The Mess Of Me:Chapter 22

22

 

Dear World, I fall asleep on the wicker sofa in Marianne’s conservatory, with my head in Joe’s lap.  I just cannot keep my eyes open any longer.  The party is over.  The guests have all gone.  There are a few random people still milling around and making coffee in the kitchen, but in the conservatory, there is just myself and Joe, and Ryan and Josh.  As I start to drift away in Joe’s lap, I listen to the boy’s conversation about their band.  They sound so enthusiastic, so worked up and into it, that I smile to myself, and think how utterly sweet they are.  Josh sings a few lines from a song he is working on.  Joe taps out the drumbeat with his hands on his knees.  I have both my hands folded under my cheek.  They are still talking and laughing softly as I slide into the blackness.

I am woken up by own dribble.  You know how it is.  You feel the drool start to escape and you suck it back in quickly, and realise that your hand, or your pillow is already fucking wet.  I lift my head and wipe my mouth, and check my hand, which is already fizzing with pins and needles.  I sit up slowly, and the room moves in that horrible, still drunk way, and I pull back from Joe’s lap and lean against the back of the sofa, yawning.  He has his head thrown back and is fast asleep.  I peer forward to check his lap for dribble, but it is dry.  Phew.

I glance at the floor.  Josh is lying on his back, with his head on a cushion and his arms folded across his chest.  He is snoring softly.  Ryan is curled up in the wicker armchair, also with his arms crossed tightly around himself.  I listen for voices and movement in the kitchen, but they are all gone.  I sit still for a while, while the memories of the night swim in and out of my mind, jostling for attention.  I don’t want to think about any of them really.  But I do need a wee.

I get up carefully, not wanting to wake any of the boys.  I have no shoes on, and tiptoe cautiously across the floor towards the kitchen, dodging broken glass, and puddles of unidentified liquid. The kitchen is empty and bears the scars of the party like no other room.  The counters are strewn with food and drink, and bottles and cups.  There is vomit blocking the sink, and vomit under the kitchen table.  Someone has ransacked the food cupboards, as the doors are all hanging open, most of the food gone.  I don’t know what the hell Marianne will tell her parents, but I think to myself, that’s her problem, and anyway, knowing her, she will most likely already have a plan.

The downstairs toilet is in the hallway.  I find myself sitting down on the loo, whipping down my knickers, and closing and locking the door at the same time as the piss streams out of me in an urgent gush.  I fill with physical relief.  I drop my head into my hands, my elbows digging into my bare knees.  I seem to stay like that for ages.  It is probably the longest wee I have ever had in my life.  I start to wish I had timed it.

When it is finally over, I pull up my pants, pull down my dress and wash my hands.  There is a mirror over the washbasin and I look at it accidentally.  I try to avoid mirrors most of the time, the same way I try to avoid cameras.  But every now and again I come across my reflection by accident, and usually this totally ruins my mood.  I always look fatter in the mirror than I feel in real life.  I can be feeling really good, having a drink, having a good time, and then come across myself in the mirror and the next thing I know I want to punch myself in my stupid ugly face.  I always feel the life and the joy slide right out of me.  It’s like, oh.  Oh, so I look like that, do I?  That’s me, is it?  And I thought I looked good earlier. Oh well, looks like I was wrong.

But this reflection takes me by surprise for a different reason.  It takes me by surprise because for a fleeting second I am confused, as I do not recognise the face in the mirror, and in my still drunken state, I momentarily think I have bumped into someone else in the loo.  But then I realise that it is me, it is my face I am staring back at, and how very peculiar not to recognise myself?  I do not know whether to feel glad or sad, and I suppose that I feel plenty of both.  The face in the mirror looks far too thin to be me.  The face in the mirror looks almost glamorous in its ruined state.  The mascara is smudged around my eyes.  My skin is pale, almost translucent, which makes my eyes stand out even more.  It is like all there is are my eyes.  Huge, dark blue eyes, and masses and masses of thick, long eyelashes.  I frown at the cheekbones I never knew I had.  I feel my hands grip the basin, steadying myself as a kind of fear washes over me, a shivering realisation of what I have done to myself.  The face in the mirror looks beautiful, but only in a haunted, wrecked kind of way.  I lick my lips, which seem very red, despite my lipstick being long gone.  I toss back my hair, which is a mess, but still straighter than usual.  I nod at myself.  I nod at her.

I am still drunk enough to feel recklessly proud of what I have done to myself, and I come out of the toilet looking forward to curling back up on Joe’s lap, and wrapping my arms around my body, feeling for those ribs.  I realise what a pointless fuck up I am, what a quivering mess of humanity I am turning out to be, and I don’t give a shit.  I come out of the toilet feeling brave and careless, and I bump right into Marianne.

She is still wearing her silky dressing gown, and she looks both pleased and excited to find me there.  She grabs my hand with both of hers and squeezes it tightly.  Her face is pale, her eyes are alive, and her smile is unnerving.  “Leon just left,” she informs me in a breathless tone.  “What a night!”

My hand feels small and heavy between hers.  “What happened?”

“Come and have a drink with me,” she breathes, and pulls me by the hand back through the kitchen.  She seems totally unfazed by the state of the place, and searches the room for any unused alcohol.  Eventually she settles on a bottle of whiskey which has a few shots left in it, grabs it by the neck, snatches my hand back up, and pulls me through the conservatory and out into the garden.

“Why outside?” I ask, tugging my hand free to wrap my arms around myself as I start to shiver.  She plonks herself onto the bench where Travis kissed me, and crosses her legs.

“I’m hot!” she cries, unscrewing the cap from the whiskey bottle.  “Aren’t you hot?”

“No, I’m cold,” I say, sitting down beside her and pulling up my knees to hug.

“You want my gown?”

“Have you got something on under it?”

She looks at me and raises her eyebrows.  “No!”

“No thanks then,” I say.  “I’ll be fine.”

“So what you been up to?”

“I just woke up.  I woke up and needed a wee.”

“Before that, I mean.  How was the party for you?”

“Oh, good.” I nod at her unsurely.  I wonder how much she remembers herself.  “Not bad.  Could have done without the big fight, but you know.  Boys.”

“Oh yeah, I heard about that.”  Marianne takes a big swig of whiskey, and then hands it to me.  I take it hesitantly.

“We should have got some coke.”

“Ooh it’s okay like that.  It’ll warm you up.”

“Okay.” I take a mouthful and very nearly spit it back out again.  It burns as I force it down my throat.  I shudder from head to toe.  But she is right.  It starts to burn a fire from the inside.

“See?” she says.  I hand her back the bottle and nod.

“Yeah.”

“Fucking amazing night,” she says then, but when I look at her, I see no joy behind her eyes.  Only aggression and frustration, and I don’t get it.  She drinks the whiskey, wipes her mouth and shoves it back in my lap.  I have to ask her what happened.  I have to get it out of the way.

“So, did you sleep with him?”

Marianne bites her lip as she looks into my eyes, and nods her head.  I don’t know what to say.  Congratulations, you had sex with a cunt?  Well done on bedding a total bastard?  So I just nod back, drink some whiskey and give it back to her.  There is a silence as she knocks it back.  I look out at the dark garden and a million thoughts and feelings fill my head and my soul and I want to swallow them all.

“Was he nice to you?” I ask her then, eyes on the garden.  “I only ask because that’s why we were worried about you and came to check on you.  He’s not the nicest person in the world.”

“He was lovely,” she says beside me.  “It was lovely.”

“Lovely?”

“Amazing.  Lou, have you had sex yet?”

“Hey?”  I look at her, taken back.  She hands me the bottle.

“Are you still a virgin?”

“You know I am.  I’d tell you if I wasn’t.  So you’re not one anymore.”

“I wasn’t one anyway, stupid.”

I swallow another mouthful of whiskey and the warmth fills my belly as the confusion fills my mind.  “Oh?  I thought you were.”

“I thought we already worked out we don’t know much about each other.”  I look at her and she is viewing me very sceptically.  It reminds me of the way my older sister looks at me when she is trying to give me advice.

“I just thought you were.”

“Nope.” She is not smiling, as she looks at me expectantly.  She takes the bottle out of my hand and throws another huge mouthful down her tiny neck.  I wait.  I feel like she is preparing to eat me alive.

“So who then?” I ask finally.

“Josh and Ryan for starters.”

I stare at her.  My jaw hits the fucking floor.  “What?” I practically scream at her.  She leans back on the bench, holds the nearly empty bottle of whiskey between her legs, and releases a huge burp.

“Yeah,” she says.

“Josh and Ryan?”

“Yeah.”

“Oh what!”  I just cannot believe it.  I want to laugh, but somehow that seems uncalled for.  I smack myself on the head, and then leave my hand there, shaking my head at her.  She curls her lip at me.

“What’s the big fucking deal?”

“I don’t know! When was this?”

“A while ago.  I don’t know.  Some time.”

“Who was first?”

“Josh.”

“Oh my fucking God,”

“Lou, grow up,” she snaps at me then, and there is no more excitement in those eyes of hers.  They are flat and cold and empty.  Only contempt spills from her face when she looks my way.  “You sound about twelve.”

“I’m sorry,” I say with a nervous laugh.  I look back out at the garden, because I am increasingly unnerved by her mood. “I’m just surprised that’s all.  It’s a lot to get my head around.  You never said before.”

She shrugs her shoulders.  “Oh well.”

“So was it good?  I mean, did you enjoy it?  I wouldn’t know, would I?  Being a virgin?”  I am almost deliberately acting like a twelve year old now, just to get her to spill the beans.  She can look at me like I am a retard if she wants, fuck her.

“Leon was the best, obviously,” she sighs, and lifts the bottle to her mouth, even though it is my turn.  I say nothing, I just watch her.  She finishes it off and then hurls the bottle into the grass.

“You got a lot of cleaning up to do tomorrow,” I say.

“Fuck it.”

“Are you okay?”

“Why do you ask?”

“You seem weird.  Kind of angry.”  She looks at me then, releases a slow sigh and then wipes her mouth with the back of her hand.  “Are you okay?” I ask again.

“I’m fine,” she says, and a faint smile touches her lips.  “What else do you want to know?”

“Um.  Does it hurt?  You know, the first time?”

“Oh not really.  Just a bit.  If he knows what he’s doing then it will be okay.”

“Did Josh and Ryan know what they were doing?” I ask, and cannot believe I am even asking, but hell, fuck it.  She looks at me kind of wearily and I smile at her indulgently, feeling more and more like a child.

“Course they didn’t,” she sighs.  “I had to show them.”

“Marianne!”

“What?”

