Zachary down in the corner of the library where he tends to spend his free periods nowadays. Itâs snowing pretty heavily outside, and I stomp my feet at the entrance and brush the snow off my shoulders before going in. Even though I donât spend much time in the Spearcrest library, it is practically hallowed ground here, and I know better than to track snow everywhere.
Inside, everything is warm and brown and gold, the silence undisturbed and the air rich with the smell of paper and leather.
Zachary is in his usual spot at a desk hidden amongst bookshelves, and I pull a chair to sit next to him. He doesnât look up from the essay heâs calmly typing into his laptop.
âWell?â I prompt him.
âWell, what?â he asks, raising an eyebrow but not looking away from his essay.
âWell, what happened yesterday?â
Zachary stops typing. âWhat do you mean?â
âYou know what I mean, you jackass. Tutoring. Bea told me that she was tutoring you before she swapped with Sophie.â
âYes,â Zachary nods. âIt went well, thank you.â
I glare at him. He ignores me, so I shove my face against his so that he can see my frown from up close.
âWhat do you want, exactly?â Zachary says, pushing my face away from his with one hand. âDo you want a minute-by-minute breakdown of everything that happened during our session?â
I nod eagerly. âThat would be a great start!â
âWell, we met in E30, I was reading some critical theory essays of Jane Austen, you know, the anthology youâve never touched?â
I roll my eyes at him and he continues. âThen Sophie came in, she sat down. I told her about my academic goals in regard to English Literature. We swapped copies of to share notes, then exchanged our critical theory notes based on the reading weâd done. We did this for two hours. At the end of the two hours, I thanked her and left.â
âAnd then?â
âAnd then, what? Then I went to eat supper, went back to my room, did some more work and went to sleep. I wore my bespoke blue pyjamas that you always make fun of.â
âI donât care about any of that!â
âThen donât ask!â
We glare at each other. But Zachary isnât stupid, he knows what I want to know. Heâs just choosing to be obtuse, probably because my torment amuses him. My stare turns into a glare.
âWhat did Sophie say about me?â
Zachary shakes his head. âNothing at all. She didnât mention you once.â
âWhat! What did say?â
âAbout you?â
âYeah!â
âWe met so that she could tutor me for English Literature, not to discuss the long and complex history between you two.â
Iâm almost speechless from the shock of this betrayal. âYou didnât mention me?â
âWas I supposed to?â
âYouâreâargh! Zach! Those tutoring sessions are meant to be !â
Zachary shrugs. âIs it my fault you made her quit?â
âI didnâtââ I start defending myself then stop since itâs not entirely wrong that I made Sophie quit. âAlright, I messed up, but now sheâs tutoring you, I thought you couldâwhy donât youââ
âWhat is it you want me to do, exactly?â
âI donât know, help me! Be my wingman or whatever.â
âHow so?â
I throw my hands up in a helpless gesture. âFuck, I donât know! Just try to explain to her she made a mistake, that I do care about my tutoring and thatâand thatââ
âLet me make one thing clear: my priority in those sessions is the actual tutoring. Your pitiful love dealings are very much secondary to my goals.â
âYou donât even need tutoring!â I glare at him. âI swear youâre one of the best students in the class.â
âIâm not best, though,â Zachary says, looking away with a sniff.
My eyes narrow as I draw closer, peering at him. âIs this about Theodora?â
Zachary clears his throat and flushes ever so slightly. On a normal person, it would be barely noticeable, but since Zachary is about as emotionless and unshakeable as a robot made from titanium, it becomes immediately obvious this subject matter is of great embarrassment to him.
