saint of academics, believed that penance relied on three conditions:
Contritionâsorrow for sin.
Amendmentâconfessing sins without omission.
And satisfaction by means of good work.
All of those things sound reasonableâmaybe even noble.
Sorrow for sins is easy because my sin resulted in Theodoraâs hurt and anger and her avoiding me like a plague of blisters. And Iâm not afraid to do good work. Work, good or otherwise, has never intimidated me.
But confessing my sins without omission is a Herculean missionâmaybe even a Sisyphean task.
Because it would mean telling Theodora while Iâm unhappy with her, why I lashed out at her, and why I couldnât read a scene of without projecting us onto the characters. It would mean telling Theodora that I wanted to be the first person to kiss her even though she never promised me her first kiss, even though not a single thing in this world entitles me to her kisses except the fact I want them. I would need to admit that she hurt me, hurt both my pride and my feelings.
Being honest doesnât bother meâI could confess to just about any sin in front of just about any person. But of course, Theodora isnât just about any person.
Still, not doing the right thing because itâs difficult or because itâs embarrassing isnât a good enough reason.
cold enough for the wind to have chased away the clouds and crystallised the beads of moisture on leaves and window panes. Normally, whenever I need to find Theodora, all I need to do is to hunt her down in her usual spot in the library, but she wonât be there today.
Theodoraâs use of social media is tactful: aesthetically pleasing and frequent without ever revealing much about her at all. Her friends, on the other hand, use their social media accounts very much in the same way as the Victorians used journals and lettersâa medium in which to pour all oneâs thoughts and emotions.
And Seraphina Rosenthalâthe Rose of Spearcrestâposted a GRWM less than half an hour ago.
In it, she filmed herself doing her make-up and picking an outfit, and although my phone was on mute and I couldnât hear what she was saying, her caption read, .
I consider asking Evan if heâd like to come to London with me since heâs always good fun on a trip, but heâs been taking English lit more seriously since Sophie Sutton started tutoring him, and I donât want to be the one to distract him. So I order a private cab and make my way to London with only David Humeâs collected essays for company.
Iâm more than a little nervousâfar more nervous than I normally am in any given circumstanceâbut luckily for me, David Humeâs stream-of-consciousness style of writing is dense enough to require all my attention, and I soon lose myself in his words.
By the time the cab pulls to a stop, Iâm still on the same section I was on at the start of the journey, but Iâve highlighted one quote which stays with me.
â
â
This sentiment flies in the face of what Iâve always believed: that the whole point of reason is that itâs there to govern the baser aspect of our mindsâour emotions. Iâm not sure I agree with Humeâs assertion that reason has no other purpose but to â
â our passions rather than the other way around, but it gives me plenty to think about as I thank the cab driver and make my way into the gallery.
Once Iâm standing inside, I pause. Above me is the white cage of the glass dome, which separates the icy-blue sky into squares like pale sapphires set in a lattice of bones.
I gaze into the sky and breathe deeply, steeling myself. Iâm tempted to open my phone and find out Theodoraâs location by checking the regular and numerous story updates Rose is doubtlessly posting, but I find that I donât need to. I make my way through the gallery, chamber by chamber, and gaze at the paintings, looking for Theodora in each of them.
Not Theodora herselfâbut Theodoraâs interest, her attention. What would capture her gaze?
Turnerâs moody, shimmering depictions of nature, vivid suns seen through clouds like torn veils. The long-haired, unsmiling women of Rossettiâs paintingsâa depiction of femininity not softened for male consumption. Draperâs fallen Icarus, with his brown skin and the tragic fan of his wings.
I spot Theodora before I spot any painting in the room sheâs in.
My eyes fall on her as if sheâs the artwork. Sheâs standing straight as an arrow, holding something against her chest. Sheâs in a short cream dress and an enormous pearl-grey cardigan.
Completely alone, she stands face to face with Millaisâs .
The moment I spot her, Iâm acutely aware of the fact that Iâm now watching her, making her the focus of all my attention. It somehow feels like an intrusion, and I know I have no choice but to make myself known.
I stand next to her, shoulder to shoulder, as close as I can get to her without making any contact between her body and mine.
âHi, Theo.â
She doesnât look at me, doesnât start. I detect perhaps the merest hint of a stiffening of her posture, a tightening of her arms around whatever sheâs holding to her chestâa textbook, a map of the gallery and her tablet in its café au lait-coloured case.
