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Authors: Tabitha Suzuma

Tags: #Young Adult, #Contemporary

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BOOK: A Note of Madness
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The kettle took for ever to boil. He hoisted himself onto the counter. The oven clock read 8:15. He looked over at the kettle again. Come on, come
on
.

The door opened, making him start. Christ, it was Jennah! She had spent the night on the sofa bed. He had forgotten.

‘Morning, you.’ Her tousled hair hung in her face and she wore an oversized sweatshirt – one of Harry’s, presumably – that skimmed her bare thighs. Flynn stared at her.

She gave a little yawn and blinked sleepily. ‘Ooh
good, you’ve got the kettle on. Can you make me some coffee?’

‘OK.’ He felt his pulse quicken. ‘Did I wake you?’

She gave a little smile and looked pointedly at his feet. He realized that he was drumming his heels against the cupboard doors again and stopped. ‘Sorry.’

‘Doesn’t matter. Got to get up anyway – rehearsal at ten.’ She brushed the hair ineffectively out of her eyes. ‘Have you recovered from your midnight run?’

He bit his lip to hold back a grin. ‘I’ve almost finished the overture.’

Her face registered mild shock. ‘What?’

‘You know, the opera!’

She frowned in disbelief. ‘Have you been writing all night?’

He nodded triumphantly.

‘And you’re going to lectures today?’

‘No! Well I’ll have to see Professor Kaiser after lunch but I’ll keep going until then.’

Jennah sat down on a stool, drawing her knees up under her jumper. ‘Flynn, why?’

‘Because it’s great! Because I’ve got all these ideas and they keep coming! Because I love composing!’

Jennah regarded him silently for a moment. She looked pale in the morning light. ‘Why not save it till the next Musicianship assignment?’ she asked quietly. ‘Why are you wearing yourself out like this?’

‘I’m not wearing myself out!’ he exclaimed. ‘I couldn’t sleep if I tried. I don’t need to sleep.’

‘Flynn, everybody needs to sleep.’

‘Yes, but not all the time.’

Another long silence. Jennah looked keenly at her toes. The kettle clicked and Flynn jumped off the counter.

‘I know it’s really none of my business,’ Jennah began softly, ‘but you’re one of my closest friends and I don’t – I don’t want anything bad to happen to you.’

‘Nothing’s going to happen to me!’

‘I’m just scared that if you carry on having no sleep and working so hard, you’ll go all funny again like before.’

‘What d’you mean?’ He looked at her, stung.

She glanced away awkwardly. ‘Come on, you know – last week, for example. You nearly bit my head off when I suggested you came to the pub and then you went underground for about three days. Harry said you wouldn’t even get out of bed.’

‘I was feeling ill.’

‘I know.’

‘I said I was sorry.’

‘It’s not that, Flynn. I’m just afraid that you’re going to – I don’t know – burn yourself out again.’

‘No I won’t! This is great – I feel brilliant!’ He finished pouring the coffee and handed her a cup.

Jennah didn’t smile. ‘You were acting so weird last night.’

‘I was just feeling energetic!’

‘We thought you were drunk.’

‘I wasn’t – I just felt like going for a run!’

‘OK. But, Flynn, you know this whole Royal College thing? It’s really high pressure for all of us this year and especially for you, with that mad professor. Just – just try and take things easy, OK?’

He smiled and shrugged. ‘I will. I am.’

‘OK.’ Jennah looked down, her eyes troubled. She drank her coffee in silence.

CHAPTER THREE


NO, NO, NO
, no, no.’ Flynn rolled over, head hanging off the side of his bed, and scrunched up his eyes. There was no pain this time, no headache, and yet he knew – as sure as he knew from the late-morning sunlight streaming through the curtains that it was a fine day – that it was back, and back with a vengeance.

Getting out of bed was unimaginable, going back to sleep impossible. There was a familiar weight on his chest – a crushing weight of interminable sadness from which there was no escape. After ten minutes or more of lying absolutely still, wishing the day away with all his might, he sat up and blearily surveyed the room around him. Manuscript sheets scattered the floor amidst empty beer cans, dirty plates and scraps of paper covered with his own familiar scrawl – lines from a poem, verses. God, what was this? Memories of the last few days began to jar together like pieces of a poorly edited film. An opera? He had been writing an opera? Jesus Christ! The sight of such a ridiculous flight of fancy sent a shrill stab of agony through his head. He fell back against the pillows, closing his eyes. Who had he told? What had he said?
Oh no, Jennah! She must think he was a complete idiot! What had he been thinking? There was the HS essay for Monday. Why couldn’t he have done that while he had the energy instead of trying to write a stupid opera?

