a day of contrition.
I begin with Zaro.
Itâs not an easy meeting to set up. In Spearcrest, you canât exchange a glance with someone across a corridor between classes without the entire school somehow knowing about it. The walls have eyes around here, and if one person sees one thing, social media ensures that everybody else will know of it.
Fortunately for me, the Spearcrest campus is a sprawling place, and I have the key to places most students donât have access to. I text Zaro and ask her to meet me in a maths classroom on the top floor of the New Manor. The awkward angle of the door means that even if you stood right against the glass panel at its centre, you could only see a small corner of the classroom.
Of course, finding somewhere to meet is the easiest part. Given how furious Zaro has been with me since she found out I asked Iakov to keep an eye on her, and given I had her quasi-kidnapped the night before, I canât imagine she has much goodwill towards me.
But this is a day of contrition, so Iâm willing to wait. Zaro has read my text, but she hasnât responded. She might come, she might not. Thereâs no way of knowing.
So I sit in a corner of the classroom thatâs the furthest from the door and take out the paperback book thatâs tucked into my coat pocketâa collection of David Hume essays Iâm going to reference in my aesthetics assignment for Mr Ambroseâand start reading.
She makes me wait almost two hours.
She turns up just before midday.
Seeing her is a bittersweet feeling, a strange mingling of melancholy and nostalgia. In her face, I see remnants of the little sister I remember so vividly: in the big, dark eyes with their forest of curly eyelashes, in the natural glow of her skin and the roundness of her cheeks, in the pout of her lips, which remind me of how her mouth would wobble every time she was about to cry as a little girl.
Those are the remnants of the old Zaro, but they are set like jewels in the shape of the new Zaro. A taller Zaro, with the grace and poise of a dancer, a Zaro with a direct, defiant gaze. A Zaro in Gucci tights and an oversized blazer, a belt around her waist, her long black curls half-up, the tips now honey-gold.
Zaro has always been a soft being, but whatever softness is left inside her is well hidden now. Even from me.
Maybe especially from me.
âMorning, Zaro,â I greet her. âYou didnât need to dress up on my account.â
âI have somewhere to be after this,â she snaps. âSo it better not take long.â
I want to tell her it would already be over if sheâd come earlier, but Iâm too grateful that she came at all to care. I nod. âIt shouldnât take long. Where are you headed to anyway?â
âWhy?â she asks in a sneer. âSo you can sic your dog on me?â
I sigh. âLook, Zaro. Iâm not going to beat about the bush with this. I am sorry for asking Iakov to keep an eye on you. Not sorry because I regret it or because I think itâs a bad idea. Iâm sorry because of how it makes you feel. I never wanted that. I never, ever want you to feel like I donât trust you or like I look down on you.â
She lets out a burst of angry laughter. âOh, you donât want me to feel that way, do you? You donât want me to feel like you see me like a little girl who canât look after herself and make her own decisions, so to show me that you really respect me, you donât get your hands dirty trying to control me, you just get your big scary friend to do it for you?â
âIâm not trying to control you,â I say immediately. âIâm trying to protect you.â
âGreat. Great. I feel so blessed and fortunate to be surrounded by so many men who wish to protect meâby controlling me.â
I clench my jaw, forcing myself to carefully consider my words. The last thing I want to do right now is to speak out of anger. I asked Zaro to meet me here because I want to sort things out with her, not deepen the trench between us.
âLookâI understand why you feel this way,â I say slowly.
She interrupts me sharply. âDonât patronise me.â
âAlright. Why donât you tell me how to fix this, then?â
She stares at me for a second as if she wasnât expecting me to say that. She recovers quickly and blurts out, âI want you to get your stupid friend to leave me alone.â
I consider my response. I realise Iâm playing with my book, tugging at the pages and flicking them back and forth. Itâs probably making me seem nervous, and I donât want Zaro to think Iâm nervous. I close the book and set it aside.
âAlright. Iâll ask Iakov to stop keeping an eye on you. What happens next?â
âWhat do you mean?â Her tone is short and irritated.
