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The Princess Present

Meg Cabot

  • Princess Diaries, #4.50

     
       ProjectPrincess
       byMEG CABOT
     
       Thursday, March 10, the loft
       I am completely exhausted. I don't know why, when I must already bear the burden of having been born
     
       a princess-even though I was not aware of it until recently-that I also have been cursed with such a trying
     
       family.
       I mean, it is bad enough that they waited until I was nearly fifteen before letting me in on the whole
     
       "oh-by-the-way-you're-a-princess" thing. But now they can't even agree on whether or not I can spend
     
       my Spring Break with the rest of the Albert Einstein High School Gifted and Talented class inWest
     
       Virginia , volunteering for Housing for the Hopeful.
       As if doing good works for the less fortunate was not what being a princessis all about!
       And okay, I can see how my whole Princess-Di-and-the-landmines argument didn't work onGrandmère
     
       - who thinks I spend enough time in my overalls as it is- but my MOM? I just spent an hour impressing
     
       upon my mother Housing for the Hopeful's "theology of the hammer": how partnerships founded on
     
       common ground- for instance, a lot of people from different cultural, religious, and socioeconomic groups
     
       getting together to build a house- bridge theological differences by putting caring into action. I mentioned
     
       how everyone, no matter how uneducated, can use a hammer, turning it into an instrument that manifests
     
       peace and love.
       My pregnant mom- who was lying on her bed watching Stolen Women: Captured Hearts on the Lifetime
     
       Movie Channel with a carton ofHäagen-Dazs chocolate-chocolate-chip ice cream balanced on her
     
       enormous belly (even though she is supposed to be limiting her saturated fat intake to less than twenty
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       grams daily due to her more-than-thirty-pound weight gain in the past half year) - just looked at me and
     
       asked, "Mia, are you in a cult?"
       OH, MY GOD! Only the extreme hormonal imbalance my mother is going through right now could
     
       make her believe that my working to provide affordable housing for the poor so that they can live in
     
       dignity and safety is in any way comparable to religious fanaticism.
       When I mentioned that out loud, however, my mother shrieked, "Frank! Come here, quick! Mia's in a
     
       cult!"
       Thank God Mr.Gianini came into the bedroom- he'd been in the living room, practicing his drums- and
     
       explained to my mother in a calm, reasonable voice that Housing for the Hopeful is not a cult, that it is a
     
       nonprofit, nondenominational organization dedicated to eliminating substandard housing and
     
       homelessness worldwide. He also said that he himself had volunteered to escort students from Albert
     
       Einstein the past five Spring Breaks, and that the only reason he hadn't gone this year was on account of
     
       my mom being pregnant with his unborn child, the sex of which we do not know because my mom says if
     
       she knows it's a boy she won't have any incentive to push, men being the reason we even need
     
       organizations like Housing for the Hopeful. Because male politicians make such bad decisions when they
     
       are elected to public office, such as starting expensive and unnecessary wars before making sure all their
     
       constituents have decent housing first, etc.
       So then I pointed out to my mom that Tina Hakim Baba, who isn't even inGifted and Talented, and
     
       whose father owns a bunch of oilwells and is always worried about Tina getting kidnapped by some rival
     
       oil baron's henchmen, has been given special permission to go. And that LillyMoscovitz , resident school
     
       genius and my best friend, is going. Ditto her boyfriend, BorisPelkowski , violin virtuoso and mouth
     
       breather.
       Then I added that my own boyfriend, Lilly's older brother Michael, is going, as well. I tried not to look
     
       too eager as I stressed this last piece of information. I mean, really, there's no reason to belabor the fact
     
       that Michael and I would be together, without parental supervision, in the wilds ofWest Virginia for five
     
       whole days. I was pretty sure my mom wouldn't be too thrilled if she realized this was the primary reason
     
       for my wanting to go. I tried to make it sound like my primary reason for my wanting to go was my desire
     
       to help those less fortunate than me.
       Which is completely, 100 percent true.But also...well, I sort of want to make out with my boyfriend
     
       without having his parents or my mother or stepfather or grandmother barge in on us.
       I stressed to my mom that the trip is totally a school sanctioned outing, and would be fully supervised by
     
       Dr. Juan Gonzales, the director of the Northeast Division of Housing for the Hopeful; Albert Einstein
     
       High School's principal, Principal Gupta; Mrs. Hill from my Gifted and Talented class (not that I am
     
       gifted or talented, but whatever); Mademoiselle Klein from French; and Mr.Wheeton , the track coach
     
       and Health and Safety teacher.
       Oh, and that-hello-the Appalachian Mountains are only, like, seven hours away from Manhattan by bus,
     
       and the whole trip is only for five days, so what is the BIG DEAL????
       But my mom still looked a little skeptical...
       ...until I mentioned thatGrandmère had declared that my wanting to go at all was entirely Mom's fault,
     
       for enrolling me in such a hippy-dippy school in the first place.
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       When I told Mom that, she got thislook in her eye, and went, "Your grandmother said that? You know
     
       what, Mia? You can go. Now get out of the way, you're blocking Janine Turner."
       It's a wonder I'm as well adjusted as I am, if you think about everything I have to put up with.
       Well, whatever. After all that arguing, I'M GOING TOWEST VIRGINIA !!!!!!!!! I must summon my
     
       last ounce of energy to tell my one true love of our impending bliss:
       FTLOUIE: Michael! My mom said I can go!
       LINUXRULZ: Oh, hey, that's great.
       Oh, hey, that's great?That's IT? This is the full extent of Michael's appreciation for all my hard work
     
       and whining?Oh, hey, that's great? Maybe it just hasn't sunk in yet.
       FTLOUIE: ToWest Virginia ! Where we will be alone AT LAST!
       LINUXRULZ: Well, not really.Because everybody else in G and T is going to be there, too.
       Oh, my God. This is going to be harder than I thought. Michael is obviously not thinking along the same
     
       lines I am concerning this trip. He is probably looking forward to doing some good for the less fortunate.
     
       Which I am too, of course.
       But I am also looking forward to making out with my boyfriend under theWest Virginia stars....
       Must work on planting seed of romance in him, so it can come to fruition in time for major make-out
     
       session in our nation's thirty-fifth state!!!!!!!!
     
