Read Undone Online

Authors: Cat Clarke

Tags: #Contemporary, #Gay, #Young Adult

Undone (12 page)

I gave her The Look, which was all it took for her to retreat. ‘Yes, yes, you need your “space” . . . Promise
you’ll tell me later though? I do love a bit of intrigue.’ She kissed me on the forehead and left me in peace.

The envelope was one of those long, business ones. More a reminder-for-a-dentist-appointment sort of envelope rather than a secret-admirer sort of envelope. There was no stamp or address, which was obviously what had made Mum jump to conclusions.

Inside was a piece of lined notepaper torn out of an exercise book. The same blue biro had been used to write the words on it in unremarkable neat capital letters.

There were six words, evenly spaced in pairs:

STUART HICKS

LUCAS MAHONEY

DEREK BUNNEY

It took me a few seconds to realize who Derek Bunney was.

It took me a few seconds more to realize what the names meant.

chapter eighteen

There was no need to talk to Max now; I knew who was to blame. Finally. It was obvious who’d written the note. Jon must have seen something at the party after all – he just didn’t want to say anything in front of his new girlfriend.

There was no shock, no surprise. Which was shocking and surprising in itself, really. As soon as I’d processed what the names meant, I realized I’d already known. Stuart Hicks. It made perfect sense. It was as if my brain had hidden the answer from me until I was ready to deal with it . . . slipped it down the back of the sofa or something, until this piece of torn paper jolted it free.

Stuart Hicks. It didn’t take a genius to work out why he’d done it, and that was what made it hard to accept – the knowledge that if I’d had sex with Stu none of this would have happened. Because it was
obvious he’d done it to get back at me. I’d wounded his pride or ego or whatever, and he’d filmed Kai to punish me.

My first instinct was to blame myself for everything. But after a couple of hours of sobbing and self-loathing, that started to lessen somehow. It was like Kai was there, talking me through it, soothing my conscience. Yes, Kai might still be alive if I’d had sex with Stu. But that didn’t mean that having sex with Stu would have been the right thing to do. Maybe I shouldn’t have headbutted him, but what happened afterwards was down to him.
He
decided to humiliate Kai.
He
made it happen. It was his fault. Not mine.

I repeated this mantra over and over until I almost believed it.

His fault. Not mine.

I couldn’t help thinking the whole thing must have been a set-up. Maybe he’d got one of his poxy mates to try it on with Kai, and Kai had been too drunk to say no. Or maybe Stu had paid some pissed-up lad to take one for the team. That would explain why the mystery boy’s identity had been hidden. It didn’t really matter. I wasn’t even interested in the mystery boy any more; there was nothing to be gained from tracking him down.

I didn’t doubt for one minute that Stu had been the ringleader. But every ringleader needs his loyal sidekicks. Ruining someone’s life was no fun unless you had someone to laugh with about it. Maybe Bugs and Lucas hadn’t done the filming or uploaded the video or sent the emails – but that didn’t make them any less guilty in my eyes. Or maybe they
had
been more involved. Maybe one of them had held the door open while Stu filmed, or kept a lookout in case anyone caught them in the act. But it was almost irrelevant. Either one of them could have stopped him. My Kai would still be alive if one of them had stopped him.

When I thought back to that night, things that had seemed meaningless now seemed to be coloured with red flashing lights and maybe a neon sign saying: PAY ATTENTION. Bugs pretending to fuck Lucas as he bent down. Stu smirking at his phone. How could I have been so stupid?

I told Mum I’d make my own way to school and she tried to hide the relief on her face. She didn’t think I knew that the lifts she’d been giving me had made her late for work more than once. It didn’t occur to her for a minute that I would walk halfway to school, turn around and walk right back home again, letting myself into the now empty house.

Stuart Hicks. Lucas Mahoney. Derek Bunney.

How on earth was I supposed to punish them? They ruled the fucking school, for fuck’s sake. They were as close to royalty as you got at Allander Park.

It was so tempting to just go to the police and let them handle it. But I couldn’t do it to Kai. I couldn’t humiliate him even more, even if he wasn’t around to see it.

It dawned on me that I couldn’t tell
anyone
, because they might not be as worried about Kai’s dignity as I was. Louise was the only other person I knew for sure would never tell the police in a million years. But those three were her
friends
. Even if I could convince her they were the ones who’d done this to Kai, she wouldn’t risk everything to punish them. There was no way.

So it was left to me. A complete nobody. Somehow this nobody was going to have to find a way to take down three of the most popular boys in school. And I would do it. No matter what I had to do or how long it took, I
would
do it.

