"Snodgrass - a novelette by Ian R MacLeod" - читать интересную книгу автора (Macleod Ian R)Snodgrass
Snodgrass
by Ian R MacLeod
Foreword
Which is more
fascinating, success or failure? You can supply your own answer, but I
think we all have a voyeuristic horror about lives gone wrong, not least
us writers, who probably lie down with failure as our bedfellows and
dream-mates at least as often as do double glazing salesmen - and rock
stars.
Which is where the idea
for 'Snodgrass' probably came from. I've always been fascinated by those
characters who leave bands after some row in the back of the Transit just
before the band becomes famous. And why not John Lennon? Why not, indeed.
Like most great bands, the Beatles were always a hair's breadth away from
imploding.
I've never been a big
Lennon fan, although only an idiot would deny his great talent. In this
story, however, he was cypher for all kinds of music and art and dreamy
ambition, and for all kinds of failure. The music I was listening to as I
wrote 'Snodgrass' was actually mostly Starless and Bible Black by King
Crimson, another fine-but-imploding band, and the most eagle-eyed reader
may even detect a few lost scraps of lyric. But if you're a rock star of
any kind, or a even a double glazing salesman, I hope you find something
relevant and entertaining in what follows.
Snodgrass
I've got me whole life worked out. Today, give up
smoking. Tomorrow, quit drinking. The day after, give up smoking again.
It's morning. Light me cig. Pick the fluff off me feet. Drag the
curtain back, and the night's left everything in the same mess outside.
Bin sacks by the kitchen door that Cal never gets around to taking out
front. The garden jungleland gone brown with autumn. Houses this way and
that, terraces queuing for something that'll never happen.
It's early. Daren't look at the clock. The stair carpet works
greasegrit between me toes. Downstairs in the freezing kitchen, pull the
cupboard where the handle's dropped off.
"Hey, Mother Hubbard," I shout up the stairs to Cal. "Why no fucking
cornflakes?"
The lav flushes. Cal lumbers down in a grey nightie. "What's all this
about cornflakes? Since when do you have breakfast, John?"
"Since John got a job."
"You? A job?"
"I wouldn't piss yer around about this, Cal."
"You owe me four weeks rent," she says. "Plus I don't know how much for
bog roll and soap. Then there's the TV licence."
"Don't tell me yer buy a TV licence."
"I don't, but I'm the householder. It's me who'd get sent to gaol."
"Every Wednesday, I'll visit yer," I say, rummaging in the bread
bin.
"What's this job anyway?"
"I told yer on Saturday when you and Kevin came back from the chinese.
Must have been too pissed to notice." I hold up a stiff green slice of
Mighty White. "Think this is edible?"
"Eat it and find out. And stop calling Steve Kevin. He's upstairs
asleep right at this moment."
"Well there's a surprise. Rip Van and his tiny Winkle."
"I wish you wouldn't say things like that. You know what Steve's like
if you give him an excuse."
"Yeah, but at least I don't have to sleep with him."
Cal sits down to watch me struggle through breakfast. Before Kevin, it
was another Kevin, and a million other Kevins before that, all with grazed
knuckles from the way they walk. Cal says she needs the protection even if
it means the odd bruise.
I paste freckled marge over ye Mighty White. It tastes just like the
doormat, and I should know.
"Why don't yer tell our Kev to stuff it?" I say.
She smiles and leans forward.
"Snuggle up to Doctor Winston here," I wheedle.
"You'd be too old to look after me with the clients, John," she says,
as though I'm being serious. Which I am.
"For what I'd charge to let them prod yer, Cal, yer wouldn't have any
clients. Onassis couldn't afford yer."
"Onassis is dead, unless you mean the woman." She stands up, turning
away, shaking the knots from her hair. She stares out of the window over
the mess in the sink. Cal hates to talk about her work. "It's past eight,
John," she says without looking at any clock. It's a knack she has.
"Hadn't you better get ready for this job?"
Yeah, ye job. The people at the Jobbie are always
on the look out for something fresh for Doctor Winston. They think of him
as a challenge. Miss Nikki was behind ye spit-splattered perspex last
week. She's an old hand -- been there for at least three months.
"Name's Doctor Winston O'Boogie," I drooled, doing me hunchback when I
reached the front of ye queue.
"We've got something for you, Mister Lennon," she says. They always
call yer Mister or Sir here, just like the fucking police. "How would you
like to work in a Government Department?"
"Well, wow," I say, letting the hunchback slip. "You mean like a
spy?"
That makes her smile. I hate it when they don't smile.
She passes me ye chit. Name, age, address. Skills, qualifications --
none. That bit always kills me. Stapled to it we have details of something
clerical.
"It's a new scheme, Mr Lennon," Nikki says. "The Government is
committed to helping the long-term unemployed. You can start Monday."
So here's Doctor Winston O'Boogie at the bus stop in the weird morning
light. I've got on me best jacket, socks that match, even remembered me
glasses so I can see what's happening. Cars are crawling. Men in suits are
tapping fingers on the steering wheel as they groove to Katie Boyle. None
of them live around here -- they're all from Solihull -- and this is just
a place to complain about the traffic. And Monday's a drag cos daughter
Celia has to back the Mini off the drive and be a darling and shift
Mummy's Citroen too so yer poor hard working Dad can get to the
Sierra.
The bus into town lumbers up. The driver looks at me like I'm a freak
when I don't know ye exact fare. Up on the top deck where there's No
standing, No spitting, No ball games, I get me a window seat and light me
a ciggy. I love it up here, looking down on the world, into people's
bedroom windows. Always have. Me and me mate Pete used to drive the bus
from the top front seat all the way from Menlove Avenue to Quarry Bank
School. I remember the rows of semis, trees that used to brush like sea on
shingle over the roof of the bus. Everything in Speke was Snodgrass of
course, what with valve radios on the sideboard and the Daily Excess, but
Snodgrass was different in them days. It was like watching a play, waiting
for someone to forget their lines. Mimi used to tell me that anyone who
said they were middle class probably wasn't. You knew just by checking
whether they had one of them blocks that look like Kendal Mint Cake hooked
around the rim of the loo. It was all tea and biscuits then, and Mind
dear, your slip's showing. You knew where you were, what you were
fighting.
The bus crawls. We're up in the clouds here, the fumes on the pavement
like dry ice at a big concert. Oh, yeah. I mean, Doctor Winston may be
nifty fifty with his whole death to look forward to but he knows what he's
saying. Cal sometimes works at the NEC when she gets too proud to do the
real business. Hands out leaflets and wiggles her ass. She got me a ticket
last year to see Simply Red and we went together and she put on her best
dress that looked just great and didn't show too much and I was proud to
be with her, even if I did feel like her Dad. Of course, the music was
warmed-over shit. It always is. I hate the way that red-haired guy sings.
