THE NEXT DAY in school my head was in a blur. I had decided that I was going to ask Clare out at the Christmas party. This had gone on long enough. I kept getting extremely nervous and my palms would get all clammy. My heart would go crazy with palpitations and my field of vision would burn white, as though someone had turned up the brightness-levels in my eyes. It’s those teenage hormones that are the best – the ones where there’s so much feeling in every pore that you think you’re going to collapse.
Because it was the last day of school before we broke up for Christmas, it was a non-uniform day so we could wear whatever we wanted. I wore my bees knees T-shirt with a scarf, and I felt good. My dress sense was more pretentious nowadays; I will concede that.
When I was sat in class I couldn’t stop my legs shaking. I tried not to think about what she would say if I asked her out because it would make no difference to the outcome anyway. I saw Clare here and there, but I wasn’t in any of her classes that day so I didn’t manage to speak to her until lunchtime. She was with her friends who, as usual, laughed when I went over.
‘Do you like the game, Rich?’ one of them said. This was a girl called Darlene, for Christ’s sake.
‘Let me just remind you of something, Darlene,’ I said quickly. ‘I had five As and six A-stars in my continuous assessment, whereas you only had seven As and two Bs, so why don’t you make like a tailor . . . and button it?’ I said the last part of the sentence in an American accent so that everybody would laugh. Which they didn’t. I guess what I said was a bit harsh. But she was a bully so I think it was OK. I had had enough with people like her, manipulative people, so I decided to stand up for myself. That’s all.
‘You’re bad,’ Clare said, coming over to me and dragging me away from her friends.
‘Yeah, well.’
‘Are we dancing tonight?’
I lowered my voice.
‘So what’s this game? You said something about it the other night at the war memorial.’
‘The game?’
I tried to absorb all of her features in my brain so that if, for whatever reason, I never saw her again, I would be able to remember what she looked like.
‘You want to know about the game?’
‘Yes,’ I said.
‘But if you know about it, the game is wrecked.’
I sighed.
‘Whatever.’ To be honest, I didn’t really care about their game because her friends were stupid and soon Clare would leave them behind and just be with us. ‘I’ll see you tonight,’ I said.
The afternoon went fairly quickly with quizzes and sitting around talking about Christmas. I heard some of the boys talking about – oh God – fingering girls and I actually went red because it was so crass.
When I got home I tried watching TV and listening to CDs but nothing was any good; I couldn’t get Clare out of my head.
At one point Toby came into my bedroom, and I cursed myself for not locking the door. He was carrying a notebook.
‘Richard,’ he said, pen in hand. ‘I just need to confirm what time we’re going into the city tomorrow.’ He wasn’t even looking at me because he was looking at his notepad.
I stared at him incredulously and left a dramatic pause.
‘Half ten,’ I said at last.
‘Hmm,’ he answered, as he wrote something in his book. ‘That’s excellent timing.’ I noticed that he was still wearing his brown leather sandals with his grey school socks.
‘I’m getting you a pair of Converses for Christmas,’ I said. ‘Here, give me that.’ I took two quick steps forward and pulled the notebook out of his hand and looked at what he had been writing. That boy is the living end, I swear to God. This is what he’d written:
And I’m not even making it up. He’d written it all down in his book.
‘Tobe,’ I said. ‘Why do you do stuff like this?’
‘Like what?’
‘Like this.’ I held my right hand over the book, which was resting in my left. ‘You’ve written what your plans are.’
‘So?’
‘Well, what’s the point?’
Toby looked at me and crumpled his face.
‘I find it useful.’
‘Well, I think you and I need to play some cricket.’
I knew his face would light up and he ran off to his room to get his bat and a tennis ball. In our house we have quite a long landing that makes a great cricket pitch. Toby doesn’t really like sports but he’ll do anything if I’m involved. I played for about five minutes (I declared not out) and decided it was time to get ready for the party. Toby was upset that I had only played for a short time, but I didn’t mind too much because I’d be spending the whole day with him tomorrow anyway.
