ONE
As school trips go, visiting a wind farm to learn about the importance of renewable energy isn’t much to get excited about. We don’t even get to go on a bus because we’re only going to the marina so Mr. Moreno makes us walk there, saying that the exercise will do us good.
It’s chaos, of course, all of us spilling out of the school gates at once in a roar of laughter and chatter that you must be able to hear halfway down the street. We Whitehawk kids have a bad enough reputation as it is, but when we’re traveling en masse like this, it’s enough to make people shake their heads and tut as they cross the road to avoid us.
By the time we get to Manor Hill, Mr. Moreno is clearly regretting his decision to make us walk as he runs back and forth, frantically doing a head count to make sure none of us have wandered off while his TA urges those of us lagging behind to hurry up or we’ll miss the boat.
I’m one of them.
“It won’t be that bad,” Adara tells me, offering me a cheese and onion crisp, which I refuse with a surly scowl as I stuff my hands into the pockets of my leather jacket. She’s right, of course. After all, it’s quite a hot afternoon for late September, the sun high and bright in the sky, and I’m missing double chemistry, which is never a bad thing. Besides, it’s Friday and Mr. Moreno says that we’ll be done by two thirty, so I should be thrilled that we’re finishing early, even if it means hanging out at a wind farm for a few hours.
My reluctance, however, is less to do with where we’re going, rather, how we’re getting there.
“Listen, yeah,” Adara says, stopping to reach for another crisp and pointing it at me. “I know you don’t like open water, babe, but it’ll be fine. I promise. We’ll sail to the wind farm, look at the turbines, marvel in the energy of the future, and sail back.” I obviously don’t look convinced because she adds, “What’s the worst that can happen?”
That question is answered as soon as we arrive at the marina and Dan McCarthy runs up behind me. He must have overheard us talking because he picks me up and threatens to throw me into the sea. I shriek, telling him to let go of me as I try to kick him, but he just laughs and asks me if I want to go for a swim. I’m aware of Adara shouting at him, but that just makes him laugh harder as he holds me over the seawall, the waves so close it’s as though they’re reaching up to lick the soles of my DMs.
Mercifully, Mr. Moreno intervenes, marching over to where Dan has me dangling. “Daniel McCarthy! Put Ashana down right now!” Mr. Moreno never raises his voice, which I almost admire, given that he has to keep a classful of sixteen-year- olds engaged through double chemistry on a Friday afternoon when our only concern is what we’re doing for the weekend. It works, though, because Dan lifts me back over the edge of the seawall and puts me down.
Mr. Moreno’s cheeks go from pink to red. “What were you doing, Daniel?”
“We were just mucking around, sir.”
We? I’m tempted to interject, but Year Eleven solidarity dictates that I never grass on a fellow classmate, even if they’re as annoying as Dan.
“It didn’t seem like Ashana was in on the joke, though.” Mr. Moreno crosses his arms, waiting for me to agree. When I don’t, he gives up with a sharp sigh. “Apologize to Ashana. Now.”
“Sorry,” Dan says, trying to swallow back a laugh and failing.
Mr. Moreno, clearly unimpressed with Dan’s lack of remorse, uncrosses his arms to raise his finger. “We’ll discuss this on Monday, Daniel. I want to see you in my office at eight o’clock, do you understand?” I can tell Dan wants to object—eight o’clock on a Monday morning!—but he thinks better of it and nods instead. “Now try to behave yourself for the rest of the afternoon. Do you think you can manage that?”
Dan grunts something I assume is yes then runs off to join his mates.
“Prick,” I mutter, adjusting my leather jacket. I didn’t think I’d said it loud enough for Mr. Moreno to hear, but he turns to me with a fierce frown that lets me know that he doesn’t think it’s a proportional response. Now it’s my turn to apologize, which is deeply unfair given that I nearly just died. I mutter one anyway, which he acknowledges with a nod before ushering my classmates who gathered to see what’s going on toward the gangway that leads to the boat.
“You okay?” Adara asks as we follow, albeit with less enthusiasm.
I nod and she knows me well enough to leave it at that.
My legs are still shaking as we walk over to where everyone is gathered in a horseshoe around Mr. Moreno at the foot of the gangway, his face back to its normal color. He must have been waiting for us, because when Adara and I stop, lingering at the back, he holds his hands up. “I know we’re all excited to learn about the marvel of renewable energy.” There’s a collective groan, which he ignores. “But you’re representing Whitehawk High School this afternoon, so please try to remember that, okay?”
He tilts his head and raises his eyebrows at Dan McCarthy, who looks back at me and laughs.