“Just…I don’t know.  I am just so shocked.  Practically speechless.  You are like two people, or something.  I never knew you were so…” I look around, searching for the right word.  “You know…sexual?”

Marianne laughs at me.  “You are so funny.”

“Am I?”

“Oh yeah.  You’ll never know how funny you are.”

I frown at her.  “What does that mean?”

“Huh?”

“You.  You’re like, talking in fucking riddles.  You must still be hammered.  Or high.”  I look at her and make a face.  “I forgot about that.  How was that?  Was that the first time?”

“I’m not going to sit here and answer all your dumb questions,” she complains and yawns at me.  I roll my eyes.

“Well you dragged me out here!”

“Oh for god’s sake.”

“Marianne!”

“What?”

“Why are you being such a bitch?”

She leans towards me then, with a tight smile on her lips, and a knowing look in her green eyes.  I have the urge to move back, and in that second she reminds me horribly of Leon.  The way he steals the space.  I don’t move back.  I stare her down.

“I’m not being a bitch at all,” she retorts.  “I just wanted to have some adult conversation with someone, that’s all.  But then you go and get all silly and girly, and it does my head in.”

I am appalled with her.  “I’ll fuck off then shall I?”

“Don’t be such a baby.”

“Don’t be such a fucking bitch! I stood up to that tosser you shagged earlier, I’ll stand up to you too, you know!” I am suddenly aware that I have leant towards her, so I am effectively shouting right into her face.  The neat whiskey was probably not a wise idea on top of everything else I have consumed.  She stares at me, giving nothing away.  “He’s a fucking nasty twat by the way,” I tell her spitefully. “Although obviously you don’t care.  But he is.  He’s an animal.”

“Maybe I like animals,” she purrs at me then.  “Better than little boys, anyway.”

“Nice.”

“Look,” she sighs then, finally moving back.  “You can think what you want.  I had fun with Leon.  You hate him.  Whatever.”

“Are you expecting to see him again?  Because I wouldn’t get my hopes up if I were you.”

“Course I’m fucking not!” she snaps at me, and in that instant I can tell that she is lying.  Her cheeks redden slightly.  She looks furiously at me.  She is hoping to see him again, and there is nothing she can do to hide it from me.  She wants to see him again, and she knows there is not a fucking chance.  “Don’t be an idiot,” she says.  “It wasn’t like that anyway.  One night of fun.  That’s how I work.”

“Oh lovely.  That’s really nice.  Really romantic.”

“Anything else is a joke.”

“Really?  Is it?”

“Yep.  Relationships.  Marriage. All that shit.” Marianne lowers her feet onto the grass, stretches out her spine and stares indignantly at the dark shadows of her garden.

“So your own parents are a joke then?” I ask her.  She nods, not looking at me.

“Yep.  They’re a joke all right.  So are yours.  So are everyone’s.”

“Well aren’t you feeling cheerful?  So you had a great night then?  It really did you good?  Sleeping with Leon and taking coke?  Because you really seem happy about it mate.”

Marianne turns her head to look at me.  “What about you then?” she asks.

“Hey?”

“Tell me about your night then.  See if yours has filled you with the joy mine so obviously hasn’t.”

“I got drunk and came to see if you were okay,” I say to her.  “Joe got beaten up by Leon, while I checked on you.  Then we went downstairs and got more drunk.  Then I fell asleep.”

“And what about Travis?”

I feel something that resembles a knife, slicing through my heart.  Not my heart again.  This time it is sliced into two pieces of meat that slip and slide, trailing damp blood down the inside of my rib cage.  Travis.

“What about him?”  I try like hell not to let anything show up in my voice, but I know how fucking astute Marianne is.  I know I have no fucking chance.

“He was here.  Then he left.”

“So?”

“He followed you out when you went to be sick.”

“Did he?”

“He tried it on again, didn’t he?” She turns her body towards mine, and I can’t help but notice her left breast showing again.  I want to tell her to tighten her gown, but what is the point?  If I draw attention to it, and let her know it makes me uncomfortable, she will probably just whip it off and run around the garden naked or something.

“Don’t be stupid,” I groan at her.  She laughs at me.

“He did!  I know he did!  I can read you like a book Lou Carling!  He did, didn’t he?  Come on, tell the truth.  I told you.”

“For Christ’s sake,” I groan, burying my face in my hands for a moment.  Marianne laughs and rocks beside me.  I don’t get her at all.  I have never met a person more complicated and strange than Marianne Sholing, and I think, she is just warming up, she is only just starting to reveal herself to me.

“Come on, spill,” she demands, slapping my leg petulantly.  I drop my hands into my lap and stare at the ground.  The whiskey is hitting me harder and harder.  It is like someone taking random and savage pot shots at my brain.  “Your silence says it all Lou Carling.  Your silence says it all.  So you finally let him kiss you then?  Out here somewhere?”  I look at her and bite my lip, and my eyes fall momentarily to the bench we are sat on, and then I look quickly back at her, but it is too late, she knows.  Her green eyes widen greedily.  “Out here on the bench,” she states it like a fact.  “He kissed you right here where we are sat.”

“Yeah, so what?” I stretch and yawn.  Try to play it down.  I have the distinct urge not to give her any ammunition.  “That’s all.  Not like you and Leon.”

“Ah bless,” she smiles at me, her head tilted to one side.  Patronising, I think.

“Yeah, well, I was drunk,” I shrug at her carelessly.  “It won’t happen again either.”

“Have you told Joe?”

“No,” I look at her quickly.  “And don’t you either.  Not yet.”

“And why not?”

“I don’t know.” I frown wearily, and pull my legs up again, wrapping my arms tightly around my knees. “It’s just complicated.  You know how it is with his brothers.  I don’t want anything kicking off.”

“You don’t want them fighting over you again, you mean?” she asks.  I shake my head.

“That’s not what I mean.  I just mean, Joe is my best friend, okay?”

“Yeah, so?”

“So I don’t want to upset him.  Anyway, forget it.  It’s boring.  I do not fancy Travis.”

Marianne leans back and folds her hands together in her lap.  She watches me quietly, and her expression is peaceful and serene, and I wonder what the hell she is thinking when she looks at me like that.  “Okay,” she sort of sighs.  “Let’s forget it.  You’re right, it is boring.  Do you want one more drink?”

“What?”

“I fancy one more drink.” She jumps up energetically and starts heading for the house.

“You’re crazy,” I tell her back.  She laughs.

“Oh yes!”

When she returns moments later, she is carrying two glasses of white wine.  I take mine reluctantly.  My head is spinning out of control.  I feel a bit nauseous again.  Marianne sits down and takes a sip of her wine.  “Ahh,” she says.  “That’s nice.”

“I’m surprised there is any booze left in there.”

“I knew where to look,” she says and winks at me.  I look down into my wine and try to take some slow, deep breaths.

“What are you doing?” she asks me in amusement.

I look up at her through my messy hair.  “I am just really, really pissed,” I tell her sombrely, and she throws back her head and bellows laughter.  Well at least she seems cheerful again, I muse.  I think I have seen her swing between every conceivable emotion tonight.

“You’re so sweet,” I hear her say.  I nod helplessly.  I can feel my eyelids trying to drop down.  I try to fight it.  They want to close down for the night, they want to slam the shutters down on my brain, and I don’t blame them, because my brain is totally fucked.  In the end I let my head drift back towards the back of the bench, and rest it there. I watch the garden.  I wonder what the hell the time is.  I wish I were still curled up with Joe.  I feel sickness spreading through my body and my soul and it saddens me.  I want to cry.  Alcohol is such a dangerous fucking thing.  Getting drunk is a risky and vicious thing to do to yourself for no reason.

“Didn’t mean to ruin your fun,” I hear myself murmur, as my mind takes me back to the fight outside her room.  I am leaning against her now.  I can feel the glassy smoothness of her silk robe against my bare arm.  I feel her sighing.

“You didn’t.  We had our fun.”

I close my eyes.  Just for a moment, I tell myself.  “Good,” I reply.  “I’m glad you had fun because we all deserve to have fun.  We all need to have fun.”

“That is very true Lou.  And have you had fun?  Tonight?”

“In the confusion of it all,” I open my eyes and try to consider it.  “Maybe.  Yes.  In a weird way.”

“Everything happens in a weird way.”

“Especially when you are pissed.”

“You are probably my best friend, Lou.”  I look at her then.  Her face is very close to mine.  Her green eyes are startling in their colour.  They remind me of cat’s eyes.  They sparkle with all the hidden thoughts that flow through her mind.

“Really?” I ask her. “I sometimes think you sort of hate me.”

“Don’t be stupid,” she giggles, and nudges me.  “I don’t hate you.  You are lovely.  And very funny.”

“Okay then.”  I close my eyes again, because my eyelids are winning, because they are tied down with weights.  My eyelashes bump down upon each other, top meeting bottom, then batting back open again as I struggle to stay awake.  Then she rests her head on my shoulder, and I rest my head on her head.

 

I jerk awake, fuck knows how much later.  I am totally disorientated and confused, and there is a glass of wine in my hands that I don’t recall being there, and as I jump out of my sleep I drop the glass, and it shatters into tiny pieces on the ground.  I gasp and sit forward, staring with one hand over my mouth, at the shining shards of glass on the grass.  I look at Marianne, and she is not there.  I look up.  How is it possible that I feel even more pissed than I did before I fell asleep?  I rub my eyes.  How the hell is that actually possible?  Where does the phrase ‘sleep it off’ come from then?

Marianne is not sat next to me anymore, and I suppose her moving away was what woke me up.  She is not sat next to me, because she is on the grass in front of me, sort of dancing around.  She is flapping her robe about, revealing one side of her tiny naked body, and then the other.  She is staring at the black sky, scarred with twinkling stars, millions of years away from us and our pointlessness.  I feel my eyes widen at the sight of her there, like that.  I have to shake my head, and then rub at my eyes, and still I cannot believe I am not dreaming the sleep of the drunk.

She is laughing, and swaying, and whipping her open gown to one side, and then the other.  I feel embarrassed, but also mesmerised, because her little body, it is so fucking beautiful.  I feel a deep sinking sadness then, far down inside my weak little belly, because something tells me that no matter how skinny I get, I will never feel like that about my own body.  I will never dance around like that, showing it off, revelling in its perfect, and unique beauty.  I only want to hide it and cover it up.  I only view it as a means of transport.

She sees me looking at her and laughs at me loudly.  She does not even attempt to pull her gown around her body.  I sort of grin in embarrassment and lower my eyes.  I feel a bit like a pervy teenage boy, spying.  “Wakey, wakey,” she laughs at me.  “Want to join me for a dance?”

