Trouble (7 page)

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Authors: Non Pratt

Tags: #Pregnancy, #Juvenile Fiction, #Dating & Sex, #Friendship, #Social Issues

BOOK: Trouble
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“Katie, I—” But she’s already huffed off and I think better of shouting, “I’m pregnant!” across a crowded room. All I can see are people I don’t want to talk to and boys I’ve either shagged or who’ve turned me down. I see Tyrone in the other room, surrounded by girls like he’s the star in his own rap video and I see Aaron Tyler standing in a doorway talking to Anj. Although I sit with her and Gideon in French I don’t see as much of Anj as I used to – we go way back – and for the first time in a while I wish things were different. Anj was always easier to talk to than Katie.

Oh
God
. I can’t do this –
any
of this. I want to scream, I want to cry, I want to escape, but there’s someone else at the front door and I hurry upstairs instead. Maybe there’s somewhere I can be alone, get my head around things, work out what to do next. Why the
fuck
did I come here? I listen at a couple of the doors, hear the grunts, groans and arguments you’d expect and walk in on Fletch, sprawled, T-shirt rucked up and baring his belly as he snores on the floor. I can’t believe I let him have sex with me.

It can’t be his.

The thought floods through me turning my blood to ice and I feel faint with fear.

The next room I try is a connecting wardrobe you can get into from either the hall or what must be Rex’s parents’ room, proving my point that the kids at Kingsway aren’t exactly poor. There’s someone in the bedroom, on the phone by the sound of it, but I feel safe as I slide my back down the far wall until I’m sitting on the floor.

Maybe I can just sit in here for a bit. No one will notice.

AARON

Gideon comes back from the kitchen carrying three plastic cups filled with something pink.

“Really? Punch? I’m never sending you for drinks again, gay boy,” Anj says.

“It was this or very vintage Martini Rosso. Take your pick, straight girl.” Gideon hands over the drinks as I watch Hannah Sheppard jog up the stairs. The contents of my cup smells like paint stripper. No way am I drinking that.

“So how come you moved schools?” Anj thinks she’s making small talk, but the reason I moved schools is far from small. I say something about needing a change of scenery and ignore the glance she exchanges with Gideon. There’s a bit of a pause.

“Not acting as your bestie’s wingman now he’s flying solo tonight?” Gideon asks.

It takes a second for me to catch up. “Rex and I aren’t best mates.”

“I was talking about God’s Gift.” Gideon nods towards the crowd of girls that have accumulated around Tyrone’s spot on the sofa.

I laugh. “I am definitely
not
Tyrone’s mate. Best or otherwise.”

They look surprised – Tyrone’s friendship is something I’m supposed to want.

“I pulled Tyrone once,” Anj says, wistfully, and Gideon and I stare at her. “Don’t look so shocked – I’m a good catch for a boy who likes a bit of cream in his coffee.”

“Of course you are,” Gideon says, grinning. “I just would have expected to
know
you pulled such a hottie. When did that happen?”

“Ages ago. The Easter you abandoned me to go to South America.” Gideon rolls his eyes and I get the impression this is an old argument. “It was before Marcy made him cool.”

“What?” I say. I thought it was the other way around.

“It’s all because of his girlfriend that Tyrone became King of Kingsway. Before then he was just some guy who was quite good at basketball.”

“Not even that good. Rex is way better.” Gideon takes up the story. “But Tyrone got taller and toned-er last term and fooled everyone into thinking he was better than he really is. Rex is happy to go along with it. Those two have been mates for ever, so little old Rex is just pleased that he’s not been left behind.”

“It’s Marcy that rules the school.” Anj nods, dark eyes wide and earnest. “Her and that coven of bitches she surrounds herself with. Don’t get on the wrong side of her, or you’ll get cut from everything. You may as well stop existing.”

They must have seen my face. Sceptical is an understatement.

“Seriously! There was a girl who left our school last year because Marcy teased her every single second until it became too much.”

I want to ask what happened, but this topic of conversation is making me uncomfortable. I don’t like speculating on why people leave schools.

“Have you seen Katie Coleman’s here?” Gideon asks Anj. “Word is that she’s after Rex.”

