Still Falling
Luke falls. He has epilepsy. And, as it turns out, he has much bigger issues too. Esther falls. In love. It's wonderful - but there's a shadow she can't identify and that she can't make go away just by loving Luke. Luke's experience has taught him to despise himself; Esther's self-belief is fragile. And love it not as easy as it looks, but they are still falling...
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Still Falling
Luke falls. He has epilepsy. And, as it turns out, he has much bigger issues too. Esther falls. In love. It's wonderful - but there's a shadow she can't identify and that she can't make go away just by loving Luke. Luke's experience has taught him to despise himself; Esther's self-belief is fragile. And love it not as easy as it looks, but they are still falling...
7.99 In Stock
Still Falling

Still Falling

by Sheena Wilkinson
Still Falling

Still Falling

by Sheena Wilkinson

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Overview

Luke falls. He has epilepsy. And, as it turns out, he has much bigger issues too. Esther falls. In love. It's wonderful - but there's a shadow she can't identify and that she can't make go away just by loving Luke. Luke's experience has taught him to despise himself; Esther's self-belief is fragile. And love it not as easy as it looks, but they are still falling...

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781910411384
Publisher: Little Island Books
Publication date: 02/26/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 280
File size: 664 KB
Age Range: 14 - 18 Years

About the Author

Sheena Wilkinson is one of Ireland's most acclaimed writers of contemporary realistic fiction for young readers. Winner of multiple Children's Books Ireland awards and recipient of special bursaries from the Arts Council of Northern Ireland for the development of her writing, Sheena is the author of Grounded and Taking Flight.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

Esther

It's not unheard of to wet yourself on your first day at school. But not normally in sixth form.

I'm late. Should have accepted Dad's offer of a lift. It's just that arriving in school with Dad is so sad, especially for someone who's started being friends with Jasmine Wright. OK, maybe not friends exactly, but after results night, when I practically saved her life – well, she's at least going to acknowledge me. Isn't she?

The corridors are empty. Teachers' voices sing-song from behind closed doors. I hitch my new satchel higher on my shoulder and make for the sixth-form block.

Rushing down the scruffy cream corridors, I wish I had taken that lift with Dad. At least I could have drifted into the room along with everybody else and not have to make An Entrance all sweaty and flustered.

I wonder who our tutor is. Every year I pray it won't be Dad and so far my prayers have been answered. Only I remind myself I don't do praying any more. Not since I ditched God.

Despite my rejection, God – or whoever organised the classes, probably a computer program – is on my side, because the person sitting at the teacher's desk, scratching his beard, blinking at the chatting rows, counting timetables, and looking like he's counting the minutes until breaktime, or possibly retirement, is only Boring Baxter.

All he says is, 'Ah. Esther Wilson. You can take that seat there,' and he points me to a desk where a boy I don't recognise is bent over, rummaging in his schoolbag. It's the only empty seat, behind Toby, who is shy and nice and the closest thing I've had to a friend at school until now. I slide into the seat, pull off my cardigan because sweat is suddenly pricking my armpits, and glance round. Jasmine hasn't noticed me yet. She's sitting with Cassie. Of course.

I give Jasmine a quick smile. This is sixth form and it's all going to be different. I'm going to be different. Though the tutor group is pretty much the same as the last five years. A few thick rugby players haven't got enough GCSEs to get back. Leaving space for the two new girls with ironed blond hair and lip-glossed pouts who sit in front of Jasmine and Cassie looking like they've been specially manufactured to be Mansfield Sixth Form Girls. They're so much a type that it takes me a second to realise they actually are identical. As in twins. One of them turns round and whispers something to Jasmine, who laughs. Cassie's lips tighten and she gives the twin her bug-eyed stare. Baxter and Toby are the only people who have even noticed me.

I sigh and reach for the timetable Baxter is handing me, only I miss and it flutters to the ground and I have to bend down to grab it and it feels like people are sniggering even though they aren't. It's strange to see only a few subjects. English lit, French, history and art. My crap science GCSE grades finally convinced me that I'm never going to be a doctor even though it used to be my dream.

