Major – a novel extract




The girls in all the sports clubs she attended generally enjoyed partying as much as they enjoyed winning, which was a lot. Diana was one of the wildest girls among them all. She’d snuck two bottles of Blue Nun into the locker room and had thrust one into her hand, glaring at her with a menacing grin before unscrewing her own bottle and taking a big gulp. She passed it on to the nearest teammate without breaking eye contact until she unscrewed the other bottle and followed suit, letting the sweet, acidic liquid spill over her tongue. She lowered the bottle to hand it over, but Diana shot out her hand, preventing her and pushing it upwards again, flooding her mouth with more than she could manage. The wine spilt from the corners of her lips and dribbled down her jaw. She swallowed, painfully, what remained; a golf ball forced down her throat.
‘That’s better! You need to have some fun…we won, Major!’ Diana said.


After downing another large mouthful, she also passed her bottle on to one of the other team members, Julie, who chinked it against the other bottle before taking a swig and passing it on.


‘You’re coming out with us tonight, Maje, no excuses.’ Diana said, pulling her in for a side-squeeze. ‘We’re heading down to Jericho, come by my room on the fifth floor at eight, we’re in the same building, right?’


‘I have plans already, with my coursemates.’


‘Great! The more, the merrier – they can join us, too,’ Diana replied, not to be discouraged. After it was clear she wasn’t going to put up any more of a fight, Diana let out a loud cheer, which the rest of the girls joined in. ‘Blues, bitches! Wooo!’


Major couldn’t help a smile from tugging at the corners of her mouth; the camaraderie and the win felt good.


‘Go, Blues!’ Diana crowed from atop one of the tables their group had convened. The team and Major’s coursemates, who had quickly gotten over the change of plans when they discovered the Lacrosse girls were down-to-earth party animals and not the spoiled daddy’s girl types, echoed the cheer. An infectious buzz zinged through Major’s chest as she joined in, nursing the glass of Asti that Diana had insisted on ordering for the entire team; it was too sweet and fizzy for her liking, but she couldn’t stop smiling. She was actually having fun. Diana clumsily climbed back down to floor level and bounced over to her.


‘Maje! I didn’t know you could laugh!?’ she teased, ‘I’m glad you came out with us, but drink up, for God’s sake, it’s part of the fun!’
She took a sip from the plastic coupe they’d been served, causing Diana to arch an eyebrow at her. She glared back, then downed the drink in one, a sharp pain behind her nose from the bubbles caused her to cough. And then burp. Loudly. Diana’s eyes widened for a moment, then she exploded with laughter, her own drink decorating the floor from the forgotten need to keep her wrist straight. They clung to each other, gasping for air between fits of laughter.


The group moved on to another bar serving cocktails, which she found slightly more palatable, losing a few teammates en route who went off to meet with other friends or return to their halls. Her coursemates remained, along with Diana and about half the team, and although she was still hyper-aware of every male in their vicinity, she was surprised when she noticed the lightness in her body. Despite this, she turned down the next offer of a drink, wishing to hold on to that fun giddiness that allowed her to laugh and join in the conversations and teasings the girls light-heartedly batted back and forth. She didn’t want to become the slurred and drowsy burden in need of being shouldered home on wobbly legs. And she couldn’t quite allow herself to lose that kind of control, to risk putting herself in that state of vulnerability – a decision she was soon glad of when a large group of lads bawled into the bar, causing the tension in her shoulders to return.


She watched as they made their way noisily to the bar to order drinks. How they seemed to take up so much more space than with just their bodies. And how people seemed to make room for them without conscious thought. It made her blood simmer.


‘Seb,’ Diana breathed next to her, having looked up to where she’d been staring. ‘Dishy isn’t he; the tall one near the back,’ she clarified.


‘Hmm.’


‘You don’t think so? Are you blind?’ Diana asked, genuinely taken aback. ‘Ohh, hold on…are you, you know,’ she winked and made a vulgar gesture with her index and middle finger to her mouth.


‘What? No!’ Major responded, her cheeks heating.


‘Fine by me, Majey-Lee, whatever floats your boat,’ she teased, digging an elbow into her ribs. There was warmth in her eyes, however; no sign of judgment or malice.


‘I’m not. Honestly. I just…he just doesn’t interest me. None of them do.’


‘Darling, if you aren’t interested, that means more chance for me, so I’m happy! Because I’ve already noticed that handsome devil sneaking a few rogue glances your way. And to think you’ve been shooting him down before he’s even had a chance to take his shot.’ Diana responded with mock sympathy, pulling her into an affectionate hug. Major laughed, sure that Diana aimed to lighten the mood rather than believing Seb was eyeing her up.


‘Knock yourself out,’ Major said, crinkling her nose with a rather-you-than-me face. Diana flashed her a feline smile, a glint in her eye as she knocked back the rest of her drink and sauntered over to the group of males, her Sabrina Duncan-style sleek brown hair bobbing flirtily. Major watched, noticing how the group became extremely interested in their new addition; they shifted to make room for Diana and glanced appreciatively over her tight bell-bottoms and low-cut tied shirt. Seb seemed not to notice her, however. He casually drank his pint and talked with the lad standing beside him, apparently unaware of the glances Diana kept flicking his way as she conversed with the rest of his group.


‘What’re you daydreaming about?’ Tina had joined her at the bar table, her forearm leaning across it as she faced her, what looked like a gin and tonic in her hand.


‘I’m just keeping an eye on Diana,’ she said, jerking her head in Diana’s direction. Tina’s brows lowered, and her eyes followed in the direction she’d indicated. Her eyebrows raised, then.


‘Got some balls, hasn’t she!’ Tina said, sounding half admiring, half wary. ‘Does she know them or something?’


‘I’m not sure, she seems to know of them. Or the one at the back, anyway. He’s her target; his name is Seb.’