The Boy With..Chapter 67

67

 

            Hope was a dangerous thing.  With only a matter of weeks to go before I turned sixteen, I was becoming hooked on it.  It was more intoxicating, more addictive than any of the drugs I had been messing around with.  It was also more fragile.  It was a constant tease; easing me into calmer dreams at night, and then awaking to hold my hand again when the morning arrived.  As Anthony put in extra hours at the pub, and Michael started a weekend job at the McDonalds on Somerley road, I felt the soft fingers of hope caressing me at every turn.  Still, I was holding back from it all of the time, afraid to give in to it, afraid to believe in it or let it carry me away.  I stopped buying uppers and downers from Jaime and started shoving all of my record shop money into a sock which I kept hidden at the back of my wardrobe.  I made sure to take a deep breath of fresh hope every day, and I felt my mind getting clearer and my heart stronger.  There was a chance, at least, I told myself.  A possibility.  If we could get out, if we could get away without them knowing, then that would be it, wouldn’t it?  It would all be over.

I sensed a new tension breeding at home.  It seemed to seep from the very walls, permeating the very air around us.  I felt Howard watching me closely; a million dangerous promises paused behind his thin lips.  He had a mobile phone.  This sleek black brick he punched his demands into.  I took deep breaths whenever I could; otherwise it felt like I would suffocate.  I felt like all I had to do was make it to my birthday, survive that long, and I would be free.  I had started to sort out and pack up my belongings in private. Throwing things I didn’t need into the rubbish when no one was at home.  I packed records and tapes up in bags and scurried over to Michael’s with them.  They were packing up too.  Slowly, but surely, peeling themselves away from their old lives.

I was in a daze one day at the dinner table.  Headphones on, until Howard came to the table.  I need to wash myself again, to hide all the dirt and pain, Thom Yorke whined into my ears, while my eyes fixed on the knife and fork that lay on the table before me.  My mother buzzed around the kitchen, with an oven glove on one hand, and a cigarette in the other.  She had just returned from the hairdressers; her stiffened waves now a startling shade of gold. I felt the barrier between us, and an immense sadness drooping on top of me as I sat there in my bubble of music. ‘Cause I’d be scared that there’s nothing underneath, but who are my real friends? Have they all got the bends?  Am I really sinking this low? Howard stormed in, reaching automatically for my headphones, but I was faster, ducking away and pulling them off myself.  He narrowed his eyes, grunted and slumped into the chair opposite me.

“He’s up to something.”  He picked up his fork and waved it menacingly from side to side. My mother placed the food on the table; sausage, chips and beans.  She sighed softly and slipped into the third chair. I just looked down at my food, and tried to be invisible.

“Okay honey,” she said, in the soothing voice she used for him when he was in a rotten mood. “I know you’ve had a bad day, but please don’t start this at the dinner table. Danny’s been no trouble lately.  You were saying it yourself the other day.”

Howard simply ignored her.  His piggy eyes bore into me as I tried to eat. “Just so you know,” he said, through a mouthful of sausage. “I know you’re up to something, alright? She may like to live on another planet these days, but I know alright?”

I continued to eat in silence, pushing my food around the plate so that it would look like I had eaten more than I had.  I hated eating in Howard’s presence. Every mouthful felt like I was chewing on glass, every untasted lump of food slipping down my throat and threatening to stick.  “Can I go?” I asked.  I couldn’t bear to have to look at him any longer, knowing what I knew.  I couldn’t bear his eyes on me. I felt my body twitching to escape.  My mother nodded at me.

“Course you can love.”

“Have you done your jobs?” Howard barked.  I pushed back my chair and stood up.

“I’ve been at my job.”

“Job?” He rolled his eyes and laughed at me.  “That’s not a job, you idiot. You don’t get fucking paid yet do you?” I breathed in, bit down on the words that filled my head, and forced a smile.

“What do you want me to do?”

Minutes later I was pushing the lawnmower up and down the back garden in the heavy August sun, while Howard sat on the doorstep watching me suffer.  My mother had gone to answer the phone.  His greedy eyes followed my every move.  I kept my head down, watching the grass as the lawnmower teeth devoured it in stripes.  I could feel the small hand of hope slipping away from me then, to be replaced by the familiar chill of dread that clung to my spine, crawling up to my neck and flicking the hairs on end, one by one.  The oppressive heat burned down from a stark cloudless sky, yet the skin on my arms had broken out in goose pimples. I lifted my head when movement caught my eye. Howard had risen from the step.  He looked over his shoulder, into the kitchen, and then he came towards me.  I pushed on, keeping my eyes down as I heaved the lawnmower forward.  He fell into casual step behind me, still puffing lazily on his cigarette. I longed so badly for hope to return and take my hand again, but she had gone, she was hiding.

“Why you giving Jack the cold shoulder?” Howard was walking close behind me, following my every step, sounding cocky and full of it like he always did, every word he spoke soaked in a snort of ridicule.  I leaned forward, pushing the mower and shrugged.

“What?”

“Don’t just say ‘what’! Turn the fuck around and look at me when I’m speaking to you!”

I stopped walking.  I killed the mower and turned slowly to face him, pushing my sweaty hair out of my eyes with the back of one hand.  The glare of the sun bounced into my eyes from behind him, so I had to raise a hand in order to see the face of the man who towered above me.  A shark like smile gleamed upon his face.  “Why does it matter to you?” I asked him. “What I do, or where I go?”

He puffed his smoke right into my face. “Don’t answer a question with a question shit for brains!”

“I’ve been busy, how about that?”

I watched him sucking up his breath, the great inhalation puffing up his chest and increasing his height. “Sarcastic little motherfucker,” he said softly. He cocked his head, and ran his eyes slowly up and down my body as if inspecting me closely for lies.  He ran a sluggish tongue across his lower lip.  “See, that’s how I know you’re up to something. ‘Cause you’re not going round to Jacks.  You’re up to something.  I can feel it.  I know it. One minute you’re all over Jack like a fucking rash, the next you’re nowhere near the place.”

I shrugged at him, and glanced at the kitchen door, wondering how close mum was to finishing her phone call.  I was brimming over with defiance, if you want to know the truth.  Oh how much I longed to spit in his face, or stamp on his balls.  It was all I could do to contain the sneer in my voice, or the loathing in my eyes as I spoke to him. “You really shouldn’t worry so much,” I said to him, catching the sudden shadow of my mother making her way briskly and urgently through the kitchen.  “I’m not doing anything wrong, just got bored of going there that’s all. Can’t stand the guy to tell you the truth.”

Howard had no time to respond.  “Lee!” my mother cried for him, as she appeared weakly in the doorway, stopping there and clinging to the wall.  A steady flow of tears marched down her cheeks from her panic stricken eyes.  Her whole face seemed twisted with grief, or shock, or something.  Howard did not move.

“What is it baby?”

“My mum,” she whimpered in reply, covering her face with her hands, her big blue eyes staring out from between her fingers.  “My mum, she’s died.” With that, she turned suddenly, and stumbled away from us, back into the house. Howard turned his head and gazed down at me.  A thin and malicious smile spread out across his face.  We could hear her distressed sobbing coming from beyond the kitchen.  I swallowed, looking away. I felt cold, and alone.  I felt like the only person in the world.  I felt isolation swirling around me like a mist.  I felt trapped and lost, and when I looked back up at him, he was grinning.  His eyes were laughing at me as he reached out, and circled his hand around my wrist.  Right there, in the middle of the sun baked lawn, he lowered the cigarette from his lips and pressed the glowing butt into the palm of my hand.  I stiffened, hissing pain through my teeth, and then it was over.  He walked away from me.  He swaggered, strutted, and whistled.  He didn’t look back because he did not need to.  He went into the house and called out to her.

I stood in the middle of the garden for what seemed like a long time.  I used my thumb to rub gently at the burn, hushing it, while my shoulders hung and my heart burned.  I stood and I listened, my breathing fast and shallow.  I listened to the crying and the wailing and the murmured words of comfort.  I listened to Howard on the telephone.  I listened to footsteps hurrying up and down the stairs.  I imagined bags being packed, and wished that they were mine.  I made myself move then.  I walked slowly around to the front of the house, and then as the howl of protest began to build up at the back of my throat, I picked up my pace and I ran.  I found myself at Michael’s front door, leaning into it as I banged upon it, looking back over my shoulder and doubting every shred of hope I had believed in before.

Anthony let me in and bopped me cheerily on the head with a rolled up newspaper.  “Been phoning up about places,” he said, closing the door. “Want to come and see a few with us tomorrow?”  I nodded in silence, as the burn pulsed within my closed fist.  Anthony frowned at me. “You okay?”

Michael appeared in the lounge doorway, a piece of toast in one hand.  “This can’t happen soon enough,” I told them both. “Mum’s going away again.  Right now, she’s packing.  My Grandma just died.”

Michael made a face. “Shit.  Sorry mate.”

I shook my head at him.  “I’m scared guys.  He knows something is up.  He wants to know why I’m not round Jacks anymore.  He’s getting paranoid and worked up, and now she’s not gonna’ be around again…and….” My voice had faded down to nothing, my throat tight and dry.  Anthony was looking at me gently.

“Hey. It’s alright mate, don’t panic.  Soon enough he won’t even know where we are.  You’ve just got to hang on a bit longer, yeah?  We’re moving as fast as we can.”

I looked down at my hand.  I uncurled my fingers and held out my palm.  “It’s gotta’ be faster,” I told them as they gasped.  “Or I’m fucked.”

The Boy With…Chapters 65&66

65

 

 

            I awoke the next day, calm and refreshed.  I spent some time just watching Kay as she slept beside me.  I knew she would sleep for hours yet, and that was just fine by me.  I liked watching her sleep, and I also liked the quiet time to myself I would get when I slipped out of bed to go downstairs.  I had already heard the newspaper boy shoving the paper through the letterbox.  Mornings were best enjoyed alone.  Mug of tea and the newspaper in the kitchen, followed by a full English breakfast if I had the time.  I glanced back at Kay and thought how tiny she looked, how delicate.  She slept with both hands pressed together under her cheek, and her small body tucked up into a little ball.  She looked serene, sleeping so peacefully, but I sighed as I flipped back the duvet and swung my legs out of the bed.  I knew that as soon as her eyes opened, they would fill with dread and anxiety.  She would remember what happened yesterday, and the despair would consume her.

As much as she liked to try to gloss it over with her fluttering eye lashes and candy smiles, she couldn’t hide it from me.  That boy tormented her days.  She was obsessed with him.  She was overdoing it with attention one moment, sucking up to him because she assumed he was heading in the right direction.  Showering him with praise he had done nothing to deserve, going back to her old soft ways with him, showing no spine.  He did it on purpose, I was pretty sure of that after all this time.  Wound her up with false hopes, viewing her with scorn and distain the entire time, before he dashed them all, right on cue, fucking up in spectacular fashion.  Liked to think he was a bad boy didn’t he?  Telling his teachers to fuck themselves and threatening to burn the school down.  Very funny.  Very fucking funny.

Now she would be in another state about him.  It had reached the point when I dreaded her speaking his name.  My skin would prickle with barely contained rage.  You wanted him dead, I wanted to scream into her pitiful little face, you told me yourself!  You were going to get rid of him and he’s haunted your very existence ever since!  Fuck, sometimes I felt like the only sane one in the family, the only one who could see things the way they really were.

