Liam knows that Saffron has a free period at 11.30, which is why he texted her to meet him in the stairwell at 11.35. He is supposed to be teaching Geography to a class of Year Sevens between 11.30 and 12.10 but he tells another teacher, Mrs. Lamb, that he has an upset stomach and asks if she can substitute for him. As expected, Mrs. Lamb looks sympathetic and agrees, and doesn’t ask him any further questions. The truth is that Liam’s stomach isn’t bothering him nearly as much as his heart, which feels like it has been violently ripped from its moorings and is now lodged somewhere in his throat, making it difficult to breathe. In the damp mildew-smelling concrete stairwell the minutes tick by: 11.40, 11.45. 11.50. His earlier feelings of anger and betrayal have now been replaced by sickening anxiety. 11.55. Liam climbs shakily to his feet. He presses a hand to his forehead, which is being stabbed from within by tiny needles of fear dipped in panic. He closes his eyes and tries to breathe through the pain.
He cannot lose her. He won’t lose her.









