Joanne Sefton Book 2. Joanne Sefton

Joanne Sefton Book 2 - Joanne Sefton


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of the jigsaw fell into place. She’d always wondered how Alex had got to know people so quickly. They could never walk a hundred yards together without people nodding, waving or stopping to talk to her. But Alex must have known some of these people already. To Misty, Cambridge may as well have been an alien planet she’d been dropped onto from a passing spacecraft. She was as likely to run into someone she knew from before as she was to stroll past Isaac Newton. She flushed a little, feeling gauche not to have realised before.

      ‘So, what’s so great about your parents’ parties then?’ asked Misty.

      ‘Music, alcohol, guys … same as any other party. But bigger and better. They don’t do things by halves and they don’t have that student obsession of worrying endlessly about how much it’s all going to cost.’

      *

      When it came to it, Misty nearly didn’t go. She had a dose of flu, which had left her hot and shivery in bed when the rest of them were at the buttery’s Christmas dinner. Three days later, she was feeling much better but still weak and tired. She’d missed a supervision and had two essays to catch up on whilst everyone else had finished. A hot chocolate in the common room with some rubbish on the telly sounded like a more appealing way to end the day than trekking out to the suburbs for a party.

      ‘Don’t be pathetic, it’ll cheer you up.’

      Karen and Alex had come banging on her door, already doused in LouLou perfume and glittery eye shadow.

      They were right – she was being pathetic and feeling sorry for herself. A little bit homesick too if she was honest. But she’d have all the time in the world to lie on the sofa and drink hot chocolate when she went home next week.

      ‘All right, I’ll get ready.’ She eyed their miniskirts and shivered. ‘I’m wearing my jeans, though.’

      ‘Fine,’ said Alex. ‘Look what I’ve got.’ There was a flat glass bottle tucked in her jacket. She unscrewed the cap and held it out to Karen to sniff.

      ‘Eurgh.’ Karen recoiled. ‘Whisky?’

      ‘Jack Daniel’s. Get the party started. Just don’t wave it about in the cab, yeah?’

      Misty ducked behind her wardrobe door to pull on a blouse that might help disguise her as someone who’d vaguely made an effort. Her friends passed the bottle between them as she dragged a brush through her hair and stabbed her mascara brush up and down to try to pick up the last bits from the empty tube.

      ‘I prefer it with cola,’ Karen was saying, pulling a face.

      ‘Gets us drunk faster this way and fewer calories,’ replied Alex. ‘Do you want some, Misty? I could put it in this mug, so we don’t catch any of your germs!’

      ‘You’re so thoughtful. It’s okay. I think if I had some now it might finish me off before we got there.’

      ‘It’s time we were going anyway,’ said Karen.

      ‘Just getting my shoes on.’

      None of them bothered with coats just to walk across college to the front Lodge where the minicab would be waiting. But even in the quads there was a chill east wind and Misty shivered violently. The three girls clung together, a little knot of festive colour amidst the dun paths and darkened wintry gardens. Alex started a plaintive chorus of ‘In the Bleak Midwinter’ and Karen quickly joined in. Misty, without the benefit of the whisky, was too self-conscious to sing in public.

      She was the one, though, who caught the moment in the shutter-click of her memory. Christmas, cold, the headiness of the perfume and the fever she hadn’t quite shaken off. She felt a rush of love for Alex, exuberant enough to even take in Karen, and a sudden certainty that these friendships were true. That they would last and be important.

      *

      The house was a sprawling old villa on the edge of town, built of grey stone, rather than the typical Cambridge pale gold, which lent it an air of foreboding. Although the outside was austere, warmth and light seeped from the windows, shimmering like tinsel. When the door swung open a cacophony of sound tumbled out and the warm, fuggy air hit Misty like a solid object.

      ‘Come on,’ said Alex, grinning, ‘let’s go in.’

      Misty was startled to be offered a glass of wine by a uniformed waitress in the large, wood-panelled hallway. The room was busy and full of festive welcome; a log fire blazed to the side, a glossy piano was garlanded with greenery, and the scent of pine and candles filled the air.

      ‘Kitchen,’ said Alex, pushing past the people standing around. Misty tried to guess who they were but there was such a mix of ages, of styles of dress, it was impossible to generalise.

      There was definitely a younger vibe in the kitchen. Octavia was there and Karen, evidently half-thrilled and half-relieved, rushed over to speak to the popular older girl. Four young men, presumably students, were leaning against the kitchen table and drinking wine from plastic glasses. They were all in black tie, although three of them had lost their bow ties, and two clutched musical instruments.

      ‘That’s him,’ Alex hissed nodding towards them.

      ‘Who?’

      ‘Andrew Dyer. He plays the saxophone.’

      Misty focused in on the boy she was gesturing towards. He was half a head shorter than the others, but undeniably good-looking.

      ‘And you like him?’

      Alex rolled her eyes dramatically. ‘I’d die for him. He’s a second year. How can you have missed him at college? He’s the most gorgeous boy we’ve got.’ She made a determined move towards the band members, pulling Misty along by her wrist.

      ‘Hi.’

      The boys nodded and grunted hellos back at Alex.

      ‘So, you’re playing tonight then?’

      One of the others looked down at the trumpet in his hand. ‘Um, looks like it. Professor Penrith will be here in a minute, demanding we get onto the next set. She’ll want her paid monkeys to be dancing.’

      A third boy nudged the one who was speaking and nodded towards Alex. ‘Shut up, you idiot. She’s …’

      ‘It’s all right. I know my mum’s a slave driver. And I also know where they keep the good booze.’ She raised an eyebrow. ‘I’m Alex Penrith. And this is Misty Jardine. She’s a first year at St Barts too, although she’s a medic, so you’ve probably never seen her.’

      ‘Misty, that’s an unusual name.’ The trumpeter was talking, and smirking. Misty sighed inwardly, cursing her mum and Johnny Mathis once again. But he let the point go and the boys introduced themselves properly. Alex produced some proper glasses and a bottle of Spanish brandy from one of the many kitchen cupboards.

      ‘I can’t believe she gave you plastic glasses,’ she teased, ‘it’s like you’re at the kids’ table. All the adults out there have got the real ones.’

      Octavia sailed over at that moment, bringing Karen and a couple of girls Misty didn’t recognise with her.

      ‘Alex, darling, amazing party. Do you know there are two members of the Royal Shakespeare Company here? And apparently a cabinet minister. Can’t remember which one, granted, but then they’re not very memorable, are they?’

      One of the band boys put his arm around Octavia’s shoulders, pulling her towards him. Another began to whisper to Karen. Misty caught something about going into the garden, but Andrew shook his head.

      ‘We’re on again in five minutes. You’re not going anywhere, Eastley.’

      As the boys collected themselves, Alex sloshed brandy and cola into glasses for the three of them and Octavia.

      ‘No point in taking it easy when you’re all staying the night anyway. Let’s get wasted and shag some tottie,’ Alex said, raising her glass.

      Misty


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