“I just broke your glass.”

“So what?  So did I. Look!” She points dramatically at the ground near her feet, which when I strain my eyes, I can see is sprinkled with shining glass.

“Watch out you idiot!” I hiss at her, as she carries on dancing.

“I don’t give a fuck!” she shouts back, throwing back her hair.  She looks wild, I think.  Untamed and fucked up.  I shiver.

“Just be careful!”

Careful!” she howls at me, laughing but angry at the same time.  She shows me what she thinks of this by dancing in a crazy circle, even faster and harder on the glass.  I cannot watch, so I cover my eyes. I imagine her little white feet getting sliced and diced upon the hidden shards of glass, laying in wait for her among the damp blades of grass.

I hide in my hands.  I stretch my shaking fingers around my cold face, caressing my skin, comforting myself, and as I do I realise that this is what I need most right now, someone to comfort me, someone to look after me, not fuck me up.  I drop my head into the palms of my hands, and my hands press against my raised knees.  I can hear her laughing.  I wonder, and I wince, at the thought of her dainty feet covered in nicks and cuts, like her arms.  I do not know what to do.  My friend, (is she my friend?) is dancing on broken glass. Is dancing on broken glass. For fucks sake

“What do you think pain is Lou?”  I hear her asking me.  I lift my head drowsily as she bounds back to the bench and sits down next to me.  She pays no attention to her open gown, as she pulls her foot up onto her other knee and inspects the sole of her foot.  I watch her, as my brains swells and throbs inside my head.  I think, I don’t know, I don’t know what pain is.  Except for my entire fucking life.  I just shake my head at her, because I am barely able to speak.  She is bent fiercely over her foot.  I do not want to know if there is glass in it or not.  “What do you actually think pain is?  Have you ever really thought about it?”

I blink at her.  “I don’t know.  No.”

“Really?  Haven’t you?”

“No.”

“It fascinates me.  Really, it does.”  I look at her then, and she is pulling a slither of glass out of her heel.  I feel my stomach turn over.

“Oh fuckinghell, Marianne.”

“Shut up. Don’t be silly.”

It is then that I remember her arms.  I force myself to look at her.  At her face.  Her eyes are gleaming as she extracts the glass, and holds it aloft triumphantly.  I watch a fat droplet of blood swelling at the tip of the glass, before stretching and falling.  I watch it land, fat and red on her naked thigh.  I am breathless.

“Look,” she says, and moves the bleeding glass, closer to my eyes.  I feel like I cannot breathe properly.  “Look,” she says.  “It’s just blood. It’s just what we are all made of, Lou. Look at it.”

It means so much to her, so I look at it.  My eyes focus in on the blood-smeared shard of glass that trembles between her fingers.  I don’t know what to say.  I do not know what she wants me to say.

“Ouch,” I say.

“No,” she says, quickly.  “That’s not ouch.  Ouch is for children.  Ouch is a stupid reaction.  You can be braver than that.”

“What?”

“Look,” she says, and she brings the glass back down towards her exposed thigh.  She whips it across the surface of the white flesh and I wince, and draw back in shock.  I see her smiling.  Laughing.  I look back at her thigh.  The bubbles of blood are pushing up along the lines of the white slash on her skin.  I watch. I am transfixed.  I watch the red beads forming along the line.  I can hear her breathing get faster, and she sounds excited. The red beads grow fatter and fatter, and start to blend into each other, absorbing each other, and growing hungry.  I watch the beads form an orderly line.  A soaking, wet red line.

“Marianne,” I hear myself whisper at her.  “Don’t do that.”

“Why not?” she says, matter of factly.  “Why shouldn’t I?”

“Because you’ll hurt yourself,” I say, stupidly.  “You’ll get hurt…”

“Hurt?” she questions, not looking at me.  “What’s hurt?  It does not hurt.”  She pushes the glass towards my face and I move back fearfully.  She laughs, and then whips it back down to her thigh, slashing at the flesh a second time.

“Marianne!” I cry out at her.  “Don’t!”

“Why?” she laughs at me.  She is laughing at me.  I want to cry. I watch a second line of blood beads stand to attention on her thigh.

“Marianne,” I say.  “Please don’t do that do yourself.”

“Why not?”

“Why not?  Because I don’t understand it Marianne.  I don’t get it.  Why would you do that to yourself?”

“It feels good,” she purrs at me, smiling from ear to ear.  She seems oblivious to the pain.  I watch the new line of blood springing to life next to the first one.  The blood runs fast, this time.  She has cut deeper.  The blood pours out from the cut, and down her thigh, zig zagging down past her knee.  I gasp uselessly.  “It’s okay,” she tells me.  “It really doesn’t hurt.  It really doesn’t.  It stings a bit the next day, that’s all.”

“That’s all?”

“Yeah.  That’s just to remind me.  I wake up and think oh yeah.  I did that.  I would forget otherwise.”

“And what do you think?” I ask her then.  “What do you think when you wake up and realise what you have done?”

“I don’t mind,” she shrugs.  “I think, oh well.”

“Marianne.  It’s not right.”

“It makes me feel better.  Lou, do you know what pain is?”  She is leaning very close to me now.  I can smell the wine on her breath.  I want to move back, to pull away, but I don’t.  I shrug my shoulders weakly.  I am weak.  “Lou,” she says.  “It is something you can easily conquer.  It is nothing really.  It is only what it is.  It is only what you allow it to be.  Once you realise that, life becomes a whole lot fucking easier, believe me.”

I feel the sigh dropping out from my chest.  I am so beaten down by everything.  The alcohol has thrashed me.  I keep my eyes on hers.  Her smile.  “Really?” I ask her.  “Is that so?”

“Yes,” she promises softly, and she moves closer.  I feel her wet, bloody thigh press against mine.  I know, that in a less drunken moment, I would pull away in disgust and make my excuses and leave.  But excessive alcohol pins me to the inevitable spot and I cannot move.  “Once you conquer physical pain,” she is saying to me softly, slowly.  “You can easily conquer emotional pain.”

“Can you?” my voice asks her.  “Really?”

“Let me show you.”  I look down.  Marianne picks up my arm.  She is still holding the weeping shard of glass.  She holds my forearm with both of her hands and I see her staring at my waiting flesh.  Then she looks into my eyes and smiles, and I know, that she knows, that I am totally fucked.  “Lou,” she says to me.  “You are very open minded.  That’s what I like about you.”  She presses one thumb against the skin on my wrist.  She moves the thumb higher, pressing softly, towards the fold of the elbow.  I think again, pull away.  She has the glass and she moves it down towards my arm, and she lines it up, and drags it along my skin, just softly.  When she hears my alarmed intake of breath she looks up at me.  “Lou,” she says to me.  “It doesn’t hurt.  Open up your mind.  Let your body take it.  It only hurts if you let it hurt.  If you think in those terms.”  I don’t understand.  I am locked within her eyes.  She stares back into mine.  I feel the glass pressing into my flesh and I don’t know what to do.  She is holding my arm gently.  I could pull away at any moment, but I do not, and she takes advantage of this, and she scrapes the glass against me harder.  I hiss at the pain.  I pull my arm out of her hands and bring it up to my eyes.

“Marianne!”

“There you go!” she cries, and I watch her hurl away the glass.  And then she is up again.  Dancing. Spinning.  Laughing.  Throwing her robe to one side, and then the other.  I let her, and I look down at my arm.  On the inside, halfway between the wrist and the elbow, she has made her mark.  I stare.  I watch the beads of red bulging and spreading.  I watch them join forces and march a straight savage line across my weak flesh.  She is right.  There is no pain.  What is pain?

I would probably be all right if I wasn’t such a fucking thinker.

I start thinking, what is this?  What does this fucking mean?  The booze lends me to paranoia, and paranoia does a real good job with me, and tells me this bitch is actually trying to kill me. I feel my body lurching, without my permission, lurching to its feet.  I am lurching up.  Reeling.  That is another good word.  Reeling.  Because you do not walk normally when drink has done this much to you.  You reel.  So I reel and lurch towards the conservatory.  I run away from her.  It is my body moving me on, and not my mind.  My body wants me out of there.  My body has had enough.

I hear her laughing and dancing, and I glimpse my bloody arm, and I want to scream out; ‘you dumb fucking bitch!’ but I don’t.  I hurl myself through the open doors of the conservatory.  I straightaway see Joe, still lying where I left him.  I want to get the fuck out of there, and I feel an awful drunken panic consuming me.  It is terrible.  I seize Joe by his arm and wrench him away from his dreams.  He opens blurry eyes and sees me.  “What the fuck?” his sleep slurred voice questions me.

“Joe,” I hiss this urgently into his ear.  I am pulling at his arm.  “Joe, we need to go.  Take me home.  Now.  Please take me home.”

He wakes up quickly, alarmed by my closeness and my panic, and I tighten my hold on his arm, and try to drag him from the sofa, because I am so mortified, and so confused, and I just want to get the hell out of there as quick as I can.  I keep pulling at his arm.  I can feel the wetness passing between us.  My arm is bleeding into his.

“What the fuck have you done?” he asks me, climbing out of groggy sleep.  I pull and pull at his arm.  I just want him to get the fuck up.  “Why are you crying?” he asks me.  I did not realise I was crying, but he is right, I am fucking crying.  There are fat hot wet tears sliding down my cheeks.

“Joe,” I beg, pulling him harder.  “Take me home.  Please, please, you have to take me home.”

“Okay, okay,” he says, and thank God, finally, he gets up from the sofa and stretches.  I have no time for stretches.  I want him to get me out of there. So I keep pulling him.  “What have you done you stupid bitch?” he is complaining at me.  He is holding onto my sticky wet arm.  “Jesus,” he breathes then.  “What have you done?”

“Joe,” I beg, “Please take me home.  Please, please, please.”

He is staring at me then.  I have to get him moving. I pull him, I yank him, I force him away from the sofa, from his sleeping friends, and out of the conservatory.  I say nothing, just become resourcefully adamant in my desire to get out of there, and I do not give up anything until I feel the cold air of the night again and I let the front door slam behind us.  I feel the crunch of gravel under my feet and a grim determination takes over me.  I can hear Joe moaning and protesting and worrying, but I do not slow down, or give in to him until I can feel the hard black pavement under my bare feet, and I am sure that she is not following us.  And then I start to cry.

“Lou, Lou, Lou,” he is saying to me, over and over again.  He has his arm around my shoulders, and he is squeezing me, trying to get me to calm down.  I cannot calm down.  I am a complete and utter wreck of a human being.  I can feel my shoulders heaving and lurching with every gut-wrenching sob.  Finally Joe has enough, and he holds me by my shoulders and stops me.  “Lou!” he shouts this into my face.  “Lou stop it!”

