It was so typical of Vonny to give me the news just before the party. I was really looking forward to it. I got out my party stuff and dyed my hair, I was really looking the part. And in comes the posse. It was horrible. She’d got Richard on her side, that was bad enough. But even Tar started agreeing with her.
“I don’t want you to go, you know I don’t want you to go,” he kept saying.
“Then what are you on about?” I hissed.
And he just ducked his head and muttered, “But they’re right…”
I went right off Tar after that. I mean, what was the point of all that I love you stuff, if he just teamed up with them and sent me back home?
Thanks, Tar.
And I’d done everything for him, I’d done it all for him. I’d never have gone away if it wasn’t for him. I might have thought about it but I wouldn’t have done it. Now I had and there he was telling me I belonged back at home. Great.
I gave him a bit of the old cold shoulder after that. You’ve got to have a bit of stand-by-me. I was getting fed up with him anyway. Now he was trying to be Mr. Responsible, he could find someone else to hold on to at night.
That was Friday. On Saturday we got ready for the party. I was really determined to have a good time; it might be my last day of freedom. We spent all day making food and clearing out the rooms and getting the sounds wired up. Jerry locked himself in upstairs with Richard’s sound system, making a party tape. Vonny and Tar and me were making salads and stuff, and Richard was running about baking bread—olive bread, olive oil bread, cheese bread, all different sorts. I stuffed myself. But I got fed up when he left to do an hour or so in the bicycle shop so I went upstairs to help Jerry while Tar and Vonny stayed downstairs and played House.
I got too stoned with Jerry, I suppose. I was all excited about this party but when it came…I dunno, I just wasn’t in the mood. Basically Auntie Von had put the spokes in as far as I was concerned. I just couldn’t help thinking how they all thought I was a kid and no one liked me.
The other three went to the pub, but me and Tar of course had no money so we just hung around at home glaring at each other. Or rather, I glared at him while he slunk about trying to be nice. But not nice enough to back me up about staying on at the squat.
We sampled the wine they’d bought in, ate some of the food. Before he went out Richard gave us some cookies he’d made—hash cookies. I was waiting for the lights to start twinkling or something, but nothing happened so I had some more but still nothing happened. I thought he hadn’t put enough in. I was still waiting when they came back.
Richard said he had some people our age coming round but as far as I could see it was just the squat crowd and a few friends of theirs. They were all standing round in groups, talking about, I dunno, how to run your car on rice salad or something. I mean, you spend all those years being Little Sammy or whatever, you leave school, get out there on your own and what do you do? You turn into Big Sammy…
If that lot grew their hair a bit and put on suits it could have been a party at my parents’ place. Here it was animal rights and anarchism; back home it would have been the Church jumble-sale and the local Conservative Club, but that was about the only difference. They wore the clothes and they had the haircuts but…well, put it like this, their parents really did a good job on them, that’s all.
Things began to liven up as more people came. I had a few smokes. Tar kept coming and going. At one point he turned up—I was by the salad bowl stuffing myself—and he turned up all excited and said that they’d hatched this plan to go and open another squat.
I said, “What for? We’ve got one.”
“No, you don’t understand, it’s just to free up as many properties as we can find.”
It turned out one of Richard’s friends had spotted this place and it was a big old house, just perfect. Of course Richard got really excited about it, like he does, and Tar had volunteered, like he does. They were actually planning to go and open it up that very night.
I said, “We’re having a party!” I mean, why spend all day making salad and hash cookies, and then go out? What for all that beer and wine? My last party on earth and they go and wreck it by opening a squat!
Tar was lost. He was beaming and smiling and I suddenly thought, Something was happening to him. His face seemed to be stretching out and it looked as if his teeth were escaping out of his mouth and his eyes were rolling around.
“You look really weird, are you all right, are you all right?” I said, but he dashed off to organise a squat committee or something.
I started stuffing more salad and thinking to myself, This is unreal, this is a squat, and they’re running away from their own party!
Then Tar started to follow me about going, “Is anything wrong? What’s the problem, Gemma?”
And I was going, “Oh just shut up, why can’t you leave me alone?”
I was going much too fast, smoking joints and pouring booze down my neck just because I couldn’t think of anything else to do. I couldn’t seem to stop myself. Later on more people turned up and it livened up more and I began to feel a bit better. Someone made up a punch. God knows what they put in it…and whoa! Everything got very fast very quick then and…well, I could tell I was going to be really ill if I carried on like that.
The place filled up suddenly. Suddenly you couldn’t move. Everyone was screaming and shouting and dancing. I was feeling so strange. I had a dance but my head was still spinning faster and faster. Then I had a couple more joints and…and…So I went upstairs and sat in the loo for a bit. Then someone wanted to come in so I went into a bedroom and lay down for a few minutes on the bed until my head settled down.