I got showered and went online. I checked my emails and something incredible had happened. Play had emailed me saying that my My Chemical Romance album had been posted, which made me feel awesome. At last it would arrive. And it was about time too.
Matthew and Jenny were both on their computers so we quickly exchanged schedules for getting to the party. After that I ran downstairs and ate a couple of packets of crisps.
‘Don’t eat those, your dinner’s almost ready,’ my mother said.
I wanted to make a witty quip and sweep out of the house but things were still frosty between us after Bertie so I said, ‘I told Matthew I would meet him in five minutes. I have to go.’
She didn’t say anything but her shoulders slumped. She clearly wanted to say something but didn’t. A few seconds passed and I left the room.
By the time I got to school, music was blaring and the disco lights were laser-blasting everywhere. The whole place was stuffed full of eleven- to eighteen-year-olds. The first years were all skidding around on their knees, just as you would expect, of course.
I couldn’t see Matthew or Jenny, or Craig or Freddy. Or Clare.
‘Rich,’ somebody called. ‘Hey, Rich.’ It was Phil, one of the boys who had once liked me but who had now followed the herd and deserted me after the Bertie incident.
‘Hey, how’s it going?’ he said, grinning.
I found myself doing something very odd. I was judging him. I looked him up and down. I had been friends with this boy up until just a few months ago. But now I felt like I didn’t know him at all, like he was an embarrassing memory from my past. I know that what I was doing was a bad thing, but I don’t want to lie and pretend that it didn’t happen. Freddy’s mediocrity theory was seeping into me slowly but surely. This boy in front of me would never do anything exceptional. He would get a job for which he would be well paid, but he would hold people like me back. Was I really thinking this? I was disgusted by myself. But that’s how I felt.
He was drunk. Completely off his face, in fact. He stumbled over to me and put his arm over my shoulder. He was a good foot taller than me.
‘What’s your problem lately, Rich?’
I could smell the alcohol on his breath.
‘What do you mean?’ I said diplomatically.
‘Why don’t you hang around with us any more?’
‘What?’ I said. ‘It’s not me. You lot have totally snubbed me since Bertie died.’
‘All you do is hang around with that fucking faggot Freddy,’ he said, ignoring me.
I immediately removed his arm from around my neck.
‘Get off me, you fucking loser.’
I pushed him away. He looked at me with contempt.
‘You’re a prick.’
‘You know what, Phil?’ I said. ‘You’re pathetic. What sets are you in now, anyway?’
He just looked at me with glazed eyes.
Then I said something quite bad.
‘You’re going to end up just like your father – a fucking manager. It doesn’t mean anything.’
We both looked at each other. Whatever had gone before, I was now cutting myself loose of my old life. After saying something like that, there was no going back. I didn’t really expect him to do what he did next though, which was to try and punch me. I felt bad as I stepped to one side and pushed his back. I stuck out my foot so that he tripped and went sprawling over the floor. Basically, I removed all of his dignity.
He got to his feet, but some of the other boys held him back. There was a wall of them, the people I used to know, and they all looked at me like I was a disease.
‘You’re all mental,’ I said to them and walked off.
‘How’s your counselling going, Rich?’ somebody shouted. I stopped where I was. My heart went thud in my chest. They knew. Fuuuuuuuck!!!!!!!!! I turned round and saw that everybody had smirks on their faces. Something suddenly hit home. Everybody knew. Everybody knew about me being in therapy and must have been laughing at me all along behind my back.
A nausea suddenly came into my throat and I felt my ears heating up. I was a laughing stock. Me. And I was so much better than all of them, I told myself blindly. So why was I getting so angry? Why were my hands balled into tight fists? My existence was crashing in around me. I wondered where Clare was but couldn’t see her. I looked at my old friends, who had all turned against me. Who were they anyway? What would they ever do with their stupid fucking lives? Nothing. They’d get jobs and fade away into the mediocrity of life. They were completely pointless. A hundred years from now, nobody would even know they had existed.
