Authors: Chris Killen
âYep.'
âWhere are you going?'
âNottingham,' he said. âNottingham
Trent
.'
âI did English at Nottingham,' I said.
âReally?' he said excitedly. âDid you like it?'
âWhat, the course or the whole thing?'
âWhole thing.'
I thought about this for a long time. Did I like it? Did I have a good time? It all seemed so unreal now; it was like remembering scenes from a corny TV drama. Mainly, I just felt embarrassed by how young and spoilt and full of self-pity I was.
âIt had its ups and down,' I said. âI'm sure you'll have a great time though.'
âRight,' he said, nodding solemnly and stretching the cuffs of his hoodie over his fingers just like you used to do.
Date: Sat, 4 Dec 2004 15:08:08 +0000
From:
[email protected]
Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Argh
hello,
thank you for the cake. it looked like it tasted very nice. you have a tan. you look happy. it's a nice photo.
(full disclosure: i've printed it out and stuck it near my desk. i hope this is okay.)
i had a nice birthday by the way: Alex took me out and got me drunk and when i told him i was giving up smoking the day after my birthday, he said you were a bad influence on me.
anyway, you'll be pleased to know that you are now corresponding with an official HMV Seasonal Temp, which is most of the reason it's taken me so long to reply to your email. that and about a million band practices (we have another gig coming up â this time we're headlining and Alex is convinced some A&R people are coming up from London). Still no word back from Leeds label yet.
HMV is okay so far. the people are nice. i feel like a traitor to Selectadisc though. i keep telling myself it's
alright because i'll probably just end up spending most of my wages back in there anyway, so actually it's like some kind of small-scale Robin Hood manoeuvre.
thank you for saying the nice things about my song, too. i'm not good at taking compliments, i never know what to say. but thanks. it means a lot.
my sister is older by five minutes than me (but acts like she's five years older). she's called Carol and she's weird and a bit boring. i don't know. that came out sounding meaner than i meant it to. she's not weird. i think we're just drifting in different directions. she did something to do with accounting at uni and whenever i get into the same old arguments with my parents about âgetting a real job' or whatever, she's always the example they dredge up. i feel guilty now. i should probably ring her up or go and visit.
yeah, myspace is weird isn't it. i don't know, mostly just hoping it will be good for the band. speaking of pretentious: have you seen Paul's profile?? he's in my friends' list if you want to have a look. (be prepared to cringe massively though.)
how are things with you? do you feel weird about spending Christmas away from home? are you still enjoying work? please send me more news and details about Canada even if it's just boring stuff. i like getting emails from you.
oh, yes, almost forgot: yesterday a Canadian man came in and bought the new album by a Canadian band called Stars on import (in case you're interested, the album's called Set Yourself On Fire, I like it a lot â highly recommended) and we got chatting about it and him and Canada and i told him about how i knew someone who was living there, etc. he comes from Toronto but he has been to Vancouver lots. he was very nice. that's it really, that's the story. sorry it's not more exciting. i think i just wanted to tell you that i had met a Canadian person and sold him a Canadian CD.
Elliott Smith albums: maybe start with either XO or Figure 8. or maybe the self-titled one. fuck it, they're all really good.
Ian
p.s. i think i would only eat crisps.
p.p.s. isn't it
your
birthday sometime soon too or have i remembered that wrong??
p.p.p.s. i've kind of accidentally started smoking again.
p.p.p.p.s. I GOT ALEX TO ORDER HAROLD AND MAUDE INTO THE LIBRARY. THANK YOU SO MUCH. YOU'RE RIGHT. I THINK IT'S THE SADDEST, MOST BEAUTIFUL THING I'VE EVER SEEN.
IAN
2014
T
he bar in Wetherspoon's is three-deep with noisy, red-faced old men. I leave Dalisay standing at the edge of the crush and push my way towards the front. When I finally get there, I ask the barmaid how much a pint of Coke and a pint of Fosters might cost.
âFour twenty-eight,' she says. âAnd it's Pepsi, not Coke.'
âMake it a half of Fosters and a small Pepsi then,' I say.
âThe small is only ten p cheaper,' she says.
âGreat,' I say. âOne of those then, please.'
We carry our drinks to a booth in the corner near the back and sit down facing each other. Dalisay tries to pay
me back for her drink, sliding a pound coin across the table.
