The War Zone

The War Zone by Alexander Stuart

Book: The War Zone by Alexander Stuart Read Free Book Online
Authors: Alexander Stuart
Tags: Fiction
Ads: Link
because it takes an eternity to move them out. It’s an effort of will—move, legs, move. Then they hurt more! I want to cry out, but that’s just going to give him what he’s looking for, so I grit my teeth and kick the shoes off. John watches me, laughing as I rub my toes, while Caz talks about the most disgusting thing she can think of to eat.
    ‘A shit sandwich,’ butts in Toe-rag. ‘Too obvious,’ reckons her friend. ‘Food,’ says John, his intellectual prowess clearly boosted by the
    pain he’s inflicted on me. ‘That’s pretty disgusting.’
    ‘Your prick,’ Caz says, looking at him, but perhaps I misheard, it’s not the sort of thing she would say. And Jessie and Nick come back. I’m rubbing the soles of my feet, wondering whether the ocean would make them feel better or worse and not wanting to seem like a cry-baby when I’m already the kid here, though why should I care? They look the same, Nick and Jessie, except they look as if they’ve taken a drug none of us know about. ‘Give me that,’ whispers Nick, draining the dregs of the beer from John’s bottle. Jessie sits the other side of the fire from him, sliding in comfortably between Caz and her chum. I feel sick. I’m not part of life, it’s not going to work for me. This is all my continuing punishment—my burnt soles, the fact that my sister hasn’t left me anything at all, she’s using it all up—life, sex, energy, despair. I feel flat. Nothing. My toes hurt.

11
    Five o’clock in the morning and we’re in deep shit.
    It’s light, but the mist and heat are spongelike, wrapping around us, clinging to us as we walk the last half mile or so to the cottage, Jessie having thought better of it than to have Nick and the boys drive us to the door on their motorbikes.
    ‘We’re in deep shit, you know that?’ she says, the two of us united again now in joint defense of our misdeeds, except that I haven’t even enjoyed mine, whatever they were, and how can I trust her when she’s wrecked or is wrecking all our futures, even if the wreckage doesn’t show yet? ‘We’ve just got to stay calm and bluff it out. This is probably major coronary time. What did you tell Dad? How long did you say we’d be?’
    ‘I said it was just a ride, I didn’t give a time.’ I watch her. She’s not really bothered, she’s just going through the motions. Jessie can get away with anything and she knows it. Mum and Dad are going to be furious, but they’ll get over it and so will Jessica.
    ‘There’s death,’ she says when she’s reasoning her way through a problem, ‘and there’s being crippled or disfigured, but apart from that there’s nothing much, nothing much they can do to you.’ She doesn’t think in terms of humiliation. ‘Everything else passes. People forget. I do.’
    I believe this last bit especially. Jessie forgets. She has a highly selective memory, good at remembering useful information but even then not infallible. She doesn’t care, she really doesn’t care. Even a grudge she might wish to repay, a score to be settled, will be forgotten if something more interesting comes along. She lives for the moment.
    And the moment is now. We’re at the front door and Jessie looks wrecked, I hadn’t realized how wrecked until now. Maybe she did do something with Nick other than fuck him! But do they know about drugs down here? This is Palookaville, not London, where even your average council estate kid can tell the difference between smack and crack, between street-grade heroin and something special. Jessie has a thin smile on her lips and pink eyes, but perhaps she’s just tired and well-pleased by Nick’s attentions. Certainly she seems to have put our conversation out of her mind.
    ‘Look repentant but not too much so,’ she advises. She digs in her jeans for the key. There’s a gash on her mouth where I scratched her. And a series of red gouges decorate the calves of her legs where her jeans finish halfway down, which

Similar Books