       Friday, March 11, Homeroom
       Lilly is so excited about theWest Virginia trip she can't talk about anything else. But she is excited for a
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       different reason than I am. She is bringing her video camera, and she is going to tape the trip and show it
     
       later on her public access cable television program,Lilly Tells It Like It Is. She says it is going to be a
     
       searing commentary on the inadequacies of our public housing system.
       "You should write something about it, Mia", Lilly just said to me. "You know, something allegorical, like
     
       about how building a house compares to building an analytic framework for government policy of a small
     
       European principality likeGenovia . I bet anything they'd put it in the school paper."
       But really Lilly was just rubbing it in that, ever since I discovered that my only talent is that I can write
     
       things in a semi-entertaining manner and joined the school paper,The Atom, all the editor has let me write
     
       is the weekly cafeteria menu, since I'm a freshman and I haven't Paid My Dues.
       But even if Icould get LeslieCho to print my story, it's not like I actuallyknow anything about building
     
       houses. It's not like I am going to be able to contribute anything to the Albert Einstein High School
     
       student construction team, considering what atalentless freak I am- except maybe for the whole writing
     
       thing. But what good, under circumstances such as these, is being able towrite? It would be so much
     
       cooler if I were skilled at using a lathe, or something actuallyuseful to society.
       Maybe I should just face the fact that the only thing I can do moderately well is write, and possibly order
     
       Chinese food, and that is highly unlikely that I have some kind of hidden talent for hanging drywall and
     
       that I am going to discover it while building houses for the homeless over Spring Break.
       Although- I am sorry- but if I were a poor person, I would so rather have me than BorisPelkowski build
     
       my house. Even if the alternative wasno house, I would not want Boris building my house. I know Boris
     
       is the most gifted person in our whole Gifted and Talented class, but since during a school orchestra
     
       concert Boris went into the third-floor stairwell so he could practice his solo in private and he ended up
     
       locking himself out and had to bang on the steel doors for hours before anyone found him. I mean, the
     
       concert had already ended by then, and everybody had gone home. It was lucky the custodian was still
     
       on duty or Boris might have been trapped in that stairwell all weekend. Without food or water, he might
     
       have died, and on Monday when everybody came back to school, all they'd have found was this
     
       skeleton clutching a violin and wearing a sweater tucked into its pants.
       But that's just my opinion.
     
       Friday, March 11, Lunch meeting of theAlbertEinsteinHigh School Housing for the Hopeful Brigade
       I am starting to have grave reservations aboutWest Virginia , and not just because Michael hasn't once
     
       asked me if I am planning on bringing my cherryChapStick (his favorite flavor). I mean, I know there are
     
       poor people there and all, but it is still inAMERICA , for crying out loud.
       But Dr. Gonzales just gave us this list of things we need to bring with us, and Lilly and Michael and Boris
     
       and Tina and I are just sitting here, reading it, going,Hello , is this a joke? Like, what is a five-gallon solar
     
       shower bag? Where would you even buy one of those? And what is with the potassium-rich, non-melting
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       snack items? What are THOSE? What are we going to need potassium for? Don't they have grocery
     
       stores inWest Virginia ? I mean, can't we just go to the deli and buy a banana?
       Other things we are supposed to bring include:
       Tool belts or cloth nail pouch
       Hammer with claw
       Gloves for handling rough lumber, hammers, shovels, etc
       25-to-30-foot tape measure
       Utility knife
       Wire cutter and/or tin snips to cut bailing and chicken wire
       Small nail puller or cat's claw
       Carpenter's pencil
       Smallsquare : combo, tri, or carpenter's
       Small (short shank), sharp handsaw
       Plumb line (optional)
       Um, hello.I am a princess. I don't have any of these things. Need a scepter? I'm your girl. Nail puller?
     
       Not so much.
       And hello, you would think they would give us some lessons on, like, gypsum board or whatever, but
     
       no. Instead, Dr. Gonzales just gave us these release forms that our parents are supposed to sign, saying
     
       that they won't hold Housing for the Hopeful responsible in the event that we are maimed or killed on the
     
       trip!!!!
       Maimed or killed!!!!!
       Tina Hakim Baba just raised her hand and wanted to know why the handout says we need to bring a
     
       week's supply of wet wipes with us. Dr. Gonzales says because on cloudy days our five-gallon solar
     
       shower bags might not warm up enough and so we should be prepared either to take a cold shower or
     
       use wet wipes to clean ourselves.
       Um, excuse me, but do wet wipes even work onb.o .? How am I going to make out with my boyfriend if
     
       I SMELL?????
       Ireally started panicking when Dr. Gonzales asked us all to turn to page 2 of the handout. That's
     
       because page 2 said:
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       · Drink plenty of sports drinks, Gatorade, or cranberry juice the week prior to departing. Drink
     
       the Gatorade provided to you at the worksite to raise your electrolyte and potassium levels.
       · There are a great many flying insects in this climate. You will need insect repellant.
       · Don't pet the local animals since they often carry diseases. Wash your hands immediately if
     
       you do.
       · Don't drink the shower water or water from the local spigots.
       Don't drink the water or pet the animals?Insect repellant?Gatorade?
       Oh, my God, what have I gotten myself into????????
     
       Friday, March 11, princess lessons, the Plaza Hotel
       Grandmèrecan't believe Mom is letting me go toWest Virginia . She says she doesn't know who's
     
       crazier, Mom for letting me go, or me for wanting to go in the first place. She read over the release forms
     
       and told me she hoped I'd have fun in boot camp.
       "It's not boot camp,Grandmère ," I told her. "It's a nonprofit, nondenominational organization
     
       dedicated to eliminating substandard housing and homelessness worldwide."
       "Then why,"Grandmère wanted to know, "does it say here that you need to rise every morning at six
     
       A.M?"
       "Because," I said, snatching the forms back from her, "that's probably when they serve breakfast."
       Grandmèreshook her head. "The last time I got up at six A.M. was when the Germans were shelling the
     
       palace, back during the war. Nothing short of anti-aircraft fire should get a princess out of bed before
     
       eight. Anything earlier is indecent. It is not too late, Amelia, for you to join me inPalm Springs , where I
     
       am going to relax from the stress of our daily princess lessons. It isn't easy, you know, teaching a young
     
       girl all she needs to be regent, day in, day out. Are you sure you don't want to come with me? There's
     
       no need to wear insect repellant in the desert. And there won't be any wet wipes. Just the beautiful
     
       crystal waters of the hotel pool, and Belgian waffles from room service..."
       "No!" I yelled, because the waffle part sounded really tempting. I bet nobody at the spa where
     