I paused outside his bedroom, tying my dressing gown neatly around my middle.  I felt good.  Better than good, I felt fucking amazing.  I might have been approaching middle age but I was in the best shape of my life.  Hadn’t let myself go, not like Jack.  I rocked back on my heels, sniffing the air, before I shuddered involuntarily, thinking about what was happening to him, what he was turning into.  It was laughable really.  He was becoming on the outside what he had been on the inside for a very long time.  I turned my head to the bedroom door, located the sound of muffled, laboured snoring, and nodded to myself in satisfaction.  The boy was on his last warning, and he had his instructions to remain put.  Fuck his friends, fuck his job, fuck all of it, unless I said otherwise.  I smiled a delicate smile when I remembered the last thing I had said, before leaving him alone in the dark.  “One wrong move, and I bring your mother in here and introduce her to this.”  I’d slapped the belt against my hand and he’d flinched on the bed, although only half conscious.  He knew I meant it though.  And I did mean it.  To be honest, I was starting to think she needed a wake-up call.  It was like one step forward, three steps back with that boy, and most of the time it was her, undoing all my hard work.

I cracked my knuckles outside his door, and then padded softly down the stairs in my slippers.  I picked the paper up from the mat and carried it into the kitchen with me.  I was half way through filling the kettle when I heard the banging on the front door.  Not knocking, but banging, hammering.  Resentment flooded me.  I slammed the kettle down onto the side and swung out of the kitchen, marching hotly towards the front door to find out who had dared to interrupt my peace, my moments of solitude which were becoming increasingly rare.  I rolled my head on my neck and cracked my knuckles again.  This was no time in the morning for visitors, and I was reminded of my growing hatred and disgust towards the place.  This estate was not for the likes of Kay, and me.  I had been scanning the property pages for homes for sale up on the hill.  That was where we belonged, in one of those houses.  Just thinking about it made me want to lick my lips slowly, from one side to the other.  When I wrenched open the door, my irritation spun into anger, in fact it was enough to ruin my entire day; the sight of that little black haired freak on my doorstep, glowering at me in his school uniform.  I jutted towards him in a fast, snapping motion, watched him jerk back in surprise and sneered into his face; “get the fuck away from my house!”

The boy composed himself quickly and scowled back at me with pure hatred in his glittering eyes.  He glared back at me like he had every right to be stood on my doorstep first thing in the morning. “I want to see Danny,” he said to me. I cocked my head to one side and frowned at him as if he were stupid.

“I’ll repeat it for you,” I said. “In case you are deaf, or just stupid…get the fuck away from my house!”

“What have you done to him now?” the boy demanded, his fists shaking at his sides, his voice rising quickly.  I looked at his chest, puffing upwards with anger, and I wanted to laugh.  I smiled instead.  “They say he’s not coming back to school. What have you done to him now?”

I had an idea then.  A bit of crazy one, but fuck it.  I pulled my neck in, took a breath and scanned the street beyond my door, for sound and movement.  Satisfied that we were alone, I reached out suddenly and took the Anderson boy by surprise, gripping him by the lapels of his school blazer and wrenching him right through the front door.  There was this amazing, this satisfying expression of utter horror upon his face, and I imagined for a moment what he was feeling, being dragged in like that, knowing what he knew, fearing whatever he feared…He was too shocked, too stunned by my sudden actions to make a single sound, or noise.  The only noise that came from him was the grunt he emitted when I slammed his body back into the hallway wall.  I kicked the door shut and held him in place, with my nose pressed right into his.  Right away, I felt better already.  The irritation and anger was all gone, replaced only by the urges that pulsed behind my eyes.

His eyes were dark and wild, at once terrified and full of outrage.  His mouth hung open, soundless and afraid.  “You know,” I said to him, pinning his head to the wall by pressing my forehead into his.  “I think I’ve just about run out of patience with you and your interfering brother.  Sticking your nose in where it’s not wanted.  I thought I warned you both before…I thought your brother said he had learnt his lesson?  Maybe it’s time I taught him another one eh?  Is that what you want you miserable little fuck up?” His body squirmed under my touch, but there was fire in those eyes, so I narrowed my own.  “You want to know where Danny is eh?” I asked him softly, purring my words into his slack mouth.  He moved his head in a nod.  I crushed his head with mine.  “He’s upstairs in his room.  In a world of pain.  Which, by the way, he fucking asked for like he always does…You can go and see him if you want, you can fucking join him if you want, if you want to find out how much you can take…You fancy that fuck-up?  You want that?  I’ll take you up there right now if you want.  I’ll take you apart.  I’ll break every bone in your body if you like.  And then, while you’re thinking about that, I’ll get on the phone and let the cops know there’s still stuff to be sniffed out in your house….Because there is you know…Not anywhere you’ll ever be able to find it mind.  But sniffer dogs, you know?  Fuck me, they’re good at their job! They’ll find what’s still there, and what’ll happen to the big boy then eh?  Back to prison where he belongs?  And how about you?”  I moved my head back just enough to stare deep into his eyes.  I laughed softly, remembering what Jack had said about him once.  Eyes like pools of melted chocolate.  Fucks sake man, I had said to him.  Write him a fucking valentines card why don’t you?  I shrugged my shoulders at him and gave him a pitying look. “Oh dear me, what will happen to you then eh?  No parents about.  No older brother.  Be carted off to care in a fucking shot, and then we’d see what a tough guy you really are eh?” I sneered laughter, opened the door and hauled him roughly towards it.  “Now of you go boy, off you go to school, go and think about that for a while.  Go and think about how quickly I can fuck up your life with one phone call.”  I shoved him through the open door and he sprawled down onto his knees. “Have a nice day!” I called, and slammed the door.  I picked the phone up and stalked into the lounge with it.  I twitched the curtain and watched the little shit picking himself up from the front lawn.  He looked confused.  He looked mad but scared, and he looked like he didn’t have a fucking clue what to do.  Little boys, I thought then, punching in a number, little boys playing games they won’t win.

The phone picked up.  “Mate?”

“Morning Jack.  Get this.  You’re going to like this.  I just had an early morning visit from that little Anderson shit you’re such a fan of.”

Jack made a noise at the back of his throat that was either a snort of laughter or a choke of embarrassment. “Really?” he asked. “Must have a death wish.”

“Yeah seems like it.  Him and his interfering brother.  Don’t trust either of them.  We need to put the shits up them again mate.  Seriously.  Can I leave it with you?”

He laughed. “I’ll put my thinking cap on then Lee.”

“Good.” I hung up the phone and glared back out of the window.  I could see the dark haired boy walking away quickly, shifting his school bag to the other shoulder.  He marched around the corner and I chuckled.  I stood there for a while, keeping an eye on the street.  I had totally forgotten about my newspaper and my breakfast.  I slipped into a kind of trance, I suppose, my hands held slackly in the pockets of my jeans, my eyes fixed on the world outside.  I found myself thinking about Jack, contemplating the way he asked how high when I told him to jump.  It was a never ending and stable thing, his loyalty to me.  He was a strange man, and ultimately harmless, no bother to anyone.  But it didn’t pay to forget what he really was underneath.  We are all animals beneath the surface; we layer up with clothes and jobs and respectability but underneath it all, an animal lurks.  Jack Freeman was nothing more than a dog on a lead, and it was me who held the other end of that lead.  He presented an image to the world, one that everyone fell for, and one that was mostly the truth.  He was a shabby, shambling figure of a man.  His hair needed a cut and he rarely washed it.  His clothes reeked of stale sweat, whiskey and last nights curry.  When people complained that time went too fast, that life was too short, Jack would disagree with them.  He didn’t see it that way.  He saw time as an awkward lumbering beast that always moved too slowly.  Life, he said, it ambled on blindly, promising nothing and meaning even less.

I turned slowly from the window and walked into the hallway.  Jack said that days all jumbled into one.  He never knew what day, or time it was, and he cared little.  He lived a simple life and always had done.  For a long time now, he had followed my rules and adhered to my expectations.  I trusted him.  I had saved his scraggy arse on more than one occasion, and he remembered this as well as I did.  I knew everything there was to know about the man.  I knew what lay beneath his human skin, I knew about each and every dirty layer that piled upon his soul, and believe me, if you peeled them back, each one would reveal something more distasteful than the last.  He had gotten away with a lot of bad shit over the years, and he had me to thank, and he knew that, so he ambled on, never grumbling, never questioning.

I heard the whine in his voice at times though, of course I did.  I heard the whine of a spoilt child who has been told he is not allowed to touch the cake, let alone taste it.  His eyes sometimes, they were like something out of a cartoon; bulging and popping from the sunken, hollowed out sockets.  I watched him shifting and fidgeting in his sagging grey chair, and it amused me.  “It’s good for you,” I told him once when we were alone.  He had groaned and rubbed his greasy head into both curled palms.  I had merely laughed at him.  “Exercising control.  It’s good for all of us.  You don’t want to be an addict, do you Jack?  Someone with no self-control?  Like all the pathetic little fuckers who call you up begging for their next hit.  They’d do anything, wouldn’t they Jack?  Weak.  It’s good for you to practice control.”

He was mostly happy, I reasoned.  He liked his flat and he liked his work, and he liked coming to the club, and he was never one to feel guilt when he saw the lives he touched run to ruin.  People will always need something, he liked to say.  People will always need something, be it booze, or drugs, or sex, or whatever.  They all have their needs.  All we do is supply, all we do is fulfil their needs.  He didn’t force anyone, did he?  Oh no, not good old Jack.  You could hardly even call the old git a pusher, a dealer.  He sat on his backside most days, his fat spreading out onto the sofa that held his imprint whenever he hauled his ageing arse out of it.  He had people like Lawler, and he had a stream of young visitors, people who needed something.  They didn’t have to take it, did they?  If they didn’t get it off him, then they would just get it somewhere else, which was true.  I knew that it amused him most of the time.  You could see it in his eyes.  But I also knew that it was getting harder for him; that some parts were becoming nothing less than fucking torture.  And yet still, I continued to dangle the bright orange carrot in front of his pale greedy eyes.

But he had to be grateful didn’t he?  I started to climb the stairs, one at a time, slowly sweeping my hand up the wall as I went.  I passed the photos Kay kept nailed up. Old photos of John and Danny as children.  First day at school.  Missing teeth.  Cheeky smiles. They made me wince.  Sometimes I had the strongest urge to knock them all down and send them shattering down to the hallway. That’s gone, I wanted to say, that was the past!  Jack was drinking more, I knew that.  Drink was only one of his weaknesses.  It walked hand in hand with the other one.  Sometimes I presented the rules to him when I sensed him wavering, when I inhaled his mewling self-pity.  I arrived on the landing and pulled my hands out of my pockets.  It was simple, I had told him.  Let him come to your flat, let any of them come.  Let them get high and let them drink, and let them do whatever the fuck they want to do, let them trust you, let him become your friend, shelter him, provide comfort, a safe place to go, but do not go anywhere near him.  Do not touch him.  You’re enjoying it, he told me miserably one night, his eyes drawn across the darkened room to the huddle that snored softly under a heap of his blankets.  I had wanted to laugh out loud and slap his saggy wrinkled cheek.  Rules are rules, I told him, and the rules are simple, and if you break the rules my friend, I’ll kick you back out on the shit heap and that will be the end of that.

I stood outside the boys room and strained my ears.  The house was still, and silent, rocked only by the snores of two, semi-conscious people.  I walked into the bathroom, found a flannel and ran it under the cold water.  Jack was relying more and more on the whiskey.  It was him and his good old friend Jack D. They walked this life hand in hand, and one was not the same without the other.  He lived a simple life and he liked the small things.  Countdown and Ready Steady Cook, Emmerdale and The Bill.  Spicy meat feast pizzas, and the first warm slosh of a Jack Daniels and coke.  Dirty magazines and filthy books.  Being alone.  He had always been alone.  People like Jack have to be.  They have to keep a distance, you see, surround themselves in a muggy kind of fog, a barrier between them and everyone else.  Normal people would be repelled, you see, normal people would turn and run.  I took the wet flannel and went back to the boys door, and turned the handle.