âThanks,' she says, when I refuse. âThings are so expensive here.'
âIn Wetherspoon's?'
âIn England.'
I want to ask which country she comes from but I can't quite work out a way to say it without sounding rude.
âHow long have you been working at the call centre?' I say instead.
âAlmost a year.'
âWow.'
âHow long has your sister been going out with Martin?'
âGod, about
nine
years, I think.'
Just then an old man with a blotchy red face stumbles up to our booth and leans in over us, his mouth hanging open, his chin all wet and shiny.
âAre youse two related?' he asks in an almost impenetrable Mancunian accent, pointing a swollen pink finger first at me, then at Dalisay, then back at me again. âAre youse two brother and sister, yeah?'
Dalisay raises her eyebrows at me, honestly puzzled.
(I am ninety-nine per cent sure he's making some kind of racist comment.)
âCome on, mate,' I say, but my voice gets swallowed by the roar of the bar before it can make its way into his ear.
âWhere are you from, love?' he asks, grabbing onto the edge of our table and swaying dangerously backwards and forwards as Dalisay squints up at him, trying her hardest to decipher his accent.
âI beg your pardon?' she says, incredibly politely.
â
Where . . . are . . . you . . . from
?' he barks, so loud it makes an older couple at the next table look over.
âOh,' Dalisay says, finally twigging. âI'm from the Philippines.'
âAnd what made you want to come over here, then?' he says. He's teetering on his heels now and narrowing his eyes, and there's a string of spit dangling from his chin.
âAlright, come on, mate,' I say, a little louder, lifting myself out of my seat.
Oh god.
What am I doing?
I'm not a big guy.
I've never been in a fight before.
âWhat's it gorra do wiv you, mate?' he slurs, and he moves towards me lifting his fists up limply.
I raise my hands and press my fingers gently against his ribcage, to stop him from coming at me, and even just that mild bit of pressure sends him stumbling backwards, away from our table. He trips over a flap of folded carpet, lurches out towards our table for balance but misses completely and sits down hard on his arse. A few more people look over and someone at the bar cheers.
He starts swearing to himself, shaking his head. As he pulls himself back to his feet and swerves off in the direction of the gents, I see a doorman come running for him.
âReally sorry about that,' I say.
(The Philippines, I think.)
âWow,' Dalisay says. âYou saved us.'
I know she's only joking, but I still feel kind of proud of myself.
âPeople here drink a lot,' she says.
Again, I'm not sure if she means in Wetherspoon's or England.
âYeah, they do.'
I take a sip of my half.
A long pause.
âWhat's it like,' I ask, âin the Philippines?'
âYou heard about the . . . the typhoon? Last year?'
âShit, yeah,' I say.
(I think I saw something online.)
A long pause.
I try to think of something else to say, something positive.
âWhat's it like, apart from that?'
(I really don't know what I'm saying.)
âYou know it's a third world country, right?'
I nod.
(I didn't know that.)
âThings cost so much here, by comparison. Back home, for instance, you could buy a whole meal with how much it cost us for just these two drinks.'
âNo way.'
âIt's pretty screwed.'
âI should move there,' I say, before I've even thought about what I'm saying. âI'm completely broke.'
âOkay,' Dalisay says quietly.
I know I should just shut up, but for some reason I don't.
âI mean it,' I hear myself say. âRecently I've just been eating things out of tins. And I had to sell my guitar, and the bloke in the guitar shop ripped me off, I know he did. He only gave me four hundred quid for it. Fuck's sake. I'm sick of having no money.'
I look down at our almost empty glasses.
I've said the wrong thing, haven't I?
Dalisay's gone quiet.
She's not smiling any more.
âDo you have any family over there?' I say.
âAll my family are back there except my tita . . . Sorry, my
aunt
. I'm staying with her at the moment and just sending most of the money I make back home to my family. I have two brothers in college.'
âHow old are you?'
âI'm thirty-six.'
She looks mid twenties at the most. Her skin is very smooth and there are no wrinkles round her eyes or mouth. She's wearing her pink top again. She's not smiling at me. Something's changed between us. I'm suddenly extremely aware that I've fucked this up and I wish I knew what the right thing to do or say was: the magic combination of words that would make Dalisay Rivera instantly like me again.
