Victoria called over later. I rushed her through the kitchen so quickly that she didn’t have time to notice Mum and Dad sitting at the table looking like their world was collapsing around their ears.
Victoria followed me up to my room. I played with the controls of my MP3 player, and managed to pretend that everything was OK for about thirty seconds.
‘What’s wrong, Eva?’ asked Victoria.
‘How do you mean?’ I asked, still half-hoping that I could bluff her.
‘You’re too quiet,’ she said. ‘It’s making me nervous.’
I jumped up, pulled a few books from my shelves, and threw them on to the floor where they landed with a huge clatter.
‘Better?’ I said. ‘Now I’m not quiet any more.’
Now she looked even more nervous.
‘Don’t act crazy,’ she said. ‘I’m serious, Eva. What’s wrong?’
I hesitated.
I wasn’t used to telling people my problems.
Well actually, that’s not really true. The truth is, I wasn’t used to having problems to tell people about.
But I badly needed to tell someone, so I took a deep breath and told Victoria everything.
‘Wow,’ she said in the end.
‘That’s it? Wow?’
She looked embarrassed. ‘What do you want me to say?’
Even though it wasn’t one bit funny, I giggled.
‘I don’t know. Maybe you should say that everything’s going to be OK or something.’
Victoria put on a serious expression.
‘Know what, Eva?’ she said. ‘I think everything’s going to be OK.’
‘But how is it going to be OK?’
She hesitated.
‘How am I supposed to know?’
I made a face and she tried again.
‘Oh, I know,’ she said after a while. ‘Your Dad’s business will start to improve. He’ll have enough money to buy back his car, or maybe he’ll have enough to buy an even better one, and then you can all live happily ever after.’
‘You really think so?’
Suddenly Victoria gave a huge grin.
‘I don’t just think things will get better – I know it. Because I’ve just had a great idea. You don’t have to sit here fretting,’ she said. ‘You can help your dad.’
‘How?’
‘You could try to manage without pocket money for a few weeks. And you could get a job too, and then you could save up money to help to pay off your dad’s debts.’
‘What kind of job?’
‘You could do baby-sitting. You like children and they like you.’
‘And I could get a paper round after school too,’ I said.
‘And you could walk dogs for people who are too busy to do it themselves.’
‘And I could muck out the stables after pony club.’
Suddenly it all seemed possible.
Victoria grabbed a paper and pen from my desk. She made four columns, and wrote lots of figures.
‘See,’ she said in the end, holding the page towards me. ‘If you work really hard, look how much you could earn every week!’
I looked at the page, and knew that it was hopeless. I’d heard Mum and Dad mention numbers that made Victoria’s calculations look pathetic. I crumpled up the page and dropped it onto my bed.
‘It’s no use,’ I said. ‘Even if I walked every dog in the country, and minded every child, and delivered papers twenty-four seven, it wouldn’t make any difference. Dad owes too much money.’
Victoria picked up the page, and threw it into the bin.
‘Sorry,’ she said. ‘But maybe there’s some other way you could help?’
I shook my head.
‘Thanks, Victoria, but this is too big for us. There’s nothing we can do.’
She came over and hugged me, but I pulled away.
‘You can go if you want. I don’t mind if you don’t want to be my friend,’ I said.
Victoria picked up a pillow and whacked me with it. At other times, it would quickly have turned into a full-scale pillow fight, but not now. I turned away, trying not to cry.
Victoria put the pillow down.
‘You idiot,’ she said. ‘I’m not your friend because you’re rich. I’m your friend … well I’m your friend for all kinds of reasons. You’re the most generous person I know. You’re always giving me stuff. And remember the time, years ago, when you gave that little girl up the road your two favourite Barbies because she didn’t have any of her own?’
‘I’d forgotten about that,’ I said.
‘I bet she hasn’t,’ said Victoria quickly. ‘I bet she still loves you like the sister she never had.’
‘She’s got three sisters,’ I said, and we both laughed for a second.
Then Victoria continued.
‘I’m your friend because I like doing stuff with you. I’m your friend because you’re fun to be around.’
I should probably have interrupted her, but how could I?
Who doesn’t like hearing good stuff about themselves?
‘You don’t have to worry, Eva,’ she said. ‘I’ll always like you. I’ll still like you even if you end up being the poorest person in the whole country.’
I looked up at her. Her big, blue eyes were wide open, and I knew for sure she was telling the truth.
‘Thanks, Victoria,’ I said. ‘It’s really nice of you to say all that stuff.’
There was still a problem though. If I was poor, Victoria might still like me – but would I still like myself?
I’d been rich all my life.
It was all I knew.
I was used to being the girl who had everything.
How could I live if I turned into the girl who had hardly anything at all?