It Sounded Better in My Head Read online




  About the Book

  When her parents announce their impending separation, Natalie can’t understand why no one is fighting or at least mildly upset. Then Zach and Lucy, her two best friends, hook up, leaving her feeling slightly miffed and decidedly awkward. She’d always imagined she would end up with Zach one day-in the version of her life that played out like a TV show, with just the right amount of banter, pining and meaningful looks. Now everything has changed and nothing is quite making sense.

  Until an unexpected romance comes along and shakes things up even further. It Sounded Better in My Head is a tender, funny and joyful novel about longing, confusion, feeling left out and finding out what really matters-from an exciting new voice in Australian YA writing.

  For Dan

  Contents

  Cover Page

  About the Book

  Title Page

  1 There Is No One to Blame Here

  2 My Face and Other Problems

  3 Something Obscene on a Park Bench

  4 Patrick Swayze and Other People’s Bathrooms

  5 Never Have I Ever

  6 A House Full of Gryffindors

  7 Ten Minutes of Fun

  8 Sun and Sand and Girls in Bikinis

  9 Auld Lang Syne

  10 Humiliating Things

  11 An Incomplete List

  12 A Favour to Ask

  13 A Night in Feelings Town

  14 Fifty-two Minutes

  15 A Day at the Beach

  16 Two Strikes

  17 What Have You Done?

  18 Confessions

  19 Everything I Ever Wanted

  20 A Great Love Story

  21 Moving-day Blues

  22 The Dating Scene

  23 Unsent

  24 Five Stages

  25 Are You Having Fun Yet?

  26 The Truth or Something Like It

  27 The First Time

  28 Not the Result We Were Hoping For

  29 Shiny Happy Party People

  30 Meltdown

  31 Show Me Your Wounds

  32 A Likeable Face

  33 Bert and Ernie

  34 A New Plan

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Copyright Page

  1

  There Is No One to Blame Here

  It’s Christmas Day, we’ve just finished playing our annual post-lunch game of Scrabble (bonus points if you play a word with a Christmas theme) and Dad says we need to talk. He’s using his Bad News voice, and I figure he’s either going to give me another lecture about getting my driver’s licence or tell me he’s reactivated his Twitter account.

  ‘Natalie, this is really hard to tell you, but we’re, uh, we’re separating,’ he says.

  ‘Who is?’

  ‘Your mother and I.’

  ‘Separating.’ The word feels strange and heavy in my mouth.

  ‘Breaking up,’ Dad says, because he can never resist hammering a point home once he’s made it.

  Mum walks into the room then, eating an apple. She vowed fruit would be her only dessert at Christmas this year because she wants to lose two kilos before January, which makes more sense now I know she is prepping for single life.

  ‘You’re breaking up?’ My tone is friendly, giving them the space to say ‘just kidding!’ in case it’s an elaborate prank, even though we are not a household that is open to pranks of any kind, most especially unfunny, emotionally scarring ones like this.

  Mum looks startled at my question, and spends a long time chewing every last bit of her mouthful of apple before speaking.

  No, they’re not breaking up, present tense, verb. They have Broken Up. Past tense, Capital Letters. This isn’t new information. I mean, it’s new to me, but they’ve known for ages. Ten months, to be exact.

  ‘What do you mean ten months?’ I slam my laptop shut for emphasis. I would like to pretend I was doing something profound in the moments before this life-altering conversation, but in truth I was watching a video of a cat getting scared at the sight of itself in a mirror.

  Mum is rattled. This wasn’t her plan, to tell me right now, like this, she says. Well, of course it wasn’t her plan. It’s Christmas.

  ‘Remember at the start of the year, when your father went overseas?’ Mum says.

  ‘Vaguely.’ I want to hurry to the part of the story where they explain the fact that they lied to me for the better part of a year. Or to the part where they explain when, exactly, they stopped loving each other and how I missed it.

