weeks, the café becomes the most comforting part of my day. At first, itâs stressful learning the pricing of things, how to make coffee, working the till. But Jess is so relaxed, and Freddy, whoâs technically speaking our supervisor, is so sweet my nerves soon fade away.
The more time I spend on the job, the better I get at it. On my sixth shift, Jess even leaves to go to the library to work on some assignments, and I work most of the shift alone.
Freddy is never gone, though. He tends to be in the office managing the place or baking the treats we sell in the shiny window displays. Still, Iâm never lonely, and Freddy even encourages me to bring a book with me so I donât get bored.
Compared to the slowly mounting pressure at school, the café is a much-needed sanctuary.
As for Evan, since entering into this alliance, heâs been a lot more bearable. Of course, it helps that I never have to see him at school and that heâs clearly trying to stay on my nice side for the sake of his assignments.
He keeps asking me where Iâm going every Tuesday and Thursday, but since there isnât much he can do to force me to answer, I just ignore his questions. I can tell he still says things to try and get a rise out of me, but itâs getting easier and easier to brush him away.
Maybe part of it is due to spending time with Freddy and getting to know him more.
Freddyâs parents own the café , and Freddy handles it while they are busy running another café they own in London. His actual dream is to be an artist, so in his spare time he paints and sketches. A few of his paintingsâmoody landscapes and soulful animal portraitsâhang in the café. His brushstrokes are exactly like him: gentle and expressive.
The more I get to know Freddy, the more I despise the boys at Spearcrest. Even though they have every opportunity at their fingertips, they do nothing with them. Apart from finding newer and more obnoxious ways of displaying their wealth, they donât so much as their time.
But Freddy⦠Freddy is things. He has hopes and dreams. A personality instead of an expensive watch.
And heâs actually interested in me. We discuss movies we like and books weâve read. Instead of constantly being on edge like I am around Evan, I can relax around Freddy, be a softer version of myself.
Things go smoothly until the British autumn sets in for good.
Clouds stack on top of clouds throughout the week. Daylight becomes as dark as dusk. By Wednesday, rain is inevitable. And on Thursday, while I sit in the taxi on the way out of Spearcrest, a booming crack startles both the driver and me.
By the time I reach Evanâs house, the clouds are gutting themselves.
Rain falls so thick and fast I donât even know how the driver sees anything through the windshield. I thank him, get out of the car, and run over to Evanâs doorway just for the shelter of his porch.
The best I can hope for is that the rain stops eventually. I have a little umbrella, but in this wind itâs useless. Freddy is expecting me, so if the rain doesnât stop Iâm just going to brave the deluge and hope for the best.
I wait a whole fifteen minutes, but the rain shows no sign of relenting. My coat doesnât have a hood but I have a woolly hat on, and my trusty old boots. Although both will only be able to protect me for so long, what choice do I have?
Time to brave the flood.
out of the shower when I heard the taxi pull up outside fifteen minutes earlier. Since I had to cut my run short due to the pelting rain, I expected to hear a knock on the door any minute.
Obviously, I should have known better.
Taking a seat in my momâs reading nook, I peer through the curtains. This vantage point gives me a perfect view of the porch. There, Sophie Sutton sits like the prideful, stubborn little thing she is.
Sheâs wearing a big grey coat, a hat and her big old boots, her legs tucked against her. Of course, sheâs too proud to ask me to come in. Or afraid. Itâs hard to tell with Sophie.
Iâm not wearing my watch, but I glance around the corner at my dadâs ugly vintage Patek Philippe clock, which dominates the wall above the mantelpiece. Fifteen minutes. For fifteen minutes, sheâs been sitting on the cold steps, hugging herself and waiting.
When she finally stands up, a sharp blade of triumph cuts right through me. Watching her pride shatter as she knocks on my door is going to be so sweet, and Iâm already anticipating the taste of it.
Except that, of course, Sophie pulls her woolly hat deep over her head and ears, and sets off down the porch steps straight in the direction of the pouring rain.
âFor fuckâs sake,â I grit out, jumping to my feet.
Iâm at the door before sheâs reached the end of the steps. She starts when I call out, âSutton!â
She turns, startled. Her eyes dart down my body, then back up, almost too quickly to notice. But it reminds me that Iâm only wearing boxers, a towel wrapped around my shoulders.
