Blood Moon

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Blood Moon Page 4

by Lucy Cuthew


  watching other people

  being useless,

  and knowing, if it was us,

  we’d be all right.

  Well, honestly,

  I’d be scared shitless.

  But Harriet

  is actually pretty brave.

  TUESDAY

  LUNCHTIME

  In the lunch hall

  I subtly scan the room

  for Benjamin,

  before I pick a table

  and start to eat

  my saucy spaghetti

  (carefully,

  in case Benjamin’s watching me).

  Harriet sits down heavily

  and sips her large

  black coffee.

  “Ugh.” She shudders,

  swallowing and grimacing.

  “This is so bitter.

  It’s disgusting.”

  “Why’re you drinking it then?”

  laughs Leylah,

  opening a can

  of lemonade.

  “Because I’m dying,” Harriet says.

  “I didn’t go to sleep until 4 a.m.”

  “Sexting Jackson?”

  Bethany smirks, nudging Harriet.

  “I told you,” she says,

  leaning away from Bethany,

  “I ended it with him.

  And your lunch

  absolutely stinks.”

  “All right,” grumbles Bethany.

  “Don’t have a go at me.”

  “I’m sorry,” says Harriet,

  rubbing her hands over her face

  and groaning. “I’m just so tired.”

  “What were you even doing?”

  I ask. “I was with you

  until about ten.”

  “I was rewriting

  my application to

  send to Mr B.”

  “Oh,” I say.

  I feel a pang of jealousy.

  What if she worked

  on hers harder than I did?

  “Did you manage it?”

  “Just,” she says. “I sent it

  this morning then had

  about two hours’ sleep.

  But I think I made

  a horrible mistake.”

  “What?” I ask.

  “No,” says Harriet. “I’m not telling you.

  It’s too embarrassing.”

  She groans

  and folds her body forward,

  resting her forehead

  on the table.

  Marie says,

  “Nothing good gets done

  after 10 p.m., if you ask me.”

  “Well, I didn’t,” Harriet retorts

  from under her hair.

  “I’m sure it’s not as bad

  as you’re imagining,”

  says Leylah.

  “What if it’s worse?”

  Harriet mumbles.

  I try to think of

  something reassuring

  to say but just then

  I see Benjamin

  walking towards me

  and I’m briefly distracted,

  wiping my face

  and smiling at him.

  He grins at me

  as he walks past.

  God, he’s dreamy.

  When I look back,

  Bethany is patting Harriet’s head.

  “I’m sure it’s great.”

  “You’ll feel better

  after a good night’s rest,”

  says Marie.

  “Enough with the sleep, Marie,”

  Harriet moans.

  “And, Beth,” she adds,

  “you had better

  not be getting

  tuna in my hair.

  It took me an hour

  this morning.”

  And we all giggle

  as Bethany licks

  her fingers

  quickly

  before resuming her patting.

  EXTRACTION

  That afternoon, in history,

  a year seven

  knocks on the open door,

  a piece of paper

  trembling in her hand.

  “I have a message

  from Mr Adamson.”

  Ms Wyse

  beckons the girl,

  lowers her glasses,

  reads the note,

  and sighs.

  “Harriet Prosser,

  you’re to go.”

  Harriet glances at me.

  She looks worried.

  Then she gets up

  and slopes off

  out of the door

  and as I hear her footsteps

  fade down the hall

  my stomach knots.

  What’s she done?

  DISTRACTIONS

  Mr Adamson banged on about distractions

  for about an hour just

  yesterday.

  I can’t think of many things more distracting

  than extracting someone in the middle of class

  with no explanation.

  Apparently Mr Adamson’s

  second lesson of the week is

  irony.

  SPECULATION

  After Harriet goes

  we’re meant to be reading in silence

  but everyone is whispering

  and the boys are all giggling.

  I can tell

  that something

  is going around.

  I remember once,

  when Mohammed’s mum had a baby,

  he got to leave early.

  Another time, Caylee’s grandmother

  was in hospital dying,

  and she was called out of class.

  Apparently she only just made it

  in time to say goodbye.

  Births and deaths.

  What could be dramatic enough

  to warrant Harriet’s extraction?

  Everyone has a theory,

  but I know it’s about

  what she mentioned at lunch.