It was horrible—like someone was stirring my stomach with an electric spoon faster and faster and faster and faster…
I lay there for ages waiting for it to stop. When I felt able to sit up again the music was still thumping away downstairs but I had no idea how late it was. I still felt extremely…well, extremely extremely. I didn’t feel drunk or hung over, but there was still this horrible tight bubble in my stomach and it felt like at any minute it was going to swell up and go…Pop!
I got up and looked out of the window. All I remember is, everything was orange and it looked like cats and weasels and things were creeping round out of sight behind the dustbins and lampposts. I don’t mean I could see them but they were there out of the corner of my eye. I looked around the room and all the things—the wardrobe and the chest of drawers, even the window frame—they all seemed to be looking back at me, like they were alive. I was thinking, What’s going on? And I suddenly realised—I’m stoned! That’s what it was, I was stoned out of my tree.
I thought, Hash cakes! The cookies, of course. Richard had told me not to eat too many and I thought he was being wet because he looks wet, but he wasn’t. I’d eaten ten times too much and now I was absolutely flying.
I thought, Wow, this is something, although I wasn’t enjoying it all that much.
I went down to see what was going on.
Downstairs was half empty. Little groups sitting on the floor talking, odd people sitting in chairs, crashed out. I looked about but Tar was nowhere to be seen. I went into the kitchen to get a drink of water. I had a mouthful of rice; it tasted so good I started eating and eating and eating and eating. When I’d finished it all up I had another glass of punch and went back into the sitting room.
A couple of new people had turned up. There was a guy standing talking to a couple of people from the squat. He looked different from the rest. And there was this girl.
She was dancing. I mean she was doing things and dancing at the same time. She’d go and put on a new cassette, or find a better track on the old one or just look through what was there, then she’d go over and pinch a fag or a joint off someone, or tidy up fag ends or paper cups or something…and all the time she was moving to the music, dancing, swaying her head, just really going with the music. She just couldn’t stand still. She was smiling all the time, not at anyone, just to herself and the good time she was having. Her mouth was even wider than mine and her eyes turned into two black, happy little gaps in her face when she smiled. She was beautiful.
She kept dancing over to her bloke and kissing him or rubbing up to him. You could tell he was as proud of her as if he’d poured out a glass of moonjuice. I just couldn’t take my eyes off her. It was as if she was in a completely different room, at a completely different party from anyone else in the room. She was different from everyone.
After a bit I noticed what she was wearing and…POW! I couldn’t believe my eyes at first. I looked around and saw all the guys eyeing her up and I almost burst out laughing because it was so daring and at the same time…
She had this black net string vest on. That was it. It took a while to sink in. At first glance you saw this vest, it was just clothes. And then suddenly your eyes went POP, right through it and there she was, bare as a baby. But some baby. I mean, you could see everything. It was quite long for a vest but even so when she bent over to put on a new cassette you could see her bare bum.
Everyone was watching her but it wasn’t just because she was more or less naked. She had the power. People were talking about this and that but they were all just pretending. She was everything that was going on in that room. Some of ’em couldn’t bear to watch her like I was. They carried on talking and watched her in little sneaky glances out of the corners of their eyes. Some of them were staring at her gobsmacked, mouths hanging open like fridge doors. But they were all looking. And she was lapping it up, jiving around doing little jobs, making little remarks to people, laughing at jokes.
Her bloke, all scruffy and stubbly with a tatty Mohican and at least two teeth missing, he was loving it as much as she was. She’d get a joint off someone and she’d take it over to him and give him a toke and then jive back. He behaved as if she was dressed in jeans or a tee-shirt, except that he touched her bum a couple of times. No one seemed to mind about her pinching their drinks and their smokes. If it had been anyone else they’d have been offended, but with her it was like it was a privilege. Or maybe they just didn’t dare complain.
Did you ever see someone and think straight away, I want to be that person? I want to look like her and think like her and have the same effect as she does…you know? This girl—nothing mattered to her. All the rules, all the things you do do and don’t do, the manners, everything—she had none of that. If she didn’t like it she just didn’t do it. If she did it, it was good. She didn’t have to say please or thank you. She didn’t have to be offered anything; it was already hers. She was more herself than anyone else ever was and as soon as I clapped eyes on her I knew I wanted to be myself just as much as she was herself.
I didn’t have the courage to talk to her but it made me feel so good just watching her, just knowing you could get like that, that someone else had done that.
I stood at the door for a while. I was so excited. After a bit I wanted someone to talk to so I went to look for Tar, but he wasn’t there. I went and sat down in a hard chair near to this bloke; he was one of the people from the squat.
