It’s well gone six by the time I sit back down at Mum and Dad’s very nearly new, smoked-glass kitchen table with a tumbler of milk and a mint Yo-Yo. I’m still shaken to the core. I’m finally, and unenthusiastically, confronting page thirty-eight of my sociology textbook and I’m disillusioned, but not altogether shocked, to discover that it’s no less dreary than it had been the last time I sat down and looked at it. I shove it to one side, again. I just can’t focus. I’m too excited, I suppose, or is it fraught? I’m not really sure, but I’ve chewed the collar of my school shirt till it’s soaked. I’m restless. I can’t think straight and my mind’s all full of the day. I have at least four chapters to read tonight, but so much has happened that concentration just seems futile.
Should I pop some music on, perhaps? Yes, that’ll calm me down: help me relax. The house is far too quiet – that’s the issue, that’s why I’m fidgety and can’t focus on my bloody homework. Only it’s not. I spring up again and saunter over to the flash new space-age radio-cassette player, which, inexplicably, has had its serial number crudely scratched off and is sitting next to the smart, and also very nearly new, portable colour television set, which came without a box or any sort of brochure or instructions. They’re both sitting on top of the recently acquired dishwasher that, rather interestingly, came with a few dirty cups and plates already inside. In fact I’d venture that almost everything in Mum and Dad’s freshly overhauled and extended kitchen-diner is nearly new.
I put in a tape and sit back down. Music: that’s better. Calm again. The whipcrack of the singer’s voice comes at me as I lean back in the chair and push my sociology folder and the tatty textbook far out of my eyeline.
‘Was it destiny?
I don’t know yet.
Was it just by chance?
Could it be kismet?
Something in my consciousness told me you’d appear.
Now, I’m always touched by your presence, dear.’
I’m moved. Jarred, in fact, by what I deem to be one of Deborah Harry’s most sublime and insightful lyrical moments: a sliver of rock genius, if you will. It’s as if she’s speaking just to me, right at this moment. My best friend from school, Frances Bassey, informed me – somewhat spitefully, I felt – this afternoon, outside the metalwork room after fifth period, that Debbie had not penned this particular verse herself per se: it had been Blondie’s mop-haired bass player, Gary Valentine, who had actually written it. Nevertheless, I thought, it had been Debbie, not Gary, who had delivered it, clad in a yellow woollen cowl-necked T-shirt dress, and corresponding thigh-high pirate boots, on The Old Grey Whistle Test last year, and that’s what chalked up points on my scoreboard.
‘David! David!’
A rather shrill pitch rudely invades my thoughts, but I pretend I haven’t heard anything and go back to them.
‘All right, you monkeys!’ Debbie had purred at the start of the song, speaking through those superb teeth, like only Debbie does, bobbing her peroxide head and pouting that mouth as she sang, like only Debbie does, an amber stage light flashing over her shoulder as she hollered – with that smart, blissful, New York twang – the line, ‘It’s really not cheating, ye know?’ Who gave a flying fuck, I pointed out to Frances, if Gary Valentine had written the words, or in fact the New fucking Testament, for the ensuing two minutes and twenty-six seconds? It was Debbie’s presence one was ultimately touched by.
‘David, I know you can hear me down there, so don’t pretend you can’t.’
What on earth does she want? I decide to answer, but only half-heartedly.
‘Yes, dear?’
I get up and rewind the cassette, seemingly unable to let the song, with all its apparent lyrical significance, sink and fade to nothing, and I start it again from the very top, turning the volume up loud. Then I sit back in my chair, and I ask myself, for what must be the two hundredth time today, could it possibly be true? Is it in any way feasible? And if it is true, what the hell am I going to do about it? But no answer comes – only Debbie. Oh! What simple truth she brings me now: what elation and insight she offers my poor, bewildered teenage heart. Yes, I know I’m being dramatic, I know! But it’s a big thing, it really is. And never, as far as I’m concerned, has a song spoken so poignantly to a boy so unsettled.
‘David, you’re not deaf; so why don’t you come when I call you?’
Just as Debbie is about to lift me into the rapture that is my absolute favourite part of the song – the bit where she sings: ‘Floating past the evidence of possibilities; we could navigate together psychic frequencies’ – I become aware of an altogether different sort of presence hovering over my right shoulder. I knew it; she wants something.
‘David, could you not hear me? Yes, of course you bloody could. Now would you mind very much getting off your fuckin’ arse and running over Liptons? I want twenty Superkings and a Vitbe.’
My mother. She can be ever so common at times.
‘Could I not go in a minute, Kath? I’m in the middle of my sociology homework,’ I say, not looking up. ‘I’ve got to rustle up an essay about venereal disease and what shoes one should wear if one should happen to catch it.’