From the outside it looked like they were impossible to get to. It would be so much easier if I knew more about them – knew their weaknesses rather than their strengths. There was only so much information you
could glean from staring at people in the canteen every lunchtime.

And I was just one person – a friendless person at that. I came up with a few lame ideas to humiliate them, but dismissed them straight away. I didn’t want to rush in and do the wrong thing. I was willing to bide my time.

As it happened, I didn’t have to wait long at all.

chapter nineteen

It was basic science; all it took was a catalyst to start the reaction. It was kind of fitting that the catalyst appeared in the science block a few days after the note had been delivered.

Since the start of term I’d got into the habit of going to the toilets at break time to check my face was looking OK. This isn’t as vain as it sounds. Well, it sort of
is
as vain as it sounds, actually, but it was also an opportunity to escape from people. I always went to the toilets in the science block because they were the quietest. The other ones were usually invaded by gangs of girls fighting for mirror space. I could just imagine the looks they’d give me if I sidled up to them and got out my make-up bag. (Yes, I had a bag now. The pencil case had returned to its original purpose in life and I’d borrowed a little zipup purse thing from Mum. She had a whole drawer
full of stuff like that, so I figured she wouldn’t miss it.)

That morning I headed to the science block, struggling through the hordes, swimming against the tide making for the cafeteria. When I got to the toilets I bent down to check the stalls were empty. Since the start of term I had never once come across anyone else in there. Those toilets were a haven of peace and quiet in the madhouse. Shame they smelled so bad, really. There was a notice on the door saying something about a problem with the drains. Thinking about it, that’s probably the reason they were always deserted. I put my make-up bag next to the sink furthest from the door and inspected myself in the mirror. My reflection still shocked me. There was still that fraction of a second where I thought I was looking at someone else. But then I saw me. I was there, lurking under the surface. Trying not to drown down there.

The door slammed open, making me drop my powder in the sink. An explosion of beige. It was Sasha Evans, and she looked as surprised to see me as I was to see her.

She was breathing hard. Tears streaked her face. Her hair still looked perfect though, and her crying wasn’t ugly in the way mine is. She cried like someone
in a glossy soap opera set in Los Angeles. I cry like someone off
EastEnders
.

Sasha stayed by the door and I stayed by the sink, and at first we said nothing. Then it got weird that no one was saying anything, so I broke the silence. ‘Are you OK?’ I could have kicked myself. I didn’t care if she was OK. She was Sasha Evans – of course she was OK. The tears were probably over some chipped nail varnish or a broken clasp on her very expensive bag.

She wiped at her tears with her dainty little fingers. ‘I’m fine. Thank you.’ Her voice wasn’t cold, exactly. It was tepid. Neutral.

‘OK.’ I turned on the tap and swooshed water around the sink to clear up the powder. I watched it swirling down the plughole.
There goes at least twenty quid’s worth
. I’d have to go to the shop after school and replace it. Just as well I still had some Christmas money left over – otherwise I’d be asking Sasha to pay up. (Who was I kidding? I would never, ever have asked her such a thing.)

Sasha went into a stall and came out with some toilet paper. She dabbed it around her eyes, careful not to smudge her mascara. It seemed like the tears had stopped for now.

‘What are you looking at?’

‘Nothing.’ I did my best to adopt her neutral tone
instead of responding to this slightly more aggressive one.

Sasha sighed in a deeply dramatic way. ‘I’m sorry. And I’m sorry about that.’ She waved a hand at the sink.
Nice of her to notice.
‘I’m just . . . I wasn’t expecting anyone to be in here. No one’s ever in here and I wanted to be alone.’

‘You and me both.’ I turned away so I was looking in the mirror. It was easier to talk to her when I didn’t have to look at her. I ran my fingers through my hair just for something to do.

‘Sorry. Let me just get my shit together and I’ll leave you to it.’ There was something different in her voice. Something slightly warmer, maybe?

I shrugged. ‘You don’t have to. It’s a free country.’

Sasha snorted and I wasn’t sure what to make of that, so I had to look at her after all. The snort was a laugh. A stifled, snotty sort of laugh. ‘What’s so funny?’

‘My little sister says that all the time:
It’s a free country
. She’s only eight and I’m pretty sure she has no idea what it even means.’ Great. I was being compared to an eight-year-old.

I said nothing. Zipped up my make-up bag and shoved it into my school bag.