I am beat.  I hide my face in his chest and keep crying.  I feel him lift my arm and I hear him swear.  “Lou, what the fuck is this?  What the fuck have you done to your arm?” I hide in his chest and cry and cry, and it is not all Marianne’s fucking fault. It is not.  It is fucking everything.  I cannot speak, because I am crying too much.  I let Joe lead me home.

“Can I sleep at yours?” I ask him at one point.  I just know that I do not want to be alone.

“Course,” he tells me, rubbing my arm.  “Course you can.”

Somehow we make it back to his.  I have vague memories of crossing the black, silent fields. Leaning harder and harder on Joe.  I think I sleep.

I am subtlety aware of entering Joe’s house.  Of the shush noise he makes at me as he turns his key in the lock.  I obey.  I shush.  I let him shuffle me in.  I stare at the patterns on the carpet.  He leads me up the stairs.  They seem so huge and vast.

He pushes me towards the bottom bunk bed.  The saggy old mattress is a welcome relief to me.  I throw back the duvet.  My head hits the pillow.  I close my eyes, and I am dimly aware of Joe moving around the room, doing things.  Finally I feel him climb into bed beside me.  He pulls the duvet over both of us.  He has something in his hand and he presses it against my wet arm.  I hiss.  Pain.  I think of Marianne, and I examine the reality of the pain.  She is right about one thing.  It is only what you think it is.

“It’s okay,” Joe is whispering this to me in the darkness.  How the fuck did I get here?  “What happened?” he is asking me.  I am cold and black and my closed eyes press against his soft chest, and I want to love him.

“Marianne did it.”

“What the fuck?”

“Marianne did it.  She cut me.”

“Oh Jesus Christ, that is mental!  Jesus Christ, Lou.”  I can feel his hand rubbing my shoulder.  His arm is around me, rubbing me. I close wet eyes upon his t-shirt.

“I’m sorry,” I tell him in the darkness. “I am a fucking twat…fuckinghell.”

“She’s a fucking mental bitch Lou!  You stay away from her! Fuckinghell!”

He sounds angry, and so he holds me closer.  I try to remember our journey through the darkness together, but I can’t.  I am just suddenly here.  I am here, and Joe has pulled the duvet right over us, and I bury myself in him.

I am sobbing again.  But it is not Marianne’s fault.  It is only because I hate myself so fucking much.

“Stay away from her,” Joe rants to me in the darkness.  “Stay the fuck away from that mad bitch!”

“I let her do it,” I sob uselessly into his soaked t-shirt.  He is still pressing the towel, or whatever it is, against my arm.  “I could have stopped her.”

“You’re hammered,” he tells me firmly.  He sounds like he is talking through gritted teeth.  “It is not your fault Lou.  She shouldn’t be going round doing that to other people!  It’s sick.”

I cannot stop crying.  I am not just weeping silent tears, I am really crying.  My whole body is rocking with them. They are coming faster and harder, and I am not in control of them, and I start to get frightened, because it feels like they are trying to consume me and take over me from the inside.  They just keep coming and coming, and I just don’t understand it, and I can’t stop it, I can’t escape.  Joe holds me tighter.

“Lou, shh, shh, it’s okay,” he is telling me, and his voice sounds worried.  He rolls onto his side and I push my head in towards his chest.  I curl up into a ball.

“I can’t stop, I can’t stop,” I try to tell him.  I can feel the horrible drumming panic rising inside my chest, and I think I will probably die, I will just die, because soon enough I will be crying so much that I will not be able to breathe.

“What is wrong with you?” he holds my face in the darkness and pulls it up to his.  “You’re scaring me Lou,” he whispers.

“I don’t want to eat anything,” I blurt out at him then.  “I just don’t want to, I don’t want to eat anything…I don’t want to get fat again.”  I close my eyes and the tears keep coming.  Joe holds me against his chest and his arms are all the way around me.

“Don’t be silly,” I hear him telling me softly.  “You’re being so silly.  You’re just really, really drunk, and Marianne has scared you, and you’re going to be fine in the morning.”

“Keep telling me that,” I shudder and beg him.  I am trying to empty out my mind, and shovel away all of the thoughts that are driving me crazy.  I don’t want to think them anymore.  I just want to be normal for once.  I just want to be happy.

“You’ll be fine in the morning,” Joe whispers into my hair.  “You’re gonna’ have one hell of a hangover, but you’ll be fine, just fine.  You are the loveliest person I know.  You should stop worrying about everything all the time.  You are just fine the way you are.  You are lovely the way you are.”  He repeats this over and over again into my hair, until his words, and my breathing start to hum a regular pattern.  It has all slowed down. “I love you the way you are.  Just be the way you are.  There is nothing wrong with who you are.”

The Mess Of Me:Chapter 21

21

 

Oh dear God, dear World, he is!  What the fuck does he fucking want?

I am angry now.  I easily switch to anger when I’ve been drinking. I can be overloaded with happiness one moment, and seething with rage the next. It can really switch that quickly. I sit back on my arse and hug my knees and scowl at him.  “You can stop watching me be sick now,” I tell him.  Travis smiles at me awkwardly.  He is on his knees, and sits back on his feet.

“Joe dropped his drink.”

“What?”

“He dropped his drink, that’s why he didn’t follow you.”

“Oh.”  I blow out my breath and look back at my vomit, steaming away in the flowerbeds.  “You didn’t have to come.  I’m quite capable of being sick on my own actually.”

“Wasn’t sure you would make it out here okay.”

“Why do you fucking care all of a sudden?” I shout at him then.  It takes him by surprise.  Good.  He can get up and fuck right off and stop messing with my head like this.  He closes his mouth and looks away from me.

“Sorry,” he says then.  “I just wanted to make sure you were okay.  I’ll leave you alone, if you’re sure you’ll be okay.”

“Why don’t you answer the question?”

“Hey?”

“The question! Why do you care all of a sudden?  I’ve known you my whole life Travis.  Why all the attention suddenly?”

“Um.”  That is all he can say.  Um.  He scratches his nose.  Then he searches his pockets for a cigarette and finds one.

“You’re giving me the creeps,” I tell him, staring back at my sick.  “That’s all.”

“Well sorry.” Travis lights his cigarette and smiles at me.  I want him to stop smiling at me.  “That cocktail was toxic by the way.”

“What?”

“She put fucking double in yours mate.  She topped it way up.”

“Did she?” I stare at him in confusion.  “Why would she?”

“I don’t know,” Travis shrugs at me, and puffs on his cigarette. “Maybe she wanted you out of the way?”

“What?”  I just stare at him.  I am sobering up now I have spewed, but I am still horribly confused by my entire life.

“Think she has the hots for Leon,” Travis shrugs again.  I roll my eyes at him, as if this is old news to me.

“Think she has the hots for all three of you,” I tell him.  “But I don’t care.  I feel better now anyway.  Time for another drink.”

“How about some food?”

“No thanks.”

“Come on.  Let me get you something.  It’ll soak up the booze.”

“You sound like her.”  I groan, getting slowly to my feet.  Travis stands up beside me and places his hand gently on my shoulder.

“You okay?”

“Yes thank you.” I am lying.  I am not okay.  I am feeling better, but I am still extremely drunk.  I suddenly start to make my way waveringly over to the garden bench.  Travis follows me hesitantly.  “Thought you were going back in?”

“Just need a little sit down first,” I tell him, and plonk myself down on the bench with a huge sigh.  “A bit more fresh air.” I wave my hand at him.  “Go on, you go.  I’m fine now.  Go and enjoy the party.”

Travis looks at me, and then looks at the house.  It is heaving and throbbing with people and music.  Why wouldn’t he want to be a part of that? I watch his shoulders drop slightly, and then he says.  “I’ll be back in a minute.”  He turns and goes into the house.  I nod at his back, saying nothing, but inside I am thinking ‘yeah right’, and I am also relieved.  I am on my own now.  I breathe in huge mouthfuls of fresh night air, and rest my head in my hand for a moment.  I recall the day, which seems like years ago now, when Joe and me sat out here watching Tommy play on Marianne’s swing set.  We had no idea where she was, and Leon wanted his drugs back.  I remember how for a moment or two it had felt like our entire world had crashed down around us.  And then I had started to laugh.

I am having a little giggle to myself at the memory when suddenly Travis reappears.  I groan inwardly at his persistence, and curse him for being so stupidly handsome.  And I remind myself that even if I did once have a teeny weeny crush on him, that was just on his looks, not his personality.  No way.  He passes me a pint of water and a packet of crisps and parks himself on the bench beside me.  I just look at him quizzically.  “You’ll feel better,” he says with a nod.

“Why do you keep doing this, when I’m drunk at parties?” I ask him then, my drunken state making me far more brazen than I would be otherwise.  When I am sober I think so many things that I keep to myself, or write on my wall.  I am glaring at him with an inviting smile.  He smiles back.  He shrugs at me.

“I don’t get the chance in normal life.  You’re always with Joe.”

“Oh.”  I look away and drink the water for a moment.  I even open the crisps and consider eating some.  I recall Joe suddenly kissing me on his bed that day after Mick had trashed his music, and it is on the tip of my tongue to just blurt it out.  To see what Travis’ reaction would be.  But I bite down on the urge.  I eat some crisps and drink some water, and we sit in silence until I look back at him and say; “You never bothered with me when I was fat, did you?  You didn’t like me then.  How superficial is that?”

Travis looks momentarily stunned and amused.  “I just never noticed you, that’s all,” he says in reply.  “You were just Joe’s friend.  You were both just these annoying little kids.”  He grins a wide grin that reminds me of Joe, and looks me up and down for a moment.  “Now suddenly you are all grown up.”

“So let me get this straight,” I say, dropping my eyes to my pint of water.  I run my index finger around the plastic rim.  “If I did let you kiss me, the only time it would ever happen would be when we’re drunk at parties?”

“No of course not,” Travis says more urgently, sitting forward, pushing his face towards mine.  “The only problem we would have is Joe.  It’s like he thinks he owns you or something.”  I look at him, and suddenly he leans in and goes for the kiss.  I duck away giggling, and he frowns.  “What?”

“You can’t really want to kiss me when I’ve just thrown up!”

“I don’t care.”

“It’s fucking disgusting!” I insist, keeping back from him.  “Look at the bloody state of me!”

“Why are you always so hard on yourself?  I said I don’t care.”

I stand up then, with my water and my crisps.  “I’m going to go and brush my teeth,” I look down at him and announce.  “I bet that when I get back you’ll be gone.”