A flush colours her cheeks, sending a tendril of dark pleasure unfurling through my chest. I want to tell her that she can look all she likes. Iâve been playing sports my whole life, I work out on a strict schedule and I was a part of Spearcrestâs rugby team up until last year, when I had to stop due to injuries.
I know what my body looks like. Iâve worked hard to make it look that way.
So if Sophie wants to look at it, she can look her fill. I her to look.
But her eyes are firmly pinned to mine when she belligerently snaps, âWhat?â
I jab my head up towards the sky. âYouâre not going to walk to town in this?â
She raises an eyebrow. âNo? What am I going to do, fly?â
I roll my eyes. For someone so smart and well-read, she can be so stupid when she wants to be. I hold the door open. âDonât be so fucking stubborn. Come in already.â
âWhile youâre prancing around naked? No thanks.â
âWhat are you afraid of, Sutton?â I ask with a smirk. âNever seen a naked guy before?â
She looks totally unimpressed. âNot one I didnât want to see.â
I narrow my eyes at her. Sheâs not implying sheâs seen a guy naked? Uptight, stuck-up Sophie? No chance.
âBut as charmed as I am by all this,â she continues witheringly, âI have somewhere to be.â
âFine, donât come in. Just wait here, okay?â
She narrows her eyes and hesitates.
âSutton, I mean it. Wait.â
Sophie gives me a long look and doesnât say anything, but sheâs not going anywhere either. So I close the door and sprint up the stairs and to my room. I throw on the first clean clothes I can get my hands on: black sweatpants and a white t-shirt, socks and my old white sneakers I mostly wear when Iâm driving somewhere.
I keep the towel around my shoulders, because my hair is still wet, and grab the first set of keys I find in my dadâs office desk. By the time I pull around in the Porsche Boxster, I half expect Sophie to be gone.
But sheâs still there, and she actually gets in the car. Her posture screams her discomfort and mistrust. She sits with her back straight and her legs crossed, hugging her backpack to her chest.
Low music plays in the car, the bass pounding like a pulse. I can smell the metallic heat of the car, my shampoo, the warm vanilla of Sophie. My heartbeat quickens, even though thereâs no reason for it to.
Her proximity is tantalising. I desperately want her to say something, to give me anything to hold on to and pull on. Every interaction between Sophie and me is always a confrontation, a battle, but this far away from Spearcrest, in the small cabin of the sports car, itâs like the rules have changed.
How do I approach her when sheâs this close? Without the Young Kings around us to make sure I never close the distance between us? Without Spearcrest to remind us we belong in different worlds?
The silence stretches on. Sophie says nothingâdoesnât even look my way. In the end, Iâm the first one to speak.
âWell? Are you going to tell me where to drop you off?â
âThe high street.â
I wait, but she says nothing else.
âAnywhere in particular on the high street?â
âNo.â
Since itâs clear sheâs not going to give me anything more to go on, I drive on. Itâs been a while since Iâve driven stick, but it comes back to me quickly. Thereâs something grounding about the gear stick, the responsive pedals under my feet. Something comforting about the control I have over the carâthe kind of control I could only ever wish to have over Sophie.
She stares out of her window and says nothing.
For weeks, Iâve been wondering where sheâs been goingâfor weeks sheâs given me absolutely nothing.
But there can only be one thing Sophie is doing away from school.
Sophie has never dated anyone at Spearcrest. Even if she had done so in secret, I would have known. I would have destroyed anyone who dared go near her. But Iâve never had to, because I worked very hard to ensure everyone would know about the special attention I pay Sophie.
Special attention which keeps her alienated and untouchable at all times.
Not that Iâve needed to work hardâSophie keeps herself isolated quite well on her own. Her open disdain for the kids of Spearcrest and her arrogant self-reliance have done well to keep others at bay.
Itâs a miracle she has any friends.
But Iâm not naive. Just because Sophie hasnât been dating Spearcrest boys doesnât mean sheâs not dating at all. She might not have the polished sheen and picture-perfect good looks of the prettiest girls in the school, but sheâs not bad-looking by any stretch of the imagination.
Her looks are particular: with her thick, dark eyebrows, her heavy-lidded eyes, that austere centre parting and her thick, shiny brown hair. With her long limbs and broad shoulders, she looks almost athletic, but she has the rigid posture of an old-timey schoolmistress. Her strides are long and authoritative. She stands out even when sheâs trying to blend in with that sort of awkward arrogance she exudes.
