Charlie and I are up on the battlements, looking out at the glitter of lights along the mainland. We left the others to their disgusting game. Thereโs something illicit about it, just the two of us up here. Something reckless. Perhaps itโs being on top of the world with the steep drop beneath us โ invisible but very much there โ adding a frisson of excitement, making everything feel slightly freighted with danger. Or that weโre cloaked by darkness. That anything could happen up here and no one would know.
โItโs so good to have you here,โ I tell him. โYou know youโreย myย best man, really?โ
โThanks,โ he says. โItโs good to be here. Why did you choose this place?โ
โOh, you know. My Irish roots. And itโs so exclusive, I like the idea of being first. Thereโs the remoteness, too: good for deterring any paps.โ
โTheyโd really try and get photos of his wedding?โ He sounds incredulous, like he doesnโt believe Willโs celebrity justifies it.
โThey might. And itโs so on-brand for Will, having his wedding in such a wild place.โ
All of what Iโve told him is true, in a way. But not the whole truth.
I rest my head against his shoulder. I think I feel him go still. Perhaps it doesnโt feel quite so natural as it once did, being physically close like this. Come to think of it, did it ever?
Charlie clears his throat. โCan I ask you a question?โ
He sounds serious. I sense a touch of wariness. โGo ahead.โ โHe does makes you happy, doesnโt he?โ
I lift my head a fraction off his shoulder. โWhat do you mean?โ
I feel him shrug. โJust that. You know how much I care about you, Jules.โ
โYes,โ I say. โHe does. And I could ask you the same about Hannah.โ โThatโsย veryย differentโโ
โReally? How so?โ I donโt want to hear his reply; I donโt need yet another person telling me that it has all been so quick, between Will and me. And then, because Iโve drunk more than I meant to this evening โ and because when else am I going to be able to? โ I say it: โAre you saying thatย youย would have made me happier?โ
โJulesโโ He says it as a kind of groan. โDonโt do that.โ โDo what?โ I ask innocently.
โWe wouldnโt have worked. Weโre friends, good friends. You know that.โ At that I feel him pulling away from me, retreating from the cliff edge.
Do I, though? And is heย reallyย so convinced of that? I know he wanted me once. I still think about that night. The memory I have returned to so many times โฆ when I have needed some inspiration in the bath, for example. We have never spoken of it since. And because we havenโt, it has retained its power. Iโm sure he still thinks about it too.
โWe were different people back then,โ he says, as though he might have read my mind. I wonder if heโs as convinced by his words as heโs making out. โI wasnโt asking because of anything likeย that,โ he says. โNot out of jealousy โฆ or anything.โ
โReally?ย Because it sounds to me like youโre a bit jealous.โ โIโm not, Iโโ
โDid I tell you how good he is in bed? Thatโs the sort of thing friends are meant to tell each other, isnโt it?โ I know Iโm pushing it, but I canโt help myself.
โLook,โ Charlie says. โI just want you to be happy.โ
How bloody patronising. I lift my head fully away from his shoulder. I feel the distance between us expanding now, metaphorically as well as physically. โIโm perfectly capable of knowing what does and doesnโt make me happy,โ I say. โIn case you havenโt noticed Iโm thirty-four. Not a sixteen-year-old virgin totally in awe of you.โ
Charlie grimaces. โGod, I know. Sorry, I didnโt mean it like that. I care, thatโs all.โ
Something has suddenly occurred to me. โCharlie?โ I ask. โDid you write me a note?โ
โA note?โ
I hear the answer to my question in his confusion. It wasnโt him. โItโs nothing,โ I say. โForget it. You know what? I think Iโm going to
turn in. If I go now, I can get eight hoursโ sleep before tomorrow.โ โOK,โ he says. I sense that he is relieved Iโve called it a night and that
pisses me off.
โGive me a hug?โ I ask. โSure.โ
I lean into him. His body is softer than Willโs, so much less taut than it used to be. But the scent of him is the same. So familiar, somehow, which is strange โ considering how long itโs been.
