Nick And Charlie Apr 2026

I told my mum. I told my brother. I told Imogen. I’m going to walk into school tomorrow, and I’m going to find you, and I’m going to kiss you in the middle of the courtyard. Not because I want to prove something to them. But because I need you to know that you are not a secret. You are not a phase. You are the only thing that makes sense.

It started on a drizzly Tuesday in Form. Nick, the Year 11 golden retriever of Truham Grammar School, with his broad shoulders and sun-touched hair, sat down at the desk next to Charlie’s. Charlie, the quiet, curly-haired Year 10 boy who had been outed a year prior and was still learning to take up less space, froze.

Nick smiled, a slow, contented curve of his lips, and snuggled deeper into Charlie’s lap. Outside, the city hummed. Inside, there was only the soft sound of breathing, the turning of a page, and the space between two heartbeats—a space that had once been filled with fear and doubt, and was now filled, entirely and irrevocably, with the simple, profound quiet of home . Nick and Charlie

It imploded on a rainy Thursday. Charlie had waited for Nick by the gates for forty minutes. When Nick finally appeared, his face was pale, his eyes red-rimmed.

From that day on, the story of Nick and Charlie wasn’t about the big, dramatic moments. It was about the small, quiet ones. I told my mum

Charlie set his book down. He looked around the cluttered flat—at the pile of Nick’s rugby kit, at his own drumsticks on the coffee table, at the framed photo of them on Brighton beach, Nick’s arm around Charlie, both of them grinning like idiots in the rain.

It was about Charlie’s recovery. When his eating disorder and OCD resurfaced, triggered by the stress of the secret and the breakup, he finally told Nick. He expected Nick to run. Instead, Nick held him tighter and said, “Okay. Then we get you help. Together.” I’m going to walk into school tomorrow, and

Their friendship built itself out of small, tectonic shifts. Rugby balls thrown too softly in PE so Charlie could actually catch them. Shared earbuds on the bus home, Nick’s playlists a chaotic storm of indie rock and 80s power ballads. Texts that started with “Did you do the maths homework?” and ended with “Goodnight, Char xx” at 1:47 AM.

Charlie felt the ground vanish. “What?”