âHi, Zach.â Sheâs silent for a moment, her eyes still fixed on Ophelia. Then she adds, âWhy do they always have to die for the men?â
âWho? Shakespeareâs women? They donât.â
âNot all of themâbut those who do. Ophelia. Desdemona. Juliet. Why must they die? Why must the men wear their dead women as accessories to their own tragedies?â
âMaybe theyâre not accessories. Maybe theyâre the real tragedyâa reflection of the innocents who get sucked into the vortex of angry, flawed people and get hurt in the process.â
âMaybe.â Theodora lets out a sigh. âI guess after studying literature all these years, I feel a bit burnt out on female victims and female suicides and suffocated wives and hysteria and erotomania.â
Iâm silent for a moment, taking in what sheâs saying. Part of it, I take at face value. Women have it hard in literatureâart imitating life and perhaps a little bit of vice versa at play. Making your way through the canon of classical literature as we have for the past few years has meant an almost constant parade of suffering or mistreated women, interrupted now and then by a Jane Eyre or a Lizzie Bennet, but even then, not without their share of pain.
But I donât think Theodora is just talking about literature.
Thereâs a sadness inside Theodora, a sadness that was there the first time I saw her, sitting stiffly in her blue felt seat, a sadness that seems to cling around her like a heavy mantle, trailing behind her wherever she goes.
A sadness I wish I could tear off herâif only it was tangible to me.
Iâm not sure what to say, and Iâm not sure if thereâs anything Theodora wants me to say. I hesitate and then ask, âHow are you, Theodora?â
She finally looks at me, a wry smile on her face. Thereâs a brittleness to her, like porcelain so frail itâs almost translucent. She looks as if a mere caress might send a crack running through her. Her eyes are cold, not cold like a distant glacier, but cold like fragile frost.
âIâm tired,â she answers. âIâm so tired. And I have no idea what Iâm going to write for Mr Ambroseâs beauty assignment.â
I frown. Theodora has excelled so far in the programme. Sheâs not missed a single assignment, and Mr Ambrose has been raining praise on every piece of work sheâs submitted.
In literature class, sheâs finally managed to pull a little ahead of me, her essays always getting higher marks than mine. As far as Iâm concerned, sheâs thrivingâacademically.
Hearing that sheâs stumped doesnât fill me with satisfaction, like Iâm seeing my rival stumble in the race. It makes me feel devastated, like finding out the enemy you were looking forward to duelling has fallen ill.
âMaybe youâre overthinking it,â I say suddenly, remembering the reading Iâve been doing, all of it to find a way of avoiding writing an essay that will make Mr Ambrose realise how desperately I love Theodora. âMr Ambrose specifically said he wants to hear about our interpretations of beautyâmaybe thatâs all you have to write about.â
âWhat if youâre not sure what is or isnât beautiful? What if you are in an abusive relationship with beauty?â Sheâs no longer looking at me, her eyes having drifted back to Opheliaâs face. âWhat if Iâm Ophelia and beauty is Hamlet, making me feel so awful I want to die?â
A pit opens at the bottom of my stomachâa dark pit of pure terror.
âDo you want to die?â I ask, keeping my voice as calm as I can when asking such a question and being so afraid of the answer.
Theodora sighs. âNo. I donât want to dieâI want to live. I want it quite desperately. Maybe Iâm not like Ophelia after all.â She finally turns away from the painting. âYouâve caught me at a bad time, Zach.â She smiles at me, a smile that feels like sheâs just put a mask back on. âIâm sure you werenât expecting such despondency after taking the time to find me here.â
âI came because I wanted to apologise to you,â I blurt out. âI know itâs an overdue sort of apology, which is why I didnât want to wait any longer than I already have.â
She raises an eyebrow. âYou donât need to apologise.â
âI do. I shouldnât have been so rude to you in lit class the other day. I shouldnât have been so moody and immature. And I shouldnâtâI didnât want to fight, that night at the party, but I felt so angry and aggrieved, I felt like you hurt me, and I wanted to hurt you back. Butââ
I remember Aquinasâs rules for penance. Confessing sins without omission. How could I possibly tell Theodora I wanted her first kissâthat I want all her kisses?
Telling her would feel both humiliating and manipulative.
âI regret our fight, Theo. And I miss our friendship, even if you keep saying weâre not friends.â
She watches me for the longest moment. I watch her back, my gaze stuck against the forget-me-not blue of her eyes, unable to penetrate the emotions beyond it. Weâre standing at armâs length from one another, and the gallery around us might as well not exist.
Existence right now is Theodoraâs blue gaze, her delicate skin, her long hair, the stormy ocean of restrained emotions I long to plunge into, the heat of every kiss and caress I want to bestow upon her.
I shiver, my skin burning with the want of hers.
âI forgive you,â she says finally, voice surprisingly soft. âAnd Iâm sorry for saying we arenât friends. We are. Wellâ¦â She lets out a little laugh. âWeâre notâare we? But weâre something.â
Something like love and hatred and desire, something like the inky depth of an abyss and the soaring breath of a zephyr. Something painful and exhilarating, the golden palaces of heaven and the dark wastelands of hell. Something like soulmates and lovers and enemies.
Something imperfect and sublime.
âYes, Theo.â I extend my hand between us. âLetâs be somethings again. Letâs not let anything get in the way of our somethingship.â
She takes my hand and smiles, finally. âBest somethings forever.â