âI'd better go,' she says, standing up and pulling on her coat.
âI can walk you out, if you like,' I say, downing my last inch of Fosters.
âIt's fine. Really,' she says. âThanks for the drink. See you in work.'
Before I can get up, she's gone.
PAUL
2014
O
n the way to his seminar, Paul sits on the top deck of the 42, fiddling nervously with his phone, refreshing his emails every few seconds. Australia, he thinks. Jonathan Franzen. Doctor's appointment. NaNoWriMo.
Almost at the Precinct Centre, a new email arrives.
It's from Julian:
Why haven't you been replying to my emails?
I could just tell him, Paul thinks. Tell him that I've written nothing at all. That I think I'm going to just give up writing completely, actually.
Meanwhile, the NaNoWriMo people have broken the 41,000-word barrier on their novels.
Or maybe do a Jack Kerouac, Paul tells himself,
dinging the bell. Just clear your head of all this extraneous shit and write it all in one go, over the course of a weekend.
In the silent, airless corridor of the first floor of the New Writing Centre, Paul walks past a framed picture of Martin Amis, past an office room where the admin people sit, past a large stationery cupboard, and pauses outside his seminar room. It's gone five-past. He peers in through the thin rectangular window in the door and they're all in there, everyone except Alison. Rachel Steed sits on her side of the desk, next to Alison's empty place, fiddling with a pale blue iPhone.
Before anyone spots him, Paul dashes on down the corridor, past the staff room, past his office, past Greg's office, and out through the double doors at the far end.
In the toilets, he locks himself in the corner cubicle, drops his trousers, lowers himself onto the ice-cold seat and takes a few deep breaths. As he shits, he slips his phone out of his pocket and starts composing a group email.
Dear all
, he types.
Sorry for any confusion re today's class. Due to unexpected circumstances I am no longer able to attend our seminar group. A reminder: everyone who's had their stories critiqued already should now be working on their second drafts. For reference and guidance, perhaps look back over the Lish/Carver example we covered in Wk 4 (photocopies can be found in your course handbook
).
We will critique two stories next week instead
.
Sorry again and see you all next week
,
Paul
What a mess, he thinks, tearing off a wad of toilet paper with one hand, hitting send with the thumb of his other.
Just then, his phone buzzes and chirps in his hand.
One new Twitter notification, from @jfgkdfjdlsjf at 1:11 p.m.:
i can see what youre doing
Paul hears a shuffling sound above him, looks up, and from a circular hole in the ceiling directly above his cubicle, a bloodshot eye winks down at him.
âFuck!' Paul cries, dropping his phone on the tiles as he stands and gathers his trousers, fumbling his way out of the cubicle. He buckles his belt, retrieves his phone â the glass has shattered, the cracks flowering up the touchscreen like tiny petals from the bottom left corner â and looks up at the ceiling, which is now just a normal square of ceiling again.
Date: Sat, 18 Dec 2004 01:34:12 +0000
From:
[email protected]
Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Argh
Ian,
Sorry i've taken a while to get back to you too. A girl at the cafe left and I've gone up to almost-full-time which, weirdly, I'm enjoying more than I thought I would. (If I'm honest, I've still been feeling a bit wobbly occasionally, just panicking, generally, about almost everything â What am I going to do when I get home? What am I going to do with my life in general? Etc. Etc. â and working a lot is taking my mind off it.)
In answer to your question: yep, my birthday was a few days ago (the 15
th
) but I purposefully didn't tell anyone (including you). For some reason I've never really had that great a time on my birthday, it always makes me feel a bit superstitious and precarious and so I decided this year not to tell anyone until it was over. (Every year I tell my mum not to get me anything, but every year she does anyway.)
Thank you for the recommendations by the way. I found a âhip' record shop and went in and bought XO and that Stars album as a birthday treat. I love them both. New music! Hooray!
I'm going to have to keep this short as I'm really, really tired, but I just wanted to say a massive thank you for how much you've been here for me recently even though, you know, you're on the other side of the world, and to let you know how much it's meant and kind of kept me sane.
It's especially nice and comforting for me sometimes just to think that you are a person, moving around, somewhere in the world, doing whatever it is you're doing.
I hope you're feeling happy and that things work out for you with the band soon. I really think they will. You're very talented.
Your friend,
L