I snigger at my own joke, then beat my pencil on the table to the last few bars of the song, singing along as if she weren’t even in the room and I was entirely adrift in the music. ‘I am always touched by your presence, dear, dear, dear, dear …’ And then, finally, I look up at Mother with the most syrupy and insincere grin I can assemble.
‘Dear!’
She’s smiling back at me, but is clearly unmoved, so I drop my head again, hoping she’ll get fed up and trot off to beleaguer my sister, Chrissy. No such joy.
‘Come on, smart arse!’ she laughs. ‘Don’t push it! You’ve been sitting there for over an hour now and I’ve not even seen you pick up a sodding biro yet, so you can go right now. And don’t call me Kath, you cheeky git, or dear for that matter. It’s vulgar.’
I slump down on the smoked glass of the nearly new kitchen table as Mum, still glamorous in her work suit, hunches expectantly over me, brandishing a couple of dog-eared pound notes. I’m fairly certain that I detect a whiff of Trebor mint so I suspect she’s been on the Blue Nun since she got home from work; no wonder she wants a fag.
‘All right,’ I say, nodding wearily, and then I grab for the cash, my mother pecking me on the forehead and affording me an absurd grin before she turns and heads for the lounge to watch the back end of Nationwide. Lifting my school blazer from the seatback, I sniff at it, wincing at the smell of rain-damp cloth fused with sweat. Then, returning to my main preoccupation of the day, I ask myself: how can I really be sure? I have no idea what it feels like, so how could I possibly know? But again, there is no answer.
‘I’d put your blazer on if I were you, David. It’s spitting,’ Mum hollers from halfway up the passage.
‘Well, you’re not me, Mother, are you?’ I mutter. ‘So that’s that conundrum sorted.’
I pull on the jacket anyway, and then I gather my sociology stuff from the table to take to my room, Mother shrieking, once more, from even further along the hall, ‘And stick all your homework upstairs; your father’ll be home in a minute. Last thing I need’s him griping about the sodding mess. And get a bottle of Cresta or something if you’ve got enough change. You and Chrissy can have that with your tea: I got some veal and ham pie from Wallis’s.’
‘All right!’
I mean, should I have the sensation of being hit by something? Or of being blessed in some way by something marvellously celestial? I just don’t know. I scan the kitchen momentarily. Mum was right. Dad would, without doubt, rebuke anyone and everyone who was in earshot if the esteemed and costly ‘new kitchen’ fell anything short of pristine splendour. Of late, in fact, leaving a cupboard door ajar, or setting a cup down upon any surface that lacked the augmentation of one of Eddie’s ‘Pigeons of Great Britain’ coasters, was a crime punishable by execution, it seemed, or at least a strident and lengthy ear-bashing, often culminating in a sharp clip round the ear. Disarray hadn’t really seemed to agitate my father prior to ‘new kitchen’. The scullery had been tatty, at best, and the decrepit Formica table in ‘old kitchen’ had become a dumping ground for back issues of Family Circle, bits of fishing tackle and boxes of whatever knocked-off goods Dad had been selling that week. There was a cosy familiarity about ‘old kitchen’. You knew where you were.
Since they’d knocked through, however, to construct and erect the magnificence that was ‘new kitchen’, Eddie Starr had insisted that his family all rise to the occasion; so thereafter, the TV Times went straight in the sideboard and the aforementioned fenced goods took up residence in the back of the pigeon loft. The upside of this, however, is that now our entire three-storey house is chock-full of the very latest gadgets, most of them courtesy of Eddie’s tepid and rather small-time underworld connections. In fact, the work surfaces in our kitchen often put me in mind of the conveyor belt on The Generation Game, laden with prizes. We’ve recently acquired, for example, a new improved Breville snack and sandwich toaster, a SodaStream, which apparently turns dull, ordinary tap water into an exciting fizzy and flavoured beverage, and a Videostar video recorder – and I’m pretty certain that we’re the only semi-detached on Chesterfield Street to have one of those!
Dad had ranted to me only last week, when he sadistically coerced me into helping him muck out his pigeons, ‘You got to change with the times, David. It’s no good standin’ still like some of the miserable bastards I have to listen to while I’m driving me taxi, fuckin’ moanin’ about this and that changing.’
‘Yes, Dad,’ I’d said, heaving at the smell of pigeon shit and holding a yellow Marigold up to my nose. ‘I’m sure you’re right.’
‘I’m embracing the eighties, I am,’ he said, even though the decade was still a good four months away. ‘I’m fed up with livin’ in an untidy shit’ole! Fed up with it!’
And I watched with some fascination as he prised a crusty lump of pigeon poop out of his thick wavy black hair.
‘Yes, Dad,’ I said.
