Daizy Star and the Pink Guitar

Daizy Star and the Pink Guitar by Cathy Cassidy Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: Daizy Star and the Pink Guitar by Cathy Cassidy Read Free Book Online
Authors: Cathy Cassidy
tear rolls down my cheek.
    Mum takes the phone and starts talking briskly about flight times and pick-up arrangements. She could at least try to seem a little bit pleased.
    I try to picture their reunion at the airport. Their eyes will meet across a crowded arrivals lounge, and they will realize how much they have missed each other and run into each other’s arms, and everything will be sorted.
    I hope.
    But what if it isn’t? What if Dad still wants to live in Malawi and Mum says she’s had enough and the late-night rows start up again? I don’t want to think about that. I won’t think about that.
    My dad is coming home … tomorrow! It’s almost more exciting than the Battle of the Bands.
    I wake up next morning with a huge smile on my face. I could be on the edge of rock superstardom!
    And best of all, Dad is coming home just in time to see it all happen.
    Dad’s flight is an overnight one, so he should be in the air right now. Mum is up bright and early, ready to head off to Heathrow to meet him.
    ‘He won’t be jet-lagged, will he?’ I ask. ‘He’ll be OK to come to the Battle of the Bands?’
    ‘He should be,’ Mum sighs. ‘He’ll have all day to recover from the flight. Don’t worry, Daizy.’
    ‘I’m not worried!’ I argue. ‘Why does everybody think I am worried? Everything is going exactly according to plan.’
    At school, the class is buzzing. Kelly, Freya and Luka have made a banner that reads Honey Badgers Forever. Miss Moon says she has got a front-row seat. Even Ethan has a ticket … and he asks if we’d like him to turn up early to help with the guitars and amps and stuff.
    Yeah, right.
    I give him a withering look. ‘You don’t have to turn up at all, Ethan,’ I say coldly. ‘Haven’t you got something more important to do? Like polishing your football boots, or practising your goal-scoring techniques, or dropping worms down people’s sweatshirts?’
    Ethan looks sad. ‘Daizy, that worm thing was years ago,’ he sighs. ‘We were in Year Three, and I’ve said I’m sorry about a million times since then. You have to forgive me sometime, y’know.’
    I raise an eyebrow frostily. ‘Wanna bet?’ I ask.
    ‘Ethan, she doesn’t mean it!’ Beth cuts in. ‘Daizy is just stressed because of the pressure and everything. Of course she forgives you, and she definitely wants you to come along tonight. We all do, don’t we?’
    ‘I do, Ethan,’ Willow breathes. ‘I’m counting on it. I’ll be watching out for you! And you’re just sooooo good at all that technical stuff, so maybe you could hang out with us beforehand and help me tweak my mike and my amp. That would be amazing!’
    ‘Er, right,’ Ethan says with a smirk. ‘See you there then.’ My two best friends are seriously embarrassing whenever Ethan is around. It must be their hormones bubbling away and turning their brains into mush. Growing up can be a very scary thing.
    I check my watch. Dad will be home by now. He and Mum will be drinking tea and sharing stories about life in the African sun. And very soon they will be sitting side by side at the Battle of the Bands, watching The Honey Badgers win, and they will be filled with pride and happiness.

    We will be a happy family again. When I hand over the £500 cheque to Dad he will send it off to Malawi and then his conscience will be clear and the nightmare will be over. That’s what I am hoping, anyway.
         
    Our very last practice in the school music room is pretty impressive, if I do say so myself. We rock, in a deafening kind of way. Willow has perfected the art of the thrash-punk-metal screech, and Beth’s drumming sounds exactly like a washing machine full of gravel, on full spin. Murphy is brilliant on bass, and my guitar riffs are loud enough to lift the roof off.
    We are almost ready.
    All that is needed now is Becca’s thrash-punk-metal makeover skills.
    After school, the four of us, with Pixie in tow, trail back to number 17, Silver Street.

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