We've
always lived for nights like these. Swift halves at the ale house
then bounce the bus into town at last orders. Things had changed a
bit over the years of course. We both had jobs now and could afford
the excess we always strove for. We both had nicer clothes and better
haircuts. But apart from that nothing much had changed. Well, that's
a lie, something had changed. I wasn't sure I liked it anymore.
'What's
the point, Joe?' I asked him when he got back with a round of drinks.
'Why do we even bother?'
I
was only three pints deep and the melancholy had started to seep in
early. I got like that sometimes. Mostly on Fridays.
'Because
this is what it's all about' that’s what Joe always said. We'd
had this conversation a few times recently. He lived for the
weekends.
'Why
do we bother with the rest of it is what you should be asking. Why do
we sit in that shite office all day? Why do we work so hard for
someone else?' He took another swig of his pint, ever the hard
drinking philosopher. Forever giving me lectures.
'This
is what the weekends for, it's to stop us going crazy. All the people
come together. The Friday people, like us. We all know what it's
like. The only thing you can do is drink up and feel alive for a bit
with the rest of them, cause come Monday it's over and our lives
don't fit together anymore' This was a lecture Joe gave me often. The
joys of drinking.
'And
apart from that, think of how fun it is! Remember all the women we've
met. We've met some nice ones over the years, like the one with the
blue hair you took home last week! Remember her? Just think who you
might take home tonight!' It hurt when he said that because I did
remember that girl. She'd stayed the whole weekend (though I didn't
tell Joe, that breaks the rules) then on Monday morning, she was
gone.
'I
did like her you know, Joe' He just looked at me and scowled.
Joe
had been gone for ages and I was getting annoyed, no one takes that
long to piss. I got my phone out and rang him. He answered straight
away,
‘Joe,
lad. Where are ya?’ He laughed down the phone at me,
‘I’m
outside having a smoke. Got launched out again didn’t I’
Joe
swore he hadn’t done anything wrong. He said no one had caught
him with any drugs or anything, he wasn’t risking that again,
not after Billy on the door gave him a crack last time. I knew he was
lying, he was grinning at me with a fat powder polo round his nose.
‘Come
on, lad. Fuck it, it’s a shithole anyway. Let’s go to
town.’
The
last bus going anywhere is always rammed but especially the one to
town on a Friday, the best one to get. The joyful mix of people
coming and people going. That night there were some rare seats going
near the back, those dead awkward ones where you have to face the
wrong way and either stare at a steamed up window or at the person in
front. It was a long way into town so we sat in them anyway.
It
was fucking freezing outside, just coming into November so of course
the windows were fogged up
‘Sappenin
girls?’ Joe shouted down to the front of the bus. They ignored
him, ‘Come on girls, why you being shy?’
I
stopped paying attention, I amused myself by drawing with my finger
on the window. The kid in front of me caught my attention. Well when
I say kid, I tend to mean anyone younger than me. Eighteen or
nineteen. Definitely a student, this kid took it serious. I could
tell. He was reading Shakespeare on the bus.
'Doubt
that the stars are fire, Doubt that the sun doth move his aides,
Doubt truth to be a liar, But never doubt I love'
I couldn't help myself. For
a minute I was eighteen again and it kind of fell out. Joe swung
around to face me.
'The
fuck was that, lad? You cracked again?' He was staring at me, but so
was the kid I was facing.
'Nah.
Don't you remember? It's from Hamlet innit? Don't you remember? From
first year?' I pointed at the book the kid was holding. It was higher
now, covering his face.
Joe
sneered at me over his can of lager.
'Lad,
I don't remember a thing from uni. That was ten years ago and I was
drunker then than I am now' Joe's insistence that he didn't remember
made me sad. I remembered it. I thought back to my time at uni often.
I think I was happier then.
'Don't
you wish you could go back though? Do it different this time? Or even
do it the same, just to not do this shit?' Joe didn't want to talk
about it, he moved to the edge of the seat and kept up his quips with
the women down near the front. I think if I could go back, I would.
Town
was booming when we got there. It was icy as fuck but every street
was still a faceless mass of tight shirts and tiny dresses. The
Friday people were out in force, they don't feel the cold. Payday
weekend (there were so many people). I looked over at Joe just as he
was doing another key, he was bouncing.