       Grandmère is going ha to worry about their potassium level. "I am going to spend my Spring Break doing
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       something good for mankind."And, hopefully, making out with my boyfriend. Oh, yes, and discovering
     
       that I am a skilled shingle layer. Hey, you never know. "Remember Prince William? He spent a YEAR
     
       after high school inChile helping the poor. I'm just going toWest Virginia , and only for five days. I think I
     
       can gold out for five days of getting up at six A.M."
       Grandmèrejust took a sip of her sidecar and pettedRommel , her semi-bald toy poodle.
       "Suityourself ," she said. "But I hope this doesn't mean you are going to start going about in native
     
       wear, like those bulky Chilean sweaters Prince William started wearing. You know how wool gives you
     
       a rash."
       I toldGrandmère they don't wear sweaters inWest Virginia , and she asked what they do wear, then,
     
       and I had to admit I didn't know. That's when she stabbed a finger at me and went, "Ah ha! I'll tell you
     
       what they wear inWest Virginia ! Gunnysacks! That's what they wear inWest Virginia !"
       I toldGrandmère that contrary to what she might believe, the Depression is over and nobody wears
     
       gunnysacks anymore.
       But I don't know. I mean, what about that movieNell , starring Jodie Foster, where she played that deaf
     
       mute who lived way out in the woods and was always going on about "dancin'een theweend "? I am
     
       pretty sure that was set inWest Virginia .Or one of theCarolinas . Close enough. And she was wearing a
     
       gunnysack.Or a housedress at the very last.
       Oh, my God, I hope they don't expect us to dress like the natives in order to blend in! I don't own a
     
       housedress! I don't even think you can buy one of those inNew York !
     
       Friday, March 11, 11 p.m., the loft
       I was so worked up about all the gunnysacks and Gatorade that when I got home I asked Mr.Gianini if
     
       there was something he maybe wasn't telling me about his past trips with Housing for the Hopeful. Mr. G
     
       has never actually been toWest Virginia before, but he went toMexico and someTexas border towns
     
       with H for the H. He went, "Really, Mia, I can't say enough positive things about the experience. It really
     
       taught me to appreciate all that I have."
       Which is fine, but didn't really answer my question about the gunnysacks.He did say I could borrow his
     
       hammer, though.
       So I went online and instant messaged Michael, because after all, he is my heart's desire, and the only
     
       person on earth who can soothe me when my soul turns fractious as an injured pony.
       But even though he is my reason for living and all of that, Michael was totally unhelpful about the whole
     
       gunnysack thing.
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       LINUXRULZ: Mia, the people we are going to build homes for are poor, not demented. I am sure they
     
       are going to be wearing something other than bags. I mean, it's not going to be like inDeliverance .
       I have never seenDeliverance because I don't like movies where things jump out at people from behind
     
       trees, but I pretended like I had, because I want Michael to think I am mature for my age. After all, he is
     
       a senior and I am only a freshman. I have to do what I can to keep him from remembering I am only
     
       fourteen and three quarter years old.
       FTLOUIE: I know. But I mean, did you ever readChristy ?
       This is kind of a stupid question to ask a guy, since the only guy I know who has readChristy is my
     
       neighbor Ronnie, who is now a girl.But whatever. Michael is way well read, for a member of what my
     
       mom likes to call the cult of patriarchy.
       FTLOUIE: becauseChristy takes place in theSmokeyMountains , which are practically the same as
     
       theAppalachians , and everybody in it gets typhoid because of the unsanitary conditions, including
     
       Christy, and I am just saying, maybe that's why we're not supposed to touch the animals....
       LINUXRULZ: Mia, stop worrying so much. If it were really unsafe, do you think Principal Gupta would
     
       be going?
       FTLOUIE: Principal Gupta does some very strange things sometimes. Remember when she agreed to
     
       play OfficerKrupke in the drama club's production of West Side Story?
       LINUXRULZ: Mia, instead of obsessing over the possibility of contracting typhoid and/or having to
     
       wear a gunnysack, why don't you try to keep in mind the most important aspect of this whole trip?
       I thought maybe he meant the fact that we were going to get to make out beneath theWest Virginia stars.
     
       But since that seemed unlikely, given our last few conversations, I decided he must mean the whole thing
     
       where I might possibly find out that I am good at something besides recording every single last detail of
     
       my existence in this diary, which is not exactly a worthwhile skill.
       But when I realized he couldn't possibly mean that, because I hadn't mentioned my secret fantasy that it
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       turns out I am an excellent plasterer, or whatever. So instead I wrote:
       FTLOUIE: You mean the part where we are helping the poor to self-actualize?
       LINUXRULZ: No, I mean the part where you and I get to spend five whole days together without any
     
       interference from your grandmother.
       Oooooh! So heis catching on, after all!!!
       Michael's right. Who cares about typhoid when there'skissing ?
     
       Saturday, March 12, 5:30 a.m., on the bus toWest Virginia
       Well, the kissing hasn't started yet.
       That's because before we'd even gotten to the Lincoln Tunnel, Boris got carsick and had to throw up in
     
       a paper bag, and Lilly said no way was she sitting by him anymore, and told Michael to move so she
     
       could sit by me, and when Michael said no, Boris threw up some more, only this time he missed the
     
       paper bag, and it went all over the floor, and Principal Gupta and Mrs. Hill had to clean it up, but they
     
       didn't do a very good job on account of not having any paper towels or anything, so we all had to move
     
       to the back of the bus, away from vomit fumes, and Michael was the only one who volunteered to stay
     
       with Boris and make sure that next time he threw up in the bag.
       My boyfriend is so cool. Not only is he incredibly smart and a very talented musician and skilled with
     
       computers and an excellent kisser and all of that, but he is also extremely compassionate. Maybe he will
     
       be a doctor someday, and discover a cure for cancer. I certainly hope so, because that's the only way
     
       theGenovian Parliament is going to approve me marrying him.
       I am not worried, though. Michael is a man among men, and will doubtlessly do something extraordinary
     
       with his life that will win the hearts of theGenovian people, just as he has won mine. If only I had as many
     
       useful talents as Michael does. It would be nice if I could play the guitarand knew html.
       Anyway, even though I offered to sit up in the front of the bus with Michael and help him pass paper
     
       bags to Boris, he said, just like Daniel Day-Lewis inThe Last of the Mohicans, "No, Mia, save
     
       yourself," so now Lilly, Tina, and I are all crammed into one seat until we get to the first rest stop on the
     
       N.J. Turnpike and the bus driver can give the floor a good hosing. Principal Gupta says as soon as we
     
       pull over, she is going to buy some Dramamine and make Boris take it. Boris says Dramamine makes him
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       drowsy and robs him of his personality.
       I can't wait.
       Anyway, Lilly has already started filming. She got a very good close-up of the vomit. She started filming
     
       at five A.M., which is the time everybody had to be atAlbertEinsteinHigh School with all of our stuff in
     
       order to catch the bus. Everybody had a lot of stuff, especially considering that this trip will only last five
     
       days.
       The person with the least luggage is Lars. Even though I lobbied very hard not to be accompanied on
     
       this trip by my royal bodyguard, m dad insisted. He said he wasn't thrilled about my going in the first
     
       place- Dad wants me to spend every vacation I get inGenovia - but since Mom had already said I could,
     
       he wouldn't contradict her. He wouldn't, however, allow me to go without protection from would-be
     
       kidnappers. All of my arguing that Tina was getting to gosans personal security system ­ Mr. Hakim
     