I asked him, “Where’s Tar?”
“Dunno.”
I took a swig of my drink and I thought, Shit, he’s left me here, he’s left me here to go and do anarchy. I felt like giggling. I got up and had another drink and sat there glugging away at it, just because there was nothing else to do, no one else to be with, nowhere else to go.
Then the girl was there, dancing about, moving her head to the music in front of me.
“Hi, what’s your party like?” she said, as if she couldn’t imagine not having a good time.
“Great,” I said, and I started to take another swig but I started giggling just as it got to my mouth and spluttered it all over me. I held my head and giggled and tried to calm down before I made a real idiot of myself.
She said, “Yeah, great.” I smiled at her, trying to look as if I was having a really great time. She held out her hand.
“Can I have some of that?”
“Sure.” I was, you know…wow, she thinks my drink’s worth drinking. She took it and went jiving off. I felt a bit naked, sitting there without my drink. I thought, How pathetic, I mean, she didn’t feel naked even with no clothes on. I watched her nervously as she boogied about with my glass. She sniffed it but she didn’t drink any of it. She just put it down on the mantelpiece and started to pick cups off the floor and stick them together to make a long tube.
“Power,” she said. She was swinging it round at a group of people sitting on the floor like it was zap ray or something, “Pow, pow…power…” She laughed, chucked the stick of cups into the bin and went dancing off, waving her body to the beat. The people on the floor smiled self-consciously. You couldn’t tell if she was teasing them because she thought they wanted power, or because she already had all of it.
I got up and made for the kitchen for another drink. I was pouring it out when there she was again, behind me.
“You don’t need that stuff, what do you think you need that stuff for?” she said crossly. She wasn’t smiling. I looked at her in surprise.
She reached out and took my drink off me. “Why do you think I took the last one off you?”
I clutched my head. “I know, I know, I don’t know what I’m doing,” I wailed.
“You’re doing okay, you know that?” she said.
She seemed to know everything about me already. I just stood there like an idiot clutching my head and going, “I know, I know, I know…” And of course I didn’t know anything.
Suddenly she put her arms around me and hugged me. She held me close. I just hugged her straight back and I felt the tears coming. I’d been thinking I was having a good time but she only had to touch me and I was crying.
A couple of people came into the kitchen and saw us like that and then went out again. She didn’t say anything. After a bit she began to move to the music again still hugging me tight and I realised she’d stopped moving to hold me. I was the only thing that made her stand still. I began to move and we stood there a little longer, just swaying to the music.
“Yeah,” she said. “Isn’t that great? Isn’t that great? The music’s the only drug…yeah…” I put my head on her shoulder and tried not to think.
I don’t know what it was she had. She was sharing her magic with me and I could feel that tight bubble in my stomach get softer and softer and softer.
“Come on, let’s see what’s going on.” She broke away and moved to the door, still dancing in that way she had.
I followed her through.
I sat on the sofa. The girl, the magic girl, was still dancing around the room, dancing as she went and kissed her boyfriend on the ear, dancing as she put someone’s drink on top of her long sausage of cups, dancing as she pushed another on top of that so that…whoops! The drink spurted all over the floor and all over her. Everyone laughed—even the girl whose drink it was laughed. The magic girl licked the wet off her arms and looked over to me as if to say, See? You don’t have to behave like them, you don’t have to behave like anyone. Then she reached over and plucked a joint out of someone’s fingers and came over to sit next to me.
We talked—I don’t know, all sorts of stuff. I took a couple of puffs but then she had a look at me and took it off me.
“You don’t need that either.” She laughed. Even sitting down, she was still dancing. She didn’t ask anything about me or where I came from. She talked about music and bands and she talked about herself and her boyfriend, what he was like, how amazing he was.
“Yeah, he’s on the right side, you know,” she said, nodding her head and puffing down the smoke.
“I don’t even know what the right side is,” I told her, beginning to giggle again.
“The right side. Your side. My side. You know.” I didn’t know if she was talking about the world or this room or just us. I asked her if she knew the people in the squat well.
“Nah.” It seemed Richard had helped them open up their squat about six months ago. “He’s okay, he’s out of his head. But the rest of them…they’re playing the wrong game,” she said. “They’re playing the same game as the banks and big business…”
I said, no…they were all out the next day squirting superglue into the locks. I was proud because I thought she couldn’t know that but she just laughed.