I
made Joe stop into a new place I’d heard of. A proper low key
affair with soft lighting and loads of private booths. After a few
shots at the bar we chose a spot and sat down. Joe was still
bouncing, I could see him looking every which way but at me. Always
on the lookout for someone to harass.
'Reckon
we'll see that girl from last week, Joe. The one with the blue hair?'
He never answered me. 'What d'ya reckon, Joe? I want to see her
again' That stopped him. He slammed his Jd and Coke down on the
table, spilling some of it.
'Why?'
He scowled at me, like every other time I'd tried to bring her up. I
tried to explain,
'I
don't know, she was just different. You get it, you met her!'
'They're
all the same to me'
'She
wasn't, Joe. She was different. We had loads of things to talk about.
We were into all the same stuff. Don't you remember when she was
shouting those Ginsberg poems at me outside the chippy?'
'So
what if she reads the same stupid shite you do. Is that what you
really want? So you can get married? Have kids? Have her fuck off and
take everything, drop the kids of with at the weekends so she can go
out and get twatted? I'm telling you. You don't need that. Life is
good now. Enjoy it'
Joe
threw back his drink in a mouthful, grabbed his jacket and stomped
off toward the door. He muttered something about this not being our
crowd. I'd liked the place. Lots of booths in the shadows and the
music was chilled. Joe said it was like a wake.
The
second club was much more to his liking. It had just turned midnight
and the place was filling up. This was where the Friday people lived.
There were bodies everywhere. Dancing and sweating all over each
other, like they were all one being. Everyone seemed to be melting
into everyone else.
Joe
fascinated me as much as he repulsed me. I watched him as he watched
the women. Even whilst he was ordering drinks his head was
everywhere, eyes always looking somebody up and down. I think he did
it differently than I did. He wasn't looking for one that appealed to
him. He was like a predator, always searching for the easiest target,
and for reasons I still can't fathom, it always worked. This isn't to
say that he wasn't attractive, in fact he's one of them dead
chiselled, bearded bastards, the ones that can slick their hair back
and wear double denim and not look a twat. I’d tried double
denim once, in an effort to be more like him. I couldn’t pull
it off.
Fairly
soon after we got there, Joe spotted his target. She was tall, red
haired and loud. If I could have picked any woman in the room he’d
go for. I would’ve picked her. It was fascinating to watch, he
cut through the crowd, stood with his hand on her hip talking into
her ear. Two minutes later, it was done. She had her arms around him
and they danced manically, all elbows and angles. He’d had a
few keys by then.
‘Hiya,
I’m Angie’
I
spun around. There was a woman smiling up at me, I was dumbstruck.
‘I
thought I’d introduce myself, I’m out with her’ She
pointed over at the woman Joe was dancing with, ‘I think you
came in with him?’ She pointed back over at them. She’d
stopped talking but hadn’t stop smiling. She was gorgeous,
blonde hair, petite and that smile, it was incredible.
It
had been an hour. Joe was still dancing with the girl I now knew as
Josie and Angie had bustled me off to a booth in the corner. She
brought over another round of shots. The third one.
‘Get
them down ya’
She
sat down in the booth and started knocking them back like a machine.
I didn’t touch mine. Angie sat back when she was done and
giggled, seemingly at nothing, then she looked straight at me,
accusation clear in her eyes.
‘Why
haven’t you touched your drinks? Something wrong?’
I
didn’t know how to tell her. Last year I would have loved this,
last week too probably. All I knew was that right now, I wasn’t
having a good time.
Joe
got off shortly after, I told you he worked fast. I spotted him
across the dancefloor and he waved to me as he and his girl left, he
gave me a conspiritory wink and nodded to my companion before
grinning, then he was gone. So there I was, partially drunk,
friendless and in the company of someone who was quite obviously more
interested in me than I was her, who seemed to be hell bent on giving
herself alcohol poisoning. Wonderful.
As
much as I didn't want to be there, I didn’t really know what to
do. I knocked back the shots that were still on the table, thinking
they might help. They didn’t, everything was just a bit softer
around the edges. That’s when I saw her. Right at the front of
the club, waiting to be served, that same electric blue hair sticking
out wildly.
‘I’ll
just get us some more drinks’
I was
there in a flash.
‘Excuse
me’ I said and tapped lightly on her bare shoulder. She turned
and smiled up at me expectantly, but it wasn’t her.
‘I’m
very sorry, I thought you were someone else.’