       Baba has no enemies, it turns out, in West Virginia, and soWahim gets a well-earned vacation...only he's
     
       not as happy about it as you would think, since it means Lars gets Mademoiselle Klein all to
     
       himself...well, and Mr.Wheeton ­ seemed to fall on deaf ears. Lars was going, my dad said, and that's
     
       it.
       At least Lars travels light. All he brought is one small duffel bag. I asked Lars where his sleeping bag and
     
       pillow were, and he just smiled. I hope he does not think he is sharing mine. I love my bodyguard, but not
     
       that much.
       Anyway, Lilly is filming everything on the bus so we won't forget a thing. She took a good long shot of
     
       the sign hanging over the bus driver's head. The sign says:
       I AM YOUR BUS DRIVER,CHARLIE.
       SAFE, COURTEOUS, AND RELIABLE.
       PLEASE STAY BEHIND THE YELLOW LINE.
       While we were stuck in traffic in front of the Lincoln Tunnel, Lilly asked us what we thought Charlie
     
       would do if Principal Gupta suddenly threw herself across the yellow line.
       "Because Charlie is safe and reliable," Tina said, "he would probably go, `Miss! Stay behind the yellow
     
       line!'
       "Yes," I agreed. "But because he is also courteous, he'd probably put it like, `Please, miss! Stay behind
     
       the yellow line! Thank you!'"
       For some reason, this made us laugh until we felt like throwing up ourselves.
       Only six and a half more hours to go until we get there.
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       Saturday, March 12,10 a .m., somewhere along theNew Jersey Turnpike
       Michael and I are finally sitting together, but we are not making out yet, because Michael does not
     
       believe in public displays of affection, because, as he says, Some Things Are Private.
       Which I fully understand and appreciate.I mean, it is not like I want him to go aroundFrenching me in the
     
       caf , or whatever.
       But you know,holdinghands wouldn't hurt.
       On the other hand, it is sort of uncomfortable to hold hands for any extended period of time. Mine
     
       always starts getting all sweaty. My hand, I mean. Michael's doesn't. His hands are never sweaty.
     
       Maybe on account of him being a musician and all.
       Maybe I am suffering from a genetic mutation. I mean, on top of my flat-chestednessand
     
       lack-of-useful-skill-ism. Maybe I've got an extra-sweaty-hand chromosome, or something.
       Anyway, Charlie, being safe, courteous, and reliable, hosed down Boris barf when we got to the Molly
     
       Pitcher Service Area, and then we all got back on board, and with the windows down, you really can't
     
       smell it that much. Principal Gupta gave Boris a good dose of Dramamine, and now he is unconscious
     
       with his head lolling against Lilly's shoulder. I guess he wasn't kidding about motion-sickness medicine
     
       causing him to lose his personality. We should give him some every day, if you ask me.
       Still, even though Boris spent most of the beginning of the trip barfing, that hasn't stopped him and Lilly
     
       from being the first couple to get caught making out. The were first spotted sucking face in the Roy
     
       Rogers at the rest stop, and a sharp rebuke from Principal Gupta caused them to spring apart.
       But just recently I looked toward the back of the bus, and they were at it again! Those two can't keep
     
       their hands off each other!!!
       I wish Michael would look back there, and realize maybe alittle PDA couldn't hurt...
       Oh, my God, I am so tired. And my hair smells a little like Boris's barf. I can't wait until we get there,
     
       and I can wash my hair, and then all the kissing can start.
     
       Saturday, March 12, 5 p.m., Hominy Knob, WestVirginia
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       Oh...my...God.
       We're here. We finally arrived, and Charlie unloaded our bags, and then we had to pick them up and
     
       carry them to...
       OUR TENTS!!!!!!!!!
       YES!!!!!!!!! TENTS!!!!!! WE ARE SUPPOSED TO STAY IN TENTS!!!!!!!!!!!!
       I realized, of course, that we'd be sleeping intents, I saw pictures of them in the brochure.
       But the tents in the brochure had, like, wooden floors, and were raised off the ground. These tents have
     
       no wood supports at all. And they are RIGHT ON THE GROUND. WHERE THERE ARE ALSO
     
       SNAKES.
       I have never slept in a tent in my life. Seriously, I am not trying to be a princess about this, but, I mean,
     
       what about bears? And don't tell me there are no bears around here, because we are SURROUNDED
     
       by woods, there is NOTHING but woods in West Virginia, and yeah, Principal Gupta keeps going on
     
       about how beautiful it is, and look at the mountains and smell the clean, fresh air, but hello????
     
       BEARS!!!!!!!!
       And didn't she ever seeThe Blair Witch Project? I mean, I will admit I watched that entire movie with
     
       my eyes closed, but it SOUNDED really scary, and I believe it took place, um, where? OH YES, THE
     
       WOODS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
       This is it. We are all so dead.
       Lars says not to worry, that he will make sure no wild animals or serial killers get into the tent Lilly and
     
       Tina and I are sharing. But I don't know. That's what the people inThe Blair Witch Project did, and
     
       look what happened to them! All they founded of that one guy was his finger! I do not want to find
     
       Lars's finger! I do not want to loseLars, he is an excellent bodyguard with a good sense of humor. Plus
     
       he doesn't mind when Michael and I make out. Do you know how rare that is in a bodyguard????
       Anyway,West Virginia itself isn't so bad. So far we haven't met one person wearing a gunnysack or
     
       playing the banjo in a menacing way. Everybody looks...well, just like people inNew York . We haven't
     
       met our "host family" yet. The way it works is, we are all split into groups, and then each group is
     
       assigned to a host family, and then they work on that family's house. I was very scared about the group
     
       thing, like, that I might get assigned to a group away from all my friends, where I wouldn't know
     
       anybody. But fortunately, you get to pick your own group. So Michael, Lilly, Boris, Tina, Mrs. Hill, Lars,
     
       me, Dr. Gonzales, and this one boy, PeterTsu , who is a junior and is on the wrestling team, are all in one
     
       group.
       I feel kind of sorry for our host family, to tell you the truth. Because I mean, except for Dr. Gonzales and
     
       possibly PeterTsu ­ who I don't know anything about ­ none of us has ever built anything before. Some
     
