Read The Judas Scar Online

Authors: Amanda Jennings

Tags: #Desire, #Love Triangle, #Novel, #Betrayal, #Fiction, #Guilt, #Past Childhood Trauma

The Judas Scar (8 page)

It was a ramble, or at least the repercussions of one, that first brought him and Luke together. One night in the third week of his first term at Farringdon Hall, Will was caught sneaking out by Mr Fielder, a reedy history master with a sparse moustache who smelt of coffee and cigarettes. Will had opened the door to the building and walked straight into him. The man sent him back up to the first years’ dormitory, his thin voice laced with what might have been regret as he told him he’d have to see the headmaster the following day. Will’s stomach had churned with dread for the whole night and following day until, finally, in the evening after prep, Drysdale summoned him.

‘Tell me, English – I’d love to know – exactly why you want to run away from school? Why you’d want to cause us bother? Worry your parents? Hm?’

Will’s stuttered mix of ums and ers failed to convince this terrifying man, and the caning that followed was brutal. Will limped back to the dormitory bruised and biting back tears, and climbed straight into bed. Later, after Matron had turned the lights out, a boy on the other side of the room – a quiet, small boy who Will hadn’t taken much notice of – crept across the room. The boy stood motionless by Will’s bed for a moment or two. Then he glanced over his shoulder and thrust out a closed fist. Will didn’t move. Nor did the boy – he just stood there, unmoving, his arm held out towards Will. Will furrowed his brow and shrugged, unsure what he was mean to do. The boy sighed theatrically and leant closer.

‘Take it,’ he whispered. ‘It’ll stop the bum-sting.’ He grabbed Will’s hand and pushed something hard into it then closed Will’s fingers around whatever it was before silently slipping back to his bed.

When Will opened his hand and saw what he’d been given his heart missed a beat. Two foil-wrapped toffees lay on his palm like gold coins. Will closed his hand and thrust it beneath his blanket. Sweets weren’t allowed. Sweets would get confiscated by the prefects, stolen and eaten, your things ransacked if there was even the smallest suspicion there was more. How had the boy got this contraband? Where had he hidden it?

Will sat up in his bed and looked over at Luke who also sat up. His pale, thin face was lit in a shaft of fluorescent light from the corridor. He stared at Will, solemn and intense, nodded once then lay back down. Will pulled his grey, regulation blanket over his head and waited with bated breath, heart hammering, until the duty prefect had done his final rounds. When Will was sure it was safe, he undid the golden wrappers, coughing to mask any rustling, then popped both toffees in at once, almost too much for his mouth to hold. He sucked slowly, closing his eyes as the creamy sweetness ran down his throat. Luke was right; for a few glorious minutes his throbbing backside, the desperate homesickness, the injustice and loneliness – all of it was forgotten.

In the morning, as they walked down the stairs on their way to breakfast, Will caught up with Luke.

‘Thanks,’ he said.

Luke smiled, then neither of them said anything more.

Will walked along the deserted back streets of Fulham. His stride was full and his rhythmic footsteps rang on the pavement. The houses were dark, their curtains drawn. He imagined the people who lived in them tucked up in their beds, quietly snoring, deeply asleep. He heard the startled screech of a cat or maybe a fox. He picked up his pace as his thoughts settled on the last time he’d seen Luke, the day he was expelled, both of them perched on hard wooden chairs in Drysdale’s office, which reeked of old leather, wood polish and mothballs. He remembered the look in Luke’s eyes, the way they’d welled with tears that spilled down his cheeks, and a thick nausea pooled in the pit of his stomach as he strode on.

In the morning Will left their flat and headed up towards the North End Road, weaving in and out of the people on the busy pavements as he walked to the shop.

‘Morning, Frank,’ he said, as he pushed through the door, sounding the old-fashioned bell that hung on the back.

‘Morning, William,’ Frank said brightly.