“Poor guy.” Anj laughs, then looks around. “Where’s Hannah, then?”

My eyes slide towards the stairs, and I notice that Tyrone has left his spot on the sofa and is walking up them.

HANNAH

The carpet in here is so deep that the door carves an arc across the pile as it opens. I wipe the tears from my face and wait to tell whoever it is that they’ll have to find somewhere else to shag.

“Hey, kitten.” Tyrone comes in, shuts the door and sits down next to me. I never noticed how creepy it is that he thinks calling me “kitten” is sexy. Kittens are about as sexy as granny pants.

“Hey.” My left leg is buzzing where his thigh touches mine and I wonder if I could lose myself in this feeling.

“You’re looking pretty gorgeous tonight.” He brushes his fingers gently up my bare leg and under my hem. I breathe in deeply, focusing on his touch. “Is this for me?”

I nod. It’s not – Tyrone didn’t exactly factor in to my thoughts when I grabbed this dress off the back of my chair. More on my mind.

I’m pregnant.

I stamp down on that thought so hard my head hurts with the effort and I concentrate on Tyrone as he twists round and leans over. His eyes are closed as he leans in and kisses me. It starts slow, but it soon gets more exciting, more promising. I remember how easy it is to turn him on and I slide under him, legs opening so our bodies fit together better in this cramped little space. I don’t even realize that my hands have worked their way under his T-shirt until I’m scratching my nails gently along his spine.

He kisses my neck and I sigh at the feel of his lips on my skin.

What am I doing?

This is such a stupid idea.

His hands run up my body straight to my breasts.

“Ow.” I wince, surprised at how bruised they feel.

“Sorry,” he murmurs then slides his face down into my cleavage. “They just look amazing.”

He nudges aside the top of my bra and that’s when I freak out.

“Get off!” I buck and twist under him, suddenly claustrophobic with this boy’s body on top of me in this closet in someone else’s house.

Tyrone sits away from me. “What’s wrong?”

“I can’t…” I’m breathing fast and shallow and I feel faint. I can’t do this. I can’t have sex with Tyrone. I can’t.

“Hannah, are you all right?”

“No!” I shriek. I’m shivering. Tyrone reaches out but I shuffle away from him, only there’s not much room to move and I press my hands to my face, wishing him away.

I hear the
swoosh
of the door on the carpet.

AARON

Tyrone is crouching on the floor of what appears to be a wardrobe talking to a girl who’s pressed herself right into the corner, dress ridden up far enough that I can see her pants. She looks up. It’s Hannah.

“Get out!” Tyrone’s voice is squeaky with fear.

“I think it’s you that should get out.” My voice is cold and hard and the sound of it scares me even more than it does him. That voice does not come from a good place. It comes from a part of me that I’m supposed to have left behind. Before I know it, I’ve pulled Tyrone up and out of the door, his face so close to mine I can almost taste the sweat standing out on his skin.

I’m trying to reel it back in and my silence gives him a chance to speak. “I don’t know what you think you saw…”

“I think I saw you behind a door with a girl who I just heard yell ‘no’ at you.” My grip on myself is distinctly less steady than the one I’ve got on the boy in front of me.

“You what?” Puzzled then horrified. “No, it’s not like that. I wasn’t … shit, man, you think I’d do that?”

He takes my silence to mean that I do.

“Aaron! There’s no way I’d force myself on a girl. I swear. We were fooling around and it was all fine then she just went mental. I swear. We wasn’t even doing anything yet. I swear on my
life
, man. Swear it.”

I walk past him and shut the door. He might be telling the truth, but I’ll wait and hear Hannah’s side. Although she’s pulled her dress down, she’s still shaking, so I take off my jumper and give it to her.

“Thanks,” she says as she wraps it around her. “You must think I’m such a head case.”

“I don’t really think anything.”

“I heard what you said to Tyrone. Don’t worry, no one can make me do anything I don’t want to do. Least of all him. Least of all that.” She smiles as she says it, fleeting and small.

“I’m glad to hear it,” I say. “I didn’t want to have to fight him.”

It sounds like a joke and Hannah smiles again, a little bigger.

“That doesn’t surprise me.” Then she sighs and she seems faded, deflated, miserable. “I just want to go home.”