  ‘Vaguely? Natalie, I was gone for a month!’ Dad looks insulted. He’s sitting on our old beanbag, which needs more beans, so he’s awkwardly sunken right down onto the floor, with his knees almost touching his chin.

  ‘Yes, of course I remember.’ He went to London and bought me an ugly tourist T-shirt with a slightly distorted picture of Prince Harry’s face on it because we have a family tradition of buying each other tacky tourist items whenever we go anywhere. That T-shirt is now my second-favourite thing to wear to bed, after my green Slytherin pyjamas.

  ‘Well, we used that time apart to think about our relationship and when your father got back we decided—mutually—that we didn’t want to be romantically together anymore.’ Mum’s eyes are shiny with emotion, but then she ruins the moment by biting into her apple again with a loud, cheerful crunch.

  It’s all so disgustingly civilised and casual. I can’t stand it. I want screaming, tears, drama. I want someone, other than me, to feel like their chest is being stomped on by a giant.

  ‘No one is at fault here,’ Dad says, which is exactly what someone at fault would say.

  ‘And you made this decision in February?’ I’m still hoping that I’ve misunderstood this part.

  ‘Yes,’ Dad says.

  ‘Ten. Months. Ago.’ Saying it more slowly and loudly doesn’t make it feel any more real.

  ‘Correct.’ Dad nods encouragingly, like I’m grappling with a tricky maths problem.

  ‘But you’ve been living together all year.’

  ‘In separate bedrooms,’ Mum says.

  ‘You said it was because of Dad’s snoring.’

  ‘Well, it was, in part. And in part because of the separation.’

  ‘But…but I just bought you both matching aprons and you said they were exactly what you wanted.’

  ‘Well, we can still wear the aprons, sweetheart.’

  ‘No, you can’t!’

  There are so many reasons why this is not okay.

  We might be a small family, but we’re a great one. An enviable one. Take today, for example. We do a cosy, three-person Christmas so well. We have stockings with our names on them, we watch Die Hard, play Scrabble, eat Dad’s homemade mince pies, and open our presents one at a time to great fanfare. We listen to carols, wear Santa hats and take silly photos. And now they’ve gone and poured vinegar all over our sugary sweetness.

  Ten months. They’ve been lying to me for so long I am momentarily dizzy trying to comprehend it.

  ‘Your father and I are still friends, Natalie. Good friends. We are going to stay in each other’s lives. We just don’t want to be married anymore.’

  Mum seems to be under the mistaken impression that I consider their friendship a worthwhile consolation prize.

  ‘But it doesn’t make any sense. And why did you wait so long to tell me?’ I wish I was hysterical and crying, but their calmness is a blanket dampening my angry fire. It’s probably a part of their strategy. Don’t let her make a scene. If we stay calm, so will she. Things are only as big a deal as you let them be. Mum, in particular, loves to throw around that last line, especially when I’m having a bad-skin day and she wants me to go outside.

/>   Unbelievably, Mum goes to bite her apple again, but I snatch it out of her hands.

  ‘Can you stop eating for one second, please?’ I’m getting much closer to shouting.

  Mum moves and sits next to me on the couch. She puts her arm around me and smooths my hair down, like I’m an animal that needs to be calmed. I want to gnash my teeth, struggle out of her grip and run howling down the street.

  ‘We wanted to wait until you were finished school. We didn’t want to disrupt your studies during such an important year.’

  ‘We love you, honey,’ Dad says, scooching the beanbag closer. It makes an unpleasant farting noise against the wooden floorboards, which we all pretend not to hear.

  ‘So, you’ve been lying to me all year?’

  ‘Not lying. Pretending a little. Omitting details.’

  ‘Avoiding the inevitable,’ Dad says.

  ‘Your father and I have grown apart.’

  ‘We wanted to be completely sure before we told you.’

  ‘It’s just one of those things.’

  ‘The guilt of not telling you has been eating us up inside.’