I don’t give him a chance to reply.  I storm away across the grass and into the house.  I feel giddy with excitement, disbelief and alcohol.  I slide through the crowd, not looking for anyone, just minding my own crazy business. I run up the stairs to the bathroom, and luckily no one is in it.  I lock the door behind me and take five minutes to sort myself out.  I find a pack of spare toothbrushes in the bathroom cabinet and brush my teeth.  I splash cold water onto my face and neck and run my fingers through my hair.  I check my clothes for splatters of vomit, and there are none.

I leave the bathroom, feeling oddly womanlike and conniving, and slip back downstairs.  It is only as I slide through the kitchen crowd that I spot Marianne with Leon in the corner.  She is sat on his lap, her face turned to his, her black hair hanging down over one shoulder.  I wonder where Joe is, but can’t see him anywhere.  I run back outside, half expecting Travis to be gone, but he is not.  He is still sat there patiently.  I make a mental decision to use him just as I am convinced he is using me.  Fuck it.  You are only sixteen once.  Who cares?  It’s not going to matter, is it?

I drop down onto the bench and Travis immediately moves closer to me, and stares into my eyes, biting down on his lower lip.  I shiver.  “Better?” he whispers.  I nod.  And then it happens.  He slides his hands onto either side of my face, holding it like it is made of china.  I feel my entire body tremble.  I have broken out in goose     pimples everywhere.  He closes his eyes and presses his lips onto mine.  I give in to him.  It is the gentlest, softest kiss I could ever have imagined.

As we kiss, I wonder helplessly if this is what being a woman is really like.  If this is what being attractive is really like.  Beautiful, stolen kisses.  Discoveries.  I melt into his arms, and feel alive, like I am made of electricity.  A part of me keeps expecting Joe to show up and interrupt us, for some horribly awkward scene to unfold, but he doesn’t.

We pull away from the kiss at the same time, which is a relief.  I feel stunned and wide open, utterly vulnerable, but I find myself resting my cheek on his shoulder and closing my eyes, waiting for him to say something.  I feel him breathing next to me.  I feel like I am in a fucking movie, or something.

“You okay?” he asks me finally, so I pull back and that is when the reality slaps me in the face; when I sit back and look at him.  He stares back at me expectantly, and I think oh my god, you are Joe’s brother.  I have known you my entire life.  You’ve never been anything more than an annoying twat until now.  I want to laugh, but that would be awful.  I glance nervously towards the house, suddenly convinced that I will say Joe’s betrayed face staring back at me from the French doors.  But I can’t see him anywhere.

“I think I better find Marianne and make sure she is okay,” I tell Travis, looking back at him shyly.  He nods at me.

“Okay, good idea.  I wouldn’t trust Leon, if I were you either.”

I frown at him.  “Or you!”

Travis laughs.  “Oh.  Yeah, right.”

I slide off the bench and get to my feet before things can go any further.  I feel the strong desire to get away from him and find Marianne to talk to.  I feel the strong desire for another drink.  “Think I’ll get another drink,” I say then, so it does not sound so much like I am abandoning him.  “Do you want anything?”

“I’m coming,” Travis says with a sigh, hauling himself to his feet.  We walk towards the house, and just before we reach the conservatory, Travis stops me with a hand on my shoulder.  I look at his hand and then look up at him.  “You’re not only beautiful and funny,” he leans towards me and whispers next to my cheek, “but you’re a fucking good kisser too.”  He kisses me once on the cheek, and goes on into the house.  I stand and stare in bewilderment and pure joy, and watch him go.  He has his hands in his pockets, which makes me think of Joe again.  He slips easily through the crowd, and disappears.  Well, I think, that is that then.

I do not see Travis again for the rest of the night.  For all I know, he walked from one end of the house to the other and left through the front door, right after he kissed my cheek.  I decide to look for Marianne.  I need to speak to her.  The party has descended into drunken chaos by the looks of it.  People are drunk and falling over, or huddled in corners kissing people they never thought they would.  I feel my cheeks growing warmer by the second as I try not to think of the kiss with Travis, and push my way through people to search for Marianne.  I am getting quite desperate to find her.  I really, really need to speak to her.

In the kitchen I find a legless Ryan leaning all over Josh.  It looks like they have drunk nearly all of Marianne’s punch by themselves.  I wonder how long I have been gone.  “Where’s Marianne?” I ask them, looking around for a fresh drink.  There is a can of unopened cider on the kitchen table, so I grab it, and when no one nearby protests, I open it and drink a mouthful.

“She went off with Joe’s brother,” Ryan tells me, trying like hell not to fall off the stool he is balanced on.  I stare at him intently.

“What, Leon?  Where did they go?”

“No idea,” he shrugs back at me.  “But they were snogging the faces of each other for a fair while down here!”

I am quite stunned.  “Really?  Were they?”  I nearly go into a rant about how gross and out of order that is in so many ways, but then I remember what has just happened between me and Travis outside, and I shut my mouth up.  I sit with Josh and Ryan for a while, digesting all of the information, and drinking my stolen cider.  “So where’s Joe?” I ask, just as he walks into the room.  “Oh.”

He slides in with his back to the counter, cider in hand and vacant look on his face.  I think of Travis, and I feel sick.  I feel so many things that I almost cannot take it, and seriously consider running back outside under the pretence of needing to vomit again, just to be alone. Just to take it all in, because right now World, I feel a bit like I am going fucking crazy. I look at him, and then I can’t look at him, so I look away, but then I need to look at him, just to work out what the hell is going on.  Jesus fucking Christ, what am I doing to myself?  “You all right, you freak?” he bumps me with his shoulder and asks me, grinning.  I grin back.

“Oh yeah.”

“Been sick?”

“Just a bit.”

“Loser.”

“Fuck you.”

“Lightweight.”

I punch him in the arm and he groans in mock pain.  “You can’t even punch properly anymore, you’re too fucking skinny!”

“Oh shut up twat face.”

“You’re too weak,” he laughs, and I think he has that lovely happy sloppy drunk look on his face, and his body is all loose and silly as he picks up my arm and tries to make me punch myself.  “Look, look! There’s no strength in that!” He holds my fist and wiggles it around.  “What is that?  What is it for?  You pathetic little specimen!”

“I could kick your skinny arse any day of the week,” I retort, pulling my hand out of his.  Josh and Ryan start to laugh.

“Come on then!” Josh tells me.  “Show us what you’re made of!”

“She’s not made of anything, look,” Joe picks up my arm and waves it about stupidly, while giggling like an idiot.  “She’s fading away!”

“Stop it,” I pull my arm away from him, and he picks up his cider and drinks it, grinning broadly.  “Where has Leon gone with my friend, by the way?”

“What?” he lowers his drink.  “I don’t know.  What do you mean?”

I nod at Josh and Ryan.  “They said Leon and Marianne were snogging.  Then disappeared somewhere.”

“Oh.” Joe closes his mouth and looks confused for a moment.  Josh and Ryan are nodding at him.  They seem to have lost the ability to speak.

“Just a bit worried,” I add, watching Joe closely.  “I don’t want him taking advantage of her.”

At this statement, Ryan and Josh swap amazed, wide-eyed looks and then snort loudly with laughter.  I look at them indignantly, and then at Joe.  He looks just as confused as I feel.  “Something funny?” he asks them.

“It’s just I wouldn’t worry about him taking advantage of her,” Josh tells us, wiping his eyes with his hand, his shoulders still shaking with laughter.  “That’s all.”

“Man, that is funny,” Ryan sighs beside him.

“You’re idiots,” I tell them both.  They just laugh at me.  I look back at Joe and poke him in the ribs.  “Think we should find her.”

“Oh god, do we have to?” he groans, closing his eyes and wiping his hand slowly down his face.

“Yes, we have to.  Just to check on her.”

“Oh I don’t want to.  You go.  She’s your weird friend, you go. I’m having fun here.”

“Joe,” I say firmly, taking his arm in both of my hands and pulling him away from the counter.  “I am not confronting your evil brother on my own.  Come on.  Don’t be a wuss all of your life.”

“But I am a wuss,” he protests, as I drag him away.  “That’s what I am!  I like it! I like being a wuss!  Let me just be a wuss please!”

“Come on, stupid.  She might need us.”

“She doesn’t need anyone!” Joe laughs, as we reach the large hallway.  “She’ll be fine!”

“Not with Leon she won’t,” I tell him, although I can’t really explain why I think this.  Maybe they are all right, I wonder, as we check the downstairs rooms for her.  Maybe she is okay with Leon.

“God I really don’t want to do this,” Joe groans again, as I start to head up the stairs, pulling him with me.  “Leon won’t like it.”

“It’s not about him.  I just want to see she is okay, that’s it.  You don’t even have to say a word.”

“But he’ll be pissed off.  He’ll be pissed off anyway.  I really don’t want to piss him off, Lou.”

“Oh stop being such a baby,” I snap at him on the landing, as I try to think where to look and what to do.  “I’m here to protect you aren’t I?”

“He wouldn’t not smack you just because you’re a girl!”  Joe cries out at me in exasperation at the top of the stairs.  He is still smiling slightly, but I can tell he is worked up too.  He is still happy drunk, but bordering on the paranoid drunk.  I sigh and walk over to Marianne’s closed bedroom door.  Joe stands behind me, huffing and puffing with his arms crossed.  I tap on the door nervously.

“Just going to check she is okay,” I repeat again, glancing back at Joe.  He rolls his eyes at me angrily.

“Tried to warn you,” he says softly, just as the door is opened.  I am face to face with Leon, and Joe was right, he does look pissed off.  This is alarming enough, but even more alarming is the fact he has no top on.  I find myself swallowing anxiously, and trying not to let my eyes wander down to his naked chest.

“Hello?” he snaps at me in a typically unfriendly voice.

“Is Marianne with you?” I ask him, trying to peer around him into her room.  “It’s just that I can’t seem to find her anywhere.”

“She’s in here.” He raises his eyebrows at me and closes the door an inch.  I push my face forward.

“Can you tell her I need to speak to her please?”

“What the fuck?”

“It’s urgent,” I plead, as the darkness spreads across his face.  “It’s life and death.  I’ll be so quick.  I just need to talk to her.”

“Not now, okay?” Leon tries to close the door, but I am too quick and get the entire left side of my body in the way of the door.  He looks at me like he would like to kill me, and then flicks his hard eyes to Joe.  “Fucks sake!” he yells.  Joe steps forward.

“Just want to see she is okay,” he explains softly to his brother.

“Marianne!” I call out then.  “Can I talk to you quickly?”

