One Summer In Paris. Sarah Morgan

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You could die, and no one would know. It was one of the cheaper areas of the city, which basically meant you paid twice what you would anywhere else in the country and got half as much for your money.

      Rain was sheeting down, obscuring the view from the window.

      Hardy, their rescue dog, was curled up in the warmth of the kitchen but when he saw Audrey he greeted her like a long-lost friend.

      Audrey dropped to her knees and hugged him. “You are the only thing about this place I’m going to miss. You’re my best friend, and I wish I could take you with me when I go.” She giggled as he licked her face. “I hope she gets out of bed long enough to feed you when I’m gone. If not, scratch at the door. Or bite Ron on the ankles.” She stood up. “Food?”

      Hardy wagged his tail.

      She put food into his bowl, freshened his water and was wondering what to eat herself when her phone buzzed. It was Meena, asking if she could come over so they could study together.

      Audrey and Meena had both moved to the school two years earlier, at an age when everyone else was already in groups and cliques.

      Their friendship was one of the best things about the place for Audrey.

      Given that she was likely to have the house to herself for hours, Audrey messaged back a yes. She would never, ever have contemplated having a friend around when her mother was home, but she occasionally invited Meena, provided the house was empty. Her parents were both doctors and Meena had the kind of stable home life Audrey could only dream of. She had uncles, aunts and cousins and Audrey wanted to implant herself in her family.

      She checked the fridge.

      It was empty apart from two bottles of wine.

      She’d asked her mother to buy milk and cheese, but instead she’d eaten the few things Audrey had stocked up on the day before.

      Tired, Audrey grabbed the open bottle of wine and tipped it down the sink. It was like trying to bail out a sinking ship with an eggcup, but still she couldn’t help trying to fix the situation.

      There was no time for her to shop, so she headed for the freezer. Fortunately the frozen pizzas she’d bought the day before were still there. She threw them in the oven and retrieved a packet of chocolate biscuits she’d hidden for emergencies.

      The moment she answered the door to her friend, she knew something was wrong. “What?”

      “Nothing.” Meena pushed past her into the house. “Close the door fast.”

      “Why?” Audrey peered out into the street and saw two girls leaning against a wall. She recognized them immediately. They were in her year at school. “What do those hyenas want?”

      “My carcass. For dinner. Close the door, Aud!”

      “They followed you again?” Audrey felt something hot and uncontrollable burn inside her. “What did they say?”

      “The usual.” Despite the cold, Meena’s face was sweaty. Her eyes looked huge behind her glasses. “It doesn’t matter. It’s just words. Please don’t say anything.”

      “It matters.” Audrey was out of the door and across the street before Meena could stop her, carrying all the extra emotion leftover from her encounter with her mother. “What is your problem?” She directed her question at the taller of the two girls because she knew she was the ringleader. Her name was Rhonda and she and Audrey clashed regularly.

      Rhonda folded her arms. “I’m not the one with the problem. But you should stop hanging out with that dumb bitch. You need to rethink your friends.”

      “Yeah.” The smaller girl standing by her side sounded like an echo. “You need to rethink your friends.”

      Audrey glared at her. She couldn’t even summon up the girl’s name. She was a mouse who hid in Rhonda’s shadow. “When you have an original opinion you can voice it, but until then shut up.” She shifted her gaze back to Rhonda. “I don’t need to rethink anything. And seeing as Meena gets top grades in everything, the only dumb bitch I see is standing right in front of me.”

      Rhonda lifted her jaw. “She should go back to wherever it is she came from.”

      “She comes from here, you brainless baboon. She was born half a mile down the road from you but you’re too stupid to even know that, and who the hell cares anyway?”

      “Why are you defending her? This isn’t your business, Audrey.”

      “My friends aren’t my business? Is that a joke?” Audrey felt the last threads of control unravel. She took a step forward and had the satisfaction of seeing the other girl take a step back.

      “You shouldn’t be here.”

      “It’s you who shouldn’t be here. This is my street. My wall. I don’t need a bunch of mean girls leaning against it.” Audrey stabbed Rhonda in the chest with her finger. “Get out of here, and if you come near Meena again I swear I’ll hurt you.”

      “You and whose army?”

      “I don’t need an army. I’m my own army. Now fuck off back to wherever you came from, which is probably the sewer.” With a threatening scowl that she’d spent hours perfecting in front of the mirror, she stalked away from them. They called something after her and she lifted her finger and kept walking.

      She found Meena shaking like a baby fawn, her phone in her hand.

      “I thought they were going to kill you.”

      “You have so little faith in me.” Audrey glanced at the phone. “Why are you calling emergency services?”

      “I thought you needed backup.”

      “We’re not in an action film, Meena. Put the phone away. And stop shaking. You look like a kitten someone dropped in a puddle.”

      Meena rubbed her arms. “I wish I could be like you. You’re funny and everyone likes you.”

      “Yeah? Well, I wish I was like you. You have a brain and a place at Oxford.”

      “I’d rather be popular and fit in. Pathetic, I know. Those girls say I just got the place to fill their diversity quota.”

      “Yeah, well, those girls are mean as snakes and dumb as shit. They’ve got to say something to make themselves feel better because their lives are crap. But you—” Audrey grabbed Meena and swung her around. “You’re going to rule the world. And because you have me to do your hair, you’re going to look good while you do it. Be proud! You’re, like, insanely smart. I can’t even spell engineering, let alone study it. I boast about you to everyone. My friend Meena is going to Oxford.

      “You don’t hate me for it?”

      “What? Don’t be crazy. I’m proud of you. Why would I hate you?”

      Meena looked sweetly anxious. “Because studying is so hard for you.”

      “Life is hard for you, too. I don’t have to put up with the crap that’s thrown

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