Freshers

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by Tom Ellen




  A MESSAGE FROM CHICKEN HOUSE

  My first week at uni was like a kids’ birthday party gone mad: dressing up, weird games, food fights – but with the helpful addition of lots of booze . . . It’s nice to know that nothing has changed!

  In FRESHERS, Tom Ellen and Lucy Ivison have written an unmissable account of this defining rite of passage, in all its crazy glory. Our protagonists discover friends for life, embarrass themselves and figure out who they want to be – and who they really are. As well as being hilarious, FRESHERS is full of wisdom, offering heartfelt insights about respect, friendship . . . and even love.

  BARRY CUNNINGHAM

  Publisher

  Chicken House

  Contents

  Part 1

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Part 2

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Part 3

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Part 4

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Part 5

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Acknowledgements

  For Cassie Cooper, Louise Geoghegan, Nell Booker and Vicky Clarfelt – I’ll keep your secrets if you keep mine – L.I.

  For Carolina – T.E.

  Also by Tom Ellen and Lucy Ivison

  Lobsters

  Never Evers

  PHOEBE

  Luke Taylor was right there and I did not feel prepared.

  I kept dancing but the sight of him had kind of electrified my insides. The boy he was with passed him a pint of something green; Luke took a sip and grimaced. The klaxon went off and everyone started shrieking.

  ‘Jutland College, make some noise!’ the DJ yelled. ‘And don’t forget to introduce yourself when you swap clothes!’

  A girl bopping next to me gave me a big smile and said something I had absolutely zero chance of hearing. I nodded and shouted ‘Phoebe’ as loudly as I could before taking the Yoda ears she handed to me and giving her my mirrored waistcoat. The song changed and she started dancing like she was at a rave.

  I needed to compose myself. And share the hysteria. I needed to call Flora. I dodged my way off the dance floor but got stuck in front of a T-shirt with a picture of Princess Diana on it that said ‘Queen of Hearts’. A head emerged from it – that girl Negin from my corridor. The one in the room opposite me.

  ‘Hey.’ I smiled really widely.

  She said something, but the music was too loud.

  ‘A really weird thing just happened to me,’ I yelled.

  She pressed her finger in her ear and leant towards me. ‘Sorry?’

  ‘I just saw someone—’

  She kept shaking her head. In a weird moment of madness I grabbed her hand and started to weave us between people. We stumbled out into the bar area and I realized I was still gripping on to her hand, which was a bit bonkers, as we had only met a few hours ago. But now it felt like I couldn’t just randomly let it go. I led her into the toilets and inside a cubicle.

  ‘Are you OK? Are you going to be sick?’ She sounded mildly concerned, but mostly grossed out. ‘I’m not really a hair-holding person.’

  ‘No, I’m fine. I’m just—’

  ‘Sorry, it’s just I actually hate puke.’

  ‘I thought you were doing medicine?’

  She frowned. ‘You don’t have to love puke to study medicine.’

  ‘Sorry, obviously, yeah.’ I went to sit on the toilet but it had no lid. ‘I’m not gonna puke, anyway.’ I was bobbing up and down on the spot, peeling my shoes from the sticky floor. ‘It’s not a physical problem.’

  Negin’s eyebrows disappeared slowly into her fringe. ‘You are having an emotional problem.’

  It was actually ridiculous. I snorted, which must have made me seem mental. ‘Sorry, I snort sometimes. I can’t control it. Anyway, yes, it’s an urgent emotional problem.’ I took a deep breath. ‘Basically, a boy that I went to school with . . . is here.’ I whispered the ‘is here’ bit, and pointed at the floor.

  The eyebrows dropped back down again. ‘That does sound emotional.’ There was a hint of a smile at the side of her mouth.

  I didn’t know how to explain it. I couldn’t think of a way to describe the last seven years of nothingness accurately. I tried again: ‘OK, this boy I have wanted – to different levels – for, like, my entire existence, is here.’ I was waving my hands about insanely.

  ‘Oh.’ Clearly, Negin had no idea how to respond to my declaration. ‘Did you not know he was coming to York?’

  ‘No, I totally did.’

  ‘Right . . .’

  ‘I’m not explaining it well because I’m drunk.’