âOh Godâso because of your weird obsession with Theodora you get to keep Sophie to yourself and not even help me get her back?â
âEvan,â Zachary says, completely deadpan, âsheâs tutoring me in English, not getting married to me.â
âI know.â I drop my head into my hands. âBut at least itâs an excuse to see her. I donât even have that anymore, and weâre more than halfway through the year! Iâm running out of fucking time.â
Zachary hesitates then relents. âWhy donât you drop me off at the next session before you go to yours?â
I raise my head. âAnd then what?â
âAnd then⦠I donât know. Just say something nice to her, and then leave. Like this, you get to see her, and she still gets the space she clearly needs from you.â
I tap my chin, thinking about his proposal. âItâs actually not a bad idea. Maybe I do need to give her space. She did tell me to stay out of her life.â
âOh, she did?â
I groan. âUgh, she did. And I told her I liked her.â
Zacharyâs eyebrows shoot up. âYou did?â
âYeah.â
âShe told you to get out of her life and so you decided to tell her you like her?â
âNo, the opposite.â
âYou said you like her and then she told you to get out of her life?â Zachary pulls a face. âThatâs cold, even for her.â
âWell, no. I said I like her, and then I said I could have any girl. Then she said: good, have every girl you want and stay out of my life.â
Zachary rubs his face with a long-suffering sigh. âWhy are you like this?â
âIf you were there, youâd understand! It was so fucking stressful. I basically completely opened myself up to her and put my cards on the table and then she looked down at my cards and tossed them right off the table! She told me she despises me. She didnât even address the fact I like her, as if my feelings donât count because Iâm me. What was I going to do, beg?â
âBeg is certainly what youâll end up having to do if you keep fucking things up this spectacularly.â
âIâm not going to beg,â I snap, glaring at Zachary.
He smirks. âYou werenât going to apologise either, remember?â
âApologising and begging are two completely different things.â
âRight. Well, time will tell, wonât it?â
I keep glaring at him but he doesnât seem too bothered. He turns back to his laptop with a dismissive flap of his hand. âNow get out of here, Ev. Iâve got work to do. Be on time tomorrow if you still want to drop me off at my tutoring session.â
âAlright, alright. Iâll text you.â
He gives a curt nod, and I leave. Iâm too wound up to go back to my room, and itâs snowing too thickly to go for a run, so I end up going to the gym. But even the gym canât distract me from the pressure of tomorrowâs meeting, and I end up spending the rest of the evening thinking about what to say to Sophie when I see her.
And thatâs particularly challenging to do when all I can think about is kissing her and fucking her against a window while it snows outside.
with Zachary, I turn up fifteen minutes early. Since he arrived first at our last session, itâs a point of pride for me to be there first this time.
I settle myself in the empty classroom, a paper cup of coffee nestled in my hands, my copy of propped against my pencil case. The door opens a few minutes later, and Zach strolls in with long, crisp steps. In his wake, hands in his pockets and hair flopping so low itâs a wonder he can see where heâs going, is Evan Knight.
I look away immediately, but his presence glows from the corner of my vision like a flare. Itâs heightened by the memory of our last encounter.
Evan was definitely easier to ignore before I found out how good he is with his stupid mouth.
âUh, hi, Sutton.â His sheepish drawl interrupts my thoughts.
Iâm reluctant to appear shaken in front of Zachary. I certainly donât want to give him the satisfaction of witnessing any drama between Evan and meâespecially after the embarrassing scene in the rec room.
âHi, Evan.â
âIâm just dropping Zach off,â he explains uselessly.
I glance at Zachary, whose expression is completely blank as he unpacks his bag.
âThatâs very kind of you,â I say, trying my best not to sound too sarcastic.
How he thinks weâre going to be exchanging pleasantries after what happened during our last meeting is beyond me.
âI wanted to say thanks for all the tutoring so far,â he says, his voice both airy and a little strangled. âYou were honestly a really good teacher and pretty much the only person to ever make Shakespeare sound interesting.â
I stare at him, blinking slowly. His blue eyes are fixed on mine, and there is a dark pink flush smeared all over his cheeks. Heâs not smilingâhe looks totally honest. Itâs not hard for lies to sprout out of Evan like water from a fountain, but he doesnât sound at all like heâs lying.
And heâs embarrassing himself in front of another Young Kings, which is probably a risky move.
