Lucy: What time do you think you'll get here tomorrow? x
Tom: Probably about 12, dinner's at 1 x
Lucy: Thanks :) can't wait to see you! xx
I put my phone down, face down, on the bare skin of my thigh. The device was too large to balance on my leg, really. I was too slim, but by a combination of keeping two fingers on the back of the phone's case and tucking the corner under the hem of my tight denim shorts, it was secure enough.
"Anyway, when Mr Gargrove told me my mark, I couldn't believe it, you know, only fifty-five on the project which had taken me weeks, so I instantly asked for a remark and he was just completely dismissive. Can you believe that? Anyway, I got Mrs Kilmore to look at it and she said it was at least eighty, so I got the remark and guess what? Ninety. Upgraded from fifty-five to ninety."
Robin looked over at me with a smug look, jiggling her leg and holding a plastic cup in one hand. "Ninety!"
"Can't believe it," I told her, sipping my own drink, which was an unidentified rum punch. I could taste pineapple but there was too much alcohol in it and I made a face.
"Anyway, next time I saw Mr Gargrove I said to him, look at how much it got upgraded, and this time he acted like he'd advised me to do that all along."
Robin was the smartest girl on our university Business course. She was nice enough, but she was obsessed with her grades, and now we'd reached the end of the first year of the course, that was all she wanted to talk about. I was unlucky enough to have sat down next to her when I arrived at the end of term party and she'd stuck to me like a limpet all night. I could have recited her full grade transcript.
"That's weird," I said to her, in between more mouthfuls of rum. "He probably gave you the fifty five in the first place."
"Exactly, Lucy!" Robin enthused, pleased she had an engaged audience. I looked away as she opened her mouth and launched into an unabridged explanation of why Mr Gargrove had always disliked her.
The party was one of those that was supposed to start with heavy drinking and then move on to a nightclub later, but somehow it had never really got going and I'd spent the past two hours sitting in a Hall of Residence kitchen on an all-expense-spared plastic seat which stuck to my thighs. It was humid and sweaty and all the windows were open, and even in my shorts and red crop top, I felt too warm. Idly, I looked at my phone again.
Tom: Can't wait to see you too x
Tom was my boyfriend. We'd been dating one year and one week, which I knew because we got together the day after my eighteenth birthday party and I had turned nineteen a week ago. Tom was great: he was studying law, his family were all really nice, and he was totally committed to making our long-distance relationship work. He was going to uni just over an hour away, and we saw each other once every couple of weeks, so it wasn't crazy. But he had a ton of coursework, so often I visited him to help him study or something.
Lucy: I think I might get an early night, this party is pretty boring x
I didn't let Robin see me typing that.
Tom: Good idea x won't take you long to get back to your room, right?
He was right. My Halls room was just about a five minute walk: through two sets of doors, across a courtyard, up a flight of stairs and then two more doors. I could be in bed in less than ten minutes.
"I think I might call it a night," I told Robin, putting my phone down again.
"Aw, no! We're supposed to be celebrating!" Robin pouted, grabbing my arm. Her hand was damp from what I hoped was condensation on the side of her cup. "One more drink? Will you get me one?"
I sighed. It was supposed to be a celebration, after all, now that exams were over. One more probably wouldn't hurt.
"Alright, one more," I told her, knowing that she was just enjoying the sound of her own voice. But it was only nine o'clock and going back to my room for an early night did sound a bit depressing.
I got up and pushed my strawberry blonde hair behind my ears. I had been blessed with a fantastic hair colour, but absolutely zero volume, so it always hung limply in my face. I took Robin's cup and stepped over to the drinks table, which was further away from the windows and insufferably stuffy. The rum punch was almost untouched but I ladled us both a cupful, bending down over the table to try not to spill any, and when I straightened up and turned I noticed a girl sitting on one side of the room, staring at me.
She was everything I was not. Thick, voluminous, wavy blonde hair fell over her shoulders in perfectly scattered tresses. She was gorgeously made up, with long mascara-ed eyelashes, pale pink glossy lips and tapered eyebrows, in contrast to my dab of nude lipstick and touch of concealer. My earrings were diamond studs; hers gold hoops which caught the low light in the kitchen as her head turned ever so slightly. And my slim figure was nothing like her curves. My neat A-cups, tucked beneath my top, were up against an ocean of her cleavage, her boobs only half-covered in a jet black sequinned dress which was halfway between casual and classy. And out of the bottom of her dress were two thighs that could comfortably accommodate my phone, no doubt about it.
Our eyes met for a moment and I looked away, feeling unusually embarrassed. I stared furiously at the two cups of punch I'd poured. She was just some other girl at the party - I didn't even recognise her from the course. I had no idea why I felt weird about her looking at me. I glanced back over in her direction, trying to come across as casual, and she had turned to talk to her friend sitting next to her, holding a can of premixed vodka at a slight angle. I was trying to work out whether her nails were painted when she looked back at me, our eyes meeting again. I could feel my face getting hot and I grabbed the punch, going back to Robin and not looking back.
"Thanks," Robin said, still bobbing her foot up and down as she took the cup from me. "Do you think next year's marks will be harder to get?"
As soon as the words were out of her mouth, I knew I couldn't hang out with her any more. I felt unnerved by that girl looking at me and I just wanted to be back in my room.
"I don't think I feel too well," I told Robin, ignoring her comment. "I'm gonna go back to my room."
"Do you need me to walk you there?" Robin asked, looking concerned, and I shook my head firmly.
"No, I think the fresh air outside will help. It's too stuffy in here," I explained.
I had to walk past the girl in the black dress to get out of the kitchen, but I forced myself not to look at her. I still didn't know why I felt weird about her. It was probably a kind of insecurity, since she had the sort of big-boobed, voluptuous body I didn't have, and at the back of my mind I was worried she was laughing at me or judging me. Something like, 'oh, look over there at that skinny, bony girl'.
The corridor outside the kitchen was a bit cooler, but after going through both sets of doors and into the courtyard, the sharp coolness of the night air hit me and I felt a lot better. My pace slackened and I looked up at the clear night's sky, a handful of stars visible beyond the light pollution, taking a deep breath. Maybe I was more drunk than I realised, even though I'd only had a couple of drinks. There was a lot of rum in them, though.
"Hey," a voice said behind me, and I turned to see the girl walking towards me. Now she was standing up, I was acutely aware of the fact that she was several inches taller than me, although admittedly she was wearing heels and I wasn't.
"Um, hi," I replied, fighting my instinctive shyness. "Sorry about back there."
She smiled slightly and gave me a confused look. "What are you sorry for?" she asked, halting a short distance away from me and perching herself on the corner of a brick planter.
"I don't know," I admitted, smiling too. "I saw you looking at me, that's all."
"Then it's probably me that should be sorry," she said, bluntly. "Do you want another drink? I nicked these vodkas, that punch was disgusting." She held up two cans she was carrying.
Now I was out of the close atmosphere of the kitchen I felt a bit better and I sat down on the bricks next to her.
"Cranberry or mango? No, I don't want mango, you'd better have it," she said, reading the flavours off in the semi-darkness before handing one to me. Before I could examine it, she popped open hers and held it up. "Cheers."
"Cheers," I repeated, opening mine and having a drink. It was lukewarm and sweet, but relatively palatable.
"Are you on the business course?" she asked. "I'm Henrietta, by the way."