He rolled over on his side and squinted down again at the music lying on the floor. He couldn’t even read it properly – his eyes wouldn’t focus. He couldn’t hear the notes in his head, couldn’t imagine that they made any sense, couldn’t comprehend how he could have possibly imagined that he was in any way capable of composing anything – anything at all. He wished he could burn it all, set fire to the damn floor, but he didn’t even have the energy to stuff the papers in the bin. He didn’t need to look at his alarm, he could tell by the sunlight that it was gone eleven and he knew he had been asleep for more than thirteen hours, although he felt as if he hadn’t slept at all.

It was Wednesday. He had already missed Aural and Musicianship. He went into the kitchen to find a scrawled note from Harry explaining that he hadn’t been able to wake him. With a jolt, he remembered that he had a piano lesson at twelve and lectures all afternoon. The last time he had missed a lesson with Professor Kaiser when he had been holed up with flu, the professor had come round in person to check he was all right – or rather to check that he wasn’t lying. The idea of him coming round again was intolerable.

A shower was far too much effort. Cold water splashed over his face would have to do. A feeble
attempt with the toothbrush – the taste made him want to retch. Puffy white face, purple smudges under his eyes. Two angry red lumps appearing on his forehead. God, he was hideous with his acne spots and crazy blond hair sticking out at all angles. He tried to flatten it with water, but it made no difference. He tried again. His fist hit the mirror with such force that it cracked down the middle. He bit his lip to hold back furious tears.

‘Jesus, there you are! You were sleeping like the dead this morning. I banged on your door but couldn’t wake you up.’ Harry fell into step with Flynn as he headed down the second-floor corridor. ‘I picked up some handouts from Aural and Musicianship for you. We just—’

Jaw clenched so that it ached. ‘Harry, not now, OK?’

‘Yes, sure. Are you – do you want to get some lunch?’

‘I’ve got a lesson.’

‘All right, but hold on a minute. Are you OK?’

‘I’m fine!’ The tone was more aggressive than he had meant it to be, but losing Harry at this point was imperative before he exploded. He burst through the fire door and let it slam behind him.

The final movement of the Rach Three had too many notes, Flynn decided. Too many notes with too little time to play them in. It was killing him, having to play this particular bit over and over again until his shoulders ached and his fingers felt numb.


Ach nein
, that is not right,’ Professor Kaiser said coolly for the third time that morning.

Flynn could have hit him. Instead he dropped his arms to his sides and let out a long, deliberate sigh of exasperation.

‘Let’s take it from the start again,’ Professor Kaiser said evenly.

No. The start was too far back. The start was nothing but fragments of music he could barely remember. The whole piece was completely alien to him today. Flynn stared at the blurred page numbly, unmoving.

Professor Kaiser flicked back a few pages. ‘From the start,’ he commanded, tapping the page. ‘Come on, try and put a little more emotion into it this time. I can see that you are tired, Flynn, but you are not trying as hard as you could be today.’

Hands clenched so as not to punch the bloody piano. Jaw clenched so as not to shout at the bloody professor. Staring at the page through a thick fog, trying to make sense of the masses of tiny notes, trying to translate them into some sort of sound in his head, some sort of feel in his fingers. Deep breath. Forget the notes, just feel the music. The music. Concentrate on the music. But where had it gone? Forgotten in some rotting cavity of his decaying mind, buried under a thousand thoughts of death and despair. The loud ticking of an irritating clock he had never noticed before. Professor Kaiser’s small impatient sigh. He held his breath. Played the first three chords. Then a blank wall came up and
hit him in the face. He stared down at his fingers, still holding down the notes from the last chord. They had to move somewhere, but where, he had no idea. It was a cruel joke. All those glossy black and white notes to choose from and not an idea where to go.

‘Are you not well?’

The words cut through him like a knife, making him jump. Professor Kaiser’s tone was heavy with concern – or was it irritation? Flynn was too tired to tell.

He looked up, his jaw set. ‘I can’t play this piece.’