       of us have never even held a hammer before.
       Our host family's house has a fair chance of ending up looking like complete crap.
       Oh, God, there's the bell. We are supposed to gather in the "dining tent" now for orientation and
     
       supper. I am having grave reservations about all of this. I mean, besides the tents and the whole thing
     
       where we are probably going to end up ruining our host family's chances of getting decent housing, there
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       is the fact that they have separated the girls' tents from the boys' tents ­ which is going to make it VERY
     
       difficult to find a place private enough to suit Michael's sensibilities for any make-out session that might lie
     
       in our future ­ with ­ I shudder to write it ­ Port-O-Lets!
       Yes!!!!! That is right!!!!!! There are not even any working indoor toilets ­ at least until we install our
     
       hostfamily's . We have to use Port-O-Lets!
       And don't even get me started on the whole shower thing. The need for solar shower bags came into
     
       startling clarity when I saw the shower area, which is just a bunch oftarped -off stalls with hooks to hang
     
       your shower bag from.
       It looks like it's going to be wet wipes the whole way, as it is drizzling steadily and there is not a hint of
     
       sun.
       And you can't wash the smell of barf out of your hair with wet wipes. Believe me, I tried.
       The bell again.Got to go.Must find a place to hide this journal so the bears/serial killers/ Blair Witch
     
       won't find it while I am gone.
       I really should try to get used to all this, because if I ever want to volunteer with Greenpeace and help
     
       save the whales, the living conditions could be even worse.
     
       Saturday, March 12, 9 p.m., Hominy Knob, WestVirginia
       We met our host family. They are Angie and ToddHarmeyer and their two children, three-year-old
     
       Mitchell and two-year-old Stefano. I swear that is the baby's name.Stefano. There is another baby on
     
       the way, too. Mrs.Harmeyer is due in a month, though if you ask me, she looks like she could blow at
     
       any moment.
       Mrs.Harmeyer has a job sweeping up hair at a beauty salon in downtown Hominy Knob, which consists
     
       of a grocery store, a credit union, a hardware store, a consignment shop, and the beauty salon. Mr.
     
       Harmeyer has been unemployed since the local tire factory burned down. Both Mr. and Mrs.Harmeyer
     
       are very excited about their new house. They have been living in a trailer since they got married. Mitchell
     
       is especially excited about the prospect of having his own room. Right now, he has to sleep in the same
     
       bed as his mom and dad.
       After we met theHarmeyers , and we were all standing in line to get our dinner ­ salad, corn on the cob,
     
       sloppyjoes (being vegetarian, I just took a bun of some of the vegetables), string beans, and cherry
     
       cobbler, for desert ­ Mrs.Harmeyer asked me if it was true about my being a princess and the tall guy
     
       behind me being my bodyguard, and I said it was true.
       "Well,whatchadoin 'spendin ' your Spring Break around here, then, if you're a princess?" Mrs.
     
       Harmeyer wanted to know. "If I were a princess, I'd spend my Spring Break inCabo San Lucas,ridin '
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       on one of them jet skis."
       I explained to Mrs.Harmeyer that I had been compelled to join Housing for the Hopeful instead of
     
       spending my Spring Break riding on jet skis out of a keen sense of civic duty and a desire to learn new
     
       skills.
       Mrs.Harmeyer just looked at me funny and went, "What?"
       So then I told Mrs.Harmeyer I was there to make out with my boyfriend. She looked really interested
     
       then and wanted to know which of the guys in line was mine, and when I pointed to Michael she went, "
     
       Ooooeee, he's a looker," which filled me with internal pride but also made me feel like smacking her.
       So then I thought I had better change the subject, and asked Mrs.Harmeyer if she knew the sex of her
     
       unborn child yet. Mrs.Harmeyer surprised me by saying she didn't want to know, since if it was another
     
       boy, she knew she'd never push.
       I was shocked to hear a woman in West Virginia echoing the exact same thing my mom back in New
     
       York City is always saying, and I asked Mrs.Harmeyer if she, like my mom, was an opponent to the cult
     
       of the patriarchy, to which Mrs.Harmeyer replied, "Gosh, no, I just want somebody I can buyBarbies
     
       for, instead of G.I. Joes."
       After informing Mrs.Harmeyer that I fully understood her feelings, I took my food and went and sat
     
       down by Michael. Lilly was at out table, too, filming everyone. She filmed all the Hominy Knob locals
     
       who filed curiously past our table, pausing occasionally to ask me where my tiara was ( answer: "Back in
     
       New York"), what it felt like to be a princess ("Okay") and why on earth I'd come to Hominy Knob
     
       ("To achieve self-actualization through selflessly helping others"). I didn't think the locals ­ aside from
     
       Mrs.Harmeyer ­ would appreciate hearing about my desire to suck face with my boyfriend.
       After dinner, Lilly declared she had enough footage for a miniseries, let alone a single episode of her
     
       show. She decided she was going to have to do a month-long tribute to Hominy Knob on her cable
     
       access show. She decided to call the documentary "Sour Mash and Medicaid: The Failure of the Federal
     
       Government to Ease the Burden of the Rural Poor."
       It will, she says, bring the current administration to its knees.
       After dinner, Dr. Gonzales talked for a while, but I didn't pay much attention because I was thinking
     
       about the Port-O-Lets. Now I know why we'd been instructed to bring flashlights. There are no lights in
     
       the Port-O-Lets, so if you have to go in the middle of the night, you have to use your flashlight to see by.
     
       What's more, there's no telling what else might be sharing that Port-O-Lets with you. I mean, if you ask
     
       me, it's the perfect hangout for spiders, possibly black widow spiders whose bite can be deadly.At least
     
       according to the Discovery Channel.
       I am definitely bringing my insect repellant with me to the bathroom every time I have to go.
       It was after Dr. Gonzales's long, boring talk that things really started to look up. That's because, walking
     
       back to our tents, Michael took my hand (it was dark out, so no one saw), then pulled me behind a tree
     
       and started kissing me in a highly romantic manner. It definitely took my mind off the Port-O-Lets for a
     
       little while. Good thing I had my cherryChapStick handy.
       But then Michael was like, "What's that smell?" and I sniffed and realized he was talking about my hair,
     
       whichstill smelled like Boris barf.
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       Why didn't I bring anyFebreze with me? WHY?
       Anyway, the barf smell kind of ruined the mood. Besides, you couldn't even see any stars, it was
     
       drizzling so much.
       Oh, no.The "lights out" bell. We have to turn out our flashlights now, and go to sleep. I don't know how
     
       anyone can be expected to sleep out here in the wilderness. There are all sorts of weird noises, like
     
       hooting owls and crickets and stuff. At least we don't have to worry about bears, though. Lars opened
     
       his duffel bag and pulled out a pup tent, complete with an inflatable air mattress, and set it up right in front
     
       of our door. While this will make going to the Port-O-Lets in the middle of the night slightly difficult- and
     
       will also, sadly, discourage any nocturnal visitations from boys ­ it makes me happy to know that Lars is
     
       out there with hisGlock9 mm and hisnunchaks ...even if he, like the rest of us, can't sleep due to the
     
       incredibly noisy owls.
       I missManhattan already. What I wouldn't give to be lulled to sleep by the dulcet tones of a car alarm.
     
