Read The Mute and the Liar Online

Authors: Victoria Best

The Mute and the Liar (39 page)

I
begin
scribbling
him
a
message
on
the
next
page
of
this
notebook.

Do
you
ever
tell
the
truth?

He
looks
confused
for
a
moment
and
then
his
smile
slowly
falters
and
pulls
itself
into
a
thin line.


What
are
you talking
about?

You lie
about everything.


No
I
don’t.

Another
lie.

We
s
it
in
silence,
just
watching
each
other.
His
bulbous
green
eyes
stare
back
at
mine,
his
lips
pursed
together.
It
is
only
now
that
I
notice
he
has
ugly
bags
under
his
eyes
and
his
skin
is
alarmingly
pale.
It
seems
he
hasn’t
slept
all
night.
He
is
acting
strange
-
his
fingers
are
madly
locking
and
unlocking
and
twisting
around
each
other
on
the
table,
and his eyes are wide and unblinking.

This
silence
is
a
spider
web,
trapping
us.
We
are
both
still,
unmoving,
just
watching
each
other,
almost
daring
each
other,
as
if
this
is
a
competition
of
who
can
stay
silent
the
longest.
We
are
both
desperate
to
win.

But
Jayce
forgets
that
silence
is
my
life. Of c
ours
e
he
br
e
ak
s t
he silence first
.


I
don’t
actually
like
coffee;
I
just
get
it
because
it
makes
me
look
sophisticated.

There
is
a
slight
pause
in
time
as
this
random
sentence
sinks
in.
Obviously
it’s
not
what
I
expected
him
to
say.
I’m
fed
up
of
this.
He’s
so
unpredictable.
It’s
grating
to
know
that
there
is
one
puzzling
thing,
one
problematic being, that I just can’t
work
out.
I
can’t
solve.

He
continues
watching
me,
but
now
stirs
his
coffee
at
the
same
time,
which
I
realise
he
hasn’t
actually
drunk
from.
I
can’t
believe
I
didn’t
notice
earlier,
and
I
feel
myself
crumbling
into
the
pit
of
self-pity.
I
call
myself
a
detective,
but
I
can't
even
get
myself
out
of
a
crime,
or
even
understand
one
person.

With
a
steady
gaze
to
match
his
steady
gaze,
Jayce
continues.


I
wasn’t
a
choirboy
in
the
Abbey,

he
leaves
another
pause,
perhaps
contemplating
what
to
say
next.
He
then
affirms
this,
as
though
to
reassure
himself
that
he
really
wasn’t.

No. No
I
wasn’t.

What
does
that
mean?
What
is
going
on?
What
is
he
doing?


I
love
the
colour
green…
I…
I
won
a
school
talent
competition
when
I
was
in
year
eight
for
singing
and
playing
a
song
I
wrote
on
the
piano.
I…
I
love
all
music
from
the
1980s.
I’ve
never
met
a
rich
ginger
girl...
I…
I
never
studied
philosophy
in
school…
My
father
isn’t
a
sumo
wrestler.

Some
of
these
sound
familiar
and
it
takes
me
a
while
to
figure
out
where
I
have heard them
before.

He’s…
He’s
telling
the
truth.
He’s
telling
the
truth!
There
is
a
wincing,
pained
expression
on
his
face,
the
look
of
someone
with
a
throbbing
headache.
It's
as
though
every
word
hurts
him.
There
is
something
about
the
truth
that does this to him.

I
don’t
know
what’s
going
through
his
head,
or
even
what
is
going
through
mine.
Because
right
now
I
feel
something
and
I
don’t
know
what
it
is.
My
chest
is
lurching in and
a
corkscrew
is tightening itself in my throat and
is
cutting
off
my
breathing.
Saying
these
things
is
hurting
him.
I...
I
have
to
make
him
stop.

STOP.


I’ve
never
been
to
McDonald’s
or
Burger
King.
I
don’t
really
care
about
the
environment.
I
never
went
on
family
fishing
trips.
I
never
got
given
any
Christmas
presents,
including
the
video
of
the
dancing
hippo.
We
didn’t
celebrate
Christmas
because
The
Woman-That-Gave-Birth-To-Me
thought
it
was
just
a
waste
of
time and
money.

PLEASE
STOP!


Ryo’s
not
my
friend.
Hell,
the
guy
picked
on
me
for
eight
years
and
then
randomly
decided
we’re
best
friends
forever
.
You
know
that
guy
Jeffrey?
I
used
to
be
him.
I
used
to
be
all
posh
and
clever
and
rich
and
an
easy
victim
for
all
bullies.
I
got
kicked
out
of
my
home
last
year
and
lost
all
of
that,
but
at
least
it meant I lost all the
bullies
that
came
with
it.

Other books

The Dead Media Notebook by Bruce Sterling, Richard Kadrey, Tom Jennings, Tom Whitwell
Dirty Aristocrat by Georgia Le Carre
Pod by Stephen Wallenfels
I Spy a Duke by Erica Monroe
Hush Money by Collins, Max Allan
A Stormy Greek Marriage by Lynne Graham
The Devil’s Pawn by Elizabeth Finn