“Ignore him,” Adara tells me as Mr. Moreno claps his hands and turns to lead the way up the narrow gangway toward the waiting boat. “You know what Dan’s like.”
“He’s kind of hard to ignore when he’s trying to throw me in the sea, Ad.”
“I know, but he only does this stuff because he fancies you. You know what boys are like. That’s how they show their affection.”
“He’s not my type,” I remind her with a sour smile.
She laughs. “He doesn’t know that, though, does he?”
“First of all.” I stop to smooth the palms of my hands over my scalp, trying to tame the fine hair that has escaped from my ponytail thanks to Dan’s grand romantic gesture. “He doesn’t fancy me, he’s an asshole. And even if he did, we’re sixteen, Ad. Aren’t we beyond boys pulling our pigtails on the playground?”
She goes quiet and when the skin between her precisely drawn eyebrows pinches, I know that she’s asking herself whether all the boys who teased us over the years, who tried to pull off her hijab and told us that we smelled like curry, were just “showing their affection” or if they were assholes, like Dan.
I’m about to tell her not to worry about it when there’s a bristle of excitement. I wonder what Dan’s done now as Mr. Moreno marches down the gangway toward us, reminding Adara and me that they’re holding up the boat because we’re late as he corrals us on. It’s then that we discover what all the excitement is about: We’re not alone. There, on the other side of the deck, is a huddle of girls who look as horrified to see us as we are to see them.
“Who are they?” Adara asks, blinking so furiously the wings of her eyeliner look set to take flight.
“The Whitehawk kids and the Roedean girls.” I smirk. “This should be interesting.”
There’s a tense moment of silence as we stare across the deck at one another. To their credit, they don’t recoil, rather push their shoulders back and lift their chins as if to say, We’re not scared of you. Some even cross their arms, and while it does nothing to deflect the stares they’re getting, when I see them in their neat navy uniforms, it’s enough to make me want to lick my thumb and bend down to wipe away the scuff on the toe of my DM.
When I turn back to Adara, she’s fussing over her hijab and I follow her gaze across the deck to a girl with the sort of hair I’ve only ever seen in shampoo adverts—long and blonde and practically glowing in the late September sun—who is staring shamelessly at us.
“What’s the matter?” I ask her, crossing my arms. “Never seen brown people before?”
The girl immediately flushes, then turns to her friend to whisper something. I’m about to tell Adara to ignore her, but I don’t need to as she looks at me and rolls her eyes.
“Right. Everyone keep to the left, please,” Mr. Moreno tells us as the teacher from Roedean tells them to keep to the right, as though we’re warring football supporters who might charge at one another.
The boat engine starts, and as soon as I feel the reluctant rumble of it beneath my feet, I remember where I am and reach for the railing to steady myself as my legs threaten to give way. I’ll give them that—the Roedean girls are a welcome distraction from the sea encircling us, but as the boat begins to pull away from the dock, I’m lashed in the face with the cloying smell of fuel and feel the milk from the cereal my mother made me have before I left home curdling in my stomach.
“Deep breaths,” Adara coos, rubbing my back with her hand, but I can’t—the heady smell combined with the smoke chugging from the engine is so strong, I can taste it coating my tongue.
I cover my mouth and nose with my hand, but it doesn’t help. Sit down, but it doesn’t help. Close my eyes, but it doesn’t help. The seagulls aren’t helping, either, hovering uncomfortably close to the boat like vultures circling a fresh kill. Eventually, one breaks away from the others, swooping down to snatch a crisp out of Dan’s hand and carrying it away in its beak. The response is swift, this sudden roar of shrieks and laughs, which makes the seagulls even more hysterical as I cling to the railing, sure that I can feel the boat tipping from side to side as everyone runs back and forth across the deck.
I can hear Mr. Moreno and the teacher from Roedean telling everyone to calm down as I tighten my grip on the railing and cover my eyes with my other hand. And I can hear Adara asking if I’m okay, and I focus on the familiar sound of her voice. I can’t speak, everything blurry and out of reach, the deck no longer solid, more like sloshing water beneath my feet as I try not to give in to it and let it pull me under.
I find my voice and ask Adara to give me a minute. I retreat to the other end of the boat to put as much distance between me and the engine as possible. It doesn’t help, and just as I realize that I won’t be able to swallow back the wave of nausea rushing up my chest much longer, I remember Mr. Moreno telling us before we left that seasickness is your brain struggling to understand why it feels like everything is moving while you’re still. Apparently, if you look at the horizon, your brain notes the movement and resets your internal equilibrium. I’m willing to try anything at this point, so I lift my head and focus on Shoreham Power Station.