       Sunday, March 13, Noon, the dining tent
       Oh, my God, every inch of me is sore. It is no joke trying to sleep on the ground. And the sides of our
     
       tents kept flapping all night, and I thought it was the Blair Witch trying to get in.
       Plus when we woke up, everything was drenched with dew.DEW. There is no dew inNew York City .
     
       Pigeons, maybe.Lots of rats.But no dew.
       Dew is my new enemy. Although thanks to it, my hair no longs smells like Boris's barf. Now it just
     
       smells like...dew.
       It doesn't help that I've done all morning is hold up wood frames. Apparently I am hopeless at
     
       hammering, sawing, drilling, and pouring cement. Good thing I came all the way toWest Virginia to find
     
       that out.
       So I was in charge of holding up the woods frames while other people hammered them in, a task that
     
       requires no skill whatsoever, just plenty of upper body strength... which I am, of course, lacking, but I
     
       am not about to admit it to anyone.At least, not out loud.
       Still, those frames are HEAVY! I mean, building houses is not easy.
       Thank God for Michael, Lars, Dr. Gonzales, and PeterTsu . I don't mean to be sexist, but at this point in
     
       the building stage, the guys are definitely doing a better job than girls ­ although Tina has proven to be
     
       pretty adept with the nail gun (lucky duck). I am pretty sure she is just doing it to look good in front of
     
       PeterTsu , who has surprisingly shapely forearms ­ as Lilly was quick to point out and film for posterity.
     
       Peter is almost as hot asMulan's boyfriend, and he has the added bonus of not being a cartoon character.
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       Nobody could be hotter than my boyfriend, though. I just wish it were sunnier out so Michael would get
     
       all sweaty and have to take his shirt off. That would make building houses WAY fun.
       Well, that and actually knowing I was contributing to its construction in some meaningful way.
       Anyway, our house is going up more quickly than anyone else's, despite our great handicap: Boris.
     
       While I am in no real way helping to build our house, at least I am not making things worse, the way
     
       Boris is. So far he has had two asthma attacks thanks to all the sawdust, and dropped a cinderblock on
     
       his foot (it will be all right, it is just bruised, Dr. Gonzales says). We have now assigned him to keeping
     
       Mitchel and Stefano from wandering too close to the chain saw, and refilling everybody's Gatorade
     
       containers.
       Oh, yeah. I know why Gatorade is so important now. Building a house is VERY tiring. You have to
     
       replace your electrolytes constantly.
       Mr.Harmeyer says beer is better for replacing electrolytes than Gatorade, but Dr. Gonzales pointed out
     
       to him that alcohol dehydrates the body very quickly, and after that, Mr.Harmeyer shut up.
       Lilly, who has been filming our progress with the framework of the house, insists that this new
     
       documentary is going to rival her most celebrated work of all, "Travels With Lana's Coccyx Bone"
     
       (witch Lilly shot, using somewhat crude animation, after Lana Weinberger's coccyx bone broke off and
     
       disappeared into her bloodstream, thanks to a fall from a badly spotted basket toss. "Travels" showed
     
       Lana's coccyx bone moving through Lana's body, carrying a little suitcase and visiting with the other
     
       bones and stuff).
       Lunch is salad, cornbread, mashed potatoes, and pork tenderloin sandwiches. I am just having salad and
     
       mashed potatoes. I am sick of corn already, though I understand that it is a staple of theWest Virginia
     
       diet, like bagels and lox are inNew York .
     
       Sunday, March 13, 9 p.m., the tent
       Too tired to give full account of day.Just held up more wood frames.For hours.
       Dinner: salad, Tater Tots, hamburgers, corn. Just ate salad and Tater Tots. Sight of corn makes me want
     
       to puke.
       Fell asleep during inspirational speech by Dr. Gonzales.Woke up with head on Michael's shoulder. He
     
       was very nice about it. Hope I didn't drool.
       Can't believe I am too tired even to make out with own boyfriend.
       Amgoing to sleep right now, too exhausted to wait for lights out.
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       Monday, March 14, Noon, the dining tent
       Woke to full-on rain.Wet wipes instead of showers for everyone. That's okay, my muscles would have
     
       been too sore to carry my five-gallon solar shower bag to shower area anyway. Besides, I'm freezing ­
     
       the dew soaked through my sleeping bag, right down to my pajamas. I feel like I've already had a
     
       shower.
       Fortunately wehad already framed in the roof of theHarmeyer's house.Spent morning applying gypsum
     
       board to interior walls.Will shingle roof later if rain lets up. May be getting better at this house-building
     
       thing, hammer only went through gypsum board five times. Mrs.Harmeyer says that's okay, she can hang
     
       pictures over holes. But Michael says no, we will plaster over them.
       Lunch is turkey sandwiches, potato salad, Jell-O, and corn chips.Ate potato salad and Jell-O.
       Aw,geez , back to work.
     
       Monday, March 14, 10 p.m., the tent
       Too tired to write much.Rain let up and I spent afternoon on roof shingling with Lilly, Tina, and PeterTsu
     
       . Only fell off roof once. Landed on Boris, so that was all right. Michael, Lars, and Dr. Gonzales installed
     
       the plumbing. Mrs.Harmeyer cried when her toilet flushed for the first time. It was a deeply moving
     
       moment.
       After dinner ­ salad, fried chicken, creamed corn, and rolls (only ate salad and rolls) ­ Michael
     
       surprised me by volunteering the two of us to "inventory the tools" in the supply tent.
       I wasn't really sure how I felt about that, on account of the whole wet wipe situation. I mean, what if I
     
       SMELLED?Made Trina smell me real quick. She said I smelled okay. But who knows if her nostrils are
     
       as sensitive as Michael's????
       Worried the whole way to supply tent that Michael would try to kiss me,then be repelled by possibleb.o
     
       .
       Except that when we got there, it turned out the supply tent was already occupied... by Mr.Wheeton
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       and Mademoiselle Klein, no less!!!!
       They made us swear not to tell anyone. We said we wouldn't.
       But that is not even the worst part. The worst part is, after they went away, Michael ACTUALLY
     
       STARTED INVENTORYING THE TOOLS!!!!!!!
       There is really only one explanation for this, and that is that I smell so bad, my own boyfriend does not
     
       even want to make out with me.
       As if this were not bad enough, I felt something crawling up my leg and looked down and saw the
     
       world's biggest bug on my calf. I screamed so loud that Lars came bursting in with his gun drawn.
       Michael said it was only a centipede.
       ONLY A CENTIPEDE?IT TOUCHED MY SKIN!!!!!!!!
       It is much easier to be an environmentalist when you live in the city where there aren't that many bugs,
     
       than when you are in the country and are being eaten alive by them. I am not sure I love nature as much s
     
       I used to think I did.
     
