of freedom between the end of GCSEs and the start of A-levels, I read .
Itâs better than I imagined it would be, but reading it is nevertheless a joyless task. I annotate it obsessively, scrutinising every line for insights into Theodoraâs mind.
By the time I finish the book, the fore-edge is a dense forest of tabs.
Amongst the forest, the red tabs reign supremeâthey are the tabs I used to denote passages regarding James Hook.
In the drunken mist of that evening in the woodsâthe search for Theodora amongst the trees, the heavy drinking afterwards, egged on by my friends, then glimpsing her gliding fey-like away from the bonfire in a flutter of feathers and skirtsâone memory stands out among the rest.
Theodoraâs pretty smile emerging from the shadows to tell me she had a childhood crush on James Hook.
It was the first time Theodora ever told me something conversational, pointlessâpersonal. Every time I speak with Theodora, itâs to debate or argue or discuss. She never just tells me things about herself. I could teach an entire curriculum of Theodoraâs debating style, her oracy, the words, terms and arguments she favours, the philosophers and historical figures she draws inspiration from.
But if I were to sit down and write a list of facts about her, I wouldnât even get past the basics. I have no idea what month her birthday falls in, what her favourite colour might be, or if she likes animals. She might be a single child, or she might have many siblingsâI would never know.
So this unexpected reveal about Hook isnât just a random fact. Itâs a precious nugget of knowledge, a treasure I never hoped to gain. And now I have one, I want more; I want a treasure chest full of glittering nuggets of information.
I re-read Hookâs death scene several times over.
Irrational anger fills me with every quote. Quotes like â
â and â
â seem to taunt me. Tragedy and dignity, elegance and despairâthis is my impression of the death scene. Is that what appeals to Theodora?
I re-read the chapter, angrily seeking signs of myself in Hook.
Zahara enters the libraryâwhich is more of a mixture of a home office and a lounge but gets its nickname because itâs furnished floor to ceiling with bookshelves filled to the brim. Sheâs home from Sainte-Agnès, the private girlsâ school sheâs attending in France, although sheâll only be home for a few days before she goes off to some summer camp.
Every time I see her, she looks less like the little girl of my memories and more like a stranger.
Sheâs taller now, graceful as a dancer, dressed in the preppy style of a private school girl. Her hair is long, well past her shoulders, a nimbus around her head, then looser curls down her back, the black streaked with warm shades of caramel and russet.
âI thought Iâd find you here,â she declares. âWhat are you reading now?â
I lift my book to show her the cover. Her eyebrows shoot up. â
? Didnât think that would be your cup of tea.â
âItâs not,â I tell her, snapping the book shut. âDo you think Hook is an attractive character?â
She smirks. âI supposeâdangerous man, tragic figure⦠that hook. Every girl loves a villain.â She perches herself on the leather-top surface of the enormous desk and frowns down at me as I let my head roll back into the desk chair. âWhat is this about? Homework?â
âNo, not homework. Thereâs this girl in my yearâitâs her favourite book.â
âOh, Theodora?â Zahara gives me a pointed look and rolls her eyes. âYou can just say her name, you know. Itâs not like you ever talk about anybody else.â
âSheâs the girl who keeps tying with me for top of our classes.â
âI know who she is.â Zaharaâs tone is half-exasperated, half-amused. âI donât care what her favourite book isâwhat I want to know is when you two are finally going to get it on?â
I grimace. âGet it on? They teach you this sort of stuff at your convent?â
She laughs. âOh no, not at all. Thereâs no chance Iâm going to learn anything inappropriate from a bunch of severely sexually frustrated teenage girls, right?â
When I asked my parents why they didnât send Zahara to Spearcrest with me, they told me they have no intention of sending their daughter to a co-ed boarding school where âanything could happenâ. Their implications were clear, and at the time Iâd thought their fears unfounded.
Now, I know for a fact theyâre not. Everyone in Spearcrest is having sex, and anyone who isnât having sex is doing everything but. Iâm the only exception, and I get my share of grief for it.
Griefâand, of course, my unimaginative nickname. Bishop Blackwood.
I sigh. âThere is nothing for us to get on, as you put it. Theodora isnât allowed to date, and she seems to be taking that rule very seriously.â
Zahara covers her mouth with her hands. âEw, Zach, donât tell me Iâm going to be losing my virginity before you.â
I use my copy of to whack her forehead. âVirginity is a social construct, Zaro.â
She kicks my arm and hops off the desk. âThatâs not what Iâve been learning at school.â
âThen you need better teachers.â
âMaybe.â She gives me a sly look. âIs having no girlfriend a social construct, too, then?â
âI donât need a girlfriend,â I tell her in my most dignified tone. âI have a beautiful rival instead.â
âA beautiful rivalâyeah.â Zahara cackles. âAnd a left hand!â
She runs out of the room before I can reply, her laughter echoing behind her.
I would laugh, too, if she wasnât so tragically right.
not used to this kind of discourse. Sharing my social time with the most popular boys in the year means constantly being surrounded by girls. I used to think Evanâthe all-American star athleteâand Séverinâthe French aristocrat playboyâwould be enough to divert most of those girlsâ attention, but I learn that there is no accounting for taste.
Some girls prefer the strong and silent appeal of Iakovâs monosyllabism and bruised knuckles, and some prefer the dark edge of Lucaâs borderline-sociopathic tendencies. And so of course, I have my own appeal and my own suitresses.