Itโs still there, I think. He must feel it too. But then attraction never really goes away, does it? Iโm sure of it: heโs jealous.
When I get back to the room Willโs getting undressed. He grins at me, I move toward him.
โShall we pick up where we left off earlier?โ he murmurs.
Itโs one way, I think, to erase the humiliation of that conversation with Charlie.
I tear open the remaining buttons on his shirt, he rips one of the straps of my jumpsuit trying to get it off me. Itโs always like the first time with him โ that haste โ only better, now we know exactly what the other wants. We fuck braced against the bed, him entering me from behind. I come, hard. Iโm not quiet about it. In a strange way, it feels as though much of the evening since we got interrupted earlier has been a kind of foreplay. Feeling the gaze of the others upon us: envious, awed. Seeing in their reactions to us how good we look together. And yes, the hurt of having crossed a line with Charlie and being rebuffed. Maybe heโll hear us.
Afterwards Will goes for a shower. He takes impeccable care of himself โ his routine even makes my own look rather slapdash. I remember being a little surprised when I realised his permanently brown face wasnโt actually due to the constant exposure to the elements but to Sisleyโs self-tan, the same one I use.
Itโs only now, sitting in the armchair in my robe, that I become aware of a strange odour, more powerful than the evanescently marine scent of sex. It is stronger, undeniably the smell of the sea: a briny, fishy, ammoniac tang at the back of the throat. And as I sit here it seems to gather itself from the shadowy corners of the room, gaining texture and depth.
I go to the window and open it. The air outside is pretty icy, now that itโs dark. I can hear the slam of the waves against the rocks down below. Further out the water is silver in the light of the moon, like molten metal, so bright that I can hardly look at it. You can see the swell in it even from here, great muscular movements beneath the surface, full of intent.
I can hear a cackling above me, up on the roof, perhaps. It sounds like a gleeful mocking.
Surely, I think, the smell of the sea should be stronger outside than in? Yet the breeze that wafts in is fresh and odourless by comparison. I canโt make sense of it. I reach over to the dressing table and light my scented candle. Then I sit in the chair and try for calm. But I can practically hear the beat of my own heart. Too fast, a flutter in my chest. Is it just the aftermath of our exertions? Or something more than that?
I should talk to Will about the note. Now is the moment, if Iโm ever going to do it. But Iโve already had one confrontation this evening โ with Charlie โ and I canโt quite bring myself to face the thing head-on, to plough ahead and raise it. And itโs probably nothing. Iโm 99 per cent sure, anyway. Maybe 98.
The door to the bathroom opens. Will steps into the room, towel knotted around his waist. Even though I have just had him Iโm momentarily distracted by the sight of his body: the planes and ridges of it, the muscles corded in stomach, arms and legs.
โWhat are you doing still up?โ he asks. โWe should get some rest. Big day tomorrow.โ
I turn my back to him and drop my robe to the floor, sure I can feel his eyes on me. Enjoying the power of it. Then I lift the cover and slip into the bed and as I do my bare legs make contact with something. Solid and cold, the consistency of dead flesh. It seems to yield as I push my feet unwittingly into it and yet at the same time to wrap itself around my legs.
โJesus Christ! Jesus Fucking Christ!โ
I leap from the bed, trip, half sprawl on the floor. Will stares at me. โJules? What is it?โ
I can hardly answer him at first, too scared and repulsed by what I just felt. The panic has risen into my throat in a choke. The shock reverberates through me, deep and visceral and animal. It was the stuff of a nightmare โ the sort of thing you dream about finding in your bed, only to wake in a chill sweat and realise it was all in your imagination. But this was real. I can still feel the cold imprint of it against my legs.
โWill,โ I say, finally finding my voice. โThereโs something โ in the bed. Under the covers.โ
He strides over in two great bounds, takes the duvet in both hands and rips it away. I canโt help screaming. There, in the middle of the mattress, sprawls the huge black body of some marine creature, tentacles stretching in all directions.