       Tuesday, March 15, Noon, the dining tent
       Worked all morning, still so much left to do, and this is LAST WORK DAY. But still must paint all
     
       walls, and trim, too, plus install flooring, etc. Boris dropped a window shutter on his big toe, but Dr.
     
       Gonzales said it isn't broken, just dislocated. He manipulated it back into place ­ I would so never touch
     
       Boris's feet. Dr. Gonzales is truly a saint ­ and buddy taped it to the toe next to it so it would stay where
     
       it is supposed to.
       Mrs.Harmeyer has been complaining of heartburn since breakfast, but no one else is feeling sick.
     
       Legionnaires's disease ruled out as we have been dining al fresco. Possibly result of two Diet Cokes she
     
       downed with her eggs and bacon? Unborn child could bephenylketonuric .Warned Mrs.Harmeyer about
     
       dangers of too much aspartame. It is a good thing I have watched so many episodes of A Baby Story on
     
       the Learning Channel in preparation for the arrival of my new baby brother or sister. I am truly a front of
     
       prenatal information.
     
       Tuesday, March 15, 9 p.m., last day of home building
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       So tired, but truly amazingday, must get it all down before I forget:
       Finished building Mr. and Mrs.Harmeyer's house.When we were done, we all stood around and
     
       marveled: we had built a three-bedroom, one-bath house in three days, complete with kitchen, dining
     
       room, and family room. I mean, it is not aBIG house (only1,200 square feet , smaller than our loft) and it
     
       isn't like theHarmeyers can afford cable or Ikea furniture or anything. But it is a house, not a double wide
     
       like Mitchell and Stefano have been living in their whole short lives.
       And you know,it didn't look so bad. I mean, we had spackled over the holes I'd made in the gypsum
     
       board, so you couldn't even see them. And with the vinyl siding, it looked, I don't know. Like a REAL
     
       house.
       While we were standing there admiring our handiwork, Mrs.Harmeyer complained that she had a
     
       wicked case of heartburn and had anyone else had the potato salad at lunch? I informed Mrs.Harmeyer
     
       that, being a vegetarian, I had eaten nothing but potato salad for lunch, as it had been the only non-meat
     
       dish available, and I felt fine. Then I opened my diary to the entry I wrote earlier today and showed Mrs.
     
       Harmeyer that she had complained of indigestion after breakfast, as well. Was it possible, I asked, that
     
       she wasn't having heartburn at all, but contractions? The two have occasionally been confused, even by
     
       experienced mothers, at least according to A Baby Story.
       Then Mrs.Harmeyer got all excited and yelled, "Oh, my God! Todd, get the pickup!"
       So Mr. and Mrs.Harmeyer sped off for the hospital, leaving us in charge of Mitchell and Stefano. Dr.
     
       Gonzales was way impresses by what he called my powers of observation. Not everybody, he said,
     
       would have kept such a detailed record of another person's complaints about their gastritis.
       I told Dr. Gonzales that it was no bigdeal, that I write down everything, really. Then he said the funniest
     
       thing. He said: "That's quite a skill."
       Wow! It almost made me think maybe being able to write isn't such a bad talent, after all! I mean, it isn't
     
       as cool as being able to use a nail gun, and all. But hey, it might not be totally useless.
       Then Dr. Gonzales turned to Michael and said, "We're out of hot-dog buns for the celebration barbecue
     
       tonight. If I stay here with Mitchell and Stefano, do you think you could go into town and pick some up?"
     
       and he handed Michael the keys to his Dodge Chevy!
       And it turns out Michael can drive! He has a driver's license and everything! He learned two summers
     
       ago at his parents' country house inAlbany .
       There are very few boys who live inManhattan who know how to drive, on account of hardly anyone
     
       owning a car inNew York City .
       So Michael said, "Sure, Dr. Gonzales."
       For a minute I thought a Spring Break miracle had occurred...you know, that Michael and I would be
     
       alone, in a motor vehicle, miles from anybody else, and would finally get a chance to feel our two hearts
     
       beat as one...
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       That is, if I could get cleaned up fast enough.
       But I needn't have worried. Because no sooner did Michael get those keys in his hands than we were
     
       descended upon by the rest of our group, who all demanded to join us. I tried not to look too depressed
     
       as Lars, Lilly, Boris, Tina, and PeterTsu piled into the truck with us. Their enthusiasm was a little bit
     
       infectious, I have to admit.
       Town was big disappointment, though. I'd forgotten that Mrs.Harmeyer had said there was nothing to
     
       do in it. There is not even a single Chinese restaurant where you can go for cold sesame noodles. We
     
       went to the grocery store and got the hot-dog buns, and Lilly was all, "Finally, I can get a bagel!" but
     
       they didn't even have any, not even the Lender's kind in a bag.
       So then we were all kind of depresses on account of the no-bagel-and-no-cold-sesame-noodle thing.
     
       But when we got back in the truck, Michael went, "Well, there's one thingWest Virginia has
     
       thatManhattan doesn't," and he started driving.
       I thought Michael was talking about theMothman , you know, from that movie, and I couldn't think what
     
       was so great about that because all theMothman does is call people on the phone and say in a scary
     
       voice, "Stay away from the chemical plant!", which isn't really useful information to anyone.
       But it turns out Michael wasn't talking about theMothman . He was talking about Dairy Queen! Yes! It
     
       turns out there was a Dairy Queen right outside Hominy Knob! There are no Dairy Queens inManhattan
     