‘Why don’t you all fuck off ?’ I shouted, a little too emotionally. My voice cracked and the last part of my sentence went way too high. I closed my eyes as everybody laughed at me. Now I felt really sick. All along I had thought that everybody laughed at Craig Bartlett-Taylor because he was nuts, but it was me they were laughing at.
My thoughts suddenly strayed to the Suicide Club – to Freddy, Jenny, Matthew, Clare, even Craig. Had they been laughing at me too? Had all of my bad thoughts about humanity been totally misplaced? Was it me who was wrong and evil and mediocre? My body felt like an empty eggshell. Was this what it was like to be unpopular?
Suddenly the music stopped and the next song came on. Music cranked out of the speakers and do you know what song it was? It was ‘Teardrop’ by a band called Massive Attack. It’s probably the most beautiful song you’ll ever hear and now here it was cascading over me as I was being humiliated in front of everybody. I wanted to scream, cry, hit out, buck against it all, but I stayed where I was, my feet made of concrete.
‘We’ve known all along, Rich,’ said one of the boys.
As I stood there, helpless, flailing, I knew exactly what Freddy meant. This was how the mediocre took down the exceptional. It was me against them, and there were more of them. It was they who had cruelly cut me out of their lives, yet still they did this to me.
I had to do something to stop this. I had to make a decision. So I did.
Deliberately, I turned away from my old life and, across the dance floor, saw Clare. She looked up and our eyes met. The first line of ‘Teardrop’ kicked in and my destiny came crushingly to life and I took my first steps towards my love. All thought of my humiliation was gone because I was about to show everybody how life should be lived. Clare was heading for me as well, and my arms went weak. I saw Clare’s friends look up at her as she walked away from them. Their eyes followed her path and saw me at the end. They put their hands over their mouths. I could feel the eyes of the other kids behind me burning into my back.
Still the music poured out into the hall and then I was only ten feet away from her. I lifted my right hand ever so slightly, so that I could brush her hair away from her face when I reached her. She didn’t smile at me because she was nervous and I could feel her energy. The golden rope came up between us and reeled itself in around our souls as we got closer. It was pure magic.
We finally reached each other and stopped. The song percolated into us and would for ever be etched into our memories. I took her right hand in my left and moved her hair away with my right.
Here it was. We looked at each other for no longer than a second and then came that most amazing plunge where all fear and doubt retreats and you tilt your head. Our lips met and I suddenly realized just how much in love with her I truly was. More than I knew. We stood there for about thirty seconds, our jaws moving up and down in tandem as we tasted each other properly for the first time. I think in that kiss I experienced pure being; that physical joy where you forget everything.
I could feel a circle of people around us but I kept my eyes closed. I had won. My secret about therapy was out and I had been completely humiliated, but here I was kissing the girl I loved. The song just carried on and on and I remember it ringing in my ears as I kissed her. We pulled away together and looked at each other.
I have to admit that after kissing I never know what to say and I usually say something to embarrass myself. Which I did this time as well, but what I said was quite sweet, I guess, even though it was very cringey.
‘Now am I playing the game?’ I said.
I saw for the first time everybody gathered around us, looking on in near disbelief.
Then something happened. Clare looked me in the eye and took a step back, just like she had in the graveyard that night when she refused to free me.
‘No, Rich,’ she said coldly.
A shiver went up my spine as I noticed her friends were laughing and high-fiving.
‘Don’t you get it?’ she said as she took another step back. She brought her hand up to cover her mouth, but not so much that I couldn’t see the emergence of a smirk.
My sweet Clare was leaving me. I felt like I was in Hades or whatever it’s called and was saying goodbye to her. She was being taken away across the water in one of the boats, wearing only a white gown. And she wasn’t looking back. The mist and the night finally dissolve her.
She lowered her head and looked out at me through the tops of her eyes. Her mouth opened.
‘You are the game.’