She tried to get me to see Cliff too, but Doctor Winston has his
pride.
Everywhere is empty round here, knocked down and boarded up, postered
over. There's a group called SideKick playing at Digbeth. And
waddayouknow, the Beatles are playing this very evening at the NEC. The
Greatest Hits Tour, it says here on ye corrugated fence. I mean, Fab Gear
Man. Give It Bloody Foive. Macca and Stu and George and Ringo, and
obviously the solo careers are up the kazoo again. Like, wow.
The bus dumps me in the middle of Brum. The office is just off Cherry
Street. I stagger meself by finding it right away, me letter from the
Jobbie in me hot little hand. I show it to a geezer in uniform, and he
sends me up to the fifth floor. The whole place is new. It smells of
formaldehyde -- that stuff we used to pickle the spiders in at school. Me
share the lift with ye office bimbo. Oh, after, you.
Doctor Winston does his iceberg cruise through the openplan. So this is
what Monday morning really looks like.
Into an office at the far end. Smells of coffee. Snodgrass has got a
filter machine bubbling away. A teapot ready for the afternoon.
"Mister Lennon."
We shake hands across the desk. "Mister Snodgrass."
Snodgrass cracks a smile. "There must have been some mistake down in
General Admin. My name's Fenn. But everyone calls me Allen."
"Oh yeah. And why's that?" A voice inside that sounds like Mimi says
Stop this behaviour John. She's right, of course. Doctor Winston
needs the job, the money. Snodgrass tells me to sit down. I fumble for a
ciggy and try to loosen up.
"No smoking please, Mister...er, John."
Oh, great.
"You're a lot, um, older than most of the casual workers we get."
"Well this is what being on the Giro does for yer. I'm nineteen
really."
Snodgrass looks down at his file. "Born 1940." He looks up again. "And
is that a Liverpool accent I detect?"
I look around me. "Where?"
Snodgrass has got a crazy grin on his face. I think the bastard likes
me. "So you're John Lennon, from Liverpool. I thought the name rang a
faint bell." He leans forward. "I am right, aren't I?"
Oh fucking Jesus. A faint bell. This happens about once every six
months. Why now? "Oh yeah," I say. "I used to play the squeezebox
for Gerry and the Pacemakers. Just session work. And it was a big thrill
to work with Shirley Bassey, I can tell yer. She's the King as far as I'm
concerned. Got bigger balls than Elvis."
"You were the guy who left the Beatles."
"That was Pete Best, Mister Snodgrass."
"You and Pete Best. Pete Best was the one who was dumped for
Ringo. You walked out on Paul McCartney and Stuart Sutcliffe. I collect
records, you see. I've read all the books about Merseybeat. And my elder
sister was a big fan of those old bands. The Fourmost, Billy J. Kramer,
Cilla, The Beatles. Of course, it was all before my time."
"Dinosaurs ruled the earth."
"You must have some stories to tell."
"Oh, yeah." I lean forward across the desk. "Did yer know that Paul
McCartney was really a woman?"
"Well, John, I -- "
"It figures if yer think about it, Mister Snodgrass. I mean, have
you ever seen his dick?"
"Just call me Allen, please, will you? Now, I'll show you your
desk."
Snodgrass takes me out into the openplan. Introduces me to a pile of
envelopes, a pile of letters. Well, Hi. Seems like Doctor Winston is
supposed to put one into the other.
"What do I do when I've finished?" I ask.
"We'll find you some more."
All the faces in open plan are staring. A phone's ringing, but no one
bothers to answer. "Yeah," I say, "I can see there's a big rush on."
On his way back to his office, Snodgrass takes a detour to have a word
with a fat Doris in a floral print sitting over by the filing cabinets. He
says something to her that includes the word Beatle. Soon, the whole
office knows.
"I bet you could write a book," fat Doris says, standing over me,
smelling of Pot Noodles. "Everyone's interested in those days now. Of
course, the Who and the Stones were the ones for me. Brian Jones. Keith
Moon, for some reason. All the ones who died. I was a real rebel. I went
to Heathrow airport once, chewed my handbag to shreds."
"Did yer piss yerself too, Doris? That's what usually happened."
Fat Doris twitches a smile. "Never quite made it to the very top, the
Beatles, did they? Still, that Paul McCartney wrote some lovely songs.
Yesterday, you still hear that one in lifts don't you? And Stu was
so good looking then. Must be a real tragedy in your life that you
didn't stay. How does it feel, carrying that around with you, licking
envelopes for a living?"
"Yer know what your trouble is don't yer, Doris?"
Seems she don't, so I tell her.
Winston's got no money for the bus home. His old
joints ache -- never realised it was this bloody far to walk. The kids are
playing in our road like it's a holiday, which it always is for most of
them. A tennis ball hits me hard on the noddle. I pretend it don't hurt,
then I growl at them to fuck off as they follow me down the street.
Kevin's van's disappeared from outside the house. Musta gone out. Pity,
shame.
Cal's wrapped up in a rug on the sofa, smoking a joint and watching
Home And Away. She jumps up when she sees me in the hall like she thought
I was dead already.
"Look, Cal," I say. "I really wanted this job, but yer wouldn't get
Adolf Hitler to do what they asked, God rest his soul. There were all
these little puppies in cages and I was supposed to push knitting needles
down into their eyes. Jesus, it was -- "
"Just shaddup for one minute will you, John!"
"I'll get the rent somehow, Cal, I -- "
" -- Paul McCartney was here!"
"Who the hell's Paul McCartney?"
"Be serious for a minute, John. He was here. There was a car the
size of a tank parked outside the house. You should have seen the curtains
twitch."
Cal hands me the joint. I take a pull, but I really need something
stronger. And I still don't believe what she's saying. "And why the fuck
should Macca come here?"
"To see you, John. He said he'd used a private detective to
trace you here. Somehow got the address through your wife Cynthia. I
didn't even know you were married, John. And a kid named Julian
who's nearly thirty. He's married too, he's -- "
" -- What else did that bastard tell yer?"
"Look, we just talked. He was very charming."
Charming. That figures. Now I'm beginning to believe.
"I thought you told me you used to be best mates."
"Too bloody right. Then he nicked me band. It was John Lennon and the
Quarrymen. I should never have let the bastard join. Then Johnny and the
Moondogs. Then Long John and the Silver Beatles. It was my name,
my idea to shorten it to just The Beatles. They all said it was
daft, but they went along with it because it was my fucking
band."
"Look, nobody doubts that, John. But what's the point in being bitter?
Paul just wanted to know how you were."
"Oh, it's Paul now is it? Did yer let him shag yer, did yer put
out for free, ask him to autograph yer fanny?"
"Come on, John. Climb down off the bloody wall. It didn't happen,
you're not rich and famous. It's like not winning the pools, happens to
everyone you meet. After all, The Beatles were just another rock band.