You still can’t control that fucking boy.  Jack’s words one night.  My fathers words every time I spoke to him on the phone.  Words, followed by amused laughter.  They were laughing at me.  Jack knew it, and I knew it.  You’re obsessed, he told me, you’re either in a bad mood or a good mood, and the reason is always the same.  It was twisting up inside of me.  It was making me restless all of the time.  I walked into the room and breathed him in.  It was dark, but a mop of blonde hair showed at the top of the duvet, the rest of him hidden from view.  Jack didn’t like it when I lost my temper with the boy.  He never said a word, but he flinched and winced and looked the other way.  You’ll kill him one day, he tried to tell me afterwards; we’ll end up driving his body all the way out to the fucking woods to bury him.  Maybe he was starting to think they were on the same side?  Jack, and the boy.  Maybe he was beginning to see me as the problem, as the common enemy?  It’s not fair, he said to me once, what you do to him is not fair.  But I’ll win, I replied and to this he looked sad, and gazed down at his knees and he said no more after that.  I lifted the duvet slowly away from him.  I had slapped his face at some point last night and he had been bleeding all over his pillow.  I grimaced.  I looked down at his pale face, eyes closed but twitching, and I thought about all the things he did not know about Jack Freeman.

Then I woke him up by rubbing his face with the wet flannel. His eyes shot open, and he spluttered and coughed and tried to pull away, but I held him fast and scrubbed all the blood from his face.  Then I yanked the pillow free from his head, ripped off the cover and slung it to the floor behind me. I knelt down next to him and pushed his hair back away from his eyes.  I tried to determine what I could see in them.  Caution, or something more than that?  Fear…fear….maybe, but it wasn’t enough.  It was less than what it had been…like it was fading, like his emotions were becoming numb to everything. I felt a swell of frustration rising inside me.  I cocked my head to one side. “I’ll just tell you what I told your little pal Michael just now,” I said to him, and then I saw it, oh yes, then I saw the fear! Flashed through his eyes like fucking lightning, it did! I smiled at him.  “Yeah that’s right, I just had a little visit from him.  Very nice.  Gave him a few things to think about though.  I think he’s gone home to look for the rest of the drugs I had hidden in his house.  Not the kind of place anyone would think to look of course, but you know those sniffer dogs they have these days? Wow, they’re amazing!”  I chuckled warmly while he stared on.  “Don’t let that angry look get in your eyes,” I warned him then, holding up a finger.  “Try not to.  Try not to let it come. I don’t want to see it, because if I see it, I will have to make a phone call to the cops.  Send them round to the Andersons house, you know?  See what they find.  One phone call, you see, just one phone call and it’s all over.” I nodded at him and got to my feet. I was smiling as I considered his small body and all the times I had beaten it.  It still wasn’t broken, and neither was he.  I would go after his friends if I had to, if that was the way to get through to him, then so be it.  I smiled down at him and thought about the lead around Jack’s neck.  “You have no idea,” I told him softly. “You have no idea how much worse I can make things, with just a click of my fingers.  No idea.”

He did a strange thing.  An unexpected thing.  He sat up slowly, eyes closing briefly against the pain in his back.  He moved back towards the wall, brought up his knees and folded his arms on top of them.   “I’m sorry,” he said then, and his voice was small, barely audible, but I heard it, I wouldn’t have missed it.  Sorry.  I frowned at him and I wanted to laugh out loud.

“You what?”

He coughed into his hand.  “I said I’m sorry.”

“And what are you saying sorry for, Danny?”

“Everything,” he replied with a limp shrug. “Walking out of school.  All of that.”

I wasn’t sure I believed in him, but it was still nice to hear it.  I wanted to believe him of course, and that was the thing that frustrated me the most.  How I couldn’t get it through to him.  How he only ever saw me as the enemy.  I wondered then if he had an ulterior motive.  Something he wanted.  “And where does that leave us?” I asked him.  He looked up at me.  His eyes, deep blue and deadened.  They fixed on mine.

“Whatever you want.”

“You’ll keep away from those boys.”

“I do anyway.  I don’t go near anyone.”

“You won’t give your mother anything else to fret about.”

“Course not,” he whispered.  I moved towards him.  I found the edge of the bed in the dull room and sat down on it.  He stiffened as I reached out to him, brushing his hair back again.  I searched his eyes, hunting him down.  “I’m sorry,” he said again, the words hushed and private. “I won’t make you angry anymore Lee.  I really won’t.”

“Yeah, well we’ll see.”  I took his face gently in my hand and turned it to mine.  I wanted him to be telling the truth.  I wanted him to be a good boy.  All of the time.  And not just because he wanted something, and not just because he was afraid of me.  I wanted him to want to be good, to want to please me, just as I had wanted to please my father.  “But I’m telling you now Danny, I am promising you, that this is the last chance I give you.  The very, very last chance.  Next time I lose it with you, next time you push me that far, I’ll send the sniffer dogs round to their house, fuck their lives up forever, I will drag your mother in front of you and beat her to within an inch of her life, and then me and you will take a special ride somewhere.  Just me and you.  And then it will be over Danny. I swear to god.  I fucking promise you.  It will all be over.”

66

 

July 1995

“We’re like rats in a cage,” Michael told me nervously when he came into The Record Shop.  He was as jittery as fuck.  Scratching at his bare wrists and looking over his shoulder, and peering constantly through the dusty windows.  I felt his constant fear, and it was a guilt that weighed me down.  Despite me keeping my distance, and keeping my promise to Howard, Michael and Anthony had been targeted for months.  It was stupid stuff mostly.  Broken windows in the middle of the night.  Phone calls from people who would not speak.  Unknown cars with blacked out windows that rolled slowly behind them if they walked the streets.  They were too scared to breathe, let alone skin up.  Anthony had paid for new locks on all the doors and windows and they were religious about checking them and double checking them.  It made me sad.  I knew what it was, and there was little I could do.  Howard and his minions, turning the screws, keeping them scared, holed up and helpless.  One wrong move and you’re slaughtered.  Bad luck.  They were in line too, just like me.  I couldn’t tell them what I longed to tell them.  That I had a plan, building slowly and surely at the back of my head, amidst the fog and the rubble and the despair.

Michael still came to the flat sometimes, and Jack always promised not to tell Howard.  He kept to his word, as far as I knew.  He told me that I was looking too small for my age; that maybe things cannot grow properly, without love and care.  He was drunk most of the time; a shadow hanging over him.  Sometimes, very late at night, he would sniffle tears in the darkness.  I still wanted desperately to believe that he was on my side.  Somehow.  Michael did not trust him at all.  He came to the flat only to make contact with me.  We would sit side by side on one of the sofas, our arms touching, our eyes restless.  If Jack was not there, Michael would hold my attention and talk fast. “Anthony’s onto it,” he would tell me. “You have to keep going.  Don’t do anything stupid.  Don’t annoy Howard or raise his suspicions. Just keep your head down.  Honestly Danny, honestly, honestly he’s onto it. He’s gonna’ help you, I promise.”

School was over.  The exams had been and gone.  I had gone in for some of them, much to everyone’s surprise.  I sat the English exams and struggled through the maths and the science.  That was it.  That was all I had, and it wasn’t much.  The looks on their faces though; that had made it worth it!  I’d walked in, head held high, eyes fixed ahead, pencils clutched in one hand.  Michael had shaken his head and covered his mouth to laugh behind it.  Jake and Billy had just stared and stared.  Better than that, I finished first in the English exams.  They were a piece of piss.  I handed them in, walked out, and felt for one fleeting moment as if I were as free as a bird.  It tickled me no end, surprising them all like that, as if I had given them a glimpse of my true master plan, of the real me that lay hidden under my wrecked and strange existence.

My friendship with Michael was continued in snatched moments, at the shop, at the flat, and at Chaos.  Leaping up and down on the dance floor, screaming along to the music, alive.  Just alive.  You had to remind yourself of it sometimes.  He loved the fact Terry had given me a proper job in the record shop.  He loved to tell me how insanely pissed off and jealous Billy and Jake were.  “You’re down, but not out!” he liked to tell me, with a ridiculous grin upon his face.  I supposed he was right.

I was surviving day by day, with my eyes fixed ahead, with my plans and my dreams rolling along inside my head to keep me company.  During that time I was exactly what Howard wanted me to be.  In his presence, I was a boy beaten and pulped into shape, and into place.  I was all, yes sir, no sir.  I kept my eyes dull and empty.  I pushed feelings down, pushed emotions away, kept myself numb and obedient and safe. He loved it, and he revelled in it, but let me tell you now, he sure as hell didn’t believe in it.  He didn’t believe in it any more than I did.  But I had to string it out, I had to bide my time, keep the façade up, keep the fire out of my eyes.

The day that Michael came skidding into the shop with a wild panic in his eyes, was a day like any other day.  The shop was sweltering, so we kept the door propped open and instead of tea, Terry and I took turns making each other milkshakes.  I remember I had put Radiohead on the record player, even though it always made Terry groan.  “At least put something joyous on,” he would complain.  “At least some uplifting lyrics that will give us all hope!” You can’t help how you feel though.  And on that day, I was feeling down, and I was feeling like there was a constant top layer of dirt upon my skin, and I was feeling like I wanted to run into the ocean to scrub myself clean but that if I did, it would never work, or it would never last.  I was putting records away in the soul section, nodding along to the music, wanting to sing along but not owning the energy to hold my head up properly let alone open my mouth and speak.

Can’t get the stink out, it’s been hanging round for days…comes like a comet, suckered you but not your friends..One day he’ll get to you and teach you how to be a holy cow…You do it to yourself, you do…and that’s what really hurts…

            “Danny!”  It was Michael, bursting breathlessly through the open door, sweat pooling on his wrinkled forehead, his hair whipped back over his head as if he had been riding his bike very fast.  He ignored the look of alarm on Terry’s face and gripped me by the arm. “When do you finish?  I need to speak to you!”

I pulled my arm free and glanced at the clock on the wall.  “Ten minutes.”  I watched his shoulders drop in relief.  He put one hand out and rested it against the wall, catching his breath.

“Good. You’re coming with me.  I just had the weirdest phone call ever from Anthony, and he told me to come and get you.”

I considered his statement for a moment, and then I scratched my head and yawned. I was tired.  I wanted to sleep, and all of my stuff was at Jack’s flat.  “I dunno,” I told him. “I kind of had something else to do Mike.”

“No you can’t,” he hissed at me then, his eyes shooting from mine to Terry’s, and then back again. “Seriously Danny. He just called me at home from the pub. He sounded really upset!  He scared me.  He said he has something to tell us about Freeman, and we have to go back to mine and wait for him to finish work.”

Now I was really confused.  I felt weary, my shoulders hanging, my head too big and heavy for my body.  I didn’t want to tell him what my plan had been before he came rushing in, because it was shameful really, because everything about my life had become shameful.  I’d been thinking about it all day though; doing a few lines of coke with Jack and seeing if it felt as amazing as last time.  Now I had this wide-eyed Michael all frantic before me, I could see that it wasn’t going to happen. “Okay,” I told him, not seeing that I had any other choice.  “I’ll come with you to see Anthony, but I have to go to the flat first to get my stuff.”

“Oh god,” Michael moaned, looking up at the ceiling.  I shook my head at him, not understanding.  He rubbed at his eyes and nodded back at me.  “Okay, okay if you really have to, but the thing is Danny, Anthony told me not to go anywhere near Jack.  I mean, he practically begged me.”

“He won’t even be there,” I lied to him. “So chill out.  We’ll be really quick.”

Michael smoked a cigarette outside while I finished up and collected my cash from Terry.  Outside the shop, Michael grabbed his bike and started to push it along the pavement, and I fell into step beside him.  I narrowed my eyes at him. “What is wrong with you?” I asked. “You look like you’re gonna’ shit yourself!”