I hold on to the railing and wait for my brain to do its thing as I watch the shoreline recede in the distance. Nothing happens, though. I still feel wretched, so I reach into the back pocket of my jeans for my phone, half tempted to call my mother and beg her to come get me when, to my surprise, I realize that it’s working. I feel better. Kind of. I still feel like I’m about to throw up, but it’s nowhere near as bad, and after a few minutes, I stop shivering. After a few more, I’ve stopped sweating and my breathing has settled enough that I feel able to stand up straight.
That’s better. My legs feel a little steadier, the breeze cooling my hot cheeks as I suck in a breath and let it out with a relieved sigh. Just as I feel able to loosen my grip on the railing, I’m aware of someone next to me and flinch so suddenly I almost drop my phone into the sea, sure that it’s Dan come to succeed in throwing me in this time.
But it’s not Dan, it’s one of the Roedean girls.
“Does it make you want to jump?”
I’m too startled to answer as she looks at me with a slow smile. All I can see is her hair. I don’t know what they feed them at Roedean, but they all have such good hair. It’s in a ponytail, which is a lot neater than mine, and it’s red. Not just red, but red red. The color of the sari my mother wore on her wedding day. A rich rust red with threads of gold that, when the sun hits it, makes it look like it’s on fire.
I know I’m staring because all I can think about is whether her eyelashes are the same color under the layers of mascara. If she notices, though, she has the grace not to say anything, she just keeps smiling. I almost smile back but I catch myself, suspicious of why she’s there. Perhaps she saw my leather jacket and DMs and thinks she can grab a cigarette from me that she’ll smoke with great flourish. A tiny display of defiance to show her friends how cool she is. Or perhaps she wants to ask me where I’m from so she can tell me about that time she went to India.
Whatever the reason, when I look at her Roedean uniform and her full cheeks, pinched pink by the wind, I can think of no good reason why a girl like her wants to talk to a girl like me. I mean, side by side, we make no sense. Her, immaculate, the sunlight settling in two moons on the toes of her saddle shoes, and me, greasy and crumpled, a thin layer of sweat drying on my top lip.
“Does it make you want to jump?” she asks again before I can ask her what she wants. “Like when you’re on a bridge or on a platform and you can hear the train coming and think, I could jump.”
Yes, I almost say, but stop myself again.
She shrugs, tucking her hands into the pockets of her blazer. “You’re not the only one.”
Really? I thought there was something wrong with me.
“Some say it’s healthy.”
Healthy?
“It’s called high place phenomenon,” she continues, clearly unfazed by the fact that I haven’t said anything yet. “A scientist called Jennifer Hames interviewed a group of students at Florida State University and found that, for the most part anyway, thinking stuff like that is pretty normal.”
How is that normal?
“It means that you have a healthy will to live.”
“How does thinking about jumping off a bridge mean you have a healthy will to live?” I say at last.
Her eyes brighten at the challenge.
“Cognitive dissonance.” I like the way she says it, like she doesn’t assume I don’t know what it means. “When you’re standing on a bridge you’re not actually in any danger, are you? Not unless someone comes along and pushes you, which isn’t likely, is it?”
I think of Dan then and quickly conclude that I wouldn’t like to be alone on a bridge with him.
“It’s all in your head.” She takes her hand out of her pocket and taps her temple with her finger. “When you’re on a bridge, your brain sees the edge and tells you that you’re in danger. So you get scared, but you shouldn’t be scared because you weren’t in any danger, were you?”
I nod, fingers tightening around my phone as the boat jerks suddenly.
“So later, when you’re trying to rationalize why you were scared, you conclude that it must have been because you wanted to jump, even though you had no desire to.” She puts her hand back in her pocket and shrugs again. “It just means that you’re sensitive to internal cues of danger, which reaffirms your will to live.”
I have no idea what she’s on about, but I like listening to her. She doesn’t talk like anyone I know. She’s not scared if there are a few beats of silence. She just leaves them there.
“You don’t want to jump. It’s just your brain playing tricks on you. Like now.” She nods at the sea. “Being on this boat is making you think that you’re going to throw up when you don’t actually want to.”
“I still might.”
She throws her head back and laughs and it’s the most beautiful thing I’ve ever heard. This delicate shiver, like the sound my grandmother’s gold bangles make when she’s clapping roti, that grows and grows until it’s so loud—I can feel it in my bones.
I don’t want her to stop, and try to think of something else to say to make her do it again, but then her chin drops and when she looks at me, smiling at me in that same slow way she did when she asked me if I wanted to jump, it’s as though she’s struck a match and set me alight.