âI mean when youâre on your own, staking your independence, without a safety net and without my interference. What happens next? You go to private clubs in London with tech execs and then what?â
Dull colour flushes into Zaroâs cheeks. She crosses her legs and breathes out through her nose. Her fingers curl around the edge of the table, squeezing it.
âIâm not stupid, alright?â she says finally. âI wouldnât have stayed the night at his hotel room.â
âWhat if he didnât give you a choice?â
She glares at me as if offended by the bluntness of my question.
âI wouldâve called the policeâas you well know.â
âWhat if he took your phone?â
She rolls her eyes. âDonât be so paranoid.â
âDonât be so naive.â I take a deep breath. âLook, Iâm not saying it have happened, Zaro. Iâm saying it have happened. Thatâs what Iâm scared ofâdonât you get it? Iâm not afraid that I canât trust you or that youâll mess up. Youâre allowed to mess up. Iâm afraid of things going wrong, of someone hurting you.â She rolls her eyes again, but this time, itâs more half-hearted. âYou have every right to want to live your life the way you want toâbut try to imagine, for one split second, how I would feel if something happened to you and I hadnât done anything to stop it. Try to imagine that the other way aroundâif something happened to me.â
She sighs, and her shoulders slump. The bravado melts from her posture.
âI know you worry about me, Zach. I know you want to keep me safe, but you canât keep me safe by keeping me in a .â
âThatâs not how I wanted to make you feel.â I raise my hands. âIâm trying my best, but I donât know how to look after you without making you feel shit about it, Zaro. I just donât.â
She nods and slides off the edge of the desk, pulling out the chair next to mine and sitting at my side. We stare at each other for a second.
âTrust me a little more, thatâs all. If youâre scared for me, Iâll start carrying mace. IâllâIâll keep you updated on where I am. And if Iâm in trouble, Iâll call you. I promise.â
I nod slowly. âAlright. Iâm willing to meet you halfway too. Iâll call Iakov offâbut I have two conditions.â
She stiffens a little bit, but thereâs a spark of hope in her eyes. âWhat conditions?â
âI want you to let Iakov teach you some self-defence.â
âUgh, no, please. I hate exercising, Zach, and heâs so bigâcanât I just carry a knife on me or something?â
âA knife will be useful until someone knocks it out of your hand.â I take her hand in mine. âI know itâs not fair that you should have to learn how to fight. I know none of this is your fault. But thereâs no use pretending danger isnât real. And if you donât want me to have Iakov look after you, then youâre going to have to learn how to look after yourself. For realânot just by sending me a pin of your location when thereâs nothing either of us could do if something went wrong.â
She sighs and throws her hands up in petulant acceptance.
âFine! Iâll learn self-defence.â She narrows her eyes. âWhatâs the other condition?â
âYou donât have to be a nun, Zaro, but for godâs sakeâplease donât hang out with old guys. Thereâs a reason these men arenât pursuing relationships with women their age. Theyâre not the kind of men who are looking to treat you as an equal.â
She drops her gaze and then mumbles, âI know this.â
âDo you?â
She glares at me. âYes, Zach, obviously I do.â Biting down into her lip, she glances away guiltily and then adds, âI was only going back to that guyâs hotel because I wanted to piss your friend off.â
For a moment, I just look at her. I donât doubt for a second that there is truth in what sheâs telling me. It wouldnât surprise me if Zaro was just testing Iakov. But Iakov wasnât around when she was at Sainte-Agnès, where she was groomed by a member of staff.
I donât want to judge Zaro based on something she was a victim of. But the knowledge of what happened at Sainte-Agnès is like an injury inside my mind. Even if it heals, itâll always leave a scar, a scar that will forever affect every decision I make when it comes to her.
âPromise me youâll be careful,â I say, giving her my hand.
She rolls her eyes but takes it. I squeeze her palm against mine. âIâll be careful.â
âI love you, lil sis.â
Her face softens. When anger and hurt and resentment arenât hardening her features, the Zaro of oldâmy little sister who loved plants and flowers and would sit at the foot of my bed playing farming games while I read books out loudâcomes melting through, making my chest ache.
âI love you too, big bro.â