He’d even employed a cleaner, Moira, to come three times a week to keep things spick and span, evidently deeming Mum to be entirely incapable of holding down a job whilst concurrently retaining an adequate standard of hygiene in the family home. Mum did have a full-time job, too – and had had for years – at Freemans catalogue. This had been rather wonderful for the duration of our childhood, especially around Christmas time as my sister Chrissy and I pawed through the silky pages of shiny new toys, but, frankly, a bane once one hit puberty and had to endure endless packs of ill-fitting Space 1999 nylon underwear from the staff shop. On the plus side, though, Mother had managed to procure me a signed photograph of Lulu modelling a shrimp-coloured safari suit when she’d come to cut the ribbon on the new office a few years back.
Truth be told, however, Mum has never been the most fastidious of cleaners, and her employment at Freemans was just the pretext she required to slack off from the dusting. So Chrissy, me and Mum herself had hailed the arrival of Moira the cleaner with a great deal of enthusiasm, despite the fact that a plethora of wigs and hairpieces rendered the woman almost impossible to identify from one day to the next. Blonde one morning, titian the next: the only way we knew it was her on most days was because of her slightly overgenerous employment of dark rouge and the terrible perfume she wore.
Moira came on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays most weeks, and, to be honest, when I came home from school the first time she’d been I thought we’d been burgled. It turned out she’d just tidied things away, which was a revelation to all of us, especially Mum. She was nice, in a busty, brusque, straightforward sort of way, and Chrissy and I liked her because she swore lots and didn’t mind if we did the same. The major boon in having Moira, though, as far as we were all concerned, was that Eddie’s once customary and oft-heard cry of ‘Look at the fucking state of this shithouse!’ seemed little more than far-flung nostalgia these days.
Anyway, I shall do Mum’s bidding for the time being and toddle off to Liptons. I’m certainly not going to let her wanton grocery demands, or, indeed, the spectre of my father’s manic tidiness, impair my mood. I’m happy today. Elated. Slightly confused, it must be said, and eerily nervous, but good and happy nonetheless. After I’ve changed into my best blue jeans and a Blondie T-shirt, I head for the front door, swinging it open.
‘Back in a jiff,’ I yell at no one in particular.
I stride out on to Chesterfield Street, slamming the door of number twenty-two behind me. Unexpectedly, the rain-washed landscape does not appear as it had this morning. Am I imagining it, or does the air smell somehow sweeter and fresher this evening? Is the front lawn that little bit greener? So many questions today and very few answers thus far. I turn out of our front garden and pass Mrs Stirzaker next door. I don’t know if it’s just me, but she actually looks rather cheery tonight as she clumps the living shit out of her unruly daughter, Stella, and I’m pretty sure I catch her winking at me. Across the street, glum Mr Archibald is smiling and waving over at me, as well – word has it he’s not cracked a smile since the Coronation so I’m definitely not going mad, there’s something in the air. Perhaps they can tell. Perhaps it is true and it shows. But how will I know? When will I know for sure?
Chesterfield Street, I think, is one of the nicer roads in East Dulwich, because it’s that bit wider and it has lots of trees. It’s just houses, no shops, and you can walk from one end of it to the other in about three and a half minutes. Of course, a lot of the roads in the area look very alike: Victorian semis with very shipshape front gardens. It’s not what you’d call deprived or anything – not like some parts of south-east London – nor is it especially posh. It’s just ordinary. But I like our street: it’s cheery, and the people keep their houses nice and sponge their cars down regularly. Well, most people. When I pass by my nan’s house, which is only two doors along from ours, I detect the familiar but ever-divine aroma of her special thick mince and macaroni cooking. She’s made it every Wednesday for donkey’s years.
We’ve always lived two doors down from my nan, which was ace when me and Chrissy were kids as we had two immense houses to tear around in instead of just one, and we loved being so close to her and my grandad. For some strange reason, and completely out of the blue, I find myself thinking about the people who lived in between our two houses years ago, Joan and Bette. They had a hairdresser’s on the main road, Lordship Lane, and they took care of their old dad, Bernie. I remember Joan and Bette always looking very ‘fifties’, with crimson lipstick, stalwartly lacquered, film-star hair and smart grey high-waisted slacks; Bernie had those sea-captain’s whiskers, and gave Chrissy and me Merry Maid chocolate toffees. We’d all be out in our back gardens on bright Saturday mornings: me, waiting for my grandad to take me shopping in the high street; Joan and Bette, fussing over their roses; Bernie, sitting in a deckchair puffing on his pipe. I think of all that as I pass by tonight – I don’t usually. Maybe it’s because the bouquet of my nan’s thick mince and macaroni is even more mouth-watering than usual. Or perhaps it isn’t, but it seems that way. Everything seems enhanced this evening. Right, somehow. Just what the doctor ordered. I think I know the reason for this and I should keep it a secret: it’s both superb and terrifying all at once. But I really need to think about it, process it. The thing is … today, for the very first time … I think I might have fallen in love! I think I might have accidentally, and very carelessly, fallen in love with the captain of the fifth-year football team.