  ‘O-kay.’ She nodded solemnly. She was actually pulling the same face as Princess Diana.

  ‘I just feel like I need time to prepare myself for seeing him, you know? Like I need to regroup and get my game face on.’

  Negin didn’t sound that convinced. ‘I would hug you,’ she said, ‘but I’m not really a hugger.’

  She wasn’t a hugger. She wasn’t a hair-holder. What was she? I really needed Flora. Flora could hug and hair-hold at the same time, as expertly demonstrated on my seventeenth birthday. Ugh – I needed to stop rose-tinting my old friends and focus on my potential new ones. It was Flora who gave me those tequila shots in the first place now I thought about it.

  ‘Do you want to go and talk to him?’ Negin said.

  ‘NO! Oh my god. No.’

  She looked at the door again and took a deep breath. ‘OK. So, what do you want to do? We have been in this cubicle for like . . . a while. I mean, I’m not that into the crazy first-night-of-Freshers’ thing, but, I was hoping for more than . . .’

  We both stared down the bowl of the toilet.

  ‘What the fuck? Are you lot dead in there?’ a girl shouted from outside.

  ‘Not dead.’ I shouted back. ‘We’re just . . . one second.’

  Negin tucked her hair behind her ears. ‘My brother told me this story about how a girl he knew went to uni and the day she got there, she tripped up putting her duvet cover on, hit her head and knocked herself unconscious. And because her door was shut, no one knew she had even arrived. They found her, like, six days later.’

  ‘What . . . dead?’

  ‘Well, she hadn’t just been trapped in her duvet for six days.’

  Negin smiled awkwardly and I burst out‘I’m sorry, that is the most awful thing I have ever heard.’

  She shook her head. ‘It’s probably not even true. My brother probably just made it up to freak me out even more about going away.’ It made me feel better to hear that someone else was nervous, too. She opened her bag and got out a tin of Vaseline. She had a black bob with no hair out of place, almost like a Lego person. Apart from the faded Princess Di T-shirt, she looked neat. Black jeans, Converse, no make-up. Like if a newsreader fronted an indie band.

  ‘Either way,’ I said, ‘I’m never shutting my door again. Or changing my duvet.’

  Negin carefully dabbed Vaseline on her lip. ‘Don’t worry, we can just check on each other every night. You know, just in case the other person is dead.’

  ‘Yay,’ I said. ‘Death pact.’

  What was wrong with me? I hate the word ‘yay’. ‘Yay’ is the worst. It’s so cheerleader-enthusiasti
c. It’s not something I even say. The stress of Luke Taylor was making me nuts.

  The girl outside banged on the door again. ‘If you’re not dead, then maybe let some other people piss, yeah?’

  ‘OK,’ Negin shouted, and then turned back to me. ‘All right. Are you ready to go out there and face . . .’

  ‘Luke,’ I said. ‘I don’t think I’ll ever be ready to face Luke Taylor. I feel like if you saw him you would understand.’

  I got my phone out and searched for a picture of him. ‘See?’

  Negin looked down at the photo. It was from two weeks ago. Luke Taylor holding up his L-plates after passing his driving test. He was wearing a white T-shirt and his hair had been bleached really, really blond by the sun. It almost looked dyed because there were dark roots coming through. He looked a bit sheepish, like someone had made him pose for it. I pressed the phone into her hands and she dutifully leant in to look closer. She didn’t say anything.

  ‘That’s him,’ I hissed.

  She nodded. ‘I got that.’

  I waited for her to speak. She must have realized she was supposed to say something else. ‘He looks . . . like a standard hot boy.’

  My seven-year loyalty to him bristled. ‘His hair looks better longer.’

  ‘Where is he?’ she asked.

  ‘At the driving test place, I guess.’

  ‘No,’ she sighed. ‘Where is he now?’

  ‘Oh. On the side bit next to the dance floor.’

  ‘OK, well, we’ll walk past and if he sees you, just casually say hello.’ Negin sounded confident so I went with it.

  ‘OK.’

  We opened the cubicle door and the girl outside huffed and barged straight in past us. We washed our hands, even though neither of us had actually been to the toilet. I tried to arrange my tutu, sweatbands and Yoda ears. Negin offered me some of her Vaseline.