       , except for a gross one nobody but tourists ever goes to in Penn Station.
       We were soexcited, we piled out of the truck and rushed up to the girl in the window. Everybody got
     
       something different. Lars got a cherry slush. Lilly got a peanut buster parfait. Boris got a Heath Bar bite
     
       blizzard. PeterTsu gota Coke slush. Tina got a low-cal yogurt on account of the fact that PeterTsu was
     
       looking. Michael got an Oreo cookie blizzard. I got a chocolate-dipped vanilla soft serve.
       And it was SO good! After all our hand work, and the sleeping in tents and the Port-O-Lets and the wet
     
       wipes and slathering on cherryChapStick for nothing and finding out that I actually have a useful talent
     
       after all, that chocolate-dipped vanilla cone was really the most delicious thing I had eaten in my whole
     
       life.
       We were all enjoying our ice cream, leaning against the side of the Dodge Chevy in the soft pre-spring
     
       sunshine, when a large black limo slithered into the Dairy Queen parking lot. I swear I nearly dropped my
     
       vanilla cone as the chauffeur came around to open the rear passenger door, and out popped ­
       "Grandmère!"I cried, barely able to believe my eyes.
       "Amelia,"Grandmère said, looking around in distaste. She was dressed in a big feathered purple velvet
     
       coat, withRommel in one arm and a purse in the other. All the residents of Hominy Knob who happened
     
       to be in the vicinity could not take their eyes off her. "You're looking ...fit."
       "Grandmère," I said. "What are you doing here? I thought you were going toPalm Springs ."
       "I do go there. I thought I would stop by to see you on my way home. I've been to your,er , work site."
       "Really?"I was still shocked to seeGrandmère in Hominy Knob. "Did you see the house we built?"
       "I did,"Grandmère said. "I must admit, when you told me this is what you wanted to do with your
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       Spring Break, I thought you were mad. But I met Dr. Gonzales, and he seems like a very nice man. And
     
       your house is... adequate. That is not, however, why I am here. I've taken rooms at the Hampton Inn ­
     
       sadly, the finest quarters I was able to procure. I thought perhaps you all might like to come back with
     
       me and shower before your little celebration dinner, to which Dr. Gonzales has very kindly invited me. I
     
       understand the bathing conditions at the camp are on the primitive side, and all of you have a very long
     
       bus ride ahead of you tomorrow."
       We piled back into the truck without another word. Take a shower? No one needed to ask us twice.
     
       The thought that we might, at long last, be able to scrape four days of sweat and dew from our bodies
     
       was even better than ice cream ­ even better, I must admit, than the prospect of uninterrupted kissing.
       So we all followedGrandmère's limo to the motel, where she'd taken seven rooms for herself and
     
       Rommel , her bodyguards, her personal maid, her assistant, her chauffeur, and her clothes. Everybody
     
       got to fully submerge themselves under nice hot water and use some clean towels for a change. I myself
     
       borrowed some ofGrandmère'sChanel No. 5 and fullyspritzed my clothes with it. Bliss!!!! Now there
     
       was NO WAY my boyfriend would be able to resist me.
       Although when I presented myself to him, in all of my squeaky-clean glory, by the ice machine in the
     
       Hampton Inn hallway, any attempt Michael might have made to kiss me was cruelly thwarted by
     
       Grandmère's maid, who came strolling by withRommel on a leash, because it was time for "walkies".
       After we had all finished washing away the sawdust and dew, we politely thankedGrandmère and said
     
       we had to be going back to camp in order to deliver the hot-dog buns. When we got there, we found out
     
       that Mrs.Harmeyer had given birth to a healthy six-pound-five-ounce baby girl. Butwhat REALLY blew
     
       me away was when Dr. Gonzales said, "And, Mia, theHarmeyers said to tell you that they named her
     
       after you."
       "Really?"I was flattered. "They named their baby Mia?"
       Dr. Gonzales looked uncomfortable. "Uh," he said."Not exactly. They named her Princess."
       PrincessHarmeyer . Oh, well. It's still nice to know I have left my mark on Hominy Knob.Sort of.
       After the celebration dinner ­ which was really nice; they seemed to have run out of corn products ­ Dr.
     
       Gonzales built a campfire and we roasted marshmallows. Michael got out his guitar and we all sang that "
     
       Kumbaya" song, the one that makes me feel like crying every time I hear it.
       Then to show our West Virginia hosts some New York City "flava," Lilly, and Tina, and I sang our
     
       version of Destiny's Child's "Survivor," which we do very well (Lilly even let me beBeyoncé for a
     
       change).Grandmère clapped like crazy, even though Lars laughed so hard that he almost choked on a
     
       s'more and Mrs. Hill had to smack him on the back.
       Then the host families sang aWest Virginia song that was very sad, about a girl who may have been born
     
       poor white trash, but Fancy was her name. It was all about how Fancy used her talents to get ahead in
     
       life. She never complained about having the WRONG KIND of talents, she just used what God gave
     
       her. That, I realized, it was what I needed to start doing: stop wishing for better talents, and just learn to
     
       use the one I have to the best of my ability.
       I sighed pretty hard when I thought of this, and Michael must have thought I was sad or something, since
     
       he put his arm around me. YES!!!!!!!! The guy was finally starting to come around.
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       Then we had some nice passionate moments making out near his tent while he was supposed to be
     
       putting his guitar away.
       All I can say is....thank you. THANK YOU, GRANDMÈRE!!!!Because without her and the use of her
     
       shower, Michael and I might never have developed the very great appreciation for the theology of the
     
       hammer that we have right now.
     
       Wednesday, March 16, 10 p.m., the loft
       I amhome!!!!!AT LAST!!!!!!!!
       The bus ride back fromWest Virginia was SO much better than the bus ride there. For one thing,
     
       Principal Gupta made sure Boris was good and dosed with Dramamine before she left him anywhere
     
       near the parking lot. And then everybody was so tired, they all fell asleep before we even got onto
     
       Highway 64.
       When the bus finally pulled up in front ofAlbertEinsteinHigh School and everyone started piling off to
     
       collect their bags from Charlie, there was a lot of hugging and "See you Monday" going on from people
     
       who before the trip hadn't been friends. Like between us and PeterTsu .
       The funniest part was, Dr. Gonzales came up to me, looking all embarrassed and went, "Princess Mia,
     
       please tell your grandmother that I enjoyed meeting her very much. She is truly a dynamic woman."
       Whoa. Looks like I'm not the only Renaldo who turns out to have a secret talent.
       I am so happy to be home, I ran around kissing everything I'd missed, including Fat Louie, the mattress
     
       on my bed, my bathtub, the refrigerator, and the TV.
       But most of all I kissed my mom, and told her that even thoughWest Virginia is all right and everything, it
     
       is really true what Dorothy says in The Wizard of Oz, about there being no place like home.
       "Even if you're on Spring Break?" my mom wanted to know.
       "Even if you're on Spring Break," I said.
       "Even if you're a princess?" my mom asked.
       "Especially if you're a princess," I said.
       And them I picked up the phone and called Number One Noodle Son and ordered us all some cold
     
       sesame noodles for dinner.
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