None of them have any appeal to me, though. At the end of Year 11, in a moment of drunken hubris, Luca and Evan made a bet that we, as a group, were going to sleep with every single girl in the year. It was a stupid idea and probably did more to repel girls than it did to attract them.
Unfortunately, it was also filmed on someoneâs phone and subsequently widely distributed.
After the summer, when we return for upper school, I half hope the bet is buried and long-forgotten, but Iâm quickly disappointed.
Sev, who unwisely proposed to his girlfriend Kayana at the end of Year 11, is now single and mending a broken heart. Evan, still nursing his inexplicable obsession with wanting and hurting his former friend Sophie Sutton, is keen for a distraction. Iakov doesnât date much, but he always comes back from his summers home in a depressive mood and is probably just craving some friendly human contact.
And Luca, Iâm beginning to suspect, is just a cold-blooded animal looking for a smaller creature to sadistically toy with.
In short, my friends begin Year 12 with their A-levels being last on their list of priorities.
âIâm going to put a dent in our numbers for the bet,â Séverin states on our first day back after weâve all gathered in the centre of the sixth form common room. âWe only have two years left here and almost one-hundred-and-fifty girls to get through still.â
âYouâre keeping count, are you?â I ask him, making no attempt to disguise the mockery in my voice.
He nods quite seriously. âI still have the list we made on my phone.â He swipes open his phone and pulls up his note app, brandishing his screen in my direction. âSee?â
âLet me have a look,â Evan says, grabbing Sevâs phone and peering at it.
Luca takes Sevâs phone out of Evanâs hand and smirks. âDonât worry, Ev, our little prefect isnât on there.â
âWhat little prefect?â Evan asks, but his jaw is clenched, muscles twitching there.
Luca ignores him, scrolling through the list with a vicious smile on his pale face, his grey eyes sharp as knife blades. âSo many names missing from our illustrious list. Are we calling dibs on anyone, gentlemen? Or is every girl game this year?â
Luca has one type: girls his friends want. Itâs the reason Evan would never in a million years admit he was checking for Sophieâs name on the list, the reason why Sev and Iakov both shrug at Lucaâs question.
âBlackwood?â Luca asks, his playful tone hiding a dangerous edge. âI see Theodoraâs name is still missing from the list. Are you claiming her?â
âSheâs not an object or a territory, so no, Iâm not claiming her.â
âYouâre right.â Thereâs a glib smile on Lucaâs pale face. âItâs not like sheâd ever sleep with you anyway.â
Heâs purposely misconstruing the meaning behind my words, but Luca likes nothing more than to provoke others. And Iâm not so foolish as to fall for his artless manipulation.
âSheâs not sleeping with anyone,â Iakov replies before I can. âHer fatherâs got a bounty on the head of anyone who touches her.â
I look up sharply, meeting Iakovâs dark eyes. Heâs just spent the summer in Russia, where Theodoraâs father lives. Of course, Russia is a large countryâthe largest country in the worldâbut I wonder if the world of the ultra-wealthy is as small there as it is here in England. I want to quiz him on whatever he knows, but not now, not here.
Besides, knowing Iakov, he might just have been joking. Itâs almost impossible to tell with his deadpan tone and neutral expression.
I drop his gaze and find Séverin looking at me with narrowed eyes. Seizing his phone out of Lucaâs hand, Sev speaks with sudden authority.
âTheodoraâs off-bounds.â
Luca raises his eyebrows. âWhy?â
âIf Zachary isnât sleeping with her, none of us are,â Sev responds with a shrug. âIâm just being realistic.â
âIf sheâs off-bounds,â Evan says, slapping me on the arm in a gesture of sportsmanly support, âmaybe this year you can set your sights on someone you actually stand a chance of sleeping with.â
I shake my hand and shrug his hand away with a grimace. âThatâs not happening.â
Evan blinksâas if he, of all people, should be confused with the concept of having your heart irrevocably set on one person.
âWhat do you mean?â he asks.
âIâm not setting my sights on anyone. Theodora is the only one worthy of my desire. I couldnât set my sights on anybody else if I tried. She and I are fated somehow. Anything else would be doomed by principle.â
My friends all stare at me without speaking as if I just spoke in a language completely foreign to them. Luca finally breaks the silence with a mocking snicker.
âIf sheâs your fated soulmate then why arenât you two together yet?â
I shrug. âWeâre seventeen. Life is long.â
âFucking hell,â Séverin blurts out. âYouâre already the only virgin left in the group and now youâre telling us youâre willing to wait until youâre an old man because of fateâwhat the fuck even is fate anyway?â
If I cared at all what they all think of me, I would perhaps bother explaining myself. But when I look at their faces, I find myself overwhelmed with indifference. Sevâs and Evanâs mouths droop open in child-like confusion, Lucaâs is twisted in a derisive smirk.
Iakov alone, sitting a little away from us, seems utterly unconcerned.
âItâs his dick,â he says. âHe can do what he likes with it.â
His blunt words of wisdom seem to shake Evan and Sev out of their state of stupefaction. Sev sighs and turns back to me.
âAnd what if you can never have her?â
Itâs a good questionâone Iâve thought of often, alone at night in my bed, hard and tense with frustration and desire and despair.
âThen life is going to hurt like a bitch.â