“’Cause I am,” he admitted, sucking the last few drags from his cigarette before chucking the butt over his shoulder.  “Anthony just phoned me at home and told me to stay the fuck away from Jack Freeman, and now we’re on the way to his bloody flat!  If I don’t shit myself I know I’m gonna’ bloody piss myself!”

“What do you think it is Mike?  Why does he want us to keep away from him?”

“I don’t know, that’s the point!  He couldn’t say over the phone.  He’d just seen Jaime though.  You know he’s been getting him to spy and that, find stuff out?”

I didn’t know, so I shook my head, baffled and astounded. “Why?”

“I dunno. They’re mates.  They meet up.  I dunno Danny, but the point is, he was very fucking specific just now.  Do not go to the flat, he said.” Michael blew his breath out slowly and looked up, shaking his hair from his face as the old council flats loomed up ahead of us, on the other side of the railway tracks.  We crossed the bridge in solemn silence, keeping our eyes ahead. “I feel like a total fucking prick coming here after what he just said,” Michael muttered, the nearer we got.  I offered him a brief and nervy smile.

“I’ll be like two seconds.  I’ll just grab my stuff and we’ll go.”

“Oh man,” Michael moaned, wiping his mouth on the back of his hand. “What do you think it is?  What do you think Anthony’s worried about?”

“I don’t know.”

“Oh Jesus.”

“Are you scared?” I asked him, looking his way.  He nodded at me instantly.

“Are you?”

I tucked my hair behind my ears and grimaced. “I’m always fucking scared.”

When we reached his block, the main door was propped open with a brick.  I stepped into the dimly lit hallway while Michael leaned his bike against the wall outside. “It might get nicked,” I warned him. He nodded in silent reply, evidently too nervous to speak.  Jack’s flat was on the second floor.  We climbed the stairs briskly, keeping close to the mustard coloured wall, keeping silent.  Michael seemed to grow increasingly agitated the nearer we got to the flat.  As we trailed along the corridor towards Jacks door, he whispered to me; “have you got your knife on you?” I looked at him, rolling my eyes.

“What are you gonna’ need a knife for Mike? He’s a fat fucking slug, he’s not gonna’ do anything.”  We reached the door so I fished my key out of my back pocket.

“That’s obviously not what Anthony thinks,” Michael reminded me miserably, his eyes shooting around nervously as I unlocked and opened the door.  At once, the smell of curry hit our nostrils, and we could hear the TV chattering.  My stomach took a massive nose dive and I imagine Michael’s did as well.  He looked like he was going to be sick, and I wondered for a moment what had happened to the boy I used to know, the tough talking Michael Anderson, the boy who was not afraid of anything.  I wondered what had happened to both of us.  We were like mice, cautious and scuttling as we entered the flat, side by side, resisting every temptation to grab eachothers arms.  Michael pulled at the back of my t-shirt as I went ahead of him. “Just get your stuff quick and go,” he hissed.

We emerged from the hallway and stepped into the lounge.  Jack was right there, sprawled like a bearded whale on his favourite leather sofa, his jaws moving around and around, a lump of bright orange curry poised on the end of a fork close to his mouth.  He hiccupped and burped and waved the greasy fork at us. “Hello boys,” he said.  We ignored him.  Michael stayed put, and I crossed the room quickly, snatching up one of my jumpers from the back of the tatty grey sofa and slinging it under one arm.  I picked up my tin from one of the coffee tables and stuffed it into a back pocket.  Then I walked behind the sofa and started to pile my arms up with records and cassettes.  “What’s up, you not staying?” Jack questioned, talking through his mouthful of food.  I looked at Michael and he nodded at me. “Lost your tongue?” Jack went on, sounding nervous. “Gone all shy on me?  Thought we had plans kiddo?  You know?  Your mate is welcome too, you know, you always know that.”

“Gotta’ go,” I told him, heading back to Michael, and the door.

“Why you taking all that with you?”

“It’s mine.”

“Oh alright, alright then.  Off you go.  Back later then are you?”

“Maybe,” I said, just to keep him happy. “See you later.”

We left the lounge and hurried back to the front door. “Don’t worry I’ll save you some!” he yelled after me.  “I know you won’t wanna’ miss out!”

I slammed the door behind me. “What’s he on about?” Michael asked, his eyes wide with fear.  I shrugged.

“Fuck knows. Come on.” We grabbed at each other in mounting uneasiness, and started to run.

We were sat in the kitchen, nibbling nervously at marmite toast, when Anthony came sighing through the front door.  We looked at each other, knowing the wait was over, knowing this was it, as he slung down his keys and kicked off his boots in the hallway.  We sat hunched over the table, and I pushed my half eaten toast away, unsure why it had suddenly begun to make me feel sick.  Anthony came into the kitchen, stopped, and just looked at us, and I swear to god, for one awful, terrible moment I was utterly convinced that he was going to cry.  He just stared at us, mostly at me, and he looked wretched and gutted, and I thought, who has died?  Has someone died?  That’s one of those faces, that’s a face like someone has died, or something really, really terrible has happened, and spikes of terror broke out across my skin, and I felt freezing cold.

Instead of crying, Anthony coughed, cleared his throat and ran a hand quickly back through his short, dark hair.  He looked troubled, and was frowning, and then it was like he was unable to meet our eyes properly, and the more we stared at him, waiting, the more he couldn’t look at us, until finally he turned and wrenched open the fridge.  “Okay then,” he said, turning back with beer in hand, and eyes to the floor.  He didn’t say anything though, he just kept us waiting even longer and started to pace back and forth with his beer.

“Come on then!” Michael snapped at him suddenly, his outburst making me jump so badly I knocked half of my cup of tea all over the table.  Michael swore and rubbed irritably at his eyes. “Come on then,” he pleaded. “Tell us what the hell’s going on.”

“Alright, alright, give me a chance, hang on, I got so much to explain. Shift up Mike.” Michael moved along the bench and Anthony slipped in beside him.  He held his beer in one hand and his head in the other.  He looked like he was in some kind of terrible pain, and my hands were growing slick and greasy with sweat.  “My head is killing me,” he complained. Michael thumped the table.

“Anthony!  For fucks sake!”

He looked up.  “Right, okay, I know, okay, give me a chance.  This isn’t easy you know.” He closed his eyes for a moment, and rubbed two fingers against the middle of his forehead. “I don’t even know if it’s definitely true, I mean, I’ve gone and scared you all, and me, and I’ve only really got Jaime’s word for it.”

“What’s Jaime got to do with it?” I asked in a small voice. “What’s been going on between you two?”

Anthony lowered his hand and looked at me with a sigh. “Well that’s the thing,” he said. “I mean, that’s why this is hard to explain.  Look, you know I said to you a while back that I was onto things?  To help you?”  I nodded yes.  He scratched his neck.  “Okay, well, that all started way back, when I came out of prison again, and bumped into Jaime. Mike told you we went to school together right?” I nodded again. “Yeah, well, anyway.  I started meeting up with him every now and then, just buying some grass off him to start with.  Started grilling him when I could get away with it, you know, about Howard and Freeman. Just finding out anything I could about them, but to be honest, he didn’t know much.  Not really.  Only that it is true Freeman used to be a cop.”

My eyes widened and Michael’s did too. “That’s true?” I asked.  My heart was beating thick and hard inside my chest.  I picked up my half cup of tea and sipped it. Anthony nodded at us.

“Well to begin with Jaime wasn’t totally sure, but he reckoned only a cop or a criminal would know the stuff Freeman knows.  He dug around a bit when he could, you see. To help me.  Because I asked him to.”

“Why the hell would he do that for you?” Michael demanded. “He works for them.”

“Hmm,” said Anthony, making a face that told us otherwise.  “He sort of works for me too.”

My jaw fell open.  “Whaaaat?”

Anthony laughed a little nervously. “This is the bit even Mike doesn’t know.  I’ve been paying him.  Jaime, I mean.  For a while now.  Well, from the start really.  I’ve been paying him to spy for me, to find stuff out, whatever.”

Michael held up a hand, shaking his head in bemusement. “Hang on, hang on, let me get this straight. You’ve been paying Jaime Lawler to dig dirt on Freeman and Howard?”

Anthony smiled slightly, shrugged and nodded.  “Basically, yes.  I wanted to know anything.  Anything he could find out, anything he heard, like if Freeman was a cop once, and how he knew Howard in the first place, and as it happens, Freeman really was a cop, a detective even, until about three or four years ago.”

“No shit?” breathed Michael, looking at me.  “That fat sack of shit, a cop? I never would have believed it.”

“How did Jaime get anything out of him?” I asked then, shifting forward slightly. “He never told me that.”

“Just questions,” Anthony shrugged. “Waiting ‘til he was drunk, that kind of thing.  But we needed more than that, we needed confirmation, so we came up with a plan.  Last night, Jaime came into The Ship and kicked off big time, reeling around the place, smashing stuff and starting on people until he got himself arrested.”

My mind was spinning.  I didn’t understand a thing.  “Why?” Michael asked, while I could only stare.

“To get arrested, on purpose,” Anthony went on very patiently. “Cost me a bit, I can tell you, but you should of seen him guys! Should’ve been an actor that lad.  You would’ve thought he was blind crazy drunk, but he hadn’t touched a drop.  Anyway, to cut the long story short, he ended up in a cell, and demanded to see Officer Heaton and no one else.”

“Why him?” I asked. Anthony sat back a little and drank some beer.

“They went to school together,” he told us, while our jaws dropped yet again.  He nodded at our shocked faces. “Same year.  Few older than me.  Heaton’s a good bloke.  He agreed to speak to Jaime to shut him up. He was causing mayhem in the cells. Anyway, Heaton agreed to speak to him and Jaime offered him a deal no copper worth his salt would ever refuse.”

What?” Michael demanded, his hands planted and splayed against the table top, his eyes bulging from his pale face.  I knew exactly how he felt.  I didn’t think I could cope with this much longer.  The suspense, and the building fear were killing me.  I wanted to get up and run out and never have to hear any of it.  Every time I looked into Anthony’s eyes I had the most awful feeling of dread, heavy and dragging in my belly, pulling me down slowly.

“He offered to give him the location of some big-time crack dealer over in Belfield Park, in return for Heaton running a quick background check on our pal Jack Freeman. So Heaton took him up on it of course.  Ran the check, gave him the information that came up, and Jaime gave him the number.  One less lowlife crack dealer operating in Belfield Park by the looks of it.”  Anthony grimaced again and rubbed his eyes with one hand.

“Dangerous for Jaime,” I whispered, my eyes on the table.  Anthony was silent for a moment or two, and then he sat forward.

“Okay, so anyway, this is where it gets interesting.  And when I say interesting, I really mean disturbing.” His eyes found mine and I really wanted him to stop it.  I wanted him to stop talking and I wanted him to stop looking at me, and I wanted him to stop looking so damn scared and anxious.  He rolled his shoulders back and rubbed vigorously at the back of his neck with one hand.  “You’re not gonna’ like this much,” he said, his voice gruff and small, and again, his eyes on me.  “But you need to know, so here goes.  Okay.  Well it’s true that Freeman and Howard have known each other for years.  And for a lot of that time Freeman was a cop, who made it all the way up to D.I. But then a few years back, he was pushed into early retirement because he was being investigated.  Someone made an accusation against him, and it was taken seriously enough for him to be suspended.  It didn’t get very far though, the investigation, before the witness backed out and changed his mind. The accusation was dropped and he pretty much got away with it.  But his career was over.  Then he turns up here.  Called over no doubt by Howard who was getting his knickers in a twist about me and my mates threatening him that time.  All falls into place when you think about it, eh?”  His voice had dried up to almost nothing.  He lifted his beer and guzzled about half of it, before banging it back onto the table.

