before he weighs out his words, one by one. âAgain. All. Right?â
I have a book in one hand, the other opening and closing on empty air, trying to hold on as we look at each other.
Oblivious, Ned drops the book heâs holding onto a stalagmite, which promptly topples. He leaps across the falling books, offering his fist for Jason to bump.
âShiiit, mate,â Ned says, as they perform a complicated handshake. It seems to involve a lot of thumbs. âIs Niall going ballistic?â
âThe usual.â Jason reverts to slow motion as the handshake ends. He sighs. âYou ready?â
âGrots.â Nedâs practically out the door already as he turns to me. âSwaps?â
I concentrate on assembling another box, fumbling over the corners. âWhatâs the swap?â
âI forgot, weâve got a Fingerband meeting. Look, do the books? Get them in the car, and I promise Iâll take care of the rest of it.â When I look at him, he adds softly, âHis clothes.â
âSeriously?â I canât decide if Nedâs trying to get out of packing the books or shield me from everything else. Greyâs shoes. The photographs. The Wurst .
I steel myself to look up at the painting on the wall. My final art exam from last year. Itâs hard, being the straight one in a house with Dumbledore and Peter Pan and Axl Rose, being friends with bangle-wearing glittered artists. So Iâd tried, and Iâd painted the canal. At the school exhibition, Papa had taken one look at itâa giant blue sausageâand christened it The Wurst . Ned had laughed himself silly. Iâd pretended I didnât mind, and laughed too.
âGots, dude.â Grey had clamped my shoulder in one giant hand, holding me steady. âYou tried something different. You think your brother would attempt anything he wasnât already good at?â We contemplated the sausage for a minute, then he said, âYour mum liked blue.â
I tear my eyes away from The Wurst and see Ned is hovering in the doorway, waiting for me to make up my mind.
âDeal,â I say.
âCheers, Grots!â he yells, disappearing across the sitting room. âJase, Iâll grab my gear, see you outside in five.â
Then Iâm alone with Jason for the first time since the day Grey died.
Soft as a sunset, he smiles. And says, âMargot.â
The way it ended between us, a text message from a hundred miles away, I never had the chance to let him go. Instead, I stuffed all my heartbreak in a box like the one Iâm packing now, and waited. When he says my name, it floods the room.
I could melt into him. But instead I grin, teeth and terror, try to speak, andâ
Jason finally breaks the awkward to murmur, âHowâs. It. Going?â
âOkay!â I answer too loud and too fast. Then, squeakily: âHow isâ¦â
Shit. My brain blanks on where heâs been. We talked every day last summer, I Internet-stalked him for weeks in the autumn, but I canât remember where he went to college.
âNottingham Trent,â he fills in with a slouchy shrug, his eyes not leaving mine. âItâs all right.â
Thereâs no air in the room, no air in my lungs, as Jason peels himself off the doorway and approaches me. For a second, I let myself hope heâll slide his arms around my waist, help me forget about this whole horrible year by giving me someone to belong to. Then he flops backwards next to the half-empty box, onto Greyâs bed. I wince.
Itâs too much: the combination of Greyâs room and Jason, so close to me. Last October, alone in this empty house and after weeks of trying to work out what we were to each other, Iâd asked him. And heâd texted, I think I can only manage friends for now . For now. I bet my heart on that caveat, and now here he is.
I grip the side of the box, trying to breathe. Concentrate on stacking