The boy beside me sets his pens on the desk. He has four – black, blue, green and red. He lays them in a row. The red one wobbles and he frowns and edges it back into place. I glance at him from under my fringe. Blondish hair. Tall, I think, though it's hard to tell when someone's sitting down. Lean. Hot. Something inside me trembles. Very hot. I try to see what subjects he's doing but all I can make out is that he has highlighted them all in different colours, and his name at the top: Luke Bressan.

Not that it matters to me what he's called. If you drew a line across the class, with the cool people on one side and the rejects on the other, Luke Bressan and I would not be on the same side.

I look away, my skin burning. It's hopeless. You can't just decide to be cool. My legs stick to my skirt with sweat. My scalp itches even though I washed my hair this morning. Now that he's tamed his pens, Luke appears as confident as the new girls. Slightly bored if anything. I'm not used to sitting with a boy. Not this kind of boy anyway. Toby doesn't count.

I fold my arms and concentrate on Baxter. He drones on about uniform regulations and careers guidance and how we will all be treated like Responsible Adults now as long as we don't Abuse the Privilege. Then he takes off his glasses and puts on his caring face.

'And of course,' he says, his voice cosy as a cupcake, 'we hope you'll all have a great year with no problems.' He pulls at his nasal hair. 'But if you should encounter any little difficulties, well, we're here to help.'

Luke slides his hands up the sides of his face and lets them rest there. His fingers are long, but his nails are short and bitten, worse than mine. A thin silver bracelet snakes his wrist. If Baxter notices that he'll tell him to take it off.

'You all know Mr Wilson,' Baxter goes on. 'Head of pastoral care. He's the man to go to if you if have any – er problems.' I stare at the scratches on my desk. Around me rises a burble of mumblings. Yeah right – Big Willy – imagine telling him

Imagine being his daughter.

Beside me Luke stiffens, as if my discomfort is catching. Then he gives a strange strangled cry and I turn to see him collapse sideways. His face strikes the desk as he falls and then he lies on the floor, limbs juddering and jerking.

Instant panic. Cassie screams. People gasp and flock round.

I slip down from my chair and kneel beside Luke.

'Don't touch him!' Toby cries. His normally pink face is white. I remember him throwing up in third year when we dissected a rat.

'Are you meant to put something in their mouth?' somebody asks.

'Oh my God, he's going to die!' Cassie shrieks. Which is exactly what she said when Jasmine passed out on results night. Helpful.

'Shut up. Give him space,' I order. My voice comes out clear and strong like I expect everyone to obey and they do, even Baxter. Even Jasmine and Cassie, huddled together, their eyes nearly popping out of their mascaraed sockets. I pull the chair well away from Luke and shove my cardigan under his head to cushion it. Blood blurs his cheek, from the desk I suppose. I yank at the tight knot of his tie, open his collar. His head flails, froth blooming from his mouth, his arms and legs spasming in a mad jerking dance.

I lean back on my heels. I've made it as safe as I can. This isn't his first time. I've seen that bracelet properly now, and it's an epilepsy medical alert one.

'Phone an ambulance,' Cassie cries.

'You shouldn't need to,' I say.

Already the shuddering limbs are slowing.

A high clear voice, one of the new twins, says, 'Oh my God, he's wet himself.'

A dark stain spreads across Luke's trousers and over the floor. It lies on the newly polished start-of-term tiles and doesn't soak in.

The jerking stops. I manoeuvre Luke's body, limp now, into the recovery position. Almost at once his eyes flicker open. They are dark greyish-blue and very confused. I swallow. I'm not so confident; now the crisis is over. I'm fabulous at emergencies. It's just the normal bits of life in between I'm crap at.

'It's OK,' I say. 'You just had a seizure.'

I stroke his arm to reassure him. We both look down at my hand on the white cotton of his shirt for a second before I pull it away.

'You're in the classroom,' I go on, partly for something to say and partly because Luke's eyes are still bewildered. 'You've cut your cheek, but it doesn't look too bad.'

He lifts his hand and rubs at his face, then looks at the blood on his fingers.