“Look fuck off right?” Leon hisses then, his breath reeking of beer as it smothers my face.  “I’m not kidding.”

“Why won’t you let us speak to her?” I ask him.  “Just let us speak to her and we’ll fucking go!”

“She’s busy,” he snarls, holding onto the door as I try to press through it.  “And I am getting seriously fucked off now.  Come here!” He says this to Joe, beckoning him forward with a curled finger.

“We only want to check she is okay,” Joe says, not moving.

“Why the fuck wouldn’t she be?”

“Because she’s with you, you fucking bully!” I shout into his face.  “Because we don’t trust you!  Because you’re probably some kind of maniac and she is my fucking friend!”

Leon points at Joe.  “Get this bitch out of my face right now or I’m gonna’ lay you out,” he says to him.  I feel Joe slide his hand around my elbow.

“Come on,” he says to me.

“No, no way.  I won’t be bullied by this prick.  Lay me out!” I glare up into his hard-set face.  “If you want to punch someone, why don’t you try me?  Then Marianne will see what you’re really like.  Or why don’t you stop being such a fucking dick for once in your life, and just let us speak to her?”  I am angrier than I thought possible.  He does not scare me.  I am drunk though.  This is what happens when you drink.  You get ridiculously aggressive and sure of yourself, when ordinarily you would just not bother.  I punch the door with my fist, wishing it was his face, wishing he would just let us see her, I mean, what the hell is wrong with him.  I am starting to think he has fucking raped or killed her or something!

Leon calls my bluff then.  He doesn’t punch me, but he does shove me hard.  I nearly land on my arse, but Joe is there to stop me.  Now that he has moved me on, Leon closes the bedroom door behind him and claims his space the way he always does.  He looks like a bear poised to attack.  “Get her out of here,” he says this softly to Joe, who looks like he is about to shit himself.

“Come on,” Joe says to me again.  “I’m sure she’s fine.”

“How can you say that?” I stare at him and cry.  “When he acts like that?  I want to know what the hell he’s done to her in there!”

Joe looks worriedly back at Leon, and tightens his grip on my elbow. “Forget about it, let’s just go.” He doesn’t even look drunk anymore, just miserable and scared, and this angers me even more.  I pull my elbow out of his hand and flick my hair out of my face and glare viciously at Leon. It is like years fall through me then, years of fearing and loathing him, years of seeing the way he treats Joe. It all falls through me and builds me back up brick by brick.

“Let me speak to my friend,” I demand through clenched teeth.  My fists are curled tightly at my sides.  I don’t recall ever feeling this enraged before.  It is the sheer arrogance of him.  The sheer stubborn stupidity that he exists in, day after day.  Can’t he see that if he just let me speak to her, I would leave them to it?

“You’re always interfering aren’t you?” Leon sneers at me, one side of his mouth pulling upwards slightly.  His eyes move to Joe. “Can’t you keep your girlfriend under control?”

“She’s not my girlfriend,” Joe sighs, with a roll of his eyes.  He crosses his arms and shakes his head at me.  “Come on.

“No,” I say again.  “This is fucking ridiculous.  What has he got to hide?  Just let me speak to her and I’ll go.  How hard is that to understand?  What is the problem?”

“I don’t like being told what to do by bossy little bitches, that’s what the problem is,” Leon informs me calmly, as I seethe in front of him.  I take a step towards Marianne’s door and he moves to block me.

“Fucking idiot!” I shout at him, incensed with frustration. “You just enjoy being a total prick, don’t you?  Your whole life!  A total and utter prick!”

“Okay,” he says then, his voice reasonable.  “Let’s put it this way, you fucked up little cunt.  You shut up and go back downstairs and carry on necking your Alco pops like a good girl, or for every second that you remain in my eyesight shouting the odds, I’m going to give your boyfriend here a good smack.”  He raises his eyebrows and smiles at me triumphantly.  He even laughs.  “What do you think about that?”

I swallow hard.  I do not want to let him beat me.  I have to speak to Marianne.  I just have to.  I narrow my eyes at him and look him up at down.  “I think you are the biggest tosser in the world.  I think you are a dumb, mindless thug.  I think you are an ungrateful shitbag of a brother, and I think I am going to speak to my friend!” I take another step towards the door.  Leon grabs Joe by the shirt, yanks him forward and cuffs him around the head.  I stop.

“Ow!” Joe complains, with both hands on the back of his head.  I blow my angry breath out through my teeth.  I think, I have seen worse.  That was a classic clip round the ear.  A basic reprimand I have seen Lorraine and Mick administer a million times over the years.  Joe is okay.  I duck around Leon suddenly, taking him by surprise, and reach Marianne’s door.  I don’t look back when I hear the sound of Leon slamming his brother back into the wall behind, or the noise Joe makes when all the breath has been punched out of his guts.  I swallow again and wrench open the door and go inside her bedroom.

She is sat at her dressing table, wearing little more than her silky black dressing gown.  The gown is tied loosely at the waist, exposing one breast, and her entire right leg, all the way up to the thigh.  I can see the dozens of tiny scars that stand out across her creamy skin.  She looks up at me in alarm, and at first I see guilt and fear etched across her face, but then her face relaxes, and she just smiles.  She is chopping up lines of white powder across her desk with her own special razor blade.  How fitting.  I let the door close softly.  I can hear the thumps and thuds of Leon punishing Joe on the landing, and a chant has started up of  ‘fight, fight, fight, fight!’

I just stare at her.  I am drunk and angry, and she is drunk and reckless, and I shake my head, at her, and at the white powder she is playing with like a child with matches.

“So that’s why he didn’t want to let me in,” I say to her softly, my shoulders dropping.  Marianne throws her head back and laughs, and then looks back down at the powder and continues to chop it up, organising it deftly into neat, white lines.

“I told him you wouldn’t exactly care,” she laughs and shrugs.

“Well then you don’t know me at all,” I tell her, my voice emotionless.  “And it looks like I don’t know you at all either.”

“Well isn’t that the truth about everyone?” she answers, looking back at me with a wide and hungry smile, her eyes shining with delight.

“Maybe it is.”

“Oh it is,” she laughs.  “It really is.  You want some?”

“No chance,” I say bitterly, looking at her in disgust.  “I wouldn’t touch that shit if you paid me.  You have no idea the shit Joe and me have gone through because of that crap.  We’re both sick of it.”

“No one forced you,” she says easily.  “No one put a gun to your head.  Everyone makes their own choices for their own reasons Lou.”

“Yeah, and Leon is beating the crap out of Joe right now out there, because of you!” I say this angrily, but also guiltily, and I know I have to go.  “I’ll talk to you later,” I tell her, my hand on the doorknob.  “You’re obviously completely fine.  I don’t know why I even bothered worrying.”

“Because you are a good friend Lou,” Marianne tells me in a sunny voice, her eyes on the desk.  She does not look up as I leave the room and close the door behind me.  On the landing, there is a crowd of kids watching and cheering as Leon and Joe roll around on the floor together.  I wade through, telling them all to get the fuck out of the way, and I reach in to the blur of fists and red faces and grab Joe by the arm.  The fight breaks up as Leon gets to his feet, grinning and panting.  Joe stays on the floor, and drops his head into the space between his knees.  I look up at Leon with all the fury and disgust I can muster.  I am glad to see his bottom lip is bleeding.

“Go on go back to her you fucking bastard,” I hiss at him from the floor.  “Go back and leave us alone if you want us to keep your secrets for you!”

Leon just turns slowly on his heels, broad and arrogant and full of himself as always.  He laughs, and his wide shoulders shake with it as he heads back to Marianne.  The crowd breaks up too.  Slouched shoulders disappear down the stairs, murmuring and chuckling.  I sit on the floor and put my arm around Joe.

“I’m really sorry,” I tell him quietly.  “I had to see she was okay.”

Joe snorts a little laugh through his nose and lifts his head to look at me.  His nose is bleeding, and there are two little tracks of red running down into his mouth.  I look into his eyes then, and I want to grab his poor face with both of my hands, just the way Travis did with mine.  I want to hold his face as if I am holding china.  I want to press my lips onto his and taste his blood.  “And was she?” he asks me, and I can see the genuine concern in his eyes and my heart lurches against my chest and smashes into tiny little pieces yet again.  I wonder how many times I can go through the same endless confusing emotions and urges.  I wonder helplessly if I will ever make any sense of it.  I lift a finger and use it to gently push back his hair, which is covering his eyes.  I watch him smile.

“She’s sat at the desk,” I sigh.  “Cutting up lines of coke.  That’s why he wanted to keep us out.”

The realisation hits Joe, and I can see he is as surprised as me.  “Oh,” he says slowly.  “That’s why.”

“I know,” I say, and drop my arm away from his shoulders.  “How stupid are we?”

“Pretty fucking stupid.”

“Pretty fucking drunk.”

“Me too.  Oh fuck man…” Joe rubs the heel of one hand into his eye, and then slides it around to the back of his head where he rubs it back and forth.  “My head really hurts.”

“Need more booze?”

“That might help, yeah.”

“He’s a fucking bastard, that cunt.” I shake my head at the closed bedroom door.  “For so many reasons.  I could write out at least one hundred reasons why he is a fucking bastard cunt.”  Joe looks at me and laughs.  I nod at him.  “Latest editions to the list being him seducing a sixteen year old girl and plying her with illegal drugs.”

“Well I don’t think she needing much seducing,” Joe says, still rubbing slowly at his head.  “You didn’t see her all over him like a rash.”

“Do you know that really surprises me?” I ask, looking at him.  “I just never saw her like that before, you know?  All sexy and seductive.  I never thought she was like that.”

“I don’t think we know her very well.”

“No, we don’t, you’re right.  I’ve been thinking that a lot lately.”  I get up then and hold my hand out to Joe.  He takes it and climbs awkwardly to his feet.  He looks wrecked and knackered and yawns widely.  “Let’s leave them to it then,” I shrug at the closed bedroom door.  “She obviously knows what she’s doing.”

“Yeah, come on, fuck ‘em,” he agrees and heads for the stairs. “They deserve each other.”

The Mess Of Me: Chapter 20

20

 

Dear World, Friday is here! Marianne insists I get ready for the party at her house.  I have no choice.  I take over the minimal make-up that I own, and the two outfits that I can’t decide between.  When I get there, Marianne’s parents have already left for their weekend away.  I gaze around at the big empty house, feeling lost and confused, as Marianne takes me from room to room, showing off the decorations and the food all laid out.  As promised she has locked the rooms she wants to keep intact, but there is still plenty of space for the guests to mill about and mingle.  Marianne is breathlessly pretty in a simple black dress and sparkly cardigan.  I wonder if the cardigan is to disguise her cuts, but I do not ask.  I let her bask in her glory.  I actually feel proud on her behalf.  She has certainly gone to a lot of effort.