* * *
We’re talking so much that we miss the discussion about the wonders of renewable energy, which means that I will almost certainly fail next week’s test, but I’m struggling to give even half a shit because I want to ask her everything. I know that her name is Poppy Morgan and she’s sixteen, like me, and she’s just started at Roedean after being kicked out of another super-posh boarding school called Wycombe Abbey. I know that she likes to twist her ponytail around her hand when she talks, that she presses her lips together when she’s thinking, and that she’s okay with open water, but she doesn’t like heights.
It’s not enough, though. I want to know if she has any brothers or sisters and what her favorite song is so I can go home and listen to it on repeat, but it’s all so perfect. It feels like she and I are encased in a soap bubble that will pop if I am foolish enough to do anything to disturb it.
So I don’t say a word, painfully aware that a clock is ticking somewhere as the shoreline gets closer and closer, and it’s like I’m floating, like I’ve left my body and I’m looking down at us, standing on the deck of the boat and God, it’s perfect. The sky so big that I want to see every corner of it. I tell myself—beg myself, actually—not to overthink it. To just enjoy these last few moments, but the clock is tick, tick, ticking and the shoreline is getting closer and closer and I’m waiting. Waiting for the bubble to burst, because it always does.
She’s so near that I feel the heat of her next to me, and I warn myself not to make it more than it is. I haven’t done this often, but I’ve done it enough to know how this ends. All the girls in the rainbow T-shirts who kiss girls to impress boys but would die if anyone called them a dyke. The girls with the careless smiles and thirsty hearts who draw lines only they can see and move goalposts when I’m not looking. All those things said and unsaid, never to be spoken of again. All the times I said “okay” when I really wanted to say “I don’t want to be friends.”
The ghost girls who are there, then not there, who let themselves give in to that itch of curiosity, just for a moment, and make me feel something, only to conclude that it isn’t for them. The ones who are bored or scared or both, who’d rather tell me that they were drunk than let me know that they felt something as well because all they want is a quiet life. Someone they can love without it being brave. Someone they can invite over for Sunday lunch and go with to prom.
I am the first and last and nothing in between. The mad one. The wild one. The one who sees things that aren’t there. I am to be unloaded on, to be bled on and cried all over. I am the one they experiment with. The one they can let go with because I’ll never tell. I am the one they have saved in their phone as Alfie or Harry or Luke. The keeper of secrets and soother of guilt. But I am never the one.
I am not to be loved. Not out loud, anyway. Maybe, one day, if I’m lucky, I’ll be a what if? Or worse, the one before the one. The one that made them realize that it wasn’t just a phase. But, for the most part, I will barely be a footnote in the book of that quiet life they want so much, and as I stand beside Poppy, looking out at the wide, wild sea, I wait. Wait for her to move away when one of the Roedean girls approaches or to suddenly mention a boyfriend like this is nothing, like she’s just talking. Like that’s all this is, just talking. After all, even fear becomes a habit after a while, doesn’t it?
We’re approaching the marina and this is it, I know. The moment has passed. The pain in my chest is so keen that it brings tears to my eyes as I make myself look down at the water so Poppy doesn’t see as the boat pulls in. When I do, I notice that the water is a different color here. A color I’ve only seen in postcards from other people. Poppy must notice as well, because she says that we could be in the Côte d’Azur. She says it with a dreamy sigh and when she closes her eyes, she suddenly feels very far away, even though she’s standing right next to me.
The nearest I’ve ever been to the French Riviera—or France in general—is a croissant from Real Patisserie, and it’s as close as I’m ever likely to get. But for whatever reason, our paths crossed today—call it luck or fate or good old-fashioned magic—and they’re about to part, never to cross again. I mean, it’s not like I’m going to bump into her at Lidl or waiting for the 1A, is it? This is it, I know, as the boat docks. She’ll just be that girl I think about sometimes when I look out at the wind farm or when I eat a croissant.
“Here.” Poppy takes my phone out of my hand so suddenly, I don’t have a chance to object. When she gives it back, I look at the screen to find that she’s added her number to my contacts. “If you ever feel like jumping,” she says, the corners of her mouth twitching mischievously when I look up again. “Or a coffee.”
My chest hurts for a different reason this time because I want to see her again—I really want to see her again—and she wants to see me and that never happens. I don’t know what to say, so I just smile back as she winks at me. I watch her turn and walk away, her hips swinging and her hair ablaze, and I wonder if there are words for how this feels, but I don’t know what they are yet.
Copyright © 2022 by Tanya Byrne