Everything about her is hard and unyielding, but itâs part of what makes her so intriguing.
She makes me want to test her strength, to see how far she can bend before she snaps. But just because I feel this way doesnât mean the prettiness of her dark eyes, her pouty lips and her smooth skin have gone unnoticed by other guys.
And Sophieâs used to being either mocked or ignored by the boys at Spearcrest, so I bet some guy could slip right past her defences if he was sweet enough to her.
The thought is both electrifying and infuriating.
I sneak a glance at her. Sheâs leaning against the window, her chin propped in her palm. I know this pose wellâshe always sits like this when sheâs deep in thought. What is she thinking about? Her secret boyfriend?
If Sophie had a secret boyfriend, what would he look like? Knowing Sophie, heâd probably be older. Smart, polite, well-read. Heâd study something pretentious, like Classics or Philosophy. Heâd probably fascinate her and make her smile.
I turn my eyes back to the road, the row of glowing red brake lights ahead. Traffic into town is slow because of the almost-blinding rain, and my mind wanders, lured down a slippery path of questions. What must it be like to be this guy, to have Sophieâs attention and affection? To take her on dates and hold her hands and talk to her without every conversation being laced with insults? To spend time with her doing nothing, just listening to music or idly touching her long hair while she reads a book?
When I imagine it, my mind plays the film of a relationship with Sophie with me starring as the boyfriend.
Weâre in my bedroom, and itâs my bed sheâs lying on while sheâs annotating some boring copy of whatever sheâs studying. Itâs my hand stroking the glossy length of her brown hair. Iâd try to play a game on my phone but Iâd be too distracted by her slight frown of concentration.
Not because Iâd want to be her boyfriend, but because I canât ever picture someone else being at the centre of her life.
Sheâd look up at me, and Iâd notice how soft and kissable her lips are. My hand would brush her cheek, wrap around her neck, pull her slowly towards me. Sheâd melt into me, her mouth would open under mine, my tongue would glide against hers. Then Iâd pull her to me, slide my hands under her shirt, my finger searching forâ
âStop.â
Sophieâs voice startles me so much I pull a muscle in my neck turning my head.
For a terrifying second, Iâm scared Iâve been thinking aloud and that Sophie is trying to stop me from expressing some deep and disturbing desire. But sheâs unbuckling her seatbeltâweâve arrived on the high street.
Besides, if sheâd heard what I was thinking, sheâd probably have thrown herself out of the moving car. I know I would have.
I pull the car to a stop in a parking bay outside a florist. Sophie shoulders her backpack and pulls on her door handle but hesitates.
âHey, uh⦠thanks for the lift.â
Her gratitude is unexpected and throws me off a little. I shrug.
âAnytime, Sutton.â
She doesnât say anything else. She gets out of the car, slams the door shut and runs off in the rain. Her big boots splash into puddles as she darts across the street and disappears through the doorway of a shop. I look up at the sign, peering through the thick grey blur of the relentless rain.
Gold letters on a green sign read âThe Little Gardenâ. The vintage style painting of a cup of coffee tells me this is a café.
I stay parked for a while, but Sophie doesnât come back out. Nobody else walks in apart from some old ladies. If Sophie is meeting her secret boyfriend, then heâs already inside. The rain is falling too thickly to be able to see anything through the window apart from the vague glow of golden lights and the outline of plants.
For a truly stupid second, I have the impulse to get out of my car and walk into the café.
Iâd know for sure then. Iâd be able to see what it looks like to be someone worthy of Sophieâs affections. But if I go in, thereâs no chance she wonât see me. And if she knows I followed her sheâll be understandably furious, and Iâll look pathetic. I canât even think of a good excuse to give her.
So I turn the key in the ignition and set off home.
Even though Iâm driving away feeling like Iâve just turned my back on a battle, I know better.
Because Iâm not going to cede Sophie to some other guyâsome insignificant nobody from some shitty British village. Iâve worked too hard to make Sophie untouchable, to ensure nobody could ever approach her on my watch.
Iâm the one that fucked up this time, though.
Because I had the perfect excuse to keep Sophie close to me, and I gave it up like a fucking idiot. I didnât realise what was at stake when I first made that deal with Sophie. It never occurred to me Sophie would seek the things sheâd never get within Spearcrest of it.
Clearly, I underestimated her.
Now, all I have to do is find a way of bringing her back to me. She wonât get away as easily this time.