Will leaps back. โWhat the fuck?โ He sounds more angry than frightened. He says it again, as though the thing on the bed might somehow answer for itself: โWhat the fuck โฆ?โ
The smell of the sea, of briny, rotting things, is overpowering now, emanating from that black mass on the bed.
And then quickly, recovering much more rapidly than I do, Will moves closer to it again. As he puts out a hand I shout, โDonโt touch it!โ But he has already grasped the tentacles, given them a yank. They come free, the thing seems to break apart โ horribly, sickeningly. It was there while we fucked, waiting for us beneath the covers โฆ
Will gives a short, hard laugh, entirely without humour. โLook โ itโs only seaweed. Itโs bloody seaweed!โ
He holds it aloft. I lean closer. Heโs right. Itโs the stuff Iโve seen strewn along the beaches here, great thick, dark ropes of it washed up by the waves. Will tosses it on to the floor.
Gradually, the whole scene loses its grotesque edge and devolves into a chaotic mess. I become acutely aware of the indignity of my position, sprawled naked on the floor. My heartbeat slows, and I find it easier to breathe.
But then โฆ how did this even end up here? Why is it here?
Someone has done this to us. Someone brought it in and hidden it beneath the duvet, knowing weโd only discover it when we climbed into bed.
I turn to Will. โWho could have done this?โ He shrugs. โWell, I have my suspicions.โ โWhat do you mean?โ
โIt was a prank we used to pull on the younger boys at school. Weโd hike down the cliff path and collect as much seaweed as we could carry, then hide it in their beds. So Iโd guess it was Johnno or Duncanโmaybe all the guys. They probably thought it was hilarious.โ
โYou call this a prank? Weโre not in school, Will; itโs the night before our wedding! What the hell?โ In a way, my anger feels like a release.
Will shrugs. โItโs not a prank for you; itโs for me. You know, for old timesโ sake. They didnโt mean for you to get upsetโโ
โIโm going to wake them up and find out who did this. Iโll show them just how funny I think it is.โ
โJules.โ Will grabs my shoulders, then speaks softly, โIf you do that โฆ you might say things youโll regret. It could spoil tomorrow, donโt you think? It could change the whole vibe.โ
I can see his point, sort of. God, heโs always so reasonableโsometimes itโs infuriating, always taking the calm approach. I look at the black mass on the floor; itโs hard to shake the feeling that thereโs a darker message behind it.
โLook,โ Will says gently. โWeโre both tired. Itโs been a long day. Letโs not stress about it now. We can grab a new sheet from the spare room.โ
The spare room was meant for Willโs parents. They were put off by the idea of actually staying on the island. Will didnโt seem surprised. โMy fatherโs never been impressed by anything Iโve doneโgetting married is no exception.โ Thereโs a bitterness in his voice. He rarely talks about his father, which somehow makes me feel that his influence looms larger over Will than heโs willing to admit.
โGet a new duvet, too,โ I tell Will now. Iโm half tempted to say I want to swap to the other room. But that would be irrational, and I pride myself on being the opposite.
โSure.โ Will gestures to the seaweed. โAnd Iโll sort out this, too โ Iโve dealt with much worse, trust me.โ
On the programme Will has escaped from wolves and been swarmed by vampire bats โ though heโs never far from the help of the crew โ so this must all seem a little pathetic to him. A bit of seaweed on the sheets is hardly a big deal, in the grand scheme of things.
โIโll have a word with the guys tomorrow morning,โ he says. โTell them theyโre fucking idiots.โ
โOK,โ I say. Heโs so good at providing comfort. Heโs so โ well, thereโs only really one word for it โ perfect.
And yet, in this moment, with particularly nasty timing, the words on that horrible little note surface.
Not the man he says he is โฆ cheat โฆ liar โฆ Donโt marry him.
โA good nightโs sleep,โ Will says, soothingly. โThatโs what we need.โ
I nod.
But I donโt think Iโm going to sleep a wink.