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Can You Keep

A Secret?

Sophie Kinsella

To H, from whom I have no secrets. Well, not many, anyway.

Acknowledgements

A big thank you to Mark Hedley, Je

their generous advice. And hugest gratitude as always to Linda Evans, Patrick Plonkington-

Smythe, Araminta Whitley and Celia Hayley, my boys and the board.

ONE

Of course I have secrets.

Of course I do. Everyone has a secret. It's completely normal. I'm sure I don't have any more

than anybody else.

I'm not talking about big, earth-shattering secrets. Not the-president-is-pla

Japan-and-only-Will-Smith-can-save-the-world type secrets. Just normal, everyday little

secrets.

Like for example, here are a few random secrets of mine, off the top of my head:

1. My Kate Spade bag is a fake.

2. I love sweet sherry, the least cool drink in the universe.

3. I have no idea what NATO stands for. Or even what it is.

4. I weigh 9 stone 3. Not 8 stone 3, like my boyfriend Co

defence, I was pla

number different.)

5. I've always thought Co

6. Sometimes, when we're right in the middle of passionate sex, I suddenly want to laugh.

7. I lost my virginity in the spare bedroom with Da

downstairs watching Ben Hur.

8. I've already drunk the wine that Dad told me to lay down for twenty years.

9. Sammy the goldfish at home isn't the same goldfish that Mum and Dad gave me to look

after when they went to Egypt.

10. When my colleague Artemis really a

pretty much every day.)

11. I once had this weird lesbian dream about my flatmate Lissy.

12. My G-string is hurting me.

13. I've always had this deep down conviction that I'm not like everybody else, and there's an

amazingly exciting new life waiting for me just around the corner.

14. I have no idea what this guy in the grey suit is going on about.

15. Plus I've already forgotten his name.

And I only met him ten minutes ago.

'We believe in logistical formative alliances,' he's saying in a nasal, droning voice, 'both above

and below the line.'

'Absolutely!' I reply brightly, as though to say: Doesn't everybody?

Logistical. What does that mean, again?

Oh God. What if they ask me?

Don't be stupid, Emma. They won't suddenly demand, 'What does logistical mean?' I'm a

fellow marketing professional, aren't I? Obviously I know these things.

And anyway, if they mention it again I'll change the subject. Or I'll say I'm post-logistical or

something.

The important thing is to keep confident and businesslike. I can do this. This is my big chance

and I'm not going to screw it up.

I'm sitting in the offices of Glen Oil's headquarters in Glasgow, and as I glance at my

reflection in the window, I look just like a top businesswoman. My hair is straightened, I'm

wearing discreet earrings like they tell you to in How-to-win-that-job articles, and I've got on

my smart new Jigsaw suit. (At least, it's practically new. I got it from the Cancer Research

shop and sewed on a button to replace the missing one, and you can hardly tell.)



I'm here representing the Panther Corporation, which is where I work. The meeting is to

finalize a promotional arrangement between the new cranberry-flavoured Panther Prime

sports drink and Glen Oil, and I flew up this morning from London, especially. (The company

paid, and everything!)

When I arrived, the Glen Oil marketing guys started on this long, show-offy 'who's-travelledthe-

most?' conversation about airmiles and the red-eye to Washington — and I think I bluffed

pretty convincingly. (Except when I said I'd flown Concorde to Ottawa, and it turns out

Concorde doesn't go to Ottawa.) But the truth is, this is the first time I've ever had to travel for

a deal.

OK. The real truth is, this is the first deal I've ever done, full stop. I've been at the Panther

Corporation for eleven months as a marketing assistant, and until now all I've been allowed to

do is type out copy, arrange meetings for other people, get the sandwiches and pick up my

boss's dry-cleaning.

So this is kind of my big break. And I've got this secret little hope that if I do this well, maybe

I'll get promoted. The ad for my job said 'possibility of promotion after a year', and on

Monday I'm having my yearly appraisal meeting with my boss, Paul. I looked up 'Appraisals'

in the staff induction book, and it said they are 'an ideal opportunity to discuss possibilities for

career advancement'.

Career advancement! At the thought, I feel a familiar stab of longing in my chest. It would

just show Dad I'm not a complete loser. And Mum. And Kerry. If I could go home and

casually say, 'By the way, I've been promoted to Marketing Executive.'

Emma Corrigan, Marketing Executive.

Emma Corrigan, Senior Vice-President (Marketing.)

As long as everything goes well today. Paul said the deal was done and dusted and all I had to

do was nod and shake their hands, and even I should be able to manage that. And so far, I

reckon it's going really well.

OK, so I don't understand about 90 per cent of what they're saying. But then I didn't

understand much of my GCSE French Oral either, and I still got a B.

'Rebranding… analysis… cost-effective…'

The man in the grey suit is still droning on about something or other. As casually as possible,

I extend my hand and inch his business card towards me so I can read it.

Doug Hamilton. That's right. OK, I can remember this. Doug. Dug. Easy. I'll picture a shovel.

Together with a ham. Which… which looks ill … and…

OK, forget this. I'll just write it down.

I write down 'rebranding' and 'Doug Hamilton' on my notepad and give an awkward little

wriggle. God, my knickers really are uncomfortable. I mean, G-strings are never that

comfortable at the best of times, in my opinion, but these are particularly bad. Which could be

because they're two sizes too small.

Which could possibly be because Co

weighed eight stone three. Whereupon she told him I must be size eight. Size eight!

(Frankly, I think she was just being mean. She must have known I was fibbing.)

So it's Christmas Eve, and we're exchanging presents, and I unwrap this pair of gorgeous pale

pink silk knickers. Size eight. And I basically have two options.

A: Confess the truth: 'Actually these are too small, I'm more of a 12, and by the way, I don't

really weigh eight stone three.' Or…

B: Shoe-horn myself into them.

Actually, it was fine. You could hardly see the red lines on my skin afterwards. And all it

meant was that I had to quickly cut all the labels out of my clothes so Co

realize.

Since then, I've hardly ever worn this particular set of underwear, needless to say. But every

so often I see them looking all nice and expensive in the drawer and think, Oh come on, they

can't be that tight, and somehow squeeze into them. Which is what I did this morning. I even

decided I must have lost weight, because they didn't feel too bad.