She ushers me upstairs to help get me ready.  “Are you okay?” she asks me more than once.  “You seem totally out of it Lou.”

“Just tired,” I keep telling her, while the image of Joe practically hanging from the bridge remains imprinted in my minds eye.  Marianne looks at my clothes and tells me to go for the dress.  I am unsure.

“You look stunning for fucks sake,” she tells me firmly, gripping me by the arm and staring daggers into my eyes.  “Show off all your hard work, Lou.  Let all the kids from school see how amazing you look.”  I stare into her eyes and just want to cry, but I have no idea, no idea why at all.  She lets my arm go and drapes the dress carefully over my knees.  “Come on woman.  Do it.  Then I’m going to do your hair and makeup.”

“Because it matters what girls look like?” I ask her weakly, recalling our conversation with Joe in the summerhouse that day.  Marianne meets my gaze and smiles vividly.

“Exactly,” she triumphs, her eyes glittering.  “Now come on.  Do it.”

A short while later I am wearing a dress, and Marianne has straightened my hair to within an inch of its life.  She kneels before me and painstakingly applies layers of mascara and eyeliner to my eyes.  “You have the most amazing eyelashes I have ever seen,” she says as she does it. “People pay to have lashes this long and dark, and you have them naturally.”

“From my mum,” I shrug apologetically.  “Sara’s are the same.”

“They look amazing now,” she tells me and holds the mirror up to my face so I can see what she has transformed me into.  I was always such a tomboy before I think, as I stare at the girl in the mirror.  I swallow.  She enchants me.  She is not someone I recognise.  She is not me.

“Thanks,” I tell Marianne, pushing the mirror away.  “How about a drink to steady the nerves?”

“What are you nervous about?” she frowns at me, getting up and walking to her large desk, where an unopened bottle of wine stands.

“I meant you,” I lie.  Marianne laughs.

“I’m not nervous!  Why would I be nervous?”  She opens the bottle and fills two glasses.

“I don’t know.  You’re not ever nervous, about anything?”

“You have to care about stuff to get nervous,” she says flippantly, thrusting a full glass towards me.  I take it and consider her careless statement.

“Okay.”

“We need some food now too,” she says then, as if she has just remembered this is important.  I try not to let my blind panic show.  “Before the party starts,” she explains, heading for the door.  “You know, to line our stomachs!”

“What food?” I ask, my mouth like sandpaper.

“Toast is best,” she assures me. “Otherwise you’ll be on the floor after the first few drinks, don’t you know that?  Have some toast, then you’ll be able to drink more.”

“If you’re sure,” I say hesitantly, and drink my wine.  Marianne stops and grins back at me just before she goes through the door.

“Don’t freak out about it,” she says.  “You’ll only throw it up again later.”

“Oh,” I say, lowering my glass and staring at her intently.  “Oh yeah, I suppose.”

After another glass of wine I am feeling more relaxed.  Marianne has put some music on; she’s gone for some sort of generic chart compilation, just to be on the safe side.  Josh and Ryan arrive first.  They make a beeline for the drinks Marianne has displayed on the kitchen counter.  “You’ve thought of everything!” Josh tells her, as he makes himself a whiskey and coke.  I watch from the doorway, drink in hand, wondering if Josh has ever tried whiskey and coke before, and if Marianne’s dad is going to notice.  What does strike me is the free and easy way Marianne has with them.  I’d had no idea they were all so close.  I had always thought of Josh and Ryan and Joe’s friends, more than mine.  They were there, you know, at school and at people’s houses, but they weren’t people I called up by myself to meet up with, or vice versa.  I watch them all and feel a stab of jealousy and confusion.  I lift my glass to my lips and drink steadily.  I feel like something is unfolding around me slowly, but I have no idea what, or why.  I can only watch Marianne, the star of the show, and wonder how I never noticed it in her before.  I had always thought her strange.  Confident and spiky in her own way, but I had never had her down for a social butterfly.

She plays the perfect hostess for the first hour of the party, as more and more people drift in.  The doorbell seems to be ringing endlessly.  Marianne floats around, serving drinks, embracing people she barely knows, and pointing them in the direction of the party nibbles.  Everyone looks so grown up and glamorous, I think, as I watch from the sidelines.  It has only been a matter of weeks since we saw people from school, but somehow it feels like months, and it seems like everyone has changed in some way.  I don’t look at myself this way, until the stick insects, Christine and Stacey spot me and come over.  Christine holds her hands up and flaps them about excitedly, while Stacey sort of circles me, in this threatening sort of way, eyeing me up and down, smiling greedily.  “Oh my god!’ they both squeal at exactly the same time.  I just smile awkwardly.

“Hi guys.”

“Lou Carling! Is that really you?” Christine, the taller stick insect places her perfectly manicured hand gently on my shoulder, as if to steady herself, as if she is about to keel over or something.

“You look amazing!” Stacey echoes her, hands on her chest, mouth open, eyes wide.  I nod at them, and want to kill them.

“Yes, yes, it’s me, it’s really me.”

Oh my god!” Christine cries again.  It’s like she is close to orgasm or something, I can barely stand it.  “You look amazing! Doesn’t she look amazing Stace?  I just can’t believe it!”

“You look so amazing,” Stacey is still running her pale blue eyes up and down my body, which makes me feel queasy to be honest.  I am not used to this, and wonder if I will ever feel comfortable with it.  “How much weight did you lose?  How the fuck did you do it Lou?  You have to tell us!”

Yes, I think, glancing away for a moment, searching for help with my eyes, because you two really need to lose weight, don’t you?  I shrug at them politely and try to fight the urge to claw their eyes out with my fingernails.  “Oh you know,” I tell them pleasantly.  “Healthy diet and exercise basically.”

“Fuckinghell, you look stunning, you really do,” Christine flicks her long blonde hair back over one shoulder.  She is wearing a tiny skirt and a bustier style top, which kind of make her look like a hooker.  I smile politely.  “You lost loads of weight last term, but this, this is unbelievable!”

“Thanks,” I shrug, and drink more wine.

“And your hair!” Stacey cries suddenly, pointing at my newly straightened locks, with a look of childlike happiness on her freckled face.  I would like to feel touched that I have made them both so ridiculously happy, but the only thing I am feeling is pure pent up rage.  I wonder if now is the time to remind them of how vile they were to me in years eight and nine?  When I was supposedly part of their little click?  When I tried to be?  When I tried so hard to please them, to be like them, that it kept me awake at night, that it tied my stomach in knots before school, never knowing if today they would be kind to me or cruel to me.  I look at their admiring faces and wonder if they have really forgotten?  Stacey reaches out and strokes my hair, and I feel like slapping her hand away, and then slapping her face.

“You look so beautiful,” Christine tells me assuringly, and the look on her face suggests to me that she is trying to convince me of this.  Let me know I have passed a test, or something.  That I am all right now, in her book at least.  I scratch at my neck, and stare past them, wondering where the hell Marianne is.

“This party is fucking brilliant!” says Stacey, gazing around at the kitchen, which is now pretty full.  “It’s so nice to see everyone!”

“So nice of Marianne to do this,” Christine leans towards me, speaking to me as if we are suddenly great friends again.  “This house is amazing.”

“It is amazing,” I murmur, and want to go and find a big fat thesaurus and shove it in her slightly too wide mouth.  “It’s all amazing,” I say again, look back at her and smile.

“She looks great too!” Stacey says suddenly, as if this fact amazes her too, that Marianne could look hot.  “She looks amazing!”

“I always thought her a total freak,” Christine leans in again and says. Stacey nods emphatically in agreement.

“Total freak at school.”

“But not now?” I ponder.  “Not here?  Here she is amazing?”

They look at each other, a flicker of confusion passing over their bland Barbie doll faces.  “Totally amazing!” Stacey says suddenly, looking relieved.  I smile at her pityingly.

“Well let’s just hope she is still amazing, when school starts,” I say to them, moving away from where they have trapped me against the counter.  “Let’s hope she doesn’t go back to being a total freak hey?  I’ve got to get another drink.”  I walk away from them, in search of alcohol.  What I would really like to search for is a blunt knife.

I am pouring myself a vodka and coke when Marianne suddenly bumps into the side of me.  She immediately giggles, and bends over her knees, pointing at the puddle on the floor where she has spilled her drink.  I frown at her curiously.  “Are you drunk Marianne?”

Marianne straightens up, throws her skinny arm around my shoulders and wags her empty glass at me.  She is drunk all right.  Drunker than I have ever seen her, anyway.  “I might just be, a little tiny bit!” she laughs, and pulls me closer with her arm.  “I’m going to get myself some food now,” she confides in me, “to soak up the booze.  And I’m going to have a big pint of water too!”

“Really?”

“Oh yes! Oh yes.  That’s what you ought to do.  You can slow it down a bit.  That’s my plan.”

“How much have you had anyway?”

“Oh a few, a few!” she giggles against me and waves her glass about.  I start to expect her to drop it at any moment and cover our feet with glass.  “How about you?  Have you had a few?  Lou?” She instantly creases over again, bent double in laughter at herself.  “That rhymes, that rhymes!”

“Yes it does,” I nod at her patiently, looking over her head.  “And guess what?  It looks like your guests of honour have just arrived.”

“What?”  Marianne jerks herself up violently, and stares around, dramatically flicking her silky hair back out of her face.  I nod towards the hallway, where just above the group of people milling there, we can see Leon’s head.  Marianne gasps, and then hides herself behind me.

“What the hell are you doing?”

“Oh like I said,” she says quickly, “food, water, all that.” She scampers off, and I shake my head, utterly bemused.  I look back towards the hallway, and see Joe pushing through the crowd toward me, with his brothers just behind him.  Joe is looking excited but incredulous, staring around at the masses of people, and the extremely successful party our strange little friend has pulled off.  He is holding a huge bottle of cider and thumps it down on the counter beside me.  I look about, but there is no sign of Marianne now.  “Good to see you,” I tell him with a sigh.  He nods.  He has no idea.  I glance at Leon and Travis, who are both clutching their own booze.  They look like they have made an effort at least.  Freshly shaven and wearing clean shirts.

“Where’s the party girl then?” Leon enquires, spreading his feet apart, setting his shoulders, and claiming his space, as if anyone here would dare consider entering it anyway.  Travis leans against the counter, crossing his legs at the ankle and smiling at me pleasantly.

“Who knows?” I shrug, picking up my own drink.  “She was here a minute ago.” I lift my eyebrows at Joe. “Right little socialite she is these days you know.”