It's not like they were The Stones."
"Oh, no. The Stones weren't crap for a start. Bang bang Maxwell's
Silver bloody Hammer. Give me Cliff any day."
"You never want to talk about it, do you? You just let it stay inside
you, boiling up. Look, why will you never believe that people care?
I care. Will you accept that for a start? Do you think I put up
with you here for the sodding rent which incidentally I never get anyway?
You're old enough to be my bloody father, John. So stop acting like a
kid." Her face starts to go wet. I hate these kind of scenes. "You
could be my father John. Seeing as I didn't have one, you'd do
fine. Just believe in yourself for a change."
"At least yer had a bloody mother," I growl. But I can't keep
the nasty up. Open me arms and she's trembling like a rabbit, smelling of
salt and grass. All these years, all these bloody years. Why is it
you can never leave anything behind?
Cal sniffs and steps back and pulls these bits of paper from her
pocket. "He gave me these. Two tickets for tonight's show, and a pass for
the do afterwards."
I look around at chez nous. The air smells of old stew that I can never
remember eating. I mean, who the hell cooks stew? And Macca was
here. Did them feet in ancient whathaveyou.
Cal plonks the tickets on the telly and brews some tea. She's humming
in the kitchen, it's her big day, a famous rock star has come on down. I
wonder if I should tear ye tickets up now, but decide to leave it for
later. Something to look forward to for a change. All these years, all
these bloody years. There was a journalist caught up with Doctor
Winston a while back. Oh Mister Lennon, I'm doing background. We'll pay
yer of course, and perhaps we could have lunch? Which we did, and I can
reveal exclusively for the first time that the Doctor got well and truly
rat-arsed. And then the cheque came and the Doctor saw it all in black and
white, serialised in the Sunday bloody Excess. A sad and bitter man, it
said. So it's in the papers and I know it's true.
Cal clears a space for the mugs on the carpet and plonks them down. "I
know you don't mean to go tonight," she says. "I'm not going to argue
about it now."
She sits down on the sofa and lets me put an arm around her waist. We
get warm and cosy. It's nice sometimes with Cal. You don't have to argue
or explain.
"You know, John," she murmurs. "The secret of happiness is not
trying."
"And you're the world expert? Happiness sure ain't living on the Giro
in bloody Birmingham."
"Birmingham isn't the end of the world."
"No, but yer can see it from here."
Cal smiles. I love it when she smiles. She leans over and lights more
blow from somewhere. She puts it to my lips. I breathe it in. The smoke.
Tastes like harvest bonfires. We're snug as two bunnies. "Think of when
you were happy," she whispers. "There must have been a time."
Oh, yeah. 1966, after I'd recorded the five singles that made up the
entire creative output of The Nowhere Men and some git at the record
company was given the job of saying, Well, John, we don't feel when can
give yer act the attention it deserves. And let's be honest the Beatles
link isn't really bankable any more is it? Walking out into the London
traffic, it was just a huge load off me back. John, yer don't have to be
rock star after all. No more backs of vans. No more Watford Gap Sizzlers
for breakfast. No more chord changes. No more launches and re-launches. No
more telling the bloody bass player how to use his instrument. Of course,
there was Cyn and little Julian back in Liverpool, but let's face it I was
always a bastard when it came to family. I kidded meself they were better
off without me.
But 1966. There was something then, the light had a sharp edge.
Not just acid and grass although that was part of it. A girl with ribbons
came up to me along Tottenham Court Road. Gave me a dogeared postcard of a
white foreign beach, a blue sea. Told me she'd been there that very
morning, just held it to her eyes in the dark. She kissed me cheek and she
said she wanted to pass the blessing on. Well, the Doctor has never been
much of a dreamer, but he could feel the surf of that beach through his
toes as he dodged the traffic. He knew there were easier ways of getting
there than closing yer eyes. So I took all me money and I bought me a
ticket and I took a plane to Spain, la, la. Seemed like everyone was
heading that way then, drifting in some warm current from the sun.
Lived on Formentera for sunbaked years I couldn't count. It was a sweet
way of life, bumming this, bumming that, me and the Walrus walking hand in
hand, counting the sand. Sheltering under a fig tree in the rain, I met
this welsh girl who called herself Morwenna. We all had strange names
then. She took me to a house made of driftwood and canvas washed up on the
shore. She had bells between her breasts and they tinkled as we made love.
When the clouds had cleared we bought fish fresh from the nets in the
whitewashed harbour. Then we talked in firelight and the dolphins sang to
the lobsters as the waves advanced. She told me under the stars that she
knew other places, other worlds. There's another John at your shoulder,
she said. He's so like you I can't understand what's different.
But Formentera was a long way from anything. It was so timeless we knew
it couldn't last. The tourists, the government, the locals, the police --
every Snodgrass in the universe -- moved in. Turned out Morwenna's parents
had money so it was all just fine and dandy for the cunt, leaving me one
morning before the sun was up, taking a little boat to the airport on
Ibiza, then all the way back to bloody Cardiff. The clouds greyed over the
Med and the Doctor stayed on too long. Shot the wrong shit, scored the
wrong deals. Somehow, I ended up in Paris, sleeping in a box and not
speaking a bloody word of the lingo. Then somewhere else. The whole thing
is a haze. Another time, I was sobbing on Mimi's doorstep in pebbledash
Menlove Avenue and the dog next door was barking and Mendips looked just
the same. The porch where I used to play me guitar. Wallpaper and cooking
smells inside. She gave me egg and chips and tea in thick white china,
just like the old days when she used to go on about me drainpipes.
So I stayed on a while in Liverpool, slept in me old bed with me feet
sticking out the bottom. Mimi had taken down all me Bridget Bardot posters
but nothing else had changed. I could almost believe that me mate Paul was
gonna come around on the wag from the Inny and we'd spend the afternoon
with our guitars and pickle sandwiches, re-writing Buddy Holly and
dreaming of the days to come. The songs never came out the way we meant
and the gigs at the Casbah were a mess. But things were possible,
then, yer know?
I roused meself from bed after a few weeks and Mimi nagged me down the
Jobbie. Then I had to give up kidding meself that time had stood still.
Did yer know all the docks have gone? I've never seen anything so empty.
God knows what the people do with themselves when they're not getting
pissed. I couldn't even find the fucking Cavern, or Eppy's old record shop
where he used to sell that Sibelius crap until he chanced upon us rough
lads.
When I got back to Mendips I suddenly saw how old Mimi had got. Mimi, I
said, yer're a senior citizen. I should be looking after
you. She just laughed that off, of course; Mimi was sweet and sour
as ever. Wagged her finger at me and put something tasty on the stove.