There was a long, cold silence between all three of us then.  I think none of us wanted to be the first to speak, the first to ask the question that hung like ice in the air, strangling us all. My eyes travelled to meet Michaels, and he just looked confused and pale and sad, and then I looked at Anthony, and oh Jesus Christ, he was just staring right back at me in this awful, this terrible knowing way, like he knew I knew exactly what he was going to say, and I felt something slipping inside of me then, and this livid terror clawing up my throat.  It was my question to ask, so I asked it.  “What was he accused of?” Anthony swallowed and glanced down at the table.  He was rubbing his thumb nail back and forth against the cloth.

“He had a rent boy as an informer, you know what is?  You know what that means?”  Michael and I shrugged and nodded at the same time.  My mouth felt coated with something vile, something I wanted to retch up and spit out.  “This kid, he was fourteen, anyway, it was him that made the complaint, and it’s all on file, and Heaton told Jaime what came up on the check, so I guess we have to assume it’s all the truth…but anyway, he accused Freeman of molesting him, you know, attacking him, you know…” He trailed off, not wanting to speak the words, not wanting those words to fit inside his mouth and I knew what he meant and I knew what he felt, and I was just blinking in shock and horror, and the whole room was spinning like crazy around my head, all of it suddenly fuzzy and unreal.  I shook my head hard, trying to shake it all away and when I felt Anthony’s hand on my forearm, I wrenched my arm away, and I heard Michael saying, shittinghell, shittinghell!

“Danny?”

I opened my mouth to speak.  But I felt sick.  I was going to be sick.  I lunged away from the table and ran to the kitchen sink, where the marmite toast lurched up violently from my belly, sending splats of twisted brown and black gunge across the worktops.  It was followed by another lurch, and this time my tea flew up after it, splattering the draining board.  I gripped onto the edge of the sink with my hands.  I felt the whole world dancing  around me.  I wanted to get off.  I wanted to die.  I didn’t want to have to turn around and look at them, not ever, not ever.  I thought he was my friend. I was breathless and panting, and my stomach kept heaving and trying to breathe for me.

“Danny?”  I heard Anthony from behind me.  He sounded desperate and panicked. “Danny? Has anything ever happened…like that?”

I did not want to turn and face them.  I did not want to face myself.  I wanted to scratch my face off.  I wanted to scratch all of my skin off.  I wanted to scratch him off.  I thought about walking to the door and leaving.  I thought about finding a dark hole somewhere and shredding my skin off, layer by layer, until I found whatever was left of me hidden underneath.  Instead, I shook my head slowly from side to side and said. “No.”

Anthony breathed a sigh of relief, and I turned around to see his eyes focused firmly on Michael, who had turned as white as a sheet. “Anything Mike?  Anything weird?”

“No!  God no!” Michael reached for his cup of tea, his hand shaking visibly as it snaked across the table.

“Okay that’s good,” said Anthony, but then his eyes were back on me.  It was the way he looked at me that did it.  My knees felt like jelly and I wanted to sink to the floor, but somehow I had to keep it together.  Somehow, I thought, some fucking how there has to be some hope somewhere.  So I sat back down and kept looking at him.  My eyes filled with frightened tears, and so did his.

“Few times,” I mumbled, my lips trembling.  I wiped my eyes with my hands. “Few times he sat next to me at night.  He stroked my hair and stuff.  I thought I was dreaming.” I nodded, remembering how I would wake in the morning with fuzzy memories in my mind, memories that I ignored, shoved away, recoiled from…Sometimes he would just be sat there.  Just staring at me. Looking like he was going to cry.  I dragged a hand across my eyes again.

“What else?” Anthony urged me.

“He was just staring at me,” I said. “I just thought I was dreaming.  I had bad dreams all the time…I thought I was dreaming.”

“Anything else?” Anthony asked, his voice tight, his face taut and still.  I shook my head miserably, but at the back of my mind, I was crawling up the walls and trembling with fear and disgust and confusion.  I pressed my face into the palms of my hands and just held it there, just rubbing and rubbing at my eyes and my head, trying to make it all just go away.  I shook my head.

“Fucking dirty son-of-a-bitch!” Michael burst out suddenly, hissing through his teeth, as he rose abruptly from the table, with his hands ploughing through his unruly black hair.  He was shaking his head at us.

“That’s all though?” Anthony turned his attention back to me.  I swallowed and rubbed at my arms.  I was trying like hell to pull myself back together, to not disintegrate in front of them.  I lowered my head back into my waiting hands.

“Yeah, that’s all,” I told him.

“It’s okay,” Anthony was telling me urgently. “It’s okay because we know now, so that’s fucking it right?  You guys never go near the slimy pervert ever again, right?  And I’m gonna’ find a way to fuck him up, you can believe that.  Both of them.”

“You think Howard knows all this?” asked Michael, standing close to the back door with his arms folded across his chest.  He blew his hair up and out of his glaring dark eyes. “I bet he does, fucking evil cunt bastard!  Both of them Anthony!  I knew it, I fucking knew there was something dodgy about that guy didn’t I Danny?  Filthy shitting pervert!”  He shuddered and shook his head and his lips were all curled back in revulsion.  He was looking at me, and I wanted to shrink away in shame, remembering the countless times he had told me how uncomfortable Jack made him, and all the times I had ignored him and encouraged him to come to the flat.  “I said, didn’t I? Why the hell would Howard’s friend let us go to his flat and drink and stuff?  Why would he?  I knew there was something dodgy going on, I knew it! Oh fuckinghell, this is horrible!” He unfolded his arms and covered his mouth with one hand, just shaking his head from side to side.

Anthony took control of things.  He picked up a pack of cigarettes and passed them out to us, lighting each one in turn.  “You’re right,” he nodded at his brother. “This is all to do with Howard. Right from the very start.”  His eyes met mine, and I could only stare back at him, trapped within a grim and frightened silence.  I heard the truth of it all come crashing in on me, and the truth was deafening.  My mind wanted to buckle under the pressure.  I felt like my heart and soul were being wrung out slowly.  “He brought the guy here,” Anthony said to us.  “We know that.  Called him up and got him here because I threw my weight around at that party.  Calls in his old perverted buddy.  Sets him up in his old flat.  Gets him dealing with the likes of Lawler, and letting you kids use the flat to score and get drunk.” Anthony was nodding as he puffed nervously away on his cigarette, his eyes on me.  “Jesus,” he said, with a brief smile. “I thought I was scared of that guy when he got me sent down again, but I think I’m even more scared of him now.” He shook his head, and in between drags his teeth were nibbling restlessly at his lip.  I had never seen him look like that before; like he was shitting himself.  “This is heavy, serious shit.  I didn’t really have a clue. I’m guessing you did though, hey?”

I glanced down at my hands, clasped together on the table to stop them shaking.  About a million memories of pain and fear rushed through my mind and all I could do was nod silently, and think, you’re right Anthony, you don’t have a clue, you really don’t…

“What now?” Michael croaked then, from the back door where he stood huddled against it. Anthony shrugged at him.

“I don’t know yet.”

“I’ve got a plan,” I said then, lifting my eyes to meet theirs.  I breathed in, wondering if it were possible to inhale their courage and their strength.  “I’m sixteen next month.  Terry can hire me properly.  That’s one thing.  The other thing is I can leave home without the cops bothering to look for me.  So I lay low until then.  Carry on as normal and pretend I don’t know all this. We find a place to live.  We don’t tell anyone.  We go.  All three of us.  They won’t know anything about it. We find a place together.” I looked from Michael, to Anthony, licking my lips as they took it in.  I could hardly stand to look at them, hoping as much as I was.  Hope was such a painful thing, I remembered then.  God, it hurt.  Michael looked at his brother, who lowered his cigarette and stared at me wonderingly.

“Are you serious?”

“It’s been my plan for ages,” I shrugged at them. “I’ve even got money saved up.  Been buying way less music.” I smiled a little. “Anyway, Terry will increase my hours when I’m sixteen, so I’ll have to keep my job there, but we’ll move somewhere else, and they won’t know, we’ll just go.  We can afford a place if it’s all three of us.”

Anthony was smiling now.  “So where are you thinking?” he asked me.

“Belfield Park,” I said, smiling back. “So we’re close to Chaos.” I watched the smile spreading up Anthony’s face, lighting up his eyes, taking over his face.  Michael came forward, looking at me as if he did not understand me. “Plenty of bed-sits and flats,” I explained. “Cheap as chips.  We can all bus into work.  If they find us, or bother us, we’ll go further.”

“Anthony?” Michael arrived at his brothers side and nudged him. “What d’you reckon?  You’re always saying we can’t afford this place now mum’s gone.  And I just got that Saturday job in McDonalds, that’ll help, right?”

Anthony stared at him before laughing out loud.  “You boys don’t need to convince me for fucks sake!” He stubbed out his cigarette, reached across the table and ruffled up my hair.  “Jesus fucking Christ mate, you’ve got more balls than anyone I’ve ever met!  Come on, I’m serious, Mike? Grab the paper!  There’s places to rent in the back of it. We need to start looking now!”

Michael dashed out of the kitchen, excitement lighting up his face, while Anthony just looked at me, shaking his head and clapping his hands, and we just grinned at each other helplessly.  I felt something stirring softly inside of me then.  A nervous and heady kind of excitement that made me feel a little woozy, a little foggy in the mind.  Anthony’s eyes burned back into mine, unflinching. “This is it,” he told me then. “Listen to me, I promise you, this is it. It’s all gonna’ be okay now.”  I wanted to believe him.  God, I wanted to believe him so fucking much.

The Boy With…Chapter 64

64

 

            I stayed as invisible as I could for the rest of the school term.  I was rarely seen anywhere, and I liked it that way.  It was safer for everyone.  I felt I had well and truly burned my bridges with Lucy, and on the rare occasions that I did make it into school, I ducked my head and looked the other way if I saw her coming.  “You’re being an idiot,” Michael told me angrily whenever I was around him long enough to listen to him speak.  “She just wants to talk to you! Why are you pushing us all away?”

“She’s better off without me,” I replied coldly, and walked away from him.  The only thing that kept me going, the only glint of light on the horizon was going to Chaos on a Friday night.  If music was my religion, then Chaos became my church.  I went every week without fail.  I went with the others, and I went on my own, it didn’t matter to me either way.  I went high and I went straight.  As long as I went, as long as I made it to Friday, then there was some joy and some pleasure, and the adrenalin from a happiness that eluded me the rest of the time.  I felt like a different person when I was on the dance floor, or when I was sat in the corner, just listening to the music thumping through the walls and up from the floorboards.  I felt the music beating in my veins and I remembered that I was alive, and that this was a life.  Friday was my day, my only day.  I would meet with Jaime first, if I had the money.  Sometimes he would come to Jack’s flat, sometimes he would meet me in the alley behind The Record Shop.  I never offered speed or anything else to Michael again, and he never asked me for any.

Anthony strolled into the record shop one day, wearing what looked like chefs whites under his big winter coat.  I felt the childish urge to laugh at him, and right away, he was smiling at me, with this mischievous sparkle in his dark eyes.  We looked at each other and it was like we both wanted to smile and laugh, though I had no idea why.  He gestured to himself and did a little bow. “What d’you think of the threads? Pretty cool huh?”  I just nodded and grinned, and he came up to me and patted my shoulder.  For some reason the gesture, and the weight of his hand on me, made me want to cry.

“Jaime said you had a job,” I said instead.

“Oh yes.  Working man of the house I am these days mate.  Mum’s done a runner, it would seem.  I am the proud father of a sixteen year old boy!”

