the first academic day of Year 12, I finish my last class and head straight to the library.
Armed with a reading list a mile long for my new subjects, I climb the broad marble steps up to my usual desk nestled in a corner of the top floor. I lay down my things and hang my blazer on the back of my chair, and I almost jump out of my skin when a dark figure bursts from amongst the bookshelves.
âWhy on earth are you not taking philosophy this year?â
Zachary looks different. Not just because Iâve not seen him since the summer and heâs now taller, broader, more handsomeâbut because heâs all out of sorts, and Zachary is never anything but calm and composed. His hair is longer and slightly ruffled, and his eyebrows are drawn into a thunderous frown.
âPardon?â I say, not because I havenât heard him, but because Iâm on the back foot and not sure what to say.
âYou werenât in my philosophy class earlier, and when I asked Dr Duvigny why, he told me you werenât enrolled in the course.â
I sigh and compose myself. Gathering my windswept hair, I smooth it and then twist it into a topknot. Itâs so long and heavy now it feels like a constant distractionâa distraction I donât need right now.
Zacharyâs eyes follow my movements, and I wonder if heâs as distracted by my hair as I am.
âI didnât enrol in the philosophy class,â I answer him. His eyes fall back to mine as soon as I speak. âIâm not sure why this surprises you. I never told you I would enrol.â
âYou never tell me anything,â he says with a dismissive wave of his hand. âBut Iâve spent every Wednesday afternoon for the pastâI donât know, five years?âdebating ethics and philosophy with you, so forgive me for assuming you might care about this topic.â
He seems genuinely upset about this. Zachary never displays strong emotion, but he should. It suits him. He has an air of the Byronic hero about him.
Part of me wants to calm him down, to soothe and pacify him, but another part of me wants to stoke the flames of his emotions, watch them burn bright and gold.
The former wins out.
âI do care about philosophy, of course. But as you know, we can only choose three A-levels. Even if Iâd argued for a fourth, it wouldnât have fit into my timetable.â
âWhat made the cut if philosophy didnât?â His tone is cold and imperious, but when he steps closer, Iâm enveloped in the heat of his presence.
âIf you want to know what A-levels I chose, you could just ask.â
âI am asking,â he says.
âYouâre disguising your question,â I tell him. âYou ambush me with your anger and your demanding toneââ I change my voice, deepening it in a purposely paltry imitation of his voice. â
â I go back to my normal voice. âWhen what you could have done is come to see me and ask me, quite normally and calmly, what A-levels Iâve chosen.â
He watches me for a moment, his expression softening into something thoughtful and inquisitive. From this close, his cologne is rich and intoxicating, a smokey, woody scent that seems mature for someone his age. I hold my breath because smelling his cologne makes this moment feel intimate even though itâs not.
And the last thing I need in my life is to think about intimacy with Zachary Blackwood.
âWhat are you going to do now we no longer have debate club?â he asks in a gentle, ponderous voice. He tilts his head. âAll that carefully contained belligerence, Theodora. What are you going to do with it now you no longer have a formal outlet?â
The library is quiet at this time of day, especially this floor. The silence is thick and satiny, and the heavy sunlight of early autumn afternoon droops from the cupola and lies like a blanket over us. Zacharyâs hair and skin and eyes catch that luxuriant sunlight and he glows like a young god.
I answer in a clipped tone. âLuckily for me, we still have literature class together. Iâll still get to prove you wrong all the time.â
He laughs and shakes his head. âNo, no, itâs not the proving me wrong you like, Theodora. Itâs what comes before thatâthe weighing me up, the scratching at me with the tips of your barbed words, the seeking of weak points for you to pierce. Thatâs the part you likeâthatâs the outlet.â
âCongratulations,â I reply. âYouâre the first person to discover that the best part of a debate is the debate itself.â
He steps forward again, but I retreat once more, and this time, the corner of the desk comes between us to stop his approach. Unfazed by it, Zachary rests his elbow on the corner of the polished wood partition that keeps the desk shielded from distractions.
âIâm not talking about debating,â he says, never dropping my gaze. âIâm talking about you and I and that need we have to wage war.â His lips curl into a sardonic half-smile. âIf you cared about debating, youâd be in my philosophy class with me.â
I sigh and look away, busying myself pulling my things out of my bag and finding my reading list.
âI couldnât take philosophy even if I wanted to, Zachary.â I glance up at him, seeking the hurt that brought him here in his eyes. âIâm sorry. You are right, I do love waging war with you, and I do love philosophy. I would have loved to be in the class with you. I just didnât have a choice.â
He nods and slowly bites down on his lip, dragging the pillowy flesh with his teeth. My honesty works on him like a soothing balm. The tension melts from his shoulders, and he sighs. âWhat did you take instead, then?â
âIâm taking English lit, history and Russian.â
âOh. I thought you already spoke Russian.â
âI speak some. I need to be fluentâI should be fluent. Thatâs why my fatherââ I interrupt myself. âThatâs why I need to take Russian this year.â
âAh, I see.â His tone is calmer now, almost gentle. âWant me to ask Iakov to help you?â
âIakov Kavinski?â I ask. âHe knows about as much Russian as I doâwe were in the same class last year.â
Zachary, for the first time, looks genuinely surprised. âWhat? I thought Russian was his first language.â
I shake my head. âNo, itâs Ukrainian.â
âI didnât even know heâd been there.â
âHe grew up there.â I lean towards Zachary slightly. âArenât you two best friends? Shouldnât you know this?â
He sighs and drops his head onto his arm, which is still resting against the wooden partition on the desk. âYes, I should. Iakov isnât very chatty, though. He keeps his cards close to his chest.â He raises his head and gives me an accusatory glance. âJust like you.â
âCards, Zachary?â I give him a small smile. âYou know I prefer chess.â
âChess pieces donât keep secretsâthey have no mystery. You always know where they can go and where theyâll end up.â He smirks. âIf only it was that easy with you.â
âDonât be so dramatic.â I wave a hand at him. âYou found me here, didnât you?â
âYes, I found you here, where I hoped to confront you and get you to change your mind and study philosophy with me. And yet here you are, being a wild card, and telling me youâll be studying Russian insteadâa subject in which you know perfectly well Iâm incapable of competing with you.â
His tone is playful, so I keep mine playful too.
âWhy do you need me there anyway? Canât you study philosophy aloneâwithout competition? Or are you scared youâll become lazy and complacent if Iâm not there?â
âEvery sword needs a whetstone,â he says.
I narrow my eyes. âAnd in this lovely little metaphor, the sword isâ¦?â
He has the audacity to smile. âMy intellect, of course. And yours is the whetstone Iâve been using to sharpen it.â
âIs that so?â I sneer. âAnd what if youâre wrong, Zachary? What if my intellect is also a sword, and all youâve been doing these past few years is dulling your blade against mine?â
He tilts his head and gives me a slow, enticing smile.
âI suppose weâll find out at the end of the year.â
âNot this time.â
He raises a questioning eyebrow.
âThis is the first year of A-levelsâno formal examinations,â I tell him. âThat means no results list. For the first time, we wonât have to see our names next to each otherâs at the top of the boards.â
The lazy gold of the slow-setting sun glitters in Zacharyâs eyes, which are smiling even when his mouth isnât.
âWhat a shame,â he murmurs. âIt was a bittersweet sight, but Iâve always thought our names look good next to each otherâs.â