Zachary goes to the Summer Ball alone. Even if he hadnât, he would still stand out amongst the other boys in our year. Not because heâs better looking than all of them or because he is dressed better.
Zachary stands out like a beacon of light. His confidence, his intensity, the way he carries himself. In a place full of people our age, he stands out like someone older, like someone important. Like a young lord, not a schoolboy.
Everything I work so hard to projectâbeauty, elegance, intelligenceâZachary exudes innately without having to try.
The Summer Ball is a depressing ordeal without a date, but Zachary doesnât seem depressed. He stands amongst his friends, talking and laughing. When everybody ends up on the dance floor, he leans against a pillar, sipping his drink and watching thoughtfully.
Later, I even see him chatting with some of the teachers. He stands with one hand in his pocket and the other gesturing confidently as if spending his time with teachers instead of dancing with girls is the most natural thing in the world.
Although I, too, end up sitting out most of the dancing, I donât approach him. Itâs my fault Iâm here aloneâhe asked me to come with him, and I refused. Commiserating would be sweetâdoing so with full knowledge I caused this situation would be too bitter.
Itâs Zachary who ends up approaching me. He brings me a cup of punch and hands it to me. I take it and sip tentatively but wince at the sugary taste. He drinks his and lifts an eyebrow.
âNot to your taste?â
âIt tastes like sugar and chemicals.â
âI can imagine thatâs the recipe, yes.â He hesitates, then asks, âWould you like me to bring you something to eat? I noticed you barely touched your food at dinner.â
âIâm not hungry,â I say automatically.
Itâs my go-to response anytime anyone mentions food, and the words unspool from my mouth with practised ease. Zachary nods slowly, his eyes on mine.
âMm. Are you sure?â
His tone is feather light, almost playful. Part of me wants to stick to the safety of my go-to response, but part of me senses the strange, silent companionship that exists between us. I want to lean into it, let it pull me in, lull me.
Zachary doesnât press me for a response. He simply watches me, waiting for my silence to transform into words.
âI donât like eating in front of people,â I say finally.
âOh, right.â
I wonder if he knows Iâm only giving him a part of the truth, not all of it. The truth would be too difficult to explain because it would mean telling him Iâve been depriving myself of food for weeks to look good in this dress. The truth would mean telling him that I am always hungry.
âWell,â Zachary says after a few seconds, âif you want, we could steal some snacks from one of those tables and sneak off to the grounds. Theyâve opened some of the French windows to let in some cold air since the dancing was turning a little feral. We could sit on a benchâitâs dark enough that nobody will see us.â He grins. âWe can even sit back to back if you like.â
I give him an eye roll, but we end up doing what he says. Zachary fills an embossed paper plate with finger foods and covers it with another paper plate. He half-hides behind meâa ridiculous notion since heâs now taller than meâas we make our way through the crowd of dancing bodies and past bored teachers to one of the windows.
Outside, the evening air is cool and crisp and full of the scent of trees and dewy grass and the sweet perfume of honeysuckle.
We make our way to one of the marble benches lining the path, picking one thatâs half-hidden in the shadows cast by the spiky branches of an enormous juniper tree. We donât sit back to back but shoulder to shoulder. Zacharyâs arm is warm against mine. He lifts the makeshift cover off the food and eats. He keeps the plate on his lap and doesnât make any attempt to offer me food or prompt me to eat.
We sit for a while, him eating and me preparing myself to eat. That involves a sort of inner ritual where I remind myself how all human beings need nutrients for survival and that eating is necessary and that itâs okay for me to do it, right now.
When I finally reach for the food, Zachary doesnât look down. He just stares ahead, his eyes glazed over in thought.
Surprising myself, Iâm the first one to break the silence.
âYou should have asked someone else to come with you.â
He turns. In the darkness of the night and the shadows of the junipers, I can barely make out his features.
âWhy?â he asks.
âBecause being at this stupid party alone is the most depressing thing thatâs happened so far in Spearcrest.â
He lets out a low, soft laugh. âMm, yes.â Heâs quiet for a moment, and then he says, âYou should have said yes, then.â
Thereâs no resentment or anger in his tone, only a wry sort of amusement that makes him sound far older than he is.
âIt didnât feel like a fair thing to do.â
âMaking us both endure this party alone is unfair.â
âI specifically advised you to ask someone else.â
âAnd I specifically told you I only ever intended to ask you.â
I give him an unimpressed look, which Iâm sure he can see about as much as I can see his expressionâhardly at all.
âDonât pretend like you donât have options. I know you and your friends are the most popular boys in our year.â
âI didnât say I didnât have options. I didnât need options. I made a choice and that choice was you. Thatâs all.â
âWhy me?â
He laughs again, this time soft and mischievous.
âWhoâs fishing for compliments now, Theodora?â
My cheeks flush with heat, and Iâm thankful for the cover of darkness. âI donât place value in flattery.â
âA compliment isnât the same as flattery.â
âWhat if I told you thereâs no need for either if you just answer the truth?â
âI like the truth,â he says. âIt has this nice, clean, stark quality to it. But sometimes, speaking truthfully and speaking the truth donât mean the same thing.â
âThatâs a nothing sentenceâyou love those.â
He leans closer as if trying to peer into my eyes even through the darkness. I donât move back, refusing to retreat.
âA nothing sentence?â he repeats.
âA sentence where it sounds like youâre saying something meaningful, but youâre not actually saying anything at all.â
âIâve never spoken such a sentence in my life.â
âYou use them all the time when debating. Itâs your signature style. Every time your team loses, itâs because youâve used one, and Iâve pointed it out to my team.â
Thereâs a moment of silence that spins and glimmers like a cosmos between us. Itâs not uncomfortable or awkward. Itâs not even hostile. Itâs like intimacy but without affection.
âHowâs your team going to win next year?â he asks in a light tone. âNow youâre about to lose your secret weapon.â
âIâll just have to find a new weakness of yours to exploit.â
âYouâll struggle to find one.â I can almost hear the arrogant smile on his mouth. âYou might wish to consider beating me fair and square with strong arguments and clear logic.â
âIâll do that too, donât worry.â
He lets out a sigh that turns into a laugh, and I laugh too. The summer night air is cooler, and a plume of wind brushes against me, making me shiver. Zachary crumples the now-empty paper plates and stands to throw them into a nearby bin.
When heâs done, he returns to the bench and stands in front of me, reaching his hand out to me.
âShall we go back in?â
âAlright.â
I give him my hand, and he helps me up, even though I donât need his help. For a moment, we just stand near each other, his hand still on mine, our fingers brushing in a delicate touch. His presence is bright and warm next to mine, the heat of it thawing the ice of me.
Zachary finally releases my hand, and we cross the pebbled path back to the French window we escaped through.
Right before we step through it, Zachary turns to me and says, âSince weâre both stuck here alone and itâs too early to leave, shall we dance together?â
Now that weâre standing in the violet and silver lights of the ballroom, the darkness can no longer conceal the flush in my cheeks, so I answer quickly, giving him no time to search for an answer on my face.
âYes.â
He leads me inside to the dance floor. The string quartet has moved on from the more formal waltzes of earlier and is now playing scintillating renditions of modern songs.
Zachary wraps his arm around my waist. He holds me close but not close enough to press my body into his. My senses are full of himâhis presence, his warmth, his intensity, his scent. We dance, and the moment is soft and unusual and special.
We dance, and although I would sooner have died than admit it to him, Zachary was right.
I should have said yes to him when he asked me to the dance.