Page 22 of The Rest is History

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God, my voice sounds husky, even to me.

And it’s only after she’s thanked me awkwardly, and shot me an even more awkward glance over her shoulder, and bolted down the corridor ahead of me, that it occurs to me that I could have just unfastened the damn clasp and taken the necklace off to untangle it.

CHAPTER 9

Elodie

‘So. How did it go with Prince Not-So-Charming?’

Zara pulls me down in the seat next to hers. We’ve left Charlie to it and absconded to the staffroom, which is a hostility-free zone compared to the History office. A judgement-free zone, too.

And, critically, it doesn’t contain the person I’m trying to avoid. And the person Zara is intent on gossiping about.

I sigh and focus on the nails tapping on her mug of tea. She gets new nail art done every other weekend. This bright Monday morning, she’s sporting a gradient that goes from palest ballet-slipper pink on the baby finger of her left hand to hot pink on its opposite. Every perfect oval talon sports an impeccable black slash down its centre. I’d have preferred it without the slash, but Zara’s style is far edgier than mine. She’s far cooler all round, basically.

Case in point: today’s ensemble of the perfect white t-shirt in a vintage slub, paired with parachute trousers in a silky olive fabric. They gather prettily above her excellent ankles, showing off a fabulous pair of flesh-coloured suede stilettos.

I mean.

As I consider how to describe Saturday, her hand leaves her mug and gives a coquettish little wave. I look up to see one of the PE teachers, Mr Gibbs, walking past. He’s in navy tracksuit bottoms and a form-fitting white t-shirt, and he flashes her a cute smile as he passes. I eye him appreciatively—daily physical activity is clearly working well for him—before returning my gaze to Zara and cocking an inquisitive eyebrow.

She smiles smugly. ‘I may have made some early inroads in my quest to acquaint myself better with the PE department. But let me remind you that we are here to talk aboutyou, my friend.’ She jabs a candy-pink talon in my direction. ‘Explain to me how you spent a day role-playing with our dickwad boss and lived to tell the tale.’

If I don’t think about the necklace incident, I can convince myself that the day was fine. Successful. Not terrible.

The problem is that I can’t stop thinking about the necklace incident.

About Charlie’s warm breath on my neck.

About the fact that every nerve ending in my body was on high alert as he put his mouth so close to my skin.

About the fact that, for some unknown reason, I found myself hoping with every fibre of my being that he’d put his lips on me. Slide a hand around my neck.

About my suspicion that I wasn’t the only one affected. That he lingered behind me, his fingers grazing my skin, a little longer than was strictly necessary.

The only possible explanation is that we both tumbled into some murky parallel consciousness where hewasHenry, and IwasAnne, and we tricked ourselves into an intimacy totally at odds with our real-life relationship.

To distract myself from the moment seared into my brain, I consider Zara’s question-slash-challenge.

‘It’s weird.’ I wrap a hand lovingly around my espresso cup. ‘He wasn’t actually a dickwad. He was… I dunno. Normal? Like, relaxed. The role really suited him. It was like it allowed him to show off a whole different side to his character. An extroverted side.’

‘Woah.’ Zara holds up a hand. ‘You’re seriously using the e-word forCharlie Vaughan?’

‘I know. He really took on the role. He was great with the visitors—he was funny. Super confident. Very larger than life.’

‘Maybe he likes hiding behind such a big character,’ Zara mused. ‘Maybe it’s a healthy outlet for him. God knows, he’s so socially awkward most of the time.’

‘Socially awkward I can handle.’ I mean, socially awkward I can definitely sympathise with. ‘It’s just the outward hostility I have a problem with. But he was Mr Jovial. He had some good swagger. And the other queens all seem fond of him. They give him a hard time, and he takes it. Like, he rolls his eyes a lot and pretends to be pissed off, but I can tell he likes it. They’re definitely not afraid of him. They even squish his face.’

‘Holy crap. That I’d pay good money to see.’

‘I know, right?’

‘I bet I’m right. I bet it’s a release for him. He gets to explore a whole different way of being with people from the safety of a costume. Speaking of which…’

I roll my eyes. I anticipated this line of questioning. Damn her.

She presses on. ‘How did he look when he was all kitted out?’