We both laughed, and he patted my shoulder once more and then took his hand away and stuffed it into the pocket of his coat.  “I’m sorry Danny,” he said then, and I could see it, the awful regret behind his eyes.  I shook my head at him. “No really,” he insisted. “I didn’t mean what I said to you that day.  I would never do that, you know that right?  We’re mates.  More than mates. You’re family. Yeah?”  He was staring right into my eyes, millions of unsaid things passing easily between us, and so I smiled at him and nodded, and watched the relief fill his face as his shoulders sagged with it.  “I mean it,” he told me. “You’re family.”

“Hey I deserved it,” I told him. “I’m sorry too, yeah? I wouldn’t, you know, ever do that again.  I haven’t.”

“I know that stupid,” he grinned and winked at me. “But hey, I am working on things, just so you know. To help you out, I mean.  I haven’t forgotten.  It’s just taking longer than I thought that’s all.”  I nodded and waited for him to say more, but he didn’t, so I had to assume that he would explain all to me when he needed to. “You’re alright though?” he asked me. “You’re doing okay?”

“I’m okay,” I told him, and he looked relieved.

I worried about it afterwards though.  I worried about what he was working on.  What did that mean?  What was going on between him and Jaime?  Did Anthony trust Jaime?  Was that a good idea, or an incredibly dangerous one?  Since as far as Howard knew, I had nothing whatsoever to with Mike or his brother, he had left them both alone.  But how long would it stay like that?  If Howard got a sniff of anything, if he even got an inkling that people were up to something behind his back….It didn’t bear thinking about.  What would happen to Michael if Anthony was sent back to prison?  They had no idea where their mother was.  The thought sent a shiver down my spine.  So when I saw them coming, I did my best to hide, and avoid them.  And when they showed up at Chaos, it was fine, because it was our world, and we were safe from view, and we were all united and full of hope and life, but then when it was over, I would go home alone.

Things were steady between Howard and I while my mother was away.  I sensed his calmness, his sense of control over me restored by the electric cable lashing.  He had me right back where he wanted me, and he knew it and he fucking loved it.  It gave him a smug fat look upon his dour face, and it made him relaxed, and it made him laugh.  He made me go about with him, as if I were his little pet.  In the company of other people, he would sling a fatherly arm around my shoulders, and tell them how I had got myself a job in the record shop.  He liked to keep up these false pretences and it made me wonder what his motives were underneath.  Did he hate me or love me?  Did he loathe me, or did he want me as his son?  There were times he appeared so reasonable.  Times he would join Jack and I in the flat, laughing at the TV, engaging in conversations, trying to coax me out of myself, trying to let me know how far we had come.  And then there were times he would grind his lit fags into my skin just for the hell of it, just because it made him feel good, and there were times he would stare deep into my eyes and say; “how much pain can you take eh? Tough little fucker.  How much can you take?”

“This is all wrong,” I would tell him.  But he didn’t understand.  I didn’t know what he understood, or what motivated him, and I didn’t think I ever would.  There were times I lay awake for hours dreaming up intricate ways to murder him, and there were times I just wanted him to be nice to me. Things changed again as soon as my mother returned from Leeds.  Figure that out.  He gets his precious Barbie doll wife back and goes all aggressive again.  He went back to complaining about me quitting the club to work in the fat mans shop instead.  He seemed constantly on edge, and he seemed to direct it all at my mother, as if my failings were all her fault.  He was quick to temper, and his expectations grew increasingly unrealistic.  Was he trying to push her away?  Would she finally get to see the real him, the monster he had kept under wraps for her for so very lon? Or did she already know?  I would lie on my bed, staring at the cracks in the ceiling and listening to them arguing downstairs.

I wondered how long before he let it come down on her.  Before she felt the force of his feet, or his fists.  I felt like it was coming, or something was.  It felt like things were unravelling faster and I didn’t know whether I ought to welcome it or fear it.  I did everything I could to avoid the man.  Disappearing out of the back door if I heard him come through the front.  Leaving Jack’s flat if there was any hint of Howard coming over.  I did whatever it took to remain off his radar, to not get on his nerves with my existence.  But when Howard became fixated on something that irritated him, he was like a rabid dog attacking a bone with no meat on it.  He wouldn’t let it go.

With my mother back, I started going to school again.  She was in a constant nervous state about my attendance and my grades.  If I didn’t go, the school would phone her, threatening all sorts, winding her up into meltdown about my future.  She would cling all teary-eyed to Howard, as if he had all the answers, although she obviously had no idea what his answers usually involved.  So I would go back to school.  Trail my way through days of misery and boredom, just to please her, and she would go overboard with the praise and the encouragement at home.  Making me special dinners.  Buying me CD’s she thought I would like.  It was as if she had suddenly remembered my shadowy existence, and thought she ought to be nurturing it in some way.  She would be oblivious to the darkening rage on her husband’s face.  She did not seem to see the massive fists clenching and unclenching as she babbled on about how proud of me she was.  It was a no win situation.  Didn’t matter what I did.  Either way I would be pissing one of them off.

But then the answer hit me right between the eyes one afternoon when I was at school, sat slumped at my desk, while the children around me scribbled frantic notes in the margins of Hamlet.  I glanced around at them all; as usual unable to concentrate on anything for very long, the remains of last night’s highs giving me an ear bashing of a headache and a dull, sick feeling in my belly.  Being close to my peers just reminded me of the distance between us, how I was not one of them, and never had been.  I sat there, feeling the urge to escape building stronger and stronger inside of me.  I realized that I was trapped on a never ending roundabout of despair, unable to ever please anyone, least of all myself.  I suddenly started thinking about what Mr James had said to me once.  Something about having a hard job keeping me in this school if my behaviour continued.  The answer hit me then, and it was so easy and simple, it was almost beautiful.  There would be repercussions of course, but it would be worth it, just to be free of this place, this chain around my neck.  I smiled to myself and started to kick the chair in front of me, the chair occupied by Edward Higgs.

He turned to glare at me, and I stared back, my expression blank and uncaring.  I noticed how grown up Higgs looked these days.  He was so much taller and broader, and when I looked down at myself in comparison I felt stunted and fragile, and a surge of hatred rushed up from my guts.  I kicked his chair harder and harder, knocking him forward and into his desk.  “Idiot!” he hissed at me, before flinging his arm into the air. “Mrs Baker! Danny Bryans is kicking my chair on purpose!”

I felt the eyes of the class turn upon me in hungry wonder. Mrs Baker rose slowly from her desk, a fidgety look on her face.  She placed her hands on the desk and peered over her spectacles at me.  “Danny, what on earth are you doing?  Stop that please, there is no need to be disruptive.” But disruptive was exactly what I planned on being.  I kicked the chair harder, and harder, until Higgs gave up and got to his feet, holding up his hands in a gesture of frustration for the teacher.  “Danny!” she barked at me.  She left her desk rather reluctantly and approached mine, fat hands fluttering around her hips as her long floral skirt swishing around her ankles.  “Danny, that’s enough, what on earth are you playing at?  That’s enough I said!  Quite enough!”

I stopped kicking and stared up at her, narrowing my eyes. “Fuck you.”

A collective gasp of horror arose from the class, followed closely by an expectant silence, as they all stared at Mrs Baker, wondering what the hell she would do now.  I thought she looked confused.  Hurt even.  She shook her grey perm at me. “What did you just say?”

“I said fuck you,” I told her with a shrug. “What are you deaf?”

“Get out of my classroom right now!” She spoke through her teeth, and pointed a slightly shaking hand at the door. “Go to Mr James’s office right now!”

I got up and said nothing as I walked casually to the door, enjoying the stunned silence that followed me.  I closed the door behind me and traipsed down the corridor, trailing one hand lightly along the wall as I walked.  As I went, I inhaled all of the usual school smells for what I hoped would be the last time.  Blackboard dust, disinfectant floor cleaner, and canteen chips.  I arrived at the heads office and opened the door without knocking.  This was going to be fun.

Mr James was on the phone, and stared at me in surprise as I sauntered on in. “Let me call you back,” he said, and hung up on them.  He was frowning at me as he nodded at the chair opposite his.  I slumped into it and stared back at him.  “To what do I owe the pleasure?” he asked me.  “First you grace us with your presence at school, and now I am honoured with a personal visit!”

“Just came to tell you what I told Mrs Baker,” I said to him, and as I said it, I lifted my feet and planted them down on the edge of his desk.  He stared at me in total horror.  He looked like he had just been punched in the mouth or something.  His hands spread out slowly across the desk and his lips pursed tightly together, allowing no sound to come out. “Go fuck yourself,” I added with a shrug. “Both of you.”

“I beg your pardon!” he roared at me then. “And get your damn feet off my desk!”

I yawned. “Are you gonna’ make me?.”

He looked like he was for a second.  He shoved back his chair and got violently to his feet, and pointed his finger at me.  “Get your feet off my desk right now young man, or I’m phoning your mother to come and get you!”

“Do it.  I don’t care.  Call her.  Call the bitch.”

He shook his head.  He looked dazed and baffled and saddened and furious all at once and I really wanted to laugh at him. “You don’t care?  What the hell is wrong with you boy? You’re never at school, failing nearly every subject, and when you are here you are disruptive and rude!  I told you before young man, I do not have to tolerate this kind of behaviour in my school!”

“Good, cool, throw me out then.”  I got to my feet and walked around the chair.  Mr James shook his head at me.

“What is this about?  You want to be expelled?  I don’t understand you Daniel.”

I walked around the edge of his office slowly, taking it all in, the filing cabinets, and the pot plants, and the framed pictures of his family that he kept upon his desk.  “You warned me once, if I kept it up, you’d throw me out.”

“I did Daniel, but there is no need for this.  I don’t want to see you expelled. I don’t want to see you ruin your life.”

“Too late for that,” I muttered in reply.  I was bored.  This was taking too long.  I picked up a large spider plant from one of the filing cabinets and held it in my hands.

“Too late?  What does that mean?  Why don’t you put that down and talk to me properly Daniel?  Tell me what is bothering you.  Whatever it is, we can sort it out, you know.  We can help you.”

“Help me,” I said, with a laugh. “Throw me out then.  That would help me a lot right now.”

“Well I won’t do it,” he told me adamantly. “This is ridiculous and childish.  You have everything ahead of you, and you are a smart young man Daniel. I don’t understand what this is all about. What is wrong with you?”

“Dunno,” I said, and let the pot slip through my fingers.  It crashed to the floor, the terracotta plant pot cracking open to spill the black soil out across his carpet.  “Oops.”

“Oh get out!” he yelled at me then, pointing at the door. “Go on get out!  Get out of my school right now!”

I was relieved.  I smiled and slouched over to the door.  I opened it and looked back over my shoulder at him.  “Can you call my mum and tell her I’m out, or I will come back and burn the whole fucking place down, and I mean it.”  I walked out, leaving him in his stupefied silence.

I walked home slowly, hoping he would get right on the phone to my mum and Howard.  I chuckled to myself as I walked.  I could almost imagine how the phone call would go.  He would tell my mum I couldn’t come back.  He would tell her how strange and threatening I had been.  He would suggest I still had a problem with drugs.  He would say the school are not equipped to deal with such things.  He would tell her I needed help, and she would believe it all, she would suck it all up like she always did, and I knew this was true, and I saw it all over her tear streaked face when I walked in through the back door.  Here I was.  Her druggy drop out son.  Hurray.

She was at the sink, peeling potatoes.  When she saw me shuffle in, she dropped the peeler and turned to face me, hugging her arms around her thin body as if to comfort herself.  I viewed her coldly, and turned my eyes on Howard.  He was sat at the table with a newspaper spread out before him, but he rose to his feet as I walked in, and all at once his body and his being consumed all of the air, and I felt like I was going to choke.  He stepped behind her, took hold of her shoulders and kept her standing, while his eyes shot icy daggers at me.  “Why did you do it?” she started saying, shaking her head and sending fresh tears flying all over the room.  “Are you insane?  Have you gone crazy?  Why would you do such a thing?  Why?  What are you going to do now Danny?  Don’t you even care about your future?”

