraldine is my only friend at the paper, although Geraldine might not agree with that, because after all we don’t socialize together after work, but we do have little chats, Geraldine perched prettily on the edge of my desk as I silently wish I looked like her.

And we do often have lunch together, frequently with Ben Williams, which is both painful and pleasurable, in equal measure, for me. Pleasurable because I live for those days when he joins us, but painful because I turn into an awkward fourteen-year-old every time he comes near. I can’t even look at him, let alone talk to him, and the only consolation is that when he sits down my appetite disappears.

I suspect he thinks I’m rather sweet, and I’m sure he knows I’ve got this ridiculous crush on him, but I doubt he spends much time thinking about me, not when Geraldine’s around.

Geraldine started here at about the same time as me, and the thing that really kills me is that I started as a graduate trainee, and Geraldine started as a secretary, but who’s the one who gets to write features first? Exactly.

It’s not that I’m completely cynical, but with her gleaming blonde hair in a chic bob, her tiny size 10 figure squeezed into the latest fashions, Geraldine may not have an ounce of talent, but the men love her, and the editor thinks she’s the biggest asset to the paper since, well, since himself.

And the thing that kills me even more is that Geraldine is the one woman here that Ben deems worthy of his attentions. Geraldine isn’t interested, which makes it just about bearable. Sure, in a vaguely detached way she can appreciate Ben’s good looks, his charm, his charisma, but please, he works at the Kilburn Herald, and by that fact alone would never be good enough for Geraldine.

Geraldine only goes out with rich men. Older, richer, wiser. Her current boyfriend has, amazingly, lasted eight months, which is a bit of a record for her, and Geraldine seems serious, which Ben can’t stand. I, on the other hand, love hearing what I think of as ‘Geraldine stories’. Geraldine is the woman I wish I was.

For now my feast is finished, and I settle down in my chair and pick up the phone to call the local veterinary practice.

‘Hello,’ I say in my brightest telephone voice. ‘This is Jemima Jones from the Kilburn Herald. Would you have any idea how to remove the smell of cat spray from a pair of curtains?’

Jemima Jones pulls open the front door and immediately her heart sinks. Every day as she goes home on the bus she crosses her chubby fingers and prays her flatmates will be out, prays for some peace and quiet, a chance to be on her own.

But as soon as the door opens she hears the music blasting from the living room, the giggles that punctuate their conversation, and with sinking heart she pushes her head round the door.

‘Hi,’ I say to the two girls, one lying on each sofa, swapping gossip. ‘Anyone fancy a cup of tea?’

‘Ooh, Mimey, love one,’ they both chorus, and I wince at the nickname they have taken it on themselves to bestow upon me. It’s a nickname I had at school, one I tried to forget because the very mention of it, even now, brings back memories of being the fat girl in the class, the one who was bullied, the one who was always left out.

But Sophie and Lisa, in their vaguely patronizing way, continue to call me Mimey. They may not have known me at school, but they do know I hate the name because I once summoned up enough courage to tell them, but the fact that it irritates only seems to amuse them more.

Do you want to know about Sophie and Lisa? Sophie and Lisa lived in this flat long before I came on the scene, and most of the time I think they were probably far happier, except that they didn’t have a permanent tea-maker in the evenings. Sophie is blonde, a chic, snappy blonde with an inviting smile and come-to-bed eyes. Lisa is brunette, long, tousled locks and a full, pouting mouth.

Meeting them for the first time you’d probably think they were perhaps fashion buyers, or something similarly glamorous, because both have perfect figures, ready smiles and wardrobes of designer clothes, but, and this is the only thing that makes me smile, the truth is far less interesting.

Sophie and Lisa are receptionists. They work together at an advertising agency, and spend their days trying to outscore one another with dates. They have both, in turn, worked through all the men in the agency, most of them eligible, some not so eligible, and now they sit behind their polished steel and beech desk, and hope for a dishy new client to walk through the door, someone to set their hearts alight, their eyelashes afluttering.

It’s not unusual for them to be at home now, but it is unusual for them to be at home all evening. They arrive home at 5.30 p.m. on the dot then lounge around reading magazines, watching television, gossiping, before jumping into hot baths at 7 p.m., hair at 7.45 p.m. and make-up at 8.15 p.m.

Every night they’re out the front door, dressed up to the nines, by 9 p.m. Teetering on the highest heels, they totter out, giggling together, instructing me, and I’m usually either in my room or watching television, to behave myself. Every night they seem to think this is hugely funny, and every night I want to smack them. It’s not that I dislike them, they’re just completely inconsequential, a couple of chattering budgerigars who constantly amaze me with their stupidity.

Off they go to Mortons, Tramp, Embargo. Anonymous places where they pick up anonymous men, who might, if they’re lucky, wine, dine and drive them around in Ferraris before disappearing off into the night.

Don’t be ridiculous, of course I don’t go with them, but, as contemptuous as I am of their lifestyles, a part of me, just a tiny part, would love to have a taste of it too.

But it’s not worth even thinking about. They are thin and beautiful, and I am not. I would never dare suggest going along, and they would never dare ask me. Not that they are nasty, you understand, underneath the glitz and glamour they’re nice girls, but a girl has to keep up appearances, and fat friends, I’m afraid, do not come into the equation.

Their diet, such as it is, seems to consist of bottles of champagne fuelled by lines of cocaine provided by the men they meet. The fridge at home is always empty, unless I’ve been shopping, and in the eight months I’ve lived here I have never seen them eat a proper meal.