Maybe this is a clever gambit: heâs taking a loss now for a later victory I canât quite see yet. But no matter how little I trust what heâs saying, itâs still pretty good to hearâand thatâs the real danger when it comes to Evan.
No matter how much we hate each other, he can always figure out ways of making me feel good.
âNo need to thank me,â I respond with as much formality as I can muster. âIâm glad I could help.â
âZach is lucky to have you. If anybody can help him beat Theodora, itâs definitely you.â
Zachary finally reacts, throwing a quick glare Evanâs way.
I shrug. âUm, Iâll do my best.â
I try to keep my answer noncommittal; I donât want to give Zach promises I canât guarantee. He seems the vindictive kind, and Iâm not looking to be hearing from the Blackwood lawyers anytime soon.
âWell, I better go to my own session,â Evan says, running his hand through his distracting mop of sandy hair. âIâm going to make sure your time wasnât wasted, okay? Iâll do everything I can to pass Lit.â
He gives me this unnecessarily intense look, like thereâs fire in his eyes and heâs trying to burn me with it. Not sure of what to say, I can only nod.
He sighs, long and deep and tragic, and leaves.
I turn back to Zachary, who is shaking his head with an expression of disbelief on his face. His mouth opens, but words donât come out. He shrugs, straightens his tie, and looks at me.
âRight, shall we do some essay work today?â
Thank god Zachary is so business-like, because this strange interaction with Evan has completely turned my mind upside down, exposing the very raw, very insistent memories of our kisses and my orgasms and our arguments, and I desperately need the distraction.
âSo,â I explain, âI annotated our exam questions with the suggestions from the mark schemes and examinersâ reports. I was thinking you could have a go at planning your responses and then comparing with the exam board suggestions?â
He nods curtly. âThat sounds excellent. Letâs get to it.â
Once more, we settle into a mostly silent session. Zachary writes up his essay plans in meticulous, spidery handwriting while I read. After that, we do some timed essay practice, reducing our time every round to force ourselves to write faster. Near the end of the session, we swap our work to critique it, take notes, and then itâs time to go.
Zachary packs away with very little ceremony and then gets up.
âThank you for today. That was very helpful.â
He sounds like he means it and I canât help but feel proud. I nod. âYouâre welcome.â
âShall we do another Austen session next Tuesday and then switch to poetry on Thursday?â he asks.
âYes, sounds good. Iâll prep some stuff over the weekend.â
âAlright. Have a good rest of the week.â
âYou too.â
Zachary strides out exactly as he came in, with long, crisp steps. Itâs funny how easy it is to forget he is a Young King; he couldnât be more different to the rest of them. He works hard, cares about his grades, and doesnât seem to be all that interested in popularity.
Of course, he could be coming across this way because itâs me heâs spending this time with, and itâs not exactly like I hold the key to popularity at Spearcrest.
But of course, this is me just overthinking things as usual. I have plenty of things to worry about without wasting my time thinking about the Young Kings, especially when the Young Kings are little more than a childish fantasy thatâs going to fade into thin air the moment we leave Spearcrest.
And soon, there isnât time to worry about anything much at all.
February sets in, brutally cold, depressingly dark. It snows pretty much non-stop, and with the second wave of mock exams rising high as it prepares to crash down upon us, weâre all feeling the mounting pressure. The library is always full, even when I end up staying there until late at night, and even the austere study hall is fuller than usual.
âYou think this is hard, and it is,â our Maths teacher says one afternoon after hitting us with an impromptu pre-mock mock exam. âBut half of you here are Oxbridge candidates, and I can guarantee you that no matter how stressed you are right now, itâs nothing compared to what youâll go through next year.â
Itâs a chilling reminder, and something that stays with me long after he says it, but it barely helps. Iâm so tired I fall asleep every other night without even realising, fully clothed at my desk, and wake up in the morning with a gasp of shock thinking itâs still two in the morning. I barely look in the mirror anymore because I know I look like a zombie.
Luckily, almost everyone in our year looks half-undead too.
Almost everyone.