Joe snorts.  “Really?”

“Well let’s get these open,” Leon says, dropping his six pack of Carlsberg next to Joe’s cider, and yanking one free of the plastic wrapping.

“This house is fucking huge,” Travis comments, looking at me.  I nod at him.

“You should see the garden.”

“Really?”

“It’s got a summerhouse,” Joe tells him.  Leon rests his back against the counter next to Travis, folds one arm across his thick middle, and raises his can of beer to his mouth.

“Some people,” he rolls his eyes.  “They don’t know they’re fucking born.”

I am not sure what this really means, but it is one of those sayings I’ve heard my parents say a million times.  Whenever someone they know gets a bigger TV, or a new car, or moves to a better house.  Apparently they don’t know they’re born.

“Lucky bastards,” Travis says, with a lazy grin.  He scans the room then, nodding and frowning in turn at the people he can see.  “Loads here though.”

“I’ve just spotted the food,” Joe says to me, nudging me with his elbow. “Shall we head over there?”

“I’m not really hungry,” I shrug.  “Josh and Ryan are here somewhere.”

“Are you okay Carling?”

“Yes, I’m fine,” I snap at him.  “Why do people keep asking me that?”

“Sorry,” grins Joe.  “You just seem weird, that’s all.”

“You would seem weird if you had to spend an entire afternoon being primped and prepared by Marianne!” I hiss at him.  “And then be accosted by the stick insects, having fucking orgasms about how amazing I look!”

Joe snorts again.  He has poured himself a huge pint of cider and has the plastic glass in one hand, and his other hand in the pockets of his jeans.  He is wearing a Radiohead t-shirt.  “Calm down woman,” he says to me, grinning.  “Don’t let the vipers get to you.  They’re just jealous.  You have a personality as well as looks!” He looks me up and down then, and raises his pint at me.  “You do look hot, by the way.  I was scared to react, because I know what you’re like.  Thought you’d kick me in the balls or something!”

Travis leans forward then, over Joe’s shoulder.  “You do look gorgeous Lou,” he says to me sounding scarily sincere.  I just stare at him blankly.  “You really do.”

“All grown up, all of a sudden,” Leon comments, with what passes for a smile on his face clearly visible behind the rim of his beer can.  I shake my head slightly, wanting it all to stop.

“Oh shut up, all of you,” I say in disgust and finish my drink.  They are bloody laughing.  At me.  I could kill them, but then I start to laugh too.  I laugh back, and loosen up a little, and then I get the coldest feeling, tingling across my skin, and when I look back over my shoulder, Marianne is staring right back at me.  From across the room.  They have not noticed her, but she is there.  So tiny, and so dark, maybe she has been creeping in and out of the crowd the whole time.  Maybe she has heard everything.  I swallow down a smile.  I turn back to Joe, and his brothers.  Joe has filled my glass up for me.

“Let’s get fucking wasted Carling,” he says to me then.  “To make up for last night.  You with me?”

I feel somehow naughty and brave, as I let the smile slide across my face, and flick back my straight, glossy locks, and let my mischievous gaze sneak quickly to Travis, and then back to Joe, as I hold up my glass.  Joe chinks his against mine.  “Fucking right I’m with you,” I tell them, and that is that.  I am drinking with the boys.

After that it all starts to get a bit messy.

We drink steadily.  We converse with the crowd.  Josh and Ryan join us.  Marianne keeps her distance.  I am shorter than all of them, so I end up hopping onto the side, so that I can hear them better above the music.  Before I know it I am pretty fucking wasted, and brimming with that obnoxious self-love that only drinking indulgently can bring on.  I feel wonderful, I feel beautiful, and I feel funny.  I feel I am all of these things, as I perch on the side, with all three handsome Lawrenson brothers surrounding me.  Joe is leaning heavily against me.  Every now and again he places his hand on my leg.  It is fine.  We are just friends, and all that.  Like fucking brother and sister remember?  So I take no notice, and I flick back my glossy hair, and laugh out loud at everything they are saying, and I do a fine job of hiding the strange and forceful desire that burns inside me every time he does it.

For the next hour and a half I only spot Marianne in the distance, through the crowd.  I try in vain to call out to her every now and again, to get her over.  But she either cannot hear me, or is pretending not to. Every time I spot her, she is making the rounds, playing the hostess to perfection.  I am proud of her really.  Good on her.  It is a fucking great party.

I find myself laughing with Joe when he retells the guy on the bridge story to Leon and Travis.  Now that I am drunk, it does not seem horrible at all, only funny and wild, and a tale to tell for years to come.  “Back over there tomorrow,” I hear Leon say to Joe after this, and I see a look go over Joe’s face that tells me he is not so sure.  I reel myself in then.  I am so so drunk, but I saw that look.  He doesn’t want to do it anymore, and I know it.  I find myself slinging my arm protectively around his shoulders and resting my head against him.  I hold my glass up to my cheek. It is cold, and I am so hot.  I breathe in and out slowly.  I am suddenly almost incapable of speaking.  So I loll into him, and just watch them, and listen to them.

I watch the easy rapport that passes between Travis and Leon.  They are on the same wavelength, I realise.  They have an obvious mutual respect that Joe by default of being the youngest, does not receive.  Not that they are cruel to him tonight.  They are at his friend’s party after all.  But as I watch them I become aware that they really only see him as a little kid.  Someone to boss around.  Someone to get doing what they want.  I watch them, and I wonder if they love him at all.  If they know him, like I know him.  I wonder so many things World, and it’s worse when you’re drunk isn’t it? Everything crashes through me like a runaway train. Feelings colliding with thoughts, my mood wrenching one way and then the other. My heart trembling within me.

My eyes meet with Travis’ more than once.  In fact, nearly every time I look at him, he is already looking at me.  Talking to Leon, and looking at me.  I still don’t get it.  I’m nothing special.  Surely he could have any girl he wanted?  But in my drunken state I get off on it hugely.  I look back at him, daring him.  I wait for him to make his move, determined to prove Joe wrong.

I am totally hammered by the time Marianne finally decides to join us.  In contrast, she suddenly seems refreshingly sober.  She squeezes sweetly in-between all the boys, asking them if they need a refill, or any food.  “This is Marianne,” I jerk my head away from Joe’s shoulder and announce, with an accompanying hiccup.  “This is her fucking party!” I say this too loud, and Marianne frowns at me smilingly.  I point my glass straight at Leon, who I deem to be the villain in everything.  “So you better give her some fucking respect right?”

They all crack up laughing, even Leon.  Marianne slips in between him and me and looks up at him with a quizzical expression, that lets him know she knows nothing about his reputation.  Except, of course she does.  She has a glass of wine held delicately between her fingers.  She still looks immaculate, and I can see Leon’s eyes giving her the once over.  I drop my other arm around her and give Leon the evil eye.  “Best party ever Marianne!” I tell her, pulling her close.  She smiles at me patiently.  She looks at me as if I am three years old.

“Oh dear Lou, how much have you had now?” she says with a laugh, rolling her eyes at Joe.

“Not enough actually,” I say defiantly, shoving my empty glass at her.  “What else you got for me Sholing?”

“Ooh how about I make some cocktails?” she says suddenly, looking instantly back up at Leon.  “Are you boys up for that?”

“Fucking right,” Leon nods at her, a faint grin pulling at his lips.  He nods at his empties, lined up along the counter.  “Just finished all my beers.”

“Right then!” Marianne puts down her glass and claps her hands.  “Give me a minute.  We need a load of stuff.”

She scoots around the counter, grabbing bottles and glasses and plonking them next to us.  She then pulls open one of the lower kitchen cupboards and drags out a huge glass bowl.  “Do you want something tried and tested?” she asks us breathlessly.  “Or something completely experimental?”

“Experimental!” I say loudly, before anyone else can speak.  “Just chuck in a load of stuff, and we won’t look! We promise!”

“Are you sure?” Marianne looks over her shoulder at the rest of them.  They all nod back or shrug.

“You might want some water first,” Joe whispers in my ear then.  I look him in the eye accusingly.  I realise that I simultaneously want to punch him in the face and kiss him.  I don’t know what is wrong with me.  I let his sweet face warm my heart and smile at him lovingly.

“It’s okay my sweet. I am going to just have one cocktail and then go outside and vomit spectacularly okay?”

“Okay,” he laughs, crossing his arms.  “If you think that is wise.”

“I think that is very wise.  One cocktail first. Then I will go.”

“You really feel sick?”

“I think I really feel sick.  But one cocktail first.”

“Okay,” Joe laughs.  “If you are sure mate.  I will come out and hold your hair for you.  Wouldn’t want you getting carrot chunks in your new do, would we?”

“No we would not.  We certainly would not.”

“You’re well and truly hammered.”

“I am.”

I can feel someone nudging me then, and when I turn in their direction, I find it is Marianne pushing a glass of red liquid into my hands.  I frown down at it, and lift it to my nose to smell it.  “What’s this?”  I ask and for some reason they all laugh at this.  “What?”

“Mystery cocktail you idiot!” laughs Marianne, passing them out. “It was your idea!”

“Oh yeah.  Let’s give it a whirl then.”

I only manage to drink half of it before I experience the undeniable and forceful urge to vomit.  I slip ungraciously to the floor, dragging Joe with me, and find myself bumping straight into Travis, who spills his drink and stares at me.

“Need fresh air, excuse me!” I mutter and push past him.  I feel Joe pull free from my grasp, and it occurs to me to turn back, beg him to come, like he promised to, but I can’t hang about.  If I turn back I am going to throw up in their faces.  So I plough on, pushing urgently through the people, ignoring the school friends who call my name and try to talk to me.  I head for the conservatory, and that is where I feel a rough hand close around my bare arm, and I think thank fuck, it’s Joe, he will hold my hair for me after all.  I let myself be pulled into his side, and he helps me get out of the French doors and into the blissful fresh air of the back garden.

It is only once I am out there, that I realise in foggy confusion that it is not Joe.  Joe is smaller.  It is Travis holding me up.  It is Travis helping me walk.  I kind of pull away from him, feeling stupid and embarrassed and angry all at once.  I head for the flowerbeds and kneel down.  “Leave me alone, you don’t want to see this!” I call out, waving my hand at him, before I hurl my guts up in Mrs. Sholings flowers.

I sit there for some time.  It feels like ages.  Travis held my hair out the way when I was sick, and then let it go once I had stopped.  So I sit there, and wipe my mouth, and breathe in the cold air, and feel my head start to clear, and I stare at my sick, and hope to god he has gone.  When I turn around, I hope to god he is not there.