  ‘I wish I looked a bit less . . . random,’ I said.

  ‘It’s a clothes swap party,’ she said. ‘You’d look weirder if you were wearing a matching outfit.’

  ‘Yeah, you’re right.’

  I took a deep breath and we walked out. But Luke Taylor had vanished.

  LUKE

  I was doing my best to focus on what Arthur was saying, but the buzzing in my pocket kept distracting me.

  If I’d counted right – and I was pretty sure I had – this buzz was the eleventh buzz since we’d got down to the bar. The eleventh. A sudden rush of anger cut through me. Did she really expect me to spend the first night of Freshers’ stood outside talking to her? Wasn’t the whole point of this week to talk to new people?

  The buzzing stopped as Arthur pushed a luminous blue shot and a pint of lager along the bar to me. He was wearing a bright-red bathrobe over a sleeveless denim jacket, his sweaty black hair just about tucked into a yellow swimming cap. I had on my mum’s 2007 Bon Jovi tour T-shirt under a massive, multi-coloured Mexican poncho. We both looked absolutely ridiculous. But then, so did everybody else. Even the barman was wearing a kimono.

  I realized Arthur’s mouth was moving again, so I leant in and tried to concentrate.

  ‘I was supposed to be off-campus this year,’ he was shouting over the music. ‘Me and some mates had a house sorted and everything. Even put the deposit down.’

  ‘So, what happened?’ I yelled back.

  ‘It got fucking condemned. Like, literally, two weeks ago. Asbestos. So that’s why I’ve ended up back in B Block next door to you.’ He did his shot and winced. ‘Still, could be worse. Most second years don’t get to do Freshers’ Week again, do they?’

  I nodded and drank my shot. It tasted like vodka-flavoured toothpaste. ‘What is asbestos?’ I shouted.

  Arthur necked half his pint in one go. ‘It’s this sort of invisible presence that lives inside your house.’

  ‘A bit like Wi-Fi.’

  ‘A bit, actually, yeah.’ He nodded. ‘But Wi-Fi that silently kills you in your sleep.’

  ‘Right. Shit.’

  The klaxon went off, and he shrugged off his bathrobe while I gave him my poncho. The barman started lining up more blue shots on a tray as Beth came over with Barney. Or maybe it wasn’t Barney. Was it Tom? Tom also had red hair. It could be Tom.

  ‘Beth! Barney!’ Arthur yelled.

  ‘Just seeing if you guys needed a hand,’ said Barney-Not-Tom, cheerfully. He was short and skinny with a strong Dorset accent and tons of orangey freckles. Beth was almost a foot taller and had a sort of strict, ‘head girl’ vibe about her that was being nicely accentuated by the Harry Potter robe she was wearing.

  ‘One, two, three, four, five . . .’ Arthur clamped the shots one-by-one between Barney’s fingers.

  ‘I’d rather have a gin and tonic than another of those shots, to be honest,’ Beth said, sharply. ‘They’re like drinking Listerine.’

  ‘No worries,’ said Arthur. ‘One G&T coming up. We’ll bring it over with the rest of them.’

  ‘Thanks.’

  Arthur leant in to me as they walked back to the table. ‘You wanna watch that Barney, by the way.’

  ‘Why?’

  ‘He’s a labeller. I saw him putting a Post-It note on his Nutella. We had a labeller on the corridor last year. Total nutjob. Got kicked out in the second term for shooting a squirrel with a BB gun. He was a chemist, too.’

  ‘Barney’s doing Geography, isn’t he?’ I’d only managed to remember that because me, him and Arthur were the only ones not doing Chemistry on our corridor.

  Arthur finished his pint and slapped the plastic glass back down on the bar. ‘Yeah, well, it’s all the same Big Bang Theory ballpark, isn’t it? Except that Geography is basically just colouring-in. What are you doing again?’

  ‘English. You’re Philosophy, right?’

  ‘Yes, mate.’ He ran a hand across his patchy black stubble. ‘I’m wrestling with the big-boy questions: what is the nature of truth? How can we find meaning in a godless universe? How hot is that girl chatting to the DJ?’ I looked at the girl in question, who was indeed hot. He picked up the tray, which was now dangerously overloaded with drinks: ‘Shall we get back, then?’