Ever since he dropped Zachary off that time, Evan has been keeping up the strange new routine. Lingering by the doorway to give me long, insistent looks, asking me how I am and bringing me cups of coffee.
Itâs awkward, and maybe Iâm going slightly mad from exhaustion, but after a while, it becomes almost endearing. Until I realise that he doesnât have a hint of a shadow under his eyes, his skin is completely clear and smooth and instead of losing weight like half the students in our year group, he seems to be filling out with new muscles every time I see him.
On the Thursday of the week before the mock exams, Evan is standing in the doorway, as usual, eating an apple as shiny and healthy-looking as he is. I stare at him in baffled shock, not hearing a thing heâs saying.
âDo you even know we have mocks next week?â I burst out, more out of sheer bafflement than anger.
He blinks. âYeah? I have five exams next week, starting Monday. You?â
âFive, too.â I narrow my eyes. âYouâre not worried about your exams?â
He brushes his hand through his hair in that distracted, distracting way and gives a slightly embarrassed smile. âIâm mostly worried about Lit, for obvious reasons.â Then he checks his watch and sighs deeply. âUgh, talking of which. I should probably go to my session.â
But he lingers in the doorway, his eyes fixed on mine. His blue eyes send the memory of his face between my legs like a war flashback through my mind.
âI wanted to sayâ¦â Evanâs voice is soft and low. âI wanted to say that I⦠that youâ¦â he looks at Zachary, then at me. He gulps, shakes his head and then smiles. âI wanted to say good luck with the exams.â
âOh, um, good luck to you too.â
He nods and then leaves, his presence lingering after heâs gone like the last caress of heat after the sun goes down.
âHe worried.â
Zacharyâs voice surprises me. I turn to look at him. âPardon?â
âHe worried. About exams. Especially Lit, like he said. Heâs been coming with me to the library every evening to revise.â
âI donât understand how anybody at this point of the school year can look like him,â I say, completely truthfully. âHe looks the exact opposite of how I feel.â
âThatâs just how he is,â Zachary says with a sigh. âMust be some strong genetics at play there. But just because he looks like this doesnât mean heâs not stressed and worried and sad like the rest of us mere mortals.â
I stare at Zachary. Heâs not looking at me; heâs unpacking his books and folders, laying them neatly in front of me.
His words remind me of Evan in his big house during the Christmas holiday, ambling around in his undecorated house, bored and aimless and alone. It sends an uncomfortable twinge of something guilt-like through me.
I drop my gaze to the cover of my notebook and mumble, âI didnât think he cared about Lit.â
Zachary laughs, cold and mirthless. âWell, he wants to do well in the exams, but itâs not exactly Lit he cares about, is it?â
âWhat do you mean?â
Zachary looks up at me, raises an eyebrow, and then sits back in his chair, crossing his arms.
âItâs you, okay? Itâs you he cares about, itâs you heâs stressed and worried and sad about. Itâs always been you. Heâs liked you for the longest time, pretty much never stopped. Even when he was dating other girls, it was always you he was thinking and talking about. It was quite irksome, actually.â
Iâm almost numb with shock and disturbed by hearing this come out of Zacharyâs mouth, of all people. My words coagulate on my tongue, thick like tar. In the end, I canât say anything other than, âWhat?â
Zachary shrugs. âI donât even know if he knows it, but heâs liked you since you guys were friends.â
âHe never said anything,â I say, my voice so low itâs almost a whisper.
âWell, no. Youâre rather intimidating, as far as girls go, and Iâm pretty sure he was too thick back then to realise he liked you. Heâs worked hard ever since to get over you, as Iâm sure youâve noticed. But I suppose it was always a matter of time until his obsession won out.â
Iâm too shocked to say anything, and Zachary gives me a level look and adds, âStill, none of this makes up for the way he treated you, so youâre right to reject him. Itâs just been annoying me that you didnât know. But now you know, and we can move on.â
I nod, absent-mindedly taking the essay he hands me.
And even though we spend the next two hours working, when I leave the session itâs not Austen and literary analysis my mind is full of.