I
didn’t wait for a reply. I was gone. I scooted back to the
booth where Angie was waiting.
‘What
happened to getting drinks?’
It
took me a minute to remember what she was on about.
‘Oh.
The card machine was broken, it’s cash only tonight.’
‘Who
the fuck goes out and doesn’t take cash?’
I
shrugged at her. She was right of course. It was a terrible lie.
‘Just
give me two minutes, there’s a cashie over the road.’
For
the second time in as many minutes I didn’t wait for a
response. I ducked out of the club and took a minute for myself
against the wall. It was raining now, heavy. There were young men and
women rushing about everywhere, diving in doorways or fighting over
taxi’s with coats and jackets over their heads. I thought I saw
her again, a flash of blue in the corner of my eye. I whipped around,
ready to go to her. I was wrong again, this time it was even blue
hair, it was a blue dress. I was losing my shit.
Angie
was waiting for me when I came back inside (I was half hoping she
would have left).
‘You
sorted now?’
She
looked annoyed. There was something in the angle she held her head.
‘Yeah,
all fine for cash now’
I was
seeing little flashes of blue everywhere now. Not just hair and
dresses, but the lights in the club, even an ambulance passing
outside made me jerk my head up. Angie was just twittering on, I had
no idea what she was saying.
It's
all a bit hazy from there. I gave up trying to put her off and just
pounded back more drinks. I know it got a bit heavier than I
intended. I know she kissed me a while later and I know it was at
that point I gave up. We left the club together, both as drunk as
shit trying to catch a cab, holding on to each other in a desperate
attempt to not fall over in the ice.
I
sobered up a little on the way home, more so than she did. She just
lay her head on my shoulder and spent the whole ride talking. Mostly
unintelligible things.
Dutch
courage failed me when we got back. I'd decided on a plan of action.
Get drunk. Get naked. Get rid. I tried my absolute hardest to be like
Joe, I really did. Standing there in front of my door though,
everything changed.
'What's
up? Not going to let us in' I'd been leaning against the door for a
while, I'd given up the pretence that I was drunk and looking for my
keys. She moved close behind me and slid her arms around my middle.
I
decided I wasn't going to lie.
'I'm
really sorry, but I don't think I want to do this anymore' I felt her
stiffen up around me.
'What
d'ya mean? Put too much shit up your nose? Afraid you wont get it up?
Let's just go inside. We'll figure it out' She spun me round to face
her. She was a tiny little thing, about five foot two. It was hard
looking down at her. I didn’t want her to be here. She didn't
understand.
'I'm
sorry, Angie. It was a mistake, I shouldn't have brought you back.'
The
change was instantaneous, her eyebrows pulled together and she called
me a word I'm not going to repeat here. I told her I was sorry but
that just made it worse. She jerked her leg up and kneed me right in
the balls. I don't have to tell you how much that hurts. I fell down
obviously, and whilst I was on the floor she swung her bag and
smashed it right into my face. And then she was gone.
I
woke up on the floor right outside my flat, I think I'd just not
bothered to get up after she floored me. I stayed there for a while
with my thoughts. It
hadn't been a good night, not by a long stretch. But I couldn't tell
Joe about it, he didn't understand the little things. Well to be
honest, I didn't understand them either, but I was aware of them at
least. Joe was still lost in the excitement of it all, the rough and
tumble and the chase. I was still lost in last week. Maybe that's
when I'd decided I was done with it.
I
got up and let myself in eventually. A sink full of dishes, a bin
spilling over with ready meal packets and the little red two seater
in the corner, complete as always with a single dirty coffee cup on
the arm. And my bed. My glorious bed. The only thing I ever took
pride in there in that shit hole. I made it every morning with
military precision and it waited for me to get in, to say goodbye to
another day.
Like
most Friday nights, the minute I put my head down the room span, so I
was up quick as a flash, as I said, this was common so I knew the
procedure. A quick visit to the bathroom to knock it in the toilet,
then off came the bloody shirt (I hadn't realised till I was in the
bathroom that she'd popped my nose) and I got onto the bed properly,
I felt better after that, I could sleep. I was careful where I placed
my head though. The pillow on the right wasn't where mine went. I
flipped it over and placed my hand on the part I kept hidden, the
part that was still stained blue. It matched the skin on my chest,
the bit that looked like a massive bruise. The stain I couldn't quite
wash off.
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