  My pocket started buzzing again. Number twelve. I pulled my phone out. ‘I’ll be there in one sec, sorry man, just need to quickly get this.’

  I slipped out of the main door and the cold hit me hard. I pressed the phone to my ear. ‘Hey.’

  ‘Hey.’ Her voice sounded wrinkled and far away. The way it’d sounded pretty much all summer.

  ‘Look, I’m sorry I didn’t pick up, it’s just—’

  ‘I know,’ she said. ‘I know you’re busy.’

  ‘I’m not busy, it’s just . . . It’s the first night. Obviously everyone’s out.’

  ‘I know.’

  Silence.

  ‘So, maybe I’d better go back in.’

  ‘OK. Have you met anyone nice?’

  ‘My corridor are all right. They’ve pretty much just talked about chemistry so far, but they seem nice. And this one bloke Arthur seems cool. He’s a second year, though.’

  ‘That sounds good. Cool. I . . . I just wanted to check everything was OK. It felt like we didn’t really sort stuff out properly this morning before you went. I didn’t want you to leave when it was weird between us.’

  I sighed. ‘It’s been weird between us all summer.’

  More silence. That was the first time either of us had actually admitted that out loud. For some reason it felt easier to say knowing she was 200 miles away.

  She still wasn’t speaking, so I kept going; the booze and the pocket buzzing and the 200 miles making me spill stuff that had been locked up firmly in my head until now. ‘And, I mean, the thing is, it’s not gonna get any less weird now that I’m here, is it?’

  ‘What do you mean?’ she said, quietly.

  ‘I mean, I’m here and you’re there. We won’t see each other that much.’

  ‘Yeah, but you said, at Reece’s party, remember, you said we could make it work.’


  ‘I know, but . . . if this is us making it work, then maybe it won’t work.’

  I heard her inhale sharply, but I carried on. ‘Like, I’m supposed to be working at other stuff, too, y’know? Meeting people. Making friends. But instead I’m standing out here talking to you. Do you really want me to spend the whole three years on the phone to you?’

  ‘You’re being a dick, Luke,’ she muttered.

  I was a bit. But I was also right.

  ‘Look, I’m sorry. It’s stupid to speak now,’ I sighed. ‘I’m a bit pissed. I’m wearing a bathrobe. I’ll call you tomorrow.’ I wasn’t quite sure why I’d added the bathrobe information.

  ‘I don’t want to talk about this tomorrow,’ she said, her voice getting lumpy with tears. ‘I want to talk about it now.’

  ‘Well, I don’t.’

  ‘If you’ve got something to say, then just say it. Have you met someone else?’

  This actually made me laugh out loud. ‘Of course I haven’t fucking met someone else, Abbey! I’m out here talking to you! How can I meet someone else?’

  ‘Do you want to meet someone else, though?’

  ‘I want to go back inside.’

  I hung up before she could respond. But my pocket was buzzing again as soon as I stepped back in.

  PHOEBE

  ‘You were terrified of seeing him, but now he’s gone you’re gutted.’

  I groaned. ‘I know. He’s ignored our subliminal instructions. What a bastard. We just planned the whole scene out and he hasn’t even bothered to turn up.’

  Negin nodded. ‘The same thing happens when I argue with my mother. I rehearse this whole speech in my head and go downstairs and start it and then she interrupts and I’m like, Mum, stop’ – she held her hand up – ‘you are ruining my epic comeback.’

  I had been daydreaming my Luke Taylor meet-cute all summer. It was part of my uni prep. I had also discussed it with Flora in detail. The only part of it I had actually managed to execute was buying an oversized scarf, which I took off in the car on the way here when my mum said it was twenty degrees and I would look strange and potentially terminally ill.

  We bought another drink and found a spot on the edge of the dance floor. There was a girl up on stage with rainbow-dyed, bowl-cut hair, chatting to the DJ. I’d watched her arrive earlier, through my window. She was still wearing the same tracksuit bottoms and crop top, but now she also had a gold crown that was sort of hanging jauntily to one side, like she was in some kind of fashion shoot.

 

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