Will was fond of Frank. He’d worked for Will since he opened the shop a year earlier, using the small lump sum his father had left him when he died. Will had met him in the wine merchant’s he worked at after college, and as soon as he thought about opening his own shop, he knew he wanted Frank with him. He was great company, eccentric in a very British way, with a great sense of humour and an easy-going nature. He was a short man, and a little rotund, and always dressed in well-fitting suits with his grey hair slicked back with old-fashioned hair cream that he ordered from a specialist gentleman’s shop in Bristol. He lived in Chiswick with two Persian cats called Pie and Pinwheel and his elderly boyfriend, a writer of moderately successful science fiction, who was as wiry as Frank was portly. Frank loved wine with a passion, and was a walking encyclopedia when it came to claret and burgundy. North End Wines was nestled in a tired row of shops between the Co-op and a bookmaker’s. From the outside it didn’t look like much, with its chipped maroon paintwork, dirty white walls and security bars on the windows – a legacy from its days as a sex shop – but the rent was cheap. Inside, however, was an Aladdin’s cave of beautiful wine. Bottles were shelved from floor to ceiling and wall to wall, all of them carefully selected by Will from a variety of vineyards, large and small, and already, even after only a year of trading, they had a small but loyal customer base who travelled from various corners of London, battling gridlock to buy their wine.

‘So how are you today?’

‘Good thanks, Frank.’

‘Kettle’s just boiled, dear.’

‘Lovely. Would you like a coffee?’

‘Gracious, no. I’ve had three already.’

‘Three?’ Will said, raising his eyebrows. ‘It’s not even ten. You’ll be bouncing off the ceiling.’

Frank smiled and playfully batted the air. ‘I’ve been up since five. I’m surprised I haven’t needed more than the three, to be honest.’

Will pushed through the plastic strip curtain, reminiscent of a Seventies corner shop, and in the tiny cupboard that passed as a kitchen he made himself an instant and dumped two spoonfuls of sugar in it. ‘How are the boys?’ he called through.

‘Fluffy,’ Frank said. ‘And as lazy as ever. Poor Pinwheel was a bit off-colour on Saturday but the vet wasn’t worried; she said it was probably something he ate. A past its sell-by mouse, I suspect. He’s such a greedy toad.’

Will smiled to himself and took his coffee back into the shop. The shop settled him; he felt comfortable here, knowledgeable and well respected, with no pressure to be anything out of the ordinary. He didn’t have to be talented or skilful, or, if truth be told, to stretch himself. He knew about wine. He’d worked in the business since his early twenties, and being able to work close to home, with no commute and no pressure, suited him. Frank was independently wealthy and worked for Will for the love of it; if the business had to fold, Frank would be unaffected financially. It was easy and pleasant, which is just how Will liked it. He didn’t make much money but it was steady, and though there were undoubtedly days when he wished he was out with his camera searching for beauty in the obscure and mundane, they weren’t frequent.

‘Would you like a custard cream?’ Frank asked. ‘I’ve a packet in my satchel.’

‘I’m okay, thanks.’ Will opened the large desk dairy by the till. There was a delivery that afternoon and he was meeting a new restaurant owner on Wednesday, but other than that, it was a quiet week. ‘Did you have a good weekend, Frank?’ he asked.

‘Oh, well, you know, this and that.’ Frank opened his old, battered bag, so stuffed it bulged in the middle, cracking the dry tan leather. He retrieved the packet of custard creams and carefully unwrapped them, took one, then wrapped the packet up and slid it back into his bag. ‘I do like a custard cream,’ he said to the biscuit. Then he seemed to remember something and waved the biscuit frantically at Will. ‘Ooh, something did happen,’ he said triumphantly. ‘Eric had a death threat through the post. That was rather thrilling.’

‘A death threat? A real one?’

‘Yes, some poor woman, distraught he’d killed off Princess Aisha in
Far Reaches of Sylion
.’

‘Blimey,’ Will said.

‘To be honest, we’re used to it. Some of the diehards were terribly upset. Saw it as a total betrayal that their gorgeous heroine got the chop.’ He shrugged. ‘I think that was it as far as weekend excitement goes.’ Frank put the last of his custard cream into his mouth then brushed the crumbs off his suit. ‘And now to work. I was thinking it was all getting a bit untidy in here. How about I give it a dust and a straighten?’

Will smiled; the shop was immaculate as always, but Frank was cursed with a compulsive disorder he wasn’t aware of and every Monday and Thursday he dusted and straightened the clean and straight bottles.

‘Good idea,’ Will said. ‘I’ll get on with sorting out the cellar to make room for the delivery.’

‘How’s your mother, by the way?’

‘She’s fine, I think. I spoke to her last week. Though she wasn’t herself. She’s been cross with me for months. God knows what I’ve done.’

‘That’s grief for you. It makes everything terribly cloudy. When I lost dear old Mum I couldn’t talk to anyone. Not even Eric.The only ones who understood were Pinwheel and Pie. They were such a support. She’ll come around. Time’s the perfect healer. You should visit her, she’d like that.’ Frank took a breath and clapped his hands together. ‘I must get on, this shop isn’t going to clean itself, you know.’ He disappeared through the strip curtain to get his duster and polish. Will perched on the edge of the stool behind the counter and looked at his iPhone. He had an email and clicked open his inbox.