  The thing she wouldn’t tell me.

  I put her bag in her locker

  when we leave the lesson

  but then in the corridor

  between classes

  I hear Harriet’s

  name behind me

  and turn to see

  Jackson, Dev and Charlie

  laughing and whooping,

  their necks craning

  around Harriet’s phone,

  taking pictures

  with their phones

  of her screen.

  I push myself

  in to see an email

  Harriet has sent.

  To Mr B.

  “How did you get that?”

  I snap,

  snatching her phone

  off the boys

  and tucking it in my pocket.

  “You can’t just take

  things out of people’s bags!”

  “It fell out of her bag in class,” says Jackson,

  holding his hands up.

  “I was just looking after it,

  as you didn’t notice.”

  “Bullshit,” I snarl.

  “How did you open it?”

  “Nine nine nine nine

  is pretty easy to see

  when you sit behind

  somebody.”

  He snorts, looking between

  Dev and Charlie, adding,

  “Easy. Lol. Just like her.”

  God, he’s disgusting.

  “You’d better not have

  done anything,”

  I say, turning away

  and leaving them

  whooping and

  calling after me

  to lighten up.

  Down the corridor,

  I look at her screen

  and read

  the email.

  She’s sent him her

  application again,

  and she’s attached a selfie.

  She’s in bed wearing

&nb
sp; a low-cut pyjama top

  and she’s leaning in,

  her boobs squeezed.

  She’s written:

  Hopefully you’ll agree

  I’ve worked really hard on this.

  Can you check it over again?

  Ugh, Harriet.

  I cannot believe her.

  Doesn’t she ever think

  about the consequences

  before doing something?

  TROUBLE

  I sit in geography,

  worrying.

  Harriet’s going to be

  in so much trouble.

  You can’t send a picture

  like that to a teacher

  and get away with it.

  What was she thinking?

  I check my phone

  under the table,

  unable to concentrate

  and wondering

  what’s happening

  to her now.

  Mr B must have told the head.

  They might suspend her.

  What if they expel her?

  I don’t know whether to cry

  or scream.

  Then

  an unknown number

  messages me.

  In iso. Meet me

  in the toilet in ten.

  H

  I wait in geography

  for nine minutes,

  feeling sick, finding it

  impossible to concentrate

  on anything Miss Allison says,

  which is annoying because

  she’s already told us

  tectonic activity

  will be in

  our mock exam.

  Finally, it’s time.

  I slip Harriet’s phone

  out of my bag

  and into my pocket

  next to mine.

  I walk to the front

  and ask for a pass

  to go to the loo.

  Miss Allison

  looks at me

  suspiciously.

  “Quickly then,”

  she says, like she knows

  I’m up to something.

  “Five minutes,

  or I’ll come check on you.”

  FIGHT

  I hurry down

  the silent corridor,

  Miss Allison’s threat

  following me.

  Five minutes.

  If she checks up on me

  they’ll find Harry too.

  (Meeting someone

  while skipping isolation

  got Joseph Carlton

  a month-long exclusion.)

  The toilet door

  bangs shut behind me

  making me jump.

  I’m so worried

  I’m already sweating.

  “Harriet?” I whisper,

  peering around

  cubicle doors.

  A hollow sniff echoes

  from the last stall.

  Harriet’s perched on

  the toilet seat.

  Black mascara streaks

  her cheeks.

  Once in primary school

  Harriet hid in the toilets

  because Lena Kowalski

  said her head was too small

  and we ended up laughing

  about it.

  I don’t think laughter

  can help us now.

  I crouch down next to her,

  hug her,

  squeeze her

  trembling body.

  “Oh, Harry,” I sigh.

  What else can I say?

  “Frankie,” she sobs,

  practically hyperventilating.

  “I’m in so much trouble.”

  “Why are you out of iso,

  and whose phone did you

  text me from?” I ask her,

  checking over my shoulder,

  hoping nobody else comes in.

  But she’s crying so much,

  I can’t understand

  what she’s saying,

  and her sobs are echoing

  all around the toilets.

  “Shh,” I hiss, ripping off some toilet roll,

  checking the time as I wind the paper around my hand.

  I’ve already been gone

  two minutes.

  “Just breathe,” I tell her.