I shrugged with my hands in my pockets and my eyes on hers.  “Not really no. Couldn’t give a shit if you want the truth.”

She pressed a hand over her gaping mouth and wailed thinly behind it. “Why are you doing this to me?  Why do you want to hurt me so much?  Why Danny?”

“Because he’s a selfish little bastard who doesn’t care about anyone except himself,” came the slow, cold words from Howards mouth as he rubbed her shoulders from behind.

“Are you on drugs again?” She asked me. “That’s what Mr James thinks!  He said we should get you some help…take you to the doctor…Lee,” she looked up into his face. “That’s what we need to do, the school said!”

“It’s up to you,” he shrugged back at her. “But I don’t know how we’d make him go.  And what will they do anyway?  What can they do about it?  But it’s up to you, call them if you want to baby.”

I wanted to leave them to it, so I balled my fists at my sides and walked towards the hallway.  “He just doesn’t want to go to school,” Howard snarled over her head then. “That’s what it is.  Wants to spend all his time in that record shop.  Thinks that’s where his future lies!” He laughed out loud at the very idea.  I stared back, and felt nothing but numb hatred for the pair of them.

“You won’t have them bothering you anymore,” I said. “And if it makes you happy I’ll go and sit the exams in the summer.”

“Ha!” Howard cried in triumph. “See honey?  He gets to do what he wants! You can see exactly what he’s playing at!”

I laughed over my shoulder as I trudged down the hallway.  “Oh you’re so funny Lee,” I said to him.  “If only mum knew the truth eh?  If only she knew.”  It made me chuckle as I walked up the stairs.  I sniggered, remembering his jealous sulks every time mum praised my efforts to go to school.  The whole thing was ridiculous.  They had followed me out to the hallway, and were staring up at me, their matching expressions of disgust and outrage glowering up at me.  In that moment, I saw them as one person, as one enemy, one monster. My mother looked and sounded like she had been devoured completely by Howard, like she had been absorbed into him, and even the eyes that stared out from her face were his, like he had crawled right inside her soul.  That’s never happening to me, I thought, staring back at her, I would rather die first.  She was clinging to his shirt like a small tearful child, and he was staring at me with stone like eyes, and a flicker of a smile upon his face.

“You really are the most selfish, unpleasant piece of work I’ve ever had to deal with,” he said, which was ironic really, if you thought about it.  So I laughed.  I knew I would pay for it as soon as she passed out, but in that moment I didn’t care.  It was playtime.  I could let him know what I really thought about him.

“You sound like you’re talking about yourself Lee,” I told him with a smirk. “Although I could add a few things to the list that mum doesn’t know about.” I raised my eyebrows, daring him to disagree.

“Danny go to your room,” my mother said then, pulling her wet face away from his shirt. “It’s best if we all calm down, then we can talk about this tomorrow and see what to do.”

Do?” I cried back at her, incredulous.  “We’re not going to do anything mother, so don’t stand there trying to make out you give a shit about me. We all know you don’t and you never have!” I stomped up the stairs, but she called out to me.

“Danny!” I paused and looked back at her, and I wondered what she really saw when she looked at me; something evil?  Something damaged and broken, something she had never really loved?  I searched her eyes with my own, begging her to see the truth, pleading with her, but then I saw her hands rising up to find Howard’s again, and I saw the way it was always going to be.  I nodded at her.

“Just leave me alone.  Before you know it I’ll be out of your hair for good.” I turned and ran swiftly up the stairs.  I closed my door, sat on my bed and pressed my hands together between my steadily shaking knees. I squeezed my eyes shut and let the waiting begin.

I waited in my room for hours.  I waited for the thing to be over.  The knot of dread and fear inside my stomach increased in size like a bad tempered tumour.  I moved restlessly around my room in an attempt to shift it, but it clung to me wherever I went.  I thought I would vomit if it went on much longer, so I took a deep breath and pulled the chair out from where I had wedged it under the door handle.  It was close to midnight and I was desperate for a piss.  I had considered aiming it out of the window, but what was the point in delaying the inevitable?  Might as well let him get it out of his system now, before it built up any longer.  I reminded myself that once it was over, it was over, and another day would begin.  I swallowed dry air, opened the door and dashed to the bathroom.

He pounced on my way back.  I heard the single creak on the stairs that gave away what would happen next, and then he loomed up like a horrific shadow out of the dark chasm of the stairs.  I tried to run, but he pinned my arms to my sides and when I opened my mouth to scream, he slapped his hand over my lips before any sound could be made and hauled me roughly back into my room.  He kicked the door shut behind us and hissed into my ear. “Don’t try pulling that stunt again shit stain!  She won’t hear you anyway! She’s out cold!” He pushed me down on the bed, twisted my right arm up behind me and planted his knee into the small of my back.  I grunted in pain and there was no escape.  “I’ve just about had enough of you,” he was snarling and dribbling over me.  “You still don’t learn do you?  You’re still not doing what I say in my own fucking house! Thought you were clever eh?  Getting kicked out of school so you can hang about in that shop all day! What’s it gonna’ take eh?  What’s it gonna’ take to get you in line and keep you there?”  He pulled back a knee and looped a hard fist into my kidneys.  “More of that?” he asked breathlessly, pressing his cold thin lips to my ear every time he spoke.  Another fist thundered in, hitting the same spot and opening up the pain again, making my body want to weep and bleed.  Break me, I thought to myself, with my face pressed into the duvet, my eyes closed tightly as another fist smashed into my ribs. Break me all apart, do it, do it, break me all up, do it, just fucking do it!

He stopped punching then and leaned down into my ear.  “You think your mum can hear anything?” his voice rasped and licked against my skin. “She can’t hear a thing.  She’s fucking comatose on sleeping pills” He put his hand around my neck then, holding me down, while his other hand was doing something, wrestling with something.  “So don’t bother calling for her this time little man, because she won’t fucking come, and she wouldn’t fucking come even if she could hear you, do you know that?  Do you know she wishes she had aborted you?  Yeah!  Did you know that, did you?  She’s told me a thousand times little man.  She even went to the clinic, that’s how close she came, that’s how much she never wanted you! So call her if you like and see if she cares!  Because no one cares Danny!  No one cares about you, except me, so I don’t know why you keep fucking me off all the time and making me angry!  I don’t get why you keep messing with me, you little fuckbag, why do you do it?  Why do you want to wind me up all the time?  You’re still not the good boy I told you to be, are you?  You’re a scruffy little fucked up dope head, that’s what you are! So what’re we gonna’ do about that then eh?”

He was tugging at something and when he got it free he held it down in front of my face, and I opened my eyes to see his belt doubled over.  “You asked for this yet again,” he told me in a hoarse, choked voice.  “Yet again you pushed me to it.  You never fucking learn.  When will you fucking learn you won’t win Danny?  You won’t ever win!”

The first strike sliced into my clammy skin and I wanted to scream, so I wriggled enough to get one of my hands up to my mouth, and I pushed it right it, crammed my fist right back against my teeth so that I wouldn’t.  Because I didn’t want to give him the satisfaction.  I crushed the pain down with my teeth and waited for it to be over.

The Boy With…Chapter 63

63

 

 

October 1994

The most important thing was making sure I did not feel anything anymore.  I had wondered if it was possible, that day on the bench.  I discovered it was actually pretty easy, with a little bit of help.  That had become my main aim, my main purpose upon waking every single day.  There were moments, where the last drink wore off, when a new day began without my permission, when the cold fingers of reality would arrive to tap me briskly on the shoulder.  I never looked reality in the face.  I turned away, and picked up another drink.  Nothing panicked me more than the sensation of the veil beginning to lift.  I would catch just a glimpse, of my own mind ticking back into action, starting to form thoughts again, and that was never a good thing, because thinking too much led to pain, one way or another.  Thinking too much made it all come back, and it was too much then, too much for me to bear.  The useless and bitter disappointment of it all.  In moments of sad clarity such as these, I would feel as if I had awoken briefly from a confusing dream, and I would look down at myself, usually slumped like a rag doll on Jack’s grotty sofa.  I would ask stupid, hollow questions while tears filled my eyes.  “Why is he like that?”  Jack would only shake his head and chuckle and smile.  “Why does he want to destroy me?  You must know.  I’ll save him the trouble today. I’ll go and jump off the cliff.”  I meant it when I said it, but I never did it.

My questions would simply echo, unanswered around the perpetually darkened flat, which had become my refuge, and my prison.  Then Jack would do his best to cheer me up, and there was always something on offer, and he was pretty generous with his offerings, and I would never say no, and then I would drift away again, and there would be no pain, no sorrow, no nothing.

Nothingness was good, nothingness was always welcome.  I tried to fight back with it when the self-loathing and disgust crept in to torture me.  It only haunted me when I was alone, when Jack was out and about, doing whatever it was he did.  Day after day I would sit and rip myself to shreds, peeling back the layers until I became a nothing person, a nothing, an empty shell who simply lived and breathed.  My aim, to reach a point where I would not be able to experience fear anymore, because I wouldn’t be able to feel it, I wouldn’t be able to feel anything.  Waking up sober was a terrible torture.  Instantly my mind was sickened and I felt disgusted with myself, for what I had taken, for what I had done to myself, for everything, and I would think, I am dying slowly inside, this is a slow death, and he will win. Because he was winning, he was the victor.  I found that I did not really care, so long as all of this was over.

Rebirth seemed a nice option, if only such a thing existed.  I daydreamed about it sometimes when I was spaced out in the flat.  It seemed a warm and wonderful thought to pay attention to.  Being born again, as someone else, someone new.  Someone better than I was; someone who was innocent and pure, and good and strong.  Sometimes I would lay and stare at the skin that covered my bones, and I would have the strongest urge to start scratching away at it, to scrape back the layers in case there was someone better hidden underneath.

When I slept, Lee Howard was there, infesting all of my dreams.  I sought to drink and smoke as much as I could in order to find a level of unconsciousness that would hold the dreams at bay.  But it never worked for long, because he was always there, looming over me, with doom in his eye and he was twisting a knife around in my belly, laughing and laughing as he turned it, curling my guts slowly up the blade.  Nights were full of horror.  I twisted and turned among wretched dreams, sometimes waking myself up with my own screams.  Jack watched over me, and I had begun to have paranoid thoughts that he was my jailor, not my protector.

The day after Lucy closed the door on me, and Anthony threatened me, I pushed them all away inside my mind.  I decided I didn’t want or need any of them.  In my mind, things could not get any darker.  I hid out at Jack’s flat, until Howard hunted me down there.  He came through the door like a tornado, spewing out eye bulging rage, his teeth shining and gnashing, his hands reaching for me.  I knew it was coming, and I did nothing to avoid the storm. “Your mother has gone to Leeds to see John,” he stood before me and said, planting his hands on his wide hips, staring down at me, with a loose, slack look to his face.  “What do you think about that eh?”

I shrugged and told him what I really thought.  “I don’t give a shit.”

He laughed.  It was high pitched and manic. He told me he had been looking for me everywhere.  That it was about time I learnt my lesson again.  That he would make me give a shit.  I wondered if he had been drinking, because he had a crazed look in his eyes, and he was sweating like a pig, and I just sat there and stared up at him, a look of dull defiance on my face especially for him.  “I’ll get you back in line,” he started ranting, before he picked me up and threw me to the floor.  He was in a state, wrestling with the waist band of his jeans. “Get you right back in fucking line!” He realized he was not wearing a belt, and went completely insane, kicking over Jack’s glass coffee table and sending it shattering to the floor. He then started pacing around the flat, and I looked up from the floor and saw the door, but I couldn’t even be bothered to try to get to it.  He came back from the kitchen, brandishing the cord from the kettle, and he put his foot on me and started lashing out with it.  And Jack did nothing and said nothing.  I could see his shoes, I could smell his cigar.  I wondered if he was scared.  Scared to speak up.  Scared to help.  I knew what Howard was doing, putting me right back to square one, and I didn’t care, in fact I was glad.  It was easier that way.  “You won’t fuck with me!” he kept screaming, and I thought yeah, you’re right, I won’t, I can’t be arsed.