When Mimi's around, I'm still just a kid, can't help it. And she couldn't
resist saying, I told you all this guitar stuff would get you nowhere,
John. But at least she said it with a smile and hug. I guess I could have
stayed there forever, but that's not the Doctor's way. Like Mimi says,
he's got ants in his pants. Just like his poor dead Mum. So I started to
worry that things were getting too cosy, that maybe it was time to dump
everything and start again, again.
What finally happened was that I met this bloke one day on me way back
from the Jobbie. The original Snodgrass, no less -- the one I used to
sneer at during calligraphy in Art School. In them days I was James Dean
and Elvis combined with me drainpipes and me duck's arse quiff. A one man
revolution -- Cynthia the rest of the class were so hip they were trying
to look like Kenny Ball and his Sodding Jazzmen. This kid Snodgrass
couldn't even manage that, probably dug Frank Ifield. He had spots on his
neck, a green sports jacket that looked like his Mum had knitted it.
Christ knows what his real name was. Of course, Doctor Winston used to
take the piss something rancid, specially when he'd sunk a few pints of
black velvet down at Ye Cracke. Anyway, twenty years on and the Doctor was
watching ye seagulls on Paradise Street and waiting for the lights to
change, when this sports car shaped like a dildo slides up and a window
purrs down.
"Hi, John! Bet you don't remember me."
All I can smell is leather and aftershave. I squint and lean forward to
see. The guy's got red-rimmed glasses on. A grin like a slab of
marble.
"Yeah," I say, although I really don't know how I know. "You're the
prat from college. The one with the spotty neck."
"I got into advertising," he said. "My own company now. You were in
that band, weren't you John? Left just before they made it. You always did
talk big."
"Fuck off Snodgrass," I tell him, and head across the road. Nearly walk
straight into a bus.
Somehow, it's the last straw. I saunter down to Lime Street, get me a
platform ticket and take the first Intercity that comes in, la, la. They
throw me off at Brum, which I swear to Jesus God is the only reason why
I'm here. Oh, yeah. I let Mimi know what had happened after a few weeks
when me conscience got too heavy. She must have told Cyn. Maybe they send
each other Crimble cards.
Damn.
Cal's gone.
Cold. The sofa. How can anyone sleep on this thing? Hurts me old
bones just to sit on it. The sun is fading at the window. Must be late
afternoon. No sign of Cal. Probably has to do the biz with some arab our
Kev's found for her. Now seems as good a time as any to sort out Macca's
tickets, but when I look on top ye telly they've done a runner. The cunt's
gone and hidden them, la, la.
Kevin's back. I can hear him farting and snoring upstairs in Cal's
room. I shift the dead begonia off ye sideboard and rummage in the cigar
box behind. Juicy stuff, near on sixty quid. Cal hides her money somewhere
different about once a fortnight, and she don't think the Doctor has
worked out where she's put it this time. Me, I've known for ages, was just
saving for ye rainy day. Which is now.
So yer thought yer could get Doctor Winston O'Boogie to go and see Stu
and Paulie just by hiding the tickets did yer? The fucking NEC! Ah-ha. The
Doctor's got other ideas. He pulls on ye jacket, his best and only shoes.
Checks himself in the hall mirror. Puts on glasses. Looks like Age
Concern. Takes them off again. Heads out. Pulls the door quiet in case Kev
should stir. The air outside is grainy, smells of diesel. The sky is pink
and all the street lights that work are coming on. The kids are still
playing, busy breaking the aerial off a car. They're too absorbed to look
up at ye passing Doctor, which is somehow worse than being taunted. I
recognise the cracks in ye pavement. This one looks like a moon buggy.
This one looks like me Mum's face after the car hit her outside Mendips.
Not that I saw, but still, yer dream, don't yer? You still dream. And
maybe things were getting a bit too cosy here with Cal anyway, starting to
feel sorry for her instead of meself. Too cosy. And the Doctor's not sure
if he's ever coming back.
I walk ye streets. Sixty quid, so which pub's it gonna be? But it turns
out the boozers are still all shut anyway. It don't feel early, but it is
-- children's hour on the telly, just the time of year for smoke and
darkness.
End up on the hill on top of the High Street. See the rooftops from
here, cars crawling, all them paper warriors on the way home, Tracy doing
lipstick on the bus, dreaming of her boyfriend's busy hands and the night
to come. Whole of Birmingham's pouring with light. A few more right turns
in the Sierra to where the avenues drip sweet evening and Snodgrass says
I'm home darling. Deep in the sea arms of love and bolognese for tea.
Streets of Solihull and Sutton Coldfield where the kids know how to work a
computer instead of just nick one, wear ye uniform at school, places where
the grass is velvet and there are magic fountains amid the fairy
trees.
The buses drift by on sails on exhaust and the sky is the colour of
Ribena. Soon the stars will come. I can feel the whole night pouring in,
humming words I can never quite find. Jesus, does everyone feel
this way? Does Snodgrass carry this around when he's watching Tracy's
legs, on holy Sunday before the Big Match polishing the GL badge on his
fucking Sierra? Does he dream of the dark tide, seaweed combers of the
ocean parting like the lips he never touched?
Me, I'm Snodgrass, Kevin, Tracy, fat Doris in her print dress. I'm
every bit part player in the whole bloody horrorshow. Everyone except John
Lennon. Oh Jesus Mary Joseph and Winston, I dreamed I could circle the
world with me arms, take the crowd with me guitar, stomp the beat on dirty
floors so it would never end, whisper the dream for every kid under the
starch sheets of radio nights. Show them how to shine.
Christ, I need a drink. Find me way easily, growl at dogs and passers
by, but Dave the barman's a mate. Everything's deep red in here and tastes
of old booze and cigs and the dodgy Gents, just like swimming though me
own blood. Dave is wiping the counter with a filthy rag and it's Getting
pissed tonight are we John? Yer bet, wac. Notice two rastas in the corner.
Give em the old comic Livipud accent. Ken Dodd and his Diddymen. Makes em
smile. I hate it when they don't smile. Ansells and a chaser. Even got
change for the jukebox. Not a Beatles song in sight. No Yesterday, no C
Moon, no Mull of Kinbloodytyre. Hey, me shout at ye rastas, Now Bob
Marley, he was the biz, reet? At least he had the sense to die. Like Jimi,
Jim, Janis, all the good ones who kept the anger and the dream. The Rastas
say something unintelligible back. Rock and roll, lets. The rastas and
Winston, we're on the same wavelength. Buy em a drink. Clap their backs.
They're exchanging grins like they think I don't notice. Man, will you
look at this sad old git? But he's buying. Yeah I'm buying thanks to Cal.
By the way lads, these Rothmans taste like shit, now surely you guys must
have something a little stronger?
The evening starts to fill out. I can see everything happening even
before it does. Maybe the Doctor will have a little puke round about eight
to make room for a greasy chippy. Oh, yeah, and plenty of time for more
booze and then maybe a bit of bother later. Rock and roll. The rastas have
got their mates with them now and they're saying Hey man, how much money
you got there? I wave it in their faces. Wipe yer arse on this, Sambo.