  Harriet sits up and

  blows her nose,

  then turns around and lifts the lid

  of the sanitary bin

  and quickly throws

  the soggy clod in.

  I sweep my thumbs

  under her eyes

  to dry her tears

  and clean her face.

  “Don’t judge me,

  Frankie,” she says.

  “But I sent something

  I shouldn’t have.”

  “I know,” I say. “I’ve already seen.”

  I take her phone from my pocket

  and put it on her knee.

  “Jackson had it.

  He saw your passcode

  over your shoulder.

  They took a copy.

  I’m really sorry.”

  “Ugh,” she moans.

  “So embarrassing.

  And Mr Adamson had

  such a go at me.

  He says I’m getting

  detention all week.”

  “Well, that’s not surprising.”

  Harriet looks up and

  narrows her eyes at me.

  “Sorry,” I say.

  “What are you going to do?”

  “I was thinking … maybe

  I can say I didn’t send it?”

  “Or you could take some

  responsibility?”

  It comes out

  before I can stop myself.

  “Thanks, Frankie,” she says.

  “All right,” I say,

  holding my hands up.

  “I just don’t think

  you should start lying.”

  “I can’t believe Mr B told on me!

  Mr Adamson said

  the photo might be classed

  as child pornography.”

  “Oh my God! Harry!

  Do you not think

  that’s why he told on you?”

  “Calm down, Frankie,”

  Harriet says, flippantly.

  “It’s just a tiny bit of tit.

  There’s no way Mr Adamson

  will call the police.

  He’s exaggerating

  to scare me.”

  I check the time.

  I’ve been gone four

  minutes.

  #ShitShitShit

  “It’s not just tit.

  Don’t you get it?

  This is serious.

  What is Mr B going to

  think of me?”

  “What’s it got

  to do with you?”

  “Everything!” I spit,

  forgetting to whisper.

  “I’m your best friend.

  He knows we’re

  always together.

  He’s going to think

  I endorsed it!”

  “Oh my God,” she says.

  “Endorsed it…

  Get over yourself!”

  “Me? What’s got into

  you lately?

  You need to

  take this seriously!”

  Harriet’s tears have stopped.

  She stares at me coldly.

  Her mascara is gone,

  her foundation too.

  Her freckles are showing

  like they always used to

  when we were little

  before she wore makeup

  only I don’t recognize

  who she is any more.

  “I am taking it seriously,”

  she protests.

  “Why do you think

  I was so depressed at lunch?

  I know it was stupid.”

  “You’re not taking
>
  anything seriously.

  You’re all over the place

  chasing Lee,

  texting Jackson,

  dumping Jackson.”

  I have less than one

  minute to get back to class

  before Miss Allison comes.

  “And now sending Mr B

  that slutty selfie!”

  “Slutty?” she screams.

  “Fucking hell, Frankie!

  You think you’re

  soooo

  PERFECT!”

  “Harriet!” I snap. “Shut up!

  Or we’ll both get busted.”

  “Oh, and if Saint Frankie got

  into trouble, that would be

  the end of the world.”

  “Hey,” I say. “That is not fair.

  I don’t want to be here.”

  “Then don’t be,” she shouts,

  shoving past me.

  “You’re not helping me;

  you’re just judging me!”

  I reach out to stop her,

  but she flings me

  off her

  so violently

  I slip on the tiles

  and fall to the floor.

  I stare at her,

  pain exploding

  in my hip where I landed,

  and in that moment

  I hate every bone

  in her body.

  She spins around

  and looks at me

  and I see in her eyes

  that she hates me too.

  She moves and I think

  she’s going to hit me.

  “I am

  done with you,”

  she spits.

  “You’re NOTHING TO ME!”

  “Good!” I shout.

  “I don’t want to be

  friends with

  a slut anyway!”

  She storms to the door,

  opens it and shouts

  into the corridor,

  “FRANKIE YOUNG IS

  SKIVING IN THE TOILETS,

  BUT I MADE HER DO IT.”

  She looks down

  at me on the floor,

  and whispers,

  “Happy now?”

  then whips her hair

  over her shoulder

  and struts out.

  HAPPY?

  I’m terrified

  a teacher

  heard and I might

  get detention,

  or worse.

  I’m furious

  she deliberately

  tried to get me

 

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