Luke’s name hit him so hard he felt winded.

 

From: Luke Crawford Subject:

Following up

 

Will,

 

It was good to see you yesterday and lovely to meet your wife.

Though wasn’t it strange bumping into each other? A small world, as they say. I was thinking on the way home how close we’d been at school. It would be great to catch up properly. I’m away on business next week and pretty busy towards the end of this week, but I’m free tonight or tomorrow evening. Would you and Harmony like to come for a drink or something to eat? Or at yours if that suits you better.

How does this sound?

Luke

 

‘Frank, I’m nipping out for a minute or two,’ Will said.

‘Everything okay?’ asked Frank. ‘You look a little pale.’

‘Just need some air.’

Will’s head was all over the place. This wasn’t going to go away. He rested against the wall of the Co-op and covered his face with his hands. Christ, he thought. Why on earth did you give him your card? He had to work out what he should do, but his head felt foggy, his thoughts blurred.

He called Harmony.

‘Hey,’ he said when she answered. ‘It’s me.’

‘You okay?’

‘I’m good. You?’

‘In the middle of something.’

He tried to speak but the words stuck in his throat.

‘Is it important?’ she said, her voice tight with impatience.

‘Luke emailed me.’

‘Really?’ He heard her voice soften. ‘That’s good, isn’t it? What did he say?’

‘He wants to meet up. Either tonight or tomorrow at ours or his.’

‘Do you want to?’

‘I’m not sure. He’s keen to see me. Refusing seems rude, I think.’

‘Then you should. Do you want me there too?’

‘Yes. If that suits you, of course.’

‘Tonight would be better for me. At ours. I’ve got a lot of work to do. At least if the evening runs on, I can get back to it if I have to.’

‘So you think I should say yes to him?’

‘It’s up to you, Will. But if he’s coming you need to sort the food out. I’m up against a deadline at work. Jacob needs to see my interim draft by the end of the week.’

Will waited after the phone call ended for a moment or two, then took a deep breath and hesitantly typed a reply.

 

Hey Luke, yes it would be great to catch up. Why don’t you come to ours for 7ish tonight? I’ll cook something. Our address is 146a Hanniker Rd, W14.

 

Will wasn’t sure how to sign off. Yours sincerely? Kind regards? Best? He scrolled down to see how Luke had done it and saw a simple ‘Luke’. Will added his name and pressed send. Then he stared at his phone in his quivering hand.

‘I’m glad you’re back,’ said a worried looking Frank as Will pushed back through the door. ‘A young woman came in asking for a bottle of pudding wine suitable to go with a chocolate roulade. I panicked.’

‘What did you go with?’

‘A bottle of the Estrella Moscatel de Valencia.’

‘Perfect,’ Will lied. ‘I’d have given her the same myself.’

Frank’s face relaxed. ‘That’s a relief,’ he said. ‘It was a bit of a punt, to be honest.’ Then he picked up his duster and Pledge from the top of the stepladder and went back to his spraying and polishing.

At five o’clock Will told Frank he had to leave to meet a client. Frank didn’t seem to mind; he said he needed some peace to tidy the cupboard in the kitchenette. Will walked down to the Sainsbury’s Local at Fulham Broadway. As he wandered up and down the aisles, memories of Luke bombarded him; things he’d forgotten came back to him as if it were yesterday, like the time they tore pages from their hymn books in assembly and made tiny paper aeroplanes. Then later they’d bunked off cadet training and scrambled up the wooded hillock behind the science block that was steep and overgrown and where nobody else ever went. They’d spent an hour launching their hymn-book planes in fits of giggles as the flimsy things looped and plopped at their feet or flew off in odd directions, both of them as close to happy as either of them could be in their school that felt more like a prison.

Will pushed through the front door of the flat laden with shopping bags and kicked it shut behind him. Harmony’s bag hung on the hook in the hallway.

‘Hello,’ he called, as he walked down to the kitchen. ‘Harmony?’ There was no answer. He put the bags on the worktop and then went back down the corridor to her study. The door was shut. He knocked as he opened it and saw her at the computer, the glasses she wore for close work perched on her nose and her hair tied up in a loose ponytail, revealing the soft, smooth skin of her neck.

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