didn’t look like I’d been working.
I shook my head.
“Good,” he said, drinking. “It’s good to take a break.”
I should have talked to him. Alice said she’d be right back; we had the privacy. I could have told him everything that troubled me.
“I have to go,” I said, but I didn’t move.
“I have to go,” I repeated, to prod myself. I turned.
He said, “Wait,” I think, but then Alice came back. He stood up, and I got away.
I felt breathless outside, like I’d escaped something. Ludicrous. Richard’s a good friend. I started to walk in small circles in front of the pub, convinced it would sober me up. I actually made myself go back in. They didn’t see me. They were looking at each other. I thought, Right, some friend he turned out to be.
I pushed between several chairs and put my fist on their table. “You want to talk? All right, I’ll talk.” They looked shocked. I was shocked myself. What could I say? About Liv? About Gretchen? What could I say about anyone that wouldn’t make it worse for them, not being wholly mine to share?
“Sorry,” I mumbled. Richard got up. He had to push Alice’s chair forward to get to me. He pushed his fiancée to get to me.
“Go home,” he said, putting a hand on each of my shoulders. “Get some sleep.”
That’s the thing with Richard. His good advice is always so uninteresting. There’s nothing arresting about it. No epiphany. It’s easy to ignore.
I tripped walking out the door, and caught the jamb to keep from pitching forward. The door bounced off my back. A group of students on the pavement stopped talking and waited for me to get out of their way. One of them had dark hair. I thought it was Liv for a minute, and stared, frozen. She looked at one of her friends and laughed, which snapped me out of it.
A bicycle bell jingled behind me. I wasn’t fast enough. The cyclist skidded sideways to avoid me and hit a parked car. Its alarm siren rose and fell, too close to my ears.
“What the fuck is wrong with you?” he demanded.
I didn’t answer. He pedalled away, not leaving a phone number tucked under the windscreen wiper. I groped in my pockets for an old receipt on which to scribble my number—it was partly my fault—but I didn’t have one. I leaned over a rubbish bin, and almost reached in to retrieve a paper bag. It had a wet stain and a bulge at the bottom, and I finally recoiled.
I leaned against a concrete pillar. My mobile rang, again, and I assumed that it was Liv calling from a borrowed phone. I’d already ignored two of those, in the pub. But this call was from Peter. I answered.
Peter and I have known each other since we were teenagers. We boarded at different schools, but attended some of the same camps and summer courses. We were both at Cambridge now. We both had theses to finish.
“What?” I said.
“Careful, mate. You’re being followed.”
I’d drunk too much to have a sense of humour. I flattened against the wall and demanded to know what the bloody hell he meant.
Peter laughed. “That girl you know? Polly? Her mother’s in town, and she’s been asking for you.”
“What are you on about?”
“I told her you might be at Magdalene. That’s why I’m phoning. If you don’t want to see her, don’t be at Magdalene.”
“I’m not.” I got myself together, and started walking along back streets toward Earth Sciences.
“You sound wrecked.”
“I thought you were Liv.” I shouldn’t have said that. I didn’t want to explain.
“Mmmm … Liv,” he said, tasting her name. “You’re not responsible for her. She’s not your fault. You didn’t ask to be worshipped.”
“Some things are,” I said.
“Some things are what?”
“My fault. Some—a lot of things are my fault.”
He laughed again. “You dog! I thought it was the other one you were after.”
“I don’t want to talk about it.” I picked up my pace.
“So what happened with her?” he asked, referring, I think, to either of them. Whichever was a better story.
“Polly …” I said, then trailed off. I don’t know what happened with her. I know what happened between us, but I don’t know what happened inside her.
“Look, you did the right thing. Liv knows what she wants. You’re better off.”
“I did the wrong thing. I did several wrong things. I’m doing a wrong thing right now.”
I skulked along the edge of Emmanuel College and crossed St. Andrew’s