He left, and I found myself existing in a fire of agony that would not cease.  I got onto the sofa, sobbing and moaning, and the pain was electric, the kind of pain you cannot even breathe through, the kind of pain that makes you want to die, the kind of pain that ties your mind up in a cage.  I writhed and panted on the sofa, and it was Jack that rolled me a joint and held it to my lips.  “He doesn’t know any other way,” I heard him murmuring softly.  I could not determine the tone of his voice. “It’s all his knows. Best you just stay on the right side of him, with your mum gone again.” The joint did nothing to help the pain, and I lay there and whimpered until he fetched me a shot of whiskey, followed by another.  Eventually I guess he got annoyed with my crying, because he came and pushed a pill inside my mouth, and I swallowed it and I was so glad, so relieved, because whatever it was worked and worked quickly, and I felt my body being lifted up by kind and gentle hands that carried me away down a dark and twisted corridor, and for ages after that I felt like I was floating, just floating on the ocean.

When I woke up in the night, he was sat beside me, with his hand resting on my head.  He didn’t ever seem to sleep, unless it was in the middle of the day, with his head thrown back and his mouth wide and snoring.  I would roll away from his hand, shivering as I felt his fingers unwind one by one from my hair.  I would bury myself in the blankets and the thick deep sleep would arrive to claim me and I would forget about it all in the morning, because I would wake up searching for escape, and because everything that existed inside my head was pushed away, stamped down, wiped out.

There was nothing to do, nowhere to turn to except oblivion, and Jack let me have whatever I wanted. If it was there I could have it.  If it wasn’t there, then we would call Jaime Lawler over.  I kept myself topped up, and the biggest fear I had was any of it wearing it off.  Jack pushed food in front of me but it all turned my stomach.  I didn’t want to do anything that would prolong my existence, but I did not have the courage to end it suddenly either.  I wondered dully in those strange moments if Jack was helping me or finishing me off.  I didn’t know, and I didn’t care, but sometimes the way he looked at me made me want to close my eyes and cease to exist, because that would be easier.  He looked at me.  Sometimes he looked at me too much, and I didn’t know what, if anything, his eyes were trying to say.  I felt like a goldfish, swimming aimlessly inside a bowl. “Try this,” he would say to me. “Just try this…”  The only thing that made me move was music.  The only thing that made my heart beat was music.  The only reason I left the flat was music.  I had to leave the flat to find the music, and when I was in The Record Shop, though Terry viewed me with a perturbed and distainful expression, he never turned me away.

He let me stay in there for hours if I wanted to.  I didn’t talk to him much.  He laughed about this, saying that at one point he could never shut me up.  He made me cups of tea and he started offering me money to sort out the shelves, or to answer the phone.  I took it graciously, thankful and yet silent.  Sometimes he tried to pull conversations out of me, asking my opinion on new releases, offering me singles and albums to take home and try for free. “Your opinion is worth more than mine,” he would explain. “The kids that come in here don’t take my word for it these days!”  The shop was busier than it had ever been.  It was the same kinds of kids that came in, day after day.  Terry called them Indie kids, and they all had hair like the Gallaghers, or hair like Jarvis Cocker.  They wore parka coats, and flared jeans, and devoured music by the likes of Pulp, Suede, Blur, Elastica and Supergrass.  Terry had a fair amount of sarcasm for the lot of them.  Members of a scene, he explained.  Followers of a rule book.  “Not like you,” he told me once.  “You’re cool, because you like everything.”

It seemed like word got out quickly about the fat man letting me hang around in the shop, letting me work for money.  Michael came through the door one day after school.  He shook his head slowly and sadly when he saw me crouched on the floor, dusting off cassettes before I put them in order.  Just the desperate look in his eye made me want to sever an artery.  I looked away from him.  I wondered what the hell he wanted.  He picked up a CD and squatted down next to me, while Terry went back to his magazine behind the counter.

“You’re never at school,” he started, and he was right.  I had given up on that again.  I hadn’t been for weeks.  My mother was still up in Leeds with John.  I was starting to wonder if she would ever come back at all.  I rolled my eyes and ignored him. “I’ve been talking to Lucy,” he went on regardless, speaking in low tones, with his eyes on my face.  “I took her to the café yesterday Danny. I explained everything to her.  Are you listening?  I know you don’t want people to know stuff, but I had to explain it to her, I had to make her see why you didn’t turn up that day.”  I didn’t look at him.  I didn’t allow the words or the information to infiltrate my mind.  I picked up another cassette.  The best of Dusty Springfield.  I started to wipe it clean with the yellow duster Terry had given me.  Michael sighed beside me. “Listen,” he said. “She understands.  The reason she was mad at you, is she went back the next week, in case you went back…she said she really thought you would, you know, because you’d been going every Sunday for like months.  She went back Danny, the next few Sundays in a row to see you there.  To sort things out.”

I rolled my eyes again and shrugged loosely.  I placed the cassette on the shelf under D and picked up the next one.  Guns ‘N’ Roses, Appetite For Destruction.  The casing was split, so I put it in another pile, knowing Terry would want it in the discount bin next to the counter.  Michael clicked his tongue angrily. “Danny, can you speak?  For fucks sake mate! I’m just gonna’ keep coming in here until you do! Did you hear what I said?  About Lucy? She’s gonna’ come and see you in here mate, I don’t know when, but she said she would because she wants you two to make up, you know?”

“Going to Chaos this Friday,” I told him then, frowning down at the next tape in the pile.  More Bob Dylan Greatest Hits.  “If you wanna’ come.  I’ll meet you there.  Or whatever.”

He nodded instantly. “Okay then.  I fucking will. I’ll see you there.  We’ll talk then, right?  We’ll catch up.”  I nodded and he got up and walked out.

I had another visitor not long after.  Jaime Lawler, at first just hovering outside of the door, finishing off his cigarette.  I watched him from inside.  He was tall and thin, and hunched up against the cold, with his cap pulled low and his tracksuit jacket zipped right up to his chin.  He nodded at me when he saw me looking.  Terry was on his stool, his wide berth dripping down either side of it.  His nose buried in the NME.  He didn’t even look up when Jaime walked in through the door.  He played it cool at first, well about as cool as he was capable of.  He picked up a CD, then put it back too quickly.  Walked along and picked up another, and then came right up to me with it.  Not exactly subtle.  I was starting to think the guy was a bit simple, to be honest.  He could have had DRUG DEALER tattooed across his forehead and it still would have been more discreet than his behaviour at times.  He loped up to the side of me with this lop-sided grin on his thin face. “Alright mate? You working in here now or what?”

“Sort of,” I shrugged.

He looked pleased and stared around at the shelves full of music.  “Wow, pretty cool ain’t it? Must be your idea of heaven eh?” He nudged me with one spiky elbow and I flinched. He looked sorry and tried a grin instead.  “Still waiting for my money mate,” he said then, leaning towards me and dropping his voice to a whisper.  I nodded at him.  I dug around in my back pocket and brought out a crumpled ten pound note, and a handful of change.  He took it and examined it before slipping it into his own pocket. “That don’t even really touch what you owe me mate,” he said, with a regretful shrug.  I nodded again.

“I know.  I’ll get you some more.” I looked at Terry briefly. “He’s started paying me a bit.  I might get a proper job here when I’m sixteen.”

Jaime looked hopeful. “Oh yeah? When’s that?”

“August.”

He made a face. “Fuckinghell I can’t wait that long mate!  Look we’ll talk later yeah, I got to go and meet this mate of yours now.  You know he’s working in The Ship?”

I was totally confused. “Who is?”

“Anthony.  Me old mate from school. Bless him.”

“He’s working in The Ship?”

“Yeah, out the back, cheffing.  I’m gonna’ go and get me a pie and chips, warm me right up.” Jaime patted my back and headed for the door.  I stepped behind him.

“What do you mean you’re meeting him?  What for?”

Jaime pulled open the door and a rush of cold air swirled around our ankles. He looked down at me, and there was for once an almost human look in his restless grey eyes, and it looked like he was trying to decide what to say to me, and how to say it.  He grimaced a little and scratched at his scrawny neck, and then pushed his cap back so that he could rake his short nails through the front of his wispy blonde hair.  He tugged the cap back into place and clapped me on the back instead. “Well you know me,” he said. “Keep everyone’s secrets don’t I eh? Ask him yourself if you wanna’ know.  Seeya’ later mate.  You at Chaos on Friday or what?”  I nodded that I was.  He snorted as he left. “I’ll be expecting a begging call from you then.  Seeya’ mate.”

I went back to my work, dazed and wondering.  Part of my mind wanted to know more, and wanted to chase down the road after him.  But the other part of my mind wanted to know nothing about anything, and went back to sleep instead.  There was nothing I could do anyway, I reasoned.  I hadn’t seen Anthony since he had laid into me for giving Michael speed that night.  I imagined he hated me, and that was that.  Truth was, I was too ashamed of myself to go anywhere near him.

“Dodgy as fuck, that one,” Terry remarked wearily from his stool.  I couldn’t have agreed with him more.  I went back to the tapes, taking my time over each one, cleaning them and checking them for wear and damage.  The Stone Roses were playing Shoot You Down on the record player.  “All this new indie Britpop stuff,” Terry started saying. “It’s all influenced by The Stone Roses, I mean, it started with them and Inspirals and all that right?”  I looked up and shrugged, not sure if I could be bothered to get into a debate with him right then.  “And they were influenced by The Smiths.  It all comes back to The Smiths you see.”

“Bullshit,” I told him. “Who were they influenced by then? Sixties guitar bands?”

“No, punk you idiot!” he roared back at me. “It’s a well known fact that Morrissey was a fan of The New York Dolls. I’m putting them on next to educate you.”

I just sighed and let him get on with it.  The man had an unhealthy obsession with The Smiths.  According to him, anything good about music today could be attributed to them.  He slipped off his stool after a while and went out the back to put the kettle on.  While he was gone, the door opened again, and Lucy walked in.  She looked awkward and nervous, in her smart school uniform, her bag on her shoulder, and two thick text books clutched to her chest.  Her face brightened when she saw me kneeling on the floor. “There you are!”

“Yeah,” I said, and stood up.  She hugged her books and smiled sheepishly.

“How are you?”  I shrugged at her.

“Good.”

Her smile faltered, and then returned stronger. “Want to try and sell me some music? You normally can’t shut up about it.”  I shook my head at her.  I was tired.  I didn’t need this, whatever this was.  I felt like cringing under her pitying glare.  I couldn’t stand the thought of what Michael had told her.  I imagined them sat in the café together, their heads lowered over their coffees or their milkshakes, while Michael filled her in on the full story of my pathetic little life.  I felt a cold anger shaking through me.  It was directed right at her, and yet again, I thought, here he is, here is the monster right on cue, seeping through me, taking me over.  I wanted her away from me.  I was no good for her. I would only drag her down and destroy her.  Couldn’t she see that?  “I just wanted to see you,” she tried to explain, her smile gone now, her eyes heavy with sadness. “Michael…I mean, he spoke to me…He explained so much to me Danny…and I had to see you, I just had to come and see you.”

I gave her a hard and withering look of contempt. “Well now you’ve seen me,” I said, and turned away from her.