As I walked past her, she reached out and put her
hand on my arm. I stopped. Sasha Evans was touching me. ‘Sorry, I didn’t mean anything by it . . . You’re Jemima, aren’t you?’

Sasha Evans knew my name. This was getting weirder and weirder by the minute. ‘I . . . Jem, yeah.’

‘I was really sorry about your friend. I wanted to say something sooner, but I . . . well, I didn’t know you and I didn’t want to intrude.’

I looked at her then. Searching for any hint of sarcasm or fakeness. I didn’t see any, but that wasn’t to say it wasn’t there. She seemed genuine though. I couldn’t very well say what I was thinking – that I was almost certain one of her so-called friends had been responsible for Kai’s death. ‘Thanks.’

She was still touching my arm and I think we both realized at the same time. She pulled her hand away. ‘You look really different now.’

I shrugged again. What was I supposed to say to that?

‘Can I say something? Promise you won’t be offended?’

Another shrug. Shrugging was a safe thing to do.

‘You should go easy on the powder. And that one’s at least two shades too dark for your skin tone. I’m not trying to be mean or anything. God, you should have
seen me a few years ago. All cakey orange foundation and no clue whatsoever.’

‘What, like Amber Sheldon?’ I winced as soon as I said it, but Sasha just laughed.

‘Worse than Amber, even! And don’t get me wrong – you look
nothing
like that. You look . . . good.’

‘Um . . . thanks.’ My insides were crawling with embarrassment.

‘Now why don’t you get out of here and let me cry in peace, eh?’ She smiled and it was warm. Definitely warm. She certainly didn’t look like she was about to cry again.

‘Are you going to be OK? What are you . . . what’s the matter?’ One compliment from Sasha and I was suddenly all concerned about her.

Sasha shook her head and went back to staring in the mirror. ‘I’ll be fine. I’ll be just fine.’ It looked like she was trying to convince her reflection as much as me.

I left her there, looking at herself. No goodbye. No ‘well, this has been lovely’. Not even a ‘please stay away in future, this is MY space, not yours’.

I replayed the conversation in my head for the rest of the day and I kept on coming back to one, unbelievable thing: Sasha Evans had been nice to
me
. Sort of.

A tiny kernel of an idea popped into my head that night, but I dismissed it immediately. It would be impossible, surely? But I kept on coming back to the fact that Sasha Evans, the most popular girl in school, had talked to
me
. I had Kai and Mum to thank for that. For one thing, I’d never have been in the science-block toilets if it wasn’t for my new-found vanity.

It would be so much easier to get back at Stu and the others if I wasn’t such a loner, such an outsider. I kept thinking, WHAT IF . . . ?

What if it was possible for me to somehow become friends with Sasha Evans?

What if she introduced me to the rest of her hideous friends?

What if I was able to get my revenge on Stu, Lucas and Bugs
from the inside
, and hurt them all the more because of it?

What if . . . ?

chapter twenty

Jem,
January. The rubbishest month of the year. Nobody likes Jannuary, do they? It’s all post-Christmas doom and gloom and it’s always cold and dark and depressing. Still, there’s only a few days left, so let’s look on the bright side.

I bet you’ve been dreading what I was going to ask you to do this month. Well, fear not, I thought I’d give you the month off ... mostly because I don’t want you to hate me! Just one thing though
... you haven’t talked to Lol yet, have you? If you have, Please accept my humble apologies. But if you haven’t, please just check on her. For me. She’s not as bad as you think.
She’s not as bad as SHE

Ooh, I’ve just realiszed that Valentine’s Day is coming up! And you know how much we ADORE Valentine’s Day. The avalanche of cards through the letter box. The flowers, the chocolates, the candlelit dinners! Be still, my beating heart. I wouldn’t be surprised if you got a card or two this year, what with your fancy new hair and all. If you do, please don’t rip them up. And go easy on the poor boy (or girl!). It takes guts to put yourself out there like that. Unless of course the card is anonymous, in which case whoever sent it is lame and not worthy of your affections.

Anyway, if you
don’t
happen to get any cards, might I suggest an all-night horror-movie marathon to cheer yourself up? I do hope you’re continuing our fine tradition is my absence? I’d tell you to watch Halloween on Valentine’s Day, but I’m nothing if not true to my word- no silly missions this month. This is merely a
suggestion
, you understand. (But you really SHOULD watch it ... you know full well nothing cheers you up quite like some empty-headed girls getting chased through a dark house by a psychopath with a big knife.)

Same time next month, yes?

Kai
xxx

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