Ja
, I can see that you are having some difficulty, which make me surprised because of how well you played it last Monday. There is for sure something not right today.’

‘I’m fine. I just can’t play it. I’ve forgotten the notes.’ He was surprised by the flatness of his own tone as he raised his gaze to meet Professor Kaiser’s.

Professor Kaiser smiled. ‘You have not forgotten anything, Flynn, you are just tired. Burning the candle at both ends, as the English call it. You must be more careful – you have much to do this year. Go home to bed, have some sleep and take some vitamins. I know you have been practising very hard recently and that is maybe some reason too. I will see you on Friday if you are feeling better. If you are not, then next week.’

Flynn was being dismissed and that was it. Obviously he was tired or coming down with something, there was no other logical explanation. It was simply not possible that he had just forgotten the notes. It was simply not
possible that he should not be able to play a piece that he had been practising every day for the last six months. He was at the Royal College of Music, for Christ’s sake – it was only meant for talented people. He had to have talent, or else he wouldn’t have been accepted here. And yet that was the greatest joke of all. That somehow he had fooled them. Somehow he had duped them all into believing that he was this great musical talent when really – really he was just a nobody.

When competing against André for the scholarship he’d just ended up looking like a fool. When the chips were down he couldn’t play a note. His brain had shrivelled up and died and all that practice on the Rach Three had gone to waste. The music had disappeared into some kind of abyss and he was unable to retrieve it. He was a fraud, he was an idiot and, worst of all, he couldn’t play the piano to save his life.

There was a scrawled note on the kitchen counter.
Staying over at Kate’s. See you tomorrow
. Flynn crumpled the note as soon as he had read it, and tossed it onto the floor. At least that meant he wouldn’t have Harry breathing down his neck tonight, acting all brotherly and concerned. At least he wouldn’t have to make an effort to be civil. At least he could just be left alone.

He stood in the middle of the living room, the late-afternoon sunlight streaming through the windows, and looked around him. It wasn’t even five o’clock. What on earth was he going to do? His eyes rested in turn on the
piano, the TV, the pile of library books for his Musical Analysis essay. Of course there were things to do, there were always things to do. But the thought of doing anything filled him with unbearable apathy. Even turning on the television for the usual evening menu of soaps and quiz shows didn’t seem worth it.

The weather had been glorious all day and the golden light outside promised a magical sunset. He thought of the couples and families strolling in the park, enjoying the late-afternoon sunshine, and was filled with an inexplicable sadness. The light would be shimmering on the Serpentine, the raised voices of children echoing from a distance. The leaves on the trees would be stirring in the breeze, the sunlight flooding the grass with golden confetti, the sky a deep, painful blue. The thought of going to the park was inconceivable – the sight of such aching beauty would infuse his soul with pain.

Sinking down against the living-room wall, Flynn thought back to Jennah’s comment that other morning.
You went underground for three days
. Was it happening again? Was he going underground? He couldn’t play a note, couldn’t tolerate the presence of others, couldn’t tolerate his own presence, for that matter. Why is this happening to me? he asked himself desperately. What is wrong with me? He pressed his fingers over his eyelids and took some rapid, shallow breaths. I can’t bear this, he thought. I can’t bear feeling like this. I can’t bear living like this. I can’t bear being me. I want to be Harry,
or Jennah, or anyone else who seems happy most of the time, or at least not miserable. I feel as if someone close to me has died, or as if I’ve suffered some terrible loss. Yet nothing bad has happened and there is no reason for me to feel this way. A few days ago I believed I could write an opera, I was a musical genius and playing was effortless fun. I loved my friends, I loved my life. But now, just existing is pure agony and all I want is escape. Escape from this world, escape from this life, escape from myself. And the only way to achieve that is through death. His breathing had grown ragged and he was aware of a hot wetness beneath his fingers. What is wrong with me? he screamed silently to himself. Oh God, what is wrong with me? Why can I feel nothing but pain?

Sleep, he thought to himself suddenly. Sleep might be the answer. This was a transitory experience, he would get through it. Three days it had been last time, Jennah had said. Three days was not so long. If he slept then at least he wouldn’t be able to think and his senses would cease to be barraged with stimuli that he couldn’t bear. Yes, he would sleep until this intolerable feeling passed.

BOOK: A Note of Madness
12.12Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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