Hey, Dave, yer serving or what? Drinky here, drinky there. The good Doctor
give drinky everywhere.
Jukebox is pounding. Arms in arms, I'm singing words I don't know. Dave
he tell me, Take it easy now, John. And I tell him exactly what to stuff,
and precisely where. Oh, yeah. Need to sit down. There's an arm on me
shoulder. I push it off. The arm comes again. The Doctor's ready to lash
out, so maybe the bother is coming earlier than expected. Well, that's
just fine and me turn to face ye foe.
It's Cal.
"John, you just can't hold your booze any longer."
She's leading me out ye door. I wave me Rastas an ocean wave. The bar
waves back.
The night air hits me like a truncheon. "How the fuck did yer find
me?"
"Not very difficult. How many pubs are there around here?"
"I've never counted." No, seriously. "Just dump me here Cal. Don't give
me another chance to piss yer around. Look." I fumble me pockets. Twenty
pee. Turns out I'm skint again. "I nicked all yer money. Behind the
begonia."
"On the sideboard? That's not mine, it's Kevin's. After last time do
you think I'm stupid enough to leave money around where you could find
it?"
"Ah-ha!" I point at her in triumph. "You called him Kevin."
"Just get in the bloody car."
I get in the bloody car. Some geezer in the front says Okay guv, and
off we zoom. It's a big car. Smells like a new camera. I do me royal wave
past Kwicksave. I tell the driver, Hey me man, just step on it and follow
that car.
"Plenty of time, Sir," he tells me. He looks like a chauffeur. He's
wearing a bloody cap.
Time for what?
And Jesus, we're heading to Solihull. I've got me glasses on somehow.
Trees and a big dual carriageway, the sort you never see from a bus.
The Doctor does the interior a favour. Says, Stop the car. Do a spastic
sprint across ye lay by and yawn me guts out over the verge. The stars
stop spinning. I wipe me face. The Sierras are swishing by. There's a road
sign the size of the Liverpool Empire over me head. Says NEC, 2 miles. So
that's it.
Rock and roll. NEC. I've been here and seen Simply
Red on Cal's free tickets, all them pretty tunes with their balls lopped
off at birth. Knew what to expect. The place is all car park, like a
bloody airport but less fun. Cal says Hi to the staff at the big doors,
twilight workers in Butlin's blazers. Got any jobs on here Cal? asks the
pretty girl with the pretty programmes. It's Max Bygraves next week. Cal
just smiles. The Doctor toys with a witty riposte about how she gets more
dough lying with her legs open but decides not to. But Jesus, this is
Snodgrass city. I've never seen so many casual suits.
I nick a programme from the pile when no one's looking. Got so much
gloss on it, feels like a sheet of glass. The Greatest Hits Tour. Two
photos of the Fab Foursome, then and now. George still looks like his Mum,
and Ringo's Ringo. Stu is wasted, but he always was. And Macca is Cliff on
steroids.
"Stop muttering, John," Cal says, and takes me arm.
We go into this aircraft hanger. Half an hour later, we've got to our
seat. It's right at the bloody front of what I presume must be the stage.
Looks more like Apollo Nine. Another small step backwards for mankind. Oh,
yeah. I know what a stage should look like. Like the bloody Indra
in Hamburg where we took turns between the striptease. A stage is a place
where yer stand and fight against the booze and the boredom and the
sodding silence. A place where yer make people listen. Like the Cavern too
before all the Tracys got their lunchtime jollies by screaming over the
music. Magic days where I could feel the power through me Rickenbacker.
And that guitar cost me a fortune and where the bloody hell did it get to?
Vanished with every other dream.
Lights go down. A smoothie in a pink suit runs up to a mike and says
ladeeez and gennnlemen, Paul McCartney, Stuart Sutcliffe, George Harrison,
Ringo Starr -- The Beatles! Hey, rock and roll. Everyone cheers as they
run on stage. Seems like there's about ten of them nowadays, not counting
the background chicks. They're all tiny up on that launch pad, but I
manage to recognise Paul from the photies. He says Hello (pause)
Birrrmingham just like he's Mick Hucknall and shakes his mop top that's
still kinda cut the way Astrid did all them years back in Hamburg. Ringo's
about half a mile back hidden behind the drums but that's okay cos there's
some session guy up there too. George is looking down at his guitar like
he's Bert Weedon. And there's Stu almost as far back as Ringo, still
having difficulty playing the bass after all these bloody years. Should
have stuck with the painting, me lad, something yer were good at. And
Jesus, I don't believe it, Paul shoots Stu an exasperated glance as they
kick into to riff for Long Tall Sally and he comes in two bars late.
Jesus, has anything changed.
Yeah, John Lennon's not up there. Would never have lasted this long
with the Doctor anyway. I mean, thirty years. That's as bad as
Status Quo, and at least they know how to rock, even if they've only
learnt the one tune.
Days in me life. Number one in a series of one. Collect the fucking
set. It's 1962. Eppy's sent us rough lads a telegram from down the Smoke.
Great news boys. A contract. This is just when we're all starting to
wonder, and Stu in particular is pining for Astrid back in Hamburg. But
we're all giving it a go and the Doctor's even agreed to that stupid
haircut that never quite caught on and to sacking Pete Best and getting
Ringo in and the bloody suit with the bloody collar and the bloody fucking
tie. So down to London it is. And then ta ran ta rah! A real single, a
real recording studio! We meet this producer dude in a suit called Martin.
He and Eppy get on like old buddies, upper crust and all that and me
wonders out loud if he's a queer jew too, but Paul says Can it John we
can't afford to blow this.
So we gets in ye studio which is like a rabbit hutch. Do a roll Ringo,
Martin says through the mike. So Ringo gets down on the mat and turns
over. We all piss ourselves over that and all the time there's Mister
Producer looking schoolmasterish. Me, I say, Hey, did yer really produce
the Goons, Meester Martin. I got the Ying Tong Song note perfect. They all
think I'm kidding. Let's get on with it, John, Eppy says, and oils a grin
through the glass, giving me the doe eyes. And don't yer believe it, John
knows exactly what he wants. Oh, yeah. Like, did Colonel Parker fancy
Elvis? Wow. So this is rock and roll.
Me and Paul, we got it all worked out. Hit the charts with Love Me Do,
by Lennon and McCartney, the credits on the record label just the way we
agreed years back in the front parlour of his Dad's house even though
we've always done our own stuff separately. It's Macca's song, but we're
democratic, right? And what really makes it is me harmonica riff. So
that's what we play and we're all nervous as shit but even Stu manages to
get the bass part right just the way Paul's shown him.