HANNAH

Aaron walked me home. We didn’t talk much, but it was nice to have the company.

All I can think about is how this happened. I use condoms, FFS, and I know they were all on properly because I’m the one doing it. Tyrone put up a bit of a fight, but if he’s refusing to wear one for me… I know I’ve got a reputation – ask Katie who I lost it to and she’ll say it was the summer-jobber at Lola’s playgroup, ask anyone at school and they’ll say whatever name they saw scratched in a park bench or heard whispered in the corridor – but whatever, whoever, whenever they say, I’m not a skank. There are times when it’s not been, like, full-on sex, but has there been a tiny possibility of something ending up where it shouldn’t…? No. There is definitely no chance that I got pregnant from not wearing knickers in a nightclub and straddling that guy’s lap while we pulled. That’s the kind of question you read in problem pages and the agony aunt calls you out for being incredibly stupid on more than one level.

But I am being stupid, because I know exactly when this happened, don’t I?

Yeah, I use condoms. Except for that one time, with that one person…

I open up the text conversation we had afterwards and skim down the threads until I reach the last one I sent:

Just a 1 nite thing? thats it? srsly?!

And I make myself read his reply, no matter how much I know it will hurt:

What did u think was going to happen?

Not this, that’s for sure.

SATURDAY 24
TH
OCTOBER
HALF-TERM

HANNAH

There’s an angry voicemail from Katie. She must have been drunk when she left it because all her words are slurred together and she repeats herself a few times. There’s something about being worried. (Which meant she hadn’t checked her texts before calling me. As if I’d leave without telling her.) Then she tells me that Tyrone was looking for me. And something that’s so garbled I only catch Rex’s name after the second listen. Basically, I’m a bad friend.

I stare at the text I’m about to send.

Im pregnant…

Then I delete it and ask if she’d like to hang out in town later.

TUESDAY 27
TH
OCTOBER
HALF-TERM

HANNAH

Since Katie’s decided she’s in a mood with me, I’ve been concentrating on how to tell my mum. I’ve tried, I really have. But I can’t work out when to do it:

*  over dinner:
This casserole is lovely. The beans look like tiny little foetuses. FYI, I’m growing one of those. Foetuses, not beans
.

*  in the car with Lola singing in the back:
Hey, Lolly, shush a minute. So, Mum, did I mention I’m pregnant? Please don’t drive into that wheelie bin. Or that postman. Or the side of that house
.

*  in the middle of a homework/school work/too-much-time-going-out argument:
NONE OF THAT SHIT MATTERS, MOTHER! I’M PREGNANT, ALL RIGHT?

I know it sounds spineless, but I’m scared of how she’ll react.

You see, Mum’s a nurse.

At the Family Planning Clinic.

Yeah. I know.

We had the chat about the birds and the bees ages ago, with regular refreshers on the occasional car journey. I’m better educated about sex than on any subject I’m taking for GCSE, but then it’s not like I have History books lying on my kitchen table with key facts written in teen-speak the way Mum’s leaflets shout “Rubber is kinky – get dressed before you get down” and “Nothing cool about chlamydia” at me whilst I eat breakfast. It would be very hard not to have a clue in this house.

But it’s always –
always
– been a case of “As soon as you’re sixteen, we’ll get you an appointment.” There’s not a single part of Mum’s brain that suspects it might be a bit late by then. And the thought of
me
being the one to bring it up… It’s one thing talking about fictional sex, but a whole conversation of cringe if she knew I was
actually
doing it. A thought that’s enough to keep me away from the Clinic even on her days off – the girls on the reception gossip so badly, Mum’d know about it before I even got home.

So condoms are the only option I’ve got. You can buy them at Boots.

And there’s always the morning-after pill. Not that
that
went to plan.

In the back of my mind I always thought I’d go and get an abortion. Simples.

The reality? Not so simples.

This is life and death we’re talking about. I mean, I don’t think you exist until you’re born, not properly, but there is something in there and it’s something that matters. If babies in the womb didn’t count until they came out then no one would give pregnant people who smoke funny looks, or tut too loudly when they have a drink. There wouldn’t be all these rules and guidelines about what’s good for the baby if the baby didn’t matter at all.

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