Just weeks after we hosted a joint birthday party together, we weren’t speaking. And I still don’t really know why.
Alice and I were inseparable for six years.
Our teenage friendship blossomed over a fit of giggles at a school assembly and we never looked back.
We hung out all day, spoke on the phone all night and spent the weekends at each other’s houses.
We were more than BFFs; we loved each other like sisters.
We pashed boys for the first time at the same party, ensuring no woman was left behind. We ventured into a foreign tattoo shop and got the piercings our parents had forbidden together, buoying one another’s bravery (and stupidity) with the comforting knowledge we were in it together. We smoked cigarettes in the out-of-bounds areas at school. She put me to bed and cleaned up my vomit when binge-drinking got the better of me. I covered her lies to her parents, earning a reputation as a fence-sitter by avoiding giving any proper answers to their questions lest I get her into trouble.