The others crowd round; curious, excited even, now that nobody is actually dying or anything. Luke struggles to sit up. 'I'm fine,' he says calmly. He glances up at the crowd of faces, then down at the ground. I catch the exact moment when he realises he's wet himself – his lips tighten. He lifts up the cardigan I had put under his head, dusts it down and stares at it.

'It's mine,' I say, and he hands it to me.

Baxter seems to remember he's in charge. 'Esther, you've been wonderful,' he says.

He glances at Luke, who is standing up now but still looks as if he isn't too sure what to do. Except that he wants out of here. I can feel the desperation oozing out of him into the stuffy classroom air.

'Sir,' I say, 'shall I take Luke to the nurse?'

'Yes.' Baxter is clearly as desperate to get rid of Luke as Luke is to escape. 'All right to walk there, Luke? It's not far, just the next corridor.'

Luke nods. He packs his schoolbag slowly. Blood trickles down his cheek. Jasmine springs forward and hands him a tissue.

'I'll take your bag,' I offer. It's light, brand new, a plain black rucksack. I think of the pens inside, all new.

I can't think of anything to say on the way to the sick bay. I trial loads of stuff in my head – Don't worry, it isn't that bad, nobody will have noticed that you wet yourself; it happens all the time – but in the end I don't say any of it. Partly because I never can think of what to say to boys and partly because it isn't true.

CHAPTER 2

Luke

By the time my brain is working half-normally we've reached a door labelled SICK BAY and the girl knocks. A middle-aged nurse opens the door and sighs as if she hadn't planned on having the first day of the school year messed up with an actual medical situation. But as soon as the girl tells her what happened the nurse sends her back to class and switches straight into professional mode.

She dabs the cut on my face with something stinging. Every time her arm moves I catch a whiff of her deodorant. Or maybe perfume. Sickly and sweet. Hard to imagine anybody choosing that smell. But Christ knows what I smell like. A seizure can be quite a workout. I look past her, itemise the room to stop myself flinching. Sickly green walls. Cheerful posters about STDs and self harm and eating five a day. Two beds against the far wall. Cupboards neatly labelled but it makes me dizzy to try to read them. Already the familiar headache is nibbling at my temples.

'I can sponge those trousers for you,' she says.

I chew my lip.

'They'll dry on the radiator in the time it takes someone to come and pick you up.'

'It's OK,' I mutter. 'You don't have to.'

'It's no bother. I've got some spares here, from Lost Property. You'd be amazed what people leave lying around.'

'No.' What is she fussing for? I'm sitting on a hard plastic chair. She can wipe it when I leave.

'Of course,' she says, riffling through a box of plasters, 'you won't be on the computer system yet. You'll have to give me a phone number. Is someone at home? Mum? Dad? Or can they come from work?'

The backs of my legs are cold and wet, but I don't think there's a smell. 'I don't have parents.'

She pulls the backing paper off a plaster. 'There must be someone?'

'Sandra.' The headache bites harder, its teeth sharpening by the second.

'Right. Sandra. She's your ...?'

I suppose this will all be on the system soon enough, along with God knows what else.

'Foster carer. Can I get some painkillers?' At least she seems to have forgotten about wanting me to take my trousers off.

She frowns, sticks the unnecessary plaster over my cheek. I suppose they have to make it look like they've ministered to you properly.

'You sure you don't have concussion? Your eyes look OK but if you hit –'

'It's just a headache. I always get one afterwards.' Along with: feeling knackered enough to sleep for a week; bumps and bruises from bashing myself around like a mad thing; occasionally throwing up; and, worst of all, mortal humiliation. The thought of going back into that classroom tomorrow is enough to make me walk out of this school now, for ever. I grit my teeth, then stop because it hurts.

She's talking again and I realise she's asking for Sandra's number. I don't know it, but I hand her my phone. I zone out and then she's handing the phone back and saying something about Sandra being in a queue at Lidl but she'll be here as soon as she can.

'And she says it's fine to give you Paracetamol,' she finishes, even though she's the one that's meant to be a nurse, not Sandra, and Sandra's never even see me have a seizure because I've only lived with her for three days.