Silence. The amps are humming. Okay, says Mister Martin, putting on a
voice, That was just great lads. An interesting song. Interesting?
Never one to beat about the proverbial, I say, yer mean it was shit,
right? Just cos we wrote it ourselves and don't live down Tin Pan bloody
Alley. But he says, I think we're looking at a B side for that one lads.
Now, listen to this.
Oh, yeah. We listen. Martin plays us this tape of a demo of some ditty
called How Do You Do It. Definite Top Ten material for somebody, he says
significantly. Gerry and the Pacemakers are already interested but I'll
give you first refusal. And Eppy nods beside him through the glass. It's
like watching Sooty and bloody Sweep in there. So Ringo smashes a cymbal
and Stu tries to tune his bass and George goes over to help and I look at
Paul and Paul looks at me.
"It's a decent tune, John," Paul says.
"You're kidding. It's a heap of shit."
Eppy tuts through the glass. Now John.
And so it goes. Me, I grab me Rickenbacker and walk out the fucking
studio. There's a boozer round the corner. London prices are a joke but I
sink one pint and then another, waiting for someone to come and say,
You're so right John. But Paul don't come. Eppy don't come either even
though I thought it was me of all the lads that he was after. After the
third pint, I'm fucking glad. The haircuts, the suits, and now playing
tunes that belong in the bloody adverts. It's all gone too far.
And there it was. John Quits The Beatles in some local snotrag called
Merseybeat the week after before I've had a chance to change me mind. And
after that I've got me pride. When I saw Paul down Victoria Street a
couple a months later yer could tell the single was doing well just by his
bloody walk. Said Hi John, yer know it's not too late and God knows how
Merseybeat got hold of the story. He said it as though he and Eppy hadn't
jumped at the chance to dump me and make sure everybody knew. There was
Macca putting on the charm the way he always did when he was in a tight
situation. I told him to stuff it where the fucking sun don't shine. And
that was that. I stomped off down ye street, had a cup of tea in
Littlewoods. Walked out on Cynthia and the kid. Formed me own band. Did a
few gigs. Bolloxed up me life good and proper.
And here we have the Beatles, still gigging, nearly a full house here
at the NEC, almost as big as Phil Collins or the Bee Gees. Paul does his
old thumbs up routine between songs. Awwrright. He's a real rock a roll
dude, him and George play their own solos just like Dire Straights. The
music drifts from the poppy older stuff to the druggy middle stuff back to
the poppy later stuff. Things We Said Today. Good Day Sun Shine. Dizzy
Miss Lizzy. Jet. They even do How Do You Do It. No sign of Love Me Do, of
course. That never got recorded, although I'll bet they could do me
harmonica riff on ye synthesizer as easy as shit. It all sounds smooth and
tight and sweetly nostalgic, just the way it would on the Sony music
centre back at home after Snodgrass has loosened his tie from a hard day
watching Tracy wriggle her ass over the fax machine in Accounts. The
pretty lights flash, the dry ice fumes, but the spaceship never quite
takes off. Me, I shout for Maxwell's Silver Hammer, and in a sudden wave
of silence, it seems like Paul actually hears. He squints down at the
front row and grins for a moment like he understands the joke. Then the
lights dim to purple and Paul sits down at ye piano, gives the seat a
little tug just the way he used to when he was practising on his Dad's old
upright in the parlour at home. Plays the opening chords of Let It Be. I
look around me and several thousand flames are held up. It's a forest of
candles, and Jesus it's a beautiful song. There's a lump in me throat, God
help me. For a moment, it feels like everyone here is close to touching
the dream.
The moment lasts for longer than it decently should. Right through No
More Lonely Nights until Hey Judi peters out like something half-finished
and the band kick into Lady Madonna, which has a thundering bass riff even
though Stu is still picking up his Fender. And the fucking stage starts to
revolve. Me, I've had enough.
Cal looks at me as I stand up. She's bopping along like a Tracy. I
mouth the word the word Bog and point to me crotch. She nods. Either she's
given up worrying about the Doctor doing a runner or she don't care. Fact
is, the booze has wrung me dry and I've got me a headache coming. I
stumble me way up the aisles. The music pushes me along. He really
is gonna do C Moon. Makes yer want to piss just hearing it.
The lav is deliciously quiet. White tiles and some poor geezer in grey
mopping up the piss. The Doctor straddles the porcelain. It takes about a
minute's concentration to get a decent flow. Maybe this is what getting
old is all about. I wonder if superstars like Macca have the same problem,
but I doubt it. Probably pay some geezer to go for them, and oh, Kevin,
can yer manage a good dump for me while yer're there?
Once it starts, the flow keeps up for a long time. Gets boring. I flush
down ye stray hair, dismantle ye cigarette butt, look at the grouting on
the tiles, stare around. The guy with the mop is leaning on it, watching
me.
"Must be a real groove in here," I say.
"Oh, no," he laughs. "Don't get the wrong idea."
I give percy a shake and zip up. The last spurt still runs down me
bloody leg. Bet that don't happen to Paul either.
The wrong idea? The guy's got the plump face of a thirty year
old choirboy. Pity poor Eppy ain't still alive, he'd be in his fucking
element.
"I think all queers should be shot," fat choirboy assures me.
"Well, seeing it from your perspective..." The Doctor starts to back
away. This guy's out-weirding me without even trying.
"What's the concert like?"
The music comes around the corner as a grey echo, drowned in the smell
of piss and disinfectant. "It's mostly shit, what do yer expect?"
"Yeah," he nods. His accent is funny. I think it's some bastard kind of
Brummy until I suddenly realise he's American. "They sold out, didn't
they?"
"The Beatles never sold in."
"Bloody hypocrites. All that money going to waste."
Some other guy comes in, stares at us as he wees. Gives his leg a
shake, walks out again. Choirboy and I stand in stupid silence. It's one
of them situations yer find yerself in. But anyone who thinks that The
Beatles are crap can't be all bad.
"You used to be in the Beatles, didn't you?"
I stare at him. No one's recognised me just from me face in years. I've
got me glasses on, me specially grey and wrinkled disguise.
"Oh, I've read all about the Beatles," he assures me, giving his mop a
twirl.
I've half a mind to say, If yer're that interested give me the fucking
mop and yer can have me seat, but there's something about him that I
wouldn't trust next to Cal.
"Hey," he smiles. "Listen in there. Sounds like they're doing the
encore."
Which of course is Yesterday, like Oh deary me, we left it out by
accident from the main show and thought we would just pop it in here. Not
a dry seat in the bloody house.
Choirboy's still grinning at me. I see he's got a paperback in the
pocket of his overall. Catcher In The Rye. "They'll be a big rush in a
minute," he says. "More mess for me to clean up. Even Jesus wouldn't like
this job."
"Then why do yer do it? The pay can't be spectacular."