  I can tell they’ve rehearsed all these lines. Written them down maybe, practised in front a mirror. Read it off a piece of paper like a script. Do I look sad enough, I imagine Mum asking Dad. Speed it up to sound more natural, I imagine him saying back. And don’t forget to tell her we’ll still be friends.

  ‘No one is to blame here.’

  Dad has got to stop saying that if he wants me to believe it.

  ‘We love you,’ Mum says.

  This is no comfort. I’m their only child. They have to love me.

  ‘Who am I going to live with?’ I ask. What I mean is, Are you at least fighting over me?

  ‘You can live with whoever you want,’ Dad says, voice bright, as though he’s handing me a present.

  That’s not the plan though. The plan was for me to keep living at home, in this house, with both of them, when I go to university next year, and after that. I would remain here for the foreseeable future. There was no end date on our situation. That’s our plan. That’s been our plan from the beginning.

  ‘I don’t want to move.’ My voice shakes a little, and I sound whiny and pathetic instead of firm.

  ‘Honey, no matter what happens, you’ll always have a home,’ Mum says, which is the kind of vague wording designed to comfort but only raises more questions. No matter what happens? What else is going to happen?

  ‘You’ll have two homes,’ Dad says, in his most upbeat voice.

  I don’t want two homes. Who wants two homes? Home only makes sense in singular form.

  I look at them both, with their identical please-adjust-quickly-to-our-terrible-news fake smiles, and I feel a sense of dread.

  This is the end of life as I know it.

  2

  My Face and Other Problems

  I was a cute child. I don’t say this as a boast, but as a matter of truth. A woman once came up to my mother and asked if she had thought about getting me into child modelling.

  ‘Your daughter would be perfect for our catalogue. She’s got the right look.’

  The woman was talking about a catalogue for a chain of discount chemists, and the ‘right look’ probably meant ordinary, gap-toothed and relatable, so we’re not talking high glamour, but the point is that my face was once considered photogenic. I had shiny dark hair. Chubby, unmarked cheeks. Twinkling brown eyes. (Okay, I don’t know if they were ever actually twinkling but it’s certainly possible that they were in the right light.) My favourite clothes were my purple glitter sneakers and a T-shirt with a unicorn on it. I even have a name perfectly suited for a pretty child: Natalie.

  Then, puberty.

  Puberty is treated by adults like it’s a big joke. Any mention of it seems to be accompanied by humour and knowing smiles. There’s talk of voices breaking and hair growing. If I thought much about it at all beforehand, I assumed I would start wearing a bra and have to figure out how a tampon works. But puberty, as it turns out, was an assault. My body changed fiercely and terribly, and I didn’t know how to handle it.

  I went from being a straight-up-and-down stick figure to a scribble of hips, stomach, breasts, thighs and stretch marks. I didn’t even know stretch marks were a thing. I truly did not know they existed until they appeared on my body. When I googled them, all the information was geared towards pregnant women. I felt like a freak, with angry red lines slashing across my hips, lower back and down my inner thighs, like a graffitied wall.

  Once, a girl from my class saw them when I was changing for PE, and she said, ‘What happened?’ and pointed at my hip, and I said, ‘My cat scratched me,’ and she widened her eyes with horror but she believed me because that’s what my stretch marks looked like—savage claw marks from a monster cat.

  But the stretch marks were nothing compared with the pimples. A regular scattering of pimples at first, and then more, and more. Then pimples that turned, almost overnight, into deep, cystic acne. Thick, hard, welt-like lumps formed under my skin on my back, shoulders, neck and face. That’s not a cool story, or a tragedy that people want to hear about. It’s gross. I was gross. I woke up thinking that every day for a long time.

  My period was heavy and really painful, and managing it felt like a full-time job. I obsessively checked my school dress, my bedsheets, my underwear, my jeans, the couch, the car seat, the train seat—anywhere there could be a hint of what was happening to me. I looked at the back of myself in any reflective surface I could find. I was paranoid about leaving a trace of evidence. The pimples on my shoulders would sometimes burst and leave stains on my top. I was messy, leaking, uncontained.