Anyway, she gives me the pills, thank God, because the pain is gnashing lumps out of my brain now, and she makes me a cup of tea and says I can lie down on one of the beds and rest while we wait for Sandra. But I say I'd rather stay where I am. I sip tea and watch the nurse fill in a form and hope that Sandra won't be annoyed at having her morning interrupted.

The nurse looks up from her desk as if she's had a bright idea and her biro jumps out of her hand. 'You can keep a spare pair of trousers here,' she says. 'Just in case.' She beams at her brilliance.

'I don't plan to make a habit of it.'

She picks up her biro again and says, 'Hmmm.'

*
Sandra reverses her Skoda carefully out of the space marked VISITORS. She keeps her eyes fixed on the driveway and slows down to avoid two tiny suicidal brats whose huge bags make them look like hunch-backed turtles. She beeps and they cower. In my last school they'd have given us the finger. I know she wants me to say something but I can't summon up any words. Sandra indicates left out of the school drive and heads down the South Road.

'God love you,' she says. 'That's bad luck on your first day. What do you think triggered it?'

I shrug. 'Dunno.'

'Were there any bright lights or –?'

'No. It's nothing to do with anything like that. It just happens.'

She should know this; she must have read my file. Plus there must have been lots of cosy chats with Brendan before he persuaded her to take me.

'You took your medication OK?'

I sigh. 'I always do.'

'Stress maybe?'

'We hadn't done anything. Just got our timetables. Sat in a classroom. It wasn't exactly stressful.'

'Och, aye, but it's a big day for you, Luke.'

I hadn't even spoken to anyone. Only answered 'Here' when the teacher called my name. And then that girl came and sat down beside me. She was quiet, not all tossy hair and makeup and giggles like other girls. And then I got that feeling – I can never describe it: it's not a smell, or a noise, nothing so romantic as an aura; I just know. But it's always too late.

I close my eyes and lean back against the seat.

'Are you sure we don't need to take you to Casualty?' Sandra asks. It's the first time I've seen anything faze her.

I open my eyes again. 'No. I just need to sleep it off. I'll be fine in a few hours.'

As always my heart sinks when we turn into Sandra's street. My street now. It's a bit miserable, a lot of concrete and the gardens are titchy. At least Sandra's has flowers in it – not bins and old bottles like the one next door. A few tattered flags, left over from summer, droop from the lampposts.

A bedraggled skinny black kitten is sitting in the middle of Sandra's path.

'There's that wee cat again,' Sandra says. 'It's been hanging round for a few days.' She bends down but the kitten scarpers.

By the time I get to my room – refusing another cup of tea; Sandra is a great believer in the healing powers of tea – the headache and the tiredness have blotted out everything else.

Sandra calls up the stairs, 'Leave me out your uniform so I can give it a wash through.' She doesn't mention the words trousers or wet and I think vaguely as I pull everything off and leave it in a heap outside the bedroom door that that's a brownie point for her. I don't know if this is just the honeymoon period or if she and Bill are going to keep on being this nice.

The plain blue duvet still smells of washing powder. I haven't been here long enough for it to smell of me. When I close my eyes I see the ring of shocked, scared faces; chair legs; human legs; dust skittering in the sun on the polished wooden floor tiles. And then the girl's face, calm and still with brown eyes. Her wide slow smile. Her hand on my sleeve. The new warm smell of her cardigan.

CHAPTER 3

Esther

I dodge through crowds of boys playing football and girls standing in groups to find a space on the wall outside the library for a quiet read. But no sooner have I taken out The Great Gatsby, which we've just been given in English, than someone looms over me. Blond hair swings over the page.

'Budge up, Esther,' Jasmine says. She smiles her beautiful cool smile, and my own lips stretch into what I know is a goofy grin.

'Hey.' I make room for her. I set the book down before she can see it's a school one.

Cassie and the new twins come up behind her. I know they're called Zara and Zoë because they're in my art class.

'So what's he like?' Jasmine asks. She takes out a plastic lunchbox and offers me a carrot stick like we have lunch together every day.

(Continues…)



Excerpted from "Still Falling"
by .
Copyright © 2015 Sheena Wilkinson.
Excerpted by permission of Little Island.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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