"Well, this is just casual work. I'll probably quit after tonight."
"Yeah, pal. I know all about casual work."
"But this is interesting, gets you into places. I like to be near to
the stars. I need to see how bad they are." He cracks that grin a little
wider. "Tell me," he says, "what's Paul really like?"
"How the fuck should I know? I haven't see the guy in nearly thirty
years. But, there's...there's some do on afterwards...he's asked me and me
bird to come along. Yer know, for old times I guess." Jesus, John, who
are yer trying to impress?
"Oh," he says, "and where's that taking place? I sometimes look in, you
know. The security's round here's a joke. Last week, I was that
close to Madonna." He demonstrates the distance with his broom.
Cal's got the invites in her handybag, but I can picture them clear
enough. I've got a great memory for crap. They're all scrolled like it's a
wedding and there's a signed pass tacked on the back just to make it
official. Admit two, The Excelsior, Meriden. Boogie on down, and I bet the
Lord Mayor's coming. And tomorrow it's Reading. I mean, do these guys
paarrty every night?
Choirboy grins. "It's here at the Metropole, right?"
"Oh, yeah, the Metropole." I saw the neon on the way in. "That's the
place just outside? Saves the bastards having to walk too far." I scratch
me head. "Well maybe I'll see yer there. And just let me know if yer have
any trouble at all getting in, right?"
"Right on." He holds out his hand. I don't bother to shake it -- and
it's not simply because this guy cleans bogs. I don't want him near me,
and I somehow I don't want him near Paul or the others either. He's a
fruitcase, and I feel briefly and absurdly pleased with meself that I've
sent him off to ye wrong hotel.
I give him a wave and head on out ye bog. In the aircraft hanger,
music's still playing. Let's all get up and dance to a song de da de da de
dum de dum. Snodgrass and Tracy are trying to be enthusiastic so they can
tell everyone how great it was in the office tomorrow. I wander down the
aisles, wondering if it might be easier not to meet up with Cal. On
reflection, this seems as good a place as any to duck out of her life. Do
the cunt a favour. After all, she deserves it. And to be honest, I really
don't fancy explaining to Kevin where all his money went. He's a big lad,
is our Kev. Useful, like.
The music stops. The crowd claps like they're really not sure whether
they want any more and Paul raises an unnecessary arm to still them.
"Hey, one more song then we'll let yer go," he says with probably
unintentional irony. I doubt if they know what the fuck is going on up
there in Mission Control.
He puts down his Gibson and a roadie hands him something silver. Stu's
grinning like a skull. He even wanders within spitting distance of the
front of the stage. A matchstick figure, I can see he looks the way Keith
Richards would have done if he really hadn't taken care of himself.
He nods to George. George picks up a twelve string.
"This one's for an old friend," Paul says.
The session musicians are looking at each other like What the fuck's
going on? Could this really be an unrehearsed moment? Seems unlikely, but
then Paul muffs the count in on a swift four/four beat. There's nervous
laughter amongst the Fab Fearsome, silence in the auditorium. Then again.
One. Two. Three. And.
Macca puts the harmonica to his lips. Plays me riff. Love Me Do. Oh,
yeah. I really can't believe it. The audience are looking a bit bemused,
but probably reckon it's just something from the new LP that's stacked by
the yard out in the foyer and no one's bothered to buy. The song's over
quickly. Them kind of songs always were. Me, I'm crying.
The End. Finis, like they say in cartoon. Ye Beatles give a wave and
duck off stage. I get swept back in the rush to get to ye doors. I hear
snatches of, Doesn't he look old, They never knew how to
rock, Absolutely brilliant, and How much did you pay the
babysitter? I wipe the snot off on me sleeve and look around. Cal catches
hold of me by the largely unpatronised tee shirt stall before I have a
chance to see her coming.
"What did you think?"
"A load of shit," I say, hoping she won't notice I've been crying.
She smiles. "Is that all you can manage, John? That must mean you liked
it."
Touche, Monsieur Pussycat. "Truth is, I could need a drink."
"Well, let's get down the Excelsior. You can meet your old mates and
get as pissed as you like."
She glides me out towards the door. Me feet feel like they're on
rollers. And there's me chauffeur pal with the boy scout uniform. People
stare at us as he opens the door like we're George Michael. Pity he don't
salute, but still, I'd look a right pillock trying to squirm me way away
from a pretty woman and the back seat of a Jag.
The car pulls slowly through the crowds. I do me wave like I'm the
Queen Mum although the old bint's probably too hip to be seen at a Beatles
concert. Turns out there's a special exit for us VIPS. I mean, rock and
roll. It's just a few minutes drive, me mate up front tells us.
Cal settles back. "This is the life."
"Call this life?"
"Might as well make the most of it, John."
"Oh, yeah. I bet you get taken in this kind of limo all the time.
Blowjobs in the back seat. It's what pays, right?" I bite me lip and look
out the window. Jesus, I'm starting to cry again.
"Why do you say things like that John?"
"Because I'm a bastard. I mean, you of all people must know about
bastards having to put up with Steve."
Cal laughed. "You called him Steve!"
I really must be going ta bits. "Yeah, well I must have puked up me
wits over that lay by."
"Anyway," she touches me arm. "Call him whatever you like. I took your
advice this evening. Told him where to stuff it."
I look carefully at her face. She obviously ain't kidding, but I can't
see any bruises. "And what about the money I nicked?"
"Well, that's not a problem for me, is it? I simply told him the truth,
that it was you." She smiled. "Come on, John. I'd almost believe you were
frightened of him. He's just some bloke. He's got another girl he's after
anyway, the other side of town and good luck to her."
"So it's just you and me is it, Cal. Cosy, like. Don't expect me to
sort out yer customers for yer."
"I'm getting too old for that, John. It costs you more than they pay.
Maybe I'll do more work at the NEC. Of course, you'll have to start paying
your sodding rent."
I hear meself say, "I think there's a vacancy coming up in the NEC
Gents. How about that for a funky job for Doctor Winston? At least you get
to sweep the shit up there rather than having to stuff it into
envelopes."
"What are you talking about, John?"
"Forget it. Maybe I'll explain in the morning. You've got influence
there, haven't you?"
"I'll help you get a job, if that's what you're trying to say."
I lookouta ye window. The houses streaming past, yellow widows, where
ye Snodgrasses who weren't at the concert are chomping pipe and slippers
whilst the wife makes spaniel eyes. The kids tucked upstairs in pink and
blue rooms that smell of Persil and Playdough. Me, I'm just the guy who
used to be in a halfway-famous band before they were anybody. I got me no
book club subscription, I got me no life so clean yer could eat yer bloody
dinner off it. Of course, I still got me rebellion, oh yeah, I got me
that, and all it amounts to is cadging cigs off Cal and lifting packets of
Cheesy Wotsits from the bargain bin in Kwicksave when Doris and Tracy
ain't looking. Oh, yeah, rebellion. The milkman shouts at me when I go
near his float in case The Mad Old Git nicks another bottle.
