Nobody in Particular(13)
Danni studies me, and I’m certain I spot an air of suspicion. “I didn’t want to make a bad first impression,” she says finally. “I know I don’t … it’s just, the handbook said we have to dress up.”
“Well, you certainly did that,” I say evenly, biting back a smile. Her suspicion crosses into outright wariness, and Molly looks fit to strangle me, and I realize I’ve taken my teasing a step too far. “I’m obviously changing, Eleanor, don’t get your knickers in a knot,” I say, moving to close the door. Then, my conscience winning against my crabbiness, I pause and lock eyes with Danni. “You look nice, don’t fret.”
I pull out my most comfortable pair of cotton trousers—my dinnertime uniform—and a soft jumper. I glance in the mirror and discover I look how I feel, and I feel like a slug in salt.
“Rose, you better not have gone back to sleep! We’re going to be late!”
I dress and run my fingers through my hair in an attempt to smooth down the flyaways that formed in my nap. It is a categorically unsuccessful venture, but there’s little to be done about it now. I apply some deodorant, drape my gown over my arm, and throw my door open, just in time to see that Molly has started off toward the staircase, Eleanor and Danni watching after her. Fresh out of patience with me, it would seem.
I let my door fall shut behind me and trot after Molly, shuffling my gown on as I go. “Let’s go, then,” I say over my shoulder to Eleanor and Danni, who scramble to catch up with my brisk pace.
The four of us—five, if you include a recently roused Sidney—walk through the brisk cold of the evening to the dining hall and arrive, despite Eleanor’s fears, bang on time.
In the dining hall I end up seated between Harriet Tomas and Molly, with Danni and Eleanor directly across from me. It’s certainly not on purpose on either Molly’s or my end—I think she was angling to sit where Florence Chan is, a few seats down from me, but in the shuffle for places, she somehow ended up jostled in my direction. I nod at her while the headmaster leads the prayer, wondering for a brief, misguided moment if Molly at least plans on making polite small talk with me for appearance’s sake. Instead, she pretends not to have noticed my gesture, and fixes her gaze on the table.
It hasn’t been like this forever. Even as recently as her party, she was at least speaking to me still. Rather, it’s as though ever since that night in Amsterdam, her opinion of me has deteriorated little by little, day by day. It started with her taking longer to reply to my texts. Then she stopped returning my calls altogether. She would mysteriously vanish whenever I contributed to the group chat, only to reappear when I’d left the conversation. She was hopelessly busy whenever I attempted to make plans.
The worst part is, I don’t entirely understand why. If she had cut me off in one fell swoop after Amsterdam, I wouldn’t have been surprised in the slightest. This gradual fading to nothingness, though? It’s bewildering. It doesn’t seem to matter if I press her for an explanation, or speak to her warmly as though I haven’t caught her withdrawal, or give her the space to come to me—and I have attempted each of the above—the result is the same.
She’s shedding our friendship like snakeskin, and there doesn’t seem to be a thing I can do to prevent it.
For just a flash, something akin to despair wrenches at the pit of my stomach, and I take a slow breath and focus on keeping my expression even so no one around me notices. Then, viciously, I jump on that feeling, pressing it down further and further until the emotion is compacted into a tiny pebble, so small I can’t feel it at all. And, to my relief, I’m no longer pretending not to be devastated. I’m simply not. For now, it’s as though I never had a friend called Molly.
As today’s soup—a thick, velvety pumpkin—is placed in the center of the table in a steel tureen, I take a bowl from the stack being passed down the line and turn my attention to Danni, whose eyes are darting around nervously to confirm what everyone else is doing.
On either side of me, Molly and Harriet speak to Danni at the exact same moment.
“Are you having soup?”
“So, how does Bramppath compare to your old school?”
The latter question, asked by Harriet, is far louder, so Danni turns to her. Harriet leans forward and to the side, all but shoving me out of the way. I give a grunt of annoyance at the invasion of personal space, but Harriet doesn’t clock on. At least she pretends not to.
I spoon some soup into a bowl, and pass the ladle to Molly. She takes it from me silently, and I feel nothing.
“It’s different,” Danni says to Harriet. “I’ll have to get used to all the religious stuff. Like the prayers. I don’t know what to say most of the time.”
“Oh, you pick up on it,” Harriet assures her through a mouthful of soup. “It’s like a jingle. You hear the same thing day in and day out and you start hearing it in your dreams before long.”
It sounds as though Harriet and I have very different dreams. Any praying in mine is usually of a distinctly separate sort.
“Anyway,” Harriet goes on. “Are you missing your old school?”
Briefly, I wonder at Harriet’s persistence to speak to Danni. Then I remember I saw the two of them speaking at length at Molly’s party. Harriet is a friend of mine, but more due to proximity than any true compatibility. At some point years ago, Molly, Eleanor, and I started gravitating toward Harriet and Florence at mealtimes, though they’re the year above us, and gradually bonded over alcohol and weed, usually smuggled in by Florence. Though I’m happy to make small talk with Harriet, who’s nice enough, she’s hardly someone I would choose to spend one-on-one time with. In truth, I find her quite dull.