“Big deal, so what? The banks don’t care, why should they? Nah…” She laughed and shook her head. “They’ll get in the back, send for a locksmith and put the charges on to their customers. No trouble. Listen…I’m a businessman myself.” She laughed at the thought. “Listen, they live in a squat and they like to think they’ve got it all worked out, but they don’t even know what they’re thinking about. They’ll be out with their mighty tubes of superglue on Monday, and on Tuesday they’ll be back in college to make sure they get nice fat exams so the bank’ll give them nice fat jobs in a couple years’ time. Five years from now they’ll be working for the same bank and moaning their faces off because their salaries aren’t fat enough. Maybe they’ll break out the superglue again. Yeah…superglue for bigger bucks!” she laughed and jived about on the sofa. “That’s the big business game. I do my own business, thanks.”
Then the music stopped and she scowled. “Are they crazy or what?” And she got up and went across to put on some more.
We talked and talked…I don’t know how long we talked. I felt better and better. Her bloke Rob came to sit with us and he was just like she said—really soft and slow but right there. I mean, he looked like he’d slit your throat for a penny but he was so warm. He was great but…it was her, Lily…she was the one. She’d done what I’d done—run away from home. She’d done it when she was twelve! Can you imagine? I thought, Wow, imagine being so sure about what you want, you can run away at twelve! And I thought I was something for doing it at fourteen. She was more real than anyone I’d ever met.
I’d started to think I was wrong about myself…you know, that I was just a stupid kid with big ideas after all, just like my mum and dad and Vonny and Richard and Tar made out. But here was this amazing person talking to me and I felt, wow, this is me, Gemma Brogan, and I’m getting somewhere…
Some time later, Tar turned up. I should have known he wouldn’t just dump me.
“Oh, right, here you are,” he said. He was smiling that big smile, but I was on another planet by then. “We went out to have a look at the new squat but you were asleep. Are you all right?” he added, his face going all serious for a second. Then I saw his eyes catch Lily sitting by me, string vest half off her shoulder, nipples sticking through. His face went sort of still and he had to concentrate on looking at me.
“This is Lily,” I said.
Tar did his nod. “Yeah, hi, hello,” he croaked. I could see him looking nervously at Rob. Rob is always so polite, more polite than anyone else, all smiles and please and thank you. But you could tell he’d been in a few really nasty fights. I guess poor old Tar was dying to get a good look at Lily’s boobs but he didn’t want to upset Rob. Actually, Rob would have lifted the string vest up for him if he’d asked.
Rob gave him a big smile and stood up to shake his hand and that made poor Tar more nervous than ever.
“Yeah, really nice to meet you,” said Tar.
“Those are a really nice pair of boots,” said Lily, nodding down at his feet.
Tar looked doubtfully down at his boots. They were nothing special. He had a good shine on them. He spent ages polishing his boots, I’d noticed it before. “Are they?” he said, trying to work out if she was teasing him or not.
“Yeah, I love ’em,” said Lily.
“Thanks.”
He stood there looking awkward and unhappy while Lily closed her eyes and danced with her head. Poor old Tar, I felt sorry for him. They were only winding him up. I stood up and took his arm.
“He’s the one I ran away with,” I told them.
“Oh, right…” Lily beamed. “Yeah, that’s really great, everyone should run away, you did the right thing. You did the right thing for Gemma too.”
Tar smiled uncertainly. He’d been told so often that I ought to be at home with Mumsy. Now this amazing naked girl was telling him he was doing everything right.
I said, “Yeah, if it wasn’t for Tar, I’d still be at home going mad.”
Lily was sitting there watching Tar and I was worried because I thought she might decide to go against him. I hadn’t got any idea at all which side he was on, but I wanted him to be on the right side, too.
“Tar had a really bad time at home, he got knocked about by his dad.”
“Yeah, right…leave the bastard,” said Rob.
I watched Lily look at him. Then she winked at me and said, “I’m gonna get him.”
She jumped up and grabbed him round the neck and pressed herself into him. “Well done, man, you broke the door down…brilliant, brilliant, yeah!”
Tar stood there, his hands fluttering nervously around her bare bum. He glanced anxiously at Rob, who stood up and started to pat him on the neck and back.
“Brilliant. I love you, man, I love you,” he said.
I said, “It’s all right, Tar, it’s all right…” because he looked so worried about it.
Lily let go and looked around the room. Everyone was staring at us. She scowled. “Sod this. Let’s go. Come on…This place is dead!” She said that in a loud voice so they’d all know what she thought about them.
“But…all our things are here,” said Tar.
“They’ll be here tomorrow. Or we can get you some new things…”
“That’s right, you put your order in,” laughed Rob. We all headed for the door. Somewhere out of the corner of my eye I saw Vonny glaring at me. I thought, YEAH! Because I fucking done it! I’d got away…She stood staring like a waxwork while we all trooped off out of the door in a line like a circus.