  My body was a shameful disaster. I was too embarrassed to go outside unless I absolutely had to. No, it was worse than that. I was too embarrassed to exist. I hunched down and inwards, trying to hide every part of me. I hated how much space I took up, because I got taller too. I was huge and hulking. I felt like everywhere I went, I was being seen and noticed in a way I didn’t want to be seen and noticed. Even now, on my very best skin days, I’m uncomfortable with people looking at my face. Eye contact makes me feel exposed.

  At thirteen, fourteen, fifteen, going to school was hard. Friday night would arrive and I would be filled with such relief. I would unclench and lie on my bed and breathe deeply and reassure myself: I don’t have to go outside or see anyone other than my parents for the next two whole days. The outside world was a place where I was constantly on edge, waiting for someone to look at or comment on my bad skin. I always carried a book with me so I had an excuse to be looking down, and I rarely spoke up in class so that no one would have a reason to look at me directly. I grew my hair very long and let it fall over my face whenever I could. I would part it on different sides depending on which half of my face needed more covering. I avoided sitting in the brightest part of a room. I watched hundreds of hours of YouTube makeup tutorial videos.

  I would never look in a mirror in the school bathrooms, because I didn’t want to meet anyone’s eyes, but I carried a little compact mirror in my pocket all the time so when I was alone in the toilet cubicle I could check my face slowly, carefully and without shame and see how bad it was. I would smuggle concealer and foundation in too, and reapply it constantly throughout the day.

  Acne hurts. No one talks about how painful it is. Well, no one talks about it, at all. My face, my back, my shoulders, they all ached. If someone bumped me, I would flinch away. If I accidentally knocked a pimple on my face, involuntary tears would pop into my eyes. I had to slink and manoeuvre my way through the world, trying not to be seen, touched or noticed at all.

  Somewhere around the age of thirteen, a new personality appeared along with my pimples. Reluctant Natalie. Anxious Natalie. Bitter Natalie. Neurotic Natalie. I was never these things before, and I wasn’t them, not really, but that’s how people saw me, and so that’s who I became.

  I’m eighteen now, and sometimes I still want to stand
up and scream, This isn’t really me.

  This is all a roundabout way of saying I became something of a shut-in during high school. I mean, I’m still something of a shut-in now, but I was a pathological shut-in for a long time.

  And until my face was fixed, until I met Zach and Lucy, until I got a bit tougher, my parents were all I had.

  3

  Something Obscene on a Park Bench

  The day after the Christmas bombshell, I go to Zach’s house and walk in through the back door without knocking. I’ve been friends with Zach for a few years now, and I still get a secret thrill out of being allowed to walk into his house unannounced. It feels like I’ve unlocked the highest friendship level.

  ‘Hello,’ I call out.

  ‘Natalie.’ Lucy appears at the end of the hall. Lucy and Zach have been officially together for nine months, which is a very long time at our age, practically a marriage, but it’s a situation I am still adjusting to. We were once a friendship group of three individuals—three equals, three devoted but platonic points of a triangle—and now we’re a breathlessly in love couple (them) and a person who spends her Saturday night taking photos of the back of her head in a mirror so she can understand what it’s like to see herself from behind (me).

  I am forced to second-guess everything. Is it movie night like always, or am I crashing their date? If I tell one of them a secret, will they automatically tell the other? If they have a fight, do I have to pick a side straight away, and can I change my side halfway through? How often, exactly, do they talk about me when I’m not there? (I hate the thought that they might, but I also hate the thought that they might not. I would like to be one of their top three conversation topics, but only if they are spending a significant amount of time reflecting on my sparkling personality.)

  Zach appears behind Lucy, sliding in his socks. Zach is the yardstick that I measure every other guy against. Zach’s mannerisms, Zach’s way of doing things, Zach’s voice, Zach’s tallness, Zach’s lankiness—he’s just how boys should be, because he’s the only boy I’ve ever really been friends with, and the best one I’ve met.