Occasionally I’ve seen one of them come in announcing ‘I’m starving!’, and then Sophie, or Lisa, will pull open the door of the fridge and walk into the living room munching on a tomato, or half a slice of pitta bread with a hint of pink – the thinnest spreading of taramasalata I’ve ever seen.

You doubtless think we make an odd trio. You’re probably right. The Italian man in the deli at the end of the road was flabbergasted to discover we lived together. The two beauties he flirts with at every opportunity, and the sad, overweight girl who probably reminds him of his fat mother always dressed in black.

But Mr Galizzi has got it wrong, because for all my faults I’m not sad. Miserable a lot of the time, yes, but those who bother to get under the layers of fat know that not only does there beat a heart of gold, I’m also bloody good fun to be around, providing I’m in the right mood. But nobody really bothers to look for that, nobody really bothers to look beneath the surface appearance.

I stand in the kitchen, dropping three teabags into three oversized Habitat mugs. I pour in the water, add semi-skimmed from the fridge, and out of habit drop in two heaped teaspoons of powdered sweetener for myself. Good girl, I tell myself, good girl for resisting the sugar, nestling quietly yet ominously in the cupboard above the kettle.

I bring the tea into the living room, and Sophie and Lisa cry their thanks, but the lazy cows don’t move from the sofas, don’t clear a space for me to sit down, so what else can I do but hover in the doorway, clasping my burning hot mug and wondering how soon I can go up to my room.

‘How was today?’ I eventually venture, as the girls stare at the television set, some American sit-com featuring perfect-looking people with perfect white teeth and perfect figures.

‘Hmm?’ says Sophie, eyes never leaving the screen, even while I sip my tea.

‘We’re in love,’ offers Lisa, looking at me for the first time this evening. ‘We’ve got the most amazing new client.’

Now Sophie looks interested, and I lower myself to the floor, sitting cross-legged and awkwardly in my role as agony aunt.

‘Honestly, Mimey, this guy was gorgeous, but we don’t know which one of us he fancies.’

Sophie shoots a fake filthy look at Lisa, who smiles broadly.

‘He definitely fancied one of you then?’ I don’t really need to ask the question, because who, after all, would not fancy one of these beautiful girls at first sight?

‘Oh yes,’ said Lisa. ‘After his meeting he stood at the reception desk for ages chatting.’

‘I think he was chatting up Lisa,’ says Sophie.

‘No,’ says Lisa. ‘Don’t be ridiculous, sweetie. He was interested in you.’ But it’s completely bloody obvious she doesn’t mean it, and even I can see that he was mesmerized by Lisa’s pouting lips and tumbling, just-out-of-bed locks.

‘So did he ask you out?’ I ask, wishing for a fleeting second that some handsome stranger would stop at my desk and chat me up. Just once. Just to see what it feels like.

‘No,’ Lisa says ruefully. ‘But he did ask if we’d both be there next week when he comes in for a meeting.’

‘We were sitting here before, planning what to wear,’ says Sophie, turning to Lisa, ‘so, what about the red suit?’

‘I’m just going upstairs,’ I say, feeling well and truly left out as I heave myself to my feet and edge out the door. I’m no longer needed, the courtesies of greeting have been dealt with, and I would never be asked an opinion on clothes, because as far as Sophie and Lisa are aware I haven’t got a clue.

I climb slowly upstairs, stopping at the top to catch my breath, walk into my bedroom and lie on the bed, staring at the ceiling, until my breathing becomes slower, more regular.

I lie there and spin out an elaborate fantasy about what I would wear if I were thin. I would have my hair cut into a super-trendy shaggy style, and perhaps, if I dared, would have a few blonde highlights, just at the front.

I would wear sunglasses a lot of the time. Occasionally they would be big Hollywood film-star tortoiseshell ones, but the rest of the time they would be cool, smart little round glasses, glasses that spelt sophistication, glamour.

I would wear tight cream trousers, lycra crop tops, and the bits of flesh exposed would be taut and tanned. I would, I decide, even look fantastic in a bathrobe. I look at my old white bathrobe hanging on the back of the door, huge, voluminous. I love wrapping it around myself for comfort, trying desperately to ignore the fact that I resemble a balloon with legs.

But when I’m slim I’ll keep that bathrobe. It will, being a man’s bathrobe, gather in folds of fabric around my athletic new body. The sleeves will hang down, obscuring my hands, and I will look cute and vulnerable.

Even first thing in the morning I will look gorgeous. With no make-up and tousled hair, I imagine meeting Mr Perfect, and curling up in an armchair with the bathrobe wrapped around me, exposing just my long, glowing legs, my bony knees, and naturally he will be head over heels in love with me.

I think about this for a while, and then I remember my magazine. I draw it out of my bag and once again study the pictures, reaching into my bedside drawer to pull out the scissors and add the latest models to my collection.

And as I put the scissors back I notice, at the very back of the drawer, a packet of biscuits. My God! I actually forgot about them, I actually forgot about food in the house.

No. I won’t. I’m being good now. But then surely it’s better to eat them, make them disappear, so there’s no more bad food in the house. Surely it’s better to finish them in one go than to eat them slowly and steadily over the course of a week. That way there won’t be any left after tonight, and then I can really start my diet. The one that’s going to work. The one that’s going to fulfil my fantasies.

Yes, I’ll eat them now and start again tomorrow.

And this is how we leave Jemima Jones for the evening, just as we leave her every evening. Sitting on her single bed in her afterthought of a room, gazing at magazines and cramming a packet of biscuits into her mouth.