I can remember when we used to stand up and face the crowd, do all them
songs I've forgotten how to play. When Paul still knew how to rock. When
Stu was half an artist, dreamy and scary at the same time. When George was
just a neat kid behind a huge guitar, lying about his age. When Ringo was
funny and the beat went on forever. Down the smoggily lit stairways and
greasy tunnels, along burrows and byways where the cheesy reek of the bogs
hit yer like a wall. Then the booze was free afterwards and the girls
would gather round, press softly against yer arm as they smiled. Their
boyfriends would mutter at the bar but you knew they were afraid of yer.
Knew they could sense the power of the music that carried off the stage.
Jesus, the girls were as sweet as the rain in those grey cities, the
shining streets, the forest wharves, the dark doorways where there was
laughter in the dripping brick-paved night. And sleeping afterwards, yer
head spinning from the booze and the wakeups and the downers, taking turns
on that stained mattress with the cinema below booming in yer head and the
music still pouring through. Diving down into carousel dreams.
Oh, the beat went on alright. Used to think it would carry up into
daylight and the real air, touch the eyes and ears of the pretty dreamers,
even make Snodgrass stir a little in his slumbers, take the shine off the
Sierra, make him look up at the angels in the sky once in a while, or even
just down at the shit on the pavement.
"Well, here we are," Cal says.
Oh, yeah. Some hotel. Out in the pretty pretty. Trees and lights across
a fucking lake. The boy scout opens the door for me and Cal. Unsteady on
me pins, I take a breath, then have me a good retching cough. The air out
here reeks of roses or something, like one of them expensive bog
fresheners that Cal sprays around when our Kev's had a dump.
"Hey." Cal holds out the crook of her arm. "Aren't you going to escort
me in?"
"Let's wait here."
There are other cars pulling up, some old git dressed like he's the
Duke of Wellington standing at the doors. Straight ahead to the Clarendon
Suite, Sir, he smooths greyly to the passing suits. I suppose these must
be record industry types. And then there's this bigger car than the rest
starts to pull up. It just goes on and on, like one of them gags in Tom
and Jerry. Everyone steps back like it's the Pope. Instead, turns out it's
just The Beatles. They blink around in the darkness like mad owls, dressed
in them ridiculous loose cotton suits that Clapton always looks such a
prat in. Lawyers tremble around them like little fish. Paul pauses to give
a motorcycle policeman his autograph, flashes the famous Macca grin. Some
guy in a suit who looks like the hotel manager shakes hands with Stu. Rock
and roll. I mean, this is what we were always fighting for. The Beatles
don't register the good Doctor before they head inside, but maybe that's
because he's taken three steps back into the toilet freshener
darkness.
"What are we waiting for?" Cal asks as the rest of the rubbernecks
drift in.
"This isn't easy, Cal."
"Who said anything about easy?"
I give the Duke of Wellington a salute as he holds ye door open.
"Straight ahead to the Clarendon Suite, Sir."
"Hey," I tell him, "I used to be Beatle John."
"Stop mucking about, John." Cal does her Kenneth Williams impression,
then gets all serious. "This is important. Just forget about the past and
let's concentrate on the rest of your life. All you have to say to Paul is
Hello. He's a decent guy. And I'm sure that the rest of them haven't
changed as much as you imagine."
Cal wheels me in. The hotel lobby looks like a hotel lobby. The Tracy
at reception gives me a cutglass smile. Catch a glimpse of meself in the
mirror and unbelievably I really don't look too bad. Must be slipping.
"Jesus, Cal. I need a smoke."
"Here." She rumbles in me pocket, produces Kevin's Rothmans. "I suppose
you want a bloody light."
All the expensive fish are drifting by. Some bint in an evening dress
so low at the back that you can see the crack of her arse puts her arm on
this Snodgrass and gives him a peck on the cheek. That was
delightful, darrling, she purrs. She really does.
"I mean a real smoke Cal. Haven't you got some blow?" I make a
lunge for her handbag.
"Bloody hell, John," she whispers, looking close to loosing her cool.
She pushes something into my hand. "Have it outside, if you must. Share it
with the bloody doorman."
"Thanks Cal." I give her a peck on the cheek and she looks at me oddly.
"I'll never forget."
"Forget what?" she asks as I back towards the door. Then she begins to
understand. But the Duke holds the door open for me and already I'm out in
the forest night air.
The door swings back, then open again. The hotel lights fan out across
the grass. I look back. There's some figure.
"Hey, John!"
It's a guy's voice, not Cal's after all. Sounds almost Liverpool.
"Hey, wait a minute! Can't we just talk?"
The voice rings in silence.
"John! It's me!"
Paul's walking into the darkness towards me. He's holding out his hand.
I stumble against chrome. The big cars are all around. Then I'm kicking
white stripes down the road. Turns to gravel underfoot and I can see blue
sea, a white beach steaming after the warm rain, a place where a woman is
waiting and the bells jingle between her breasts. Just close your eyes and
you're there.
Me throat me legs me head hurts. But there's a gated side road here
that leads off through trees and scuffing the dirt at the end of a field
to some big houses that nod and sway with the sleepy night.
I risk a look behind. Everything is peaceful. There's no one around.
Snodgrass is dreaming. Stars upon the rooftops, and the Sierra's in the
drive. Trees and privet, lawns neat as velvet. Just some suburban road at
the back of the hotel. People living their lives.
I catch me breath, and start to run again.
 ©
Ian R MacLeod 1992, 2000
'Snodgrass' was first
published in In Dreams, edited by Paul J McAuley and Kim
Newman (Victor Gollancz, 1992). Snodgrass
Snodgrass
by Ian R MacLeod
Foreword
Which is more
fascinating, success or failure? You can supply your own answer, but I
think we all have a voyeuristic horror about lives gone wrong, not least
us writers, who probably lie down with failure as our bedfellows and
dream-mates at least as often as do double glazing salesmen - and rock
stars.
Which is where the idea
for 'Snodgrass' probably came from. I've always been fascinated by those
characters who leave bands after some row in the back of the Transit just
before the band becomes famous. And why not John Lennon? Why not, indeed.
Like most great bands, the Beatles were always a hair's breadth away from
imploding.
I've never been a big
Lennon fan, although only an idiot would deny his great talent. In this
story, however, he was cypher for all kinds of music and art and dreamy
ambition, and for all kinds of failure. The music I was listening to as I
wrote 'Snodgrass' was actually mostly Starless and Bible Black by King
Crimson, another fine-but-imploding band, and the most eagle-eyed reader
may even detect a few lost scraps of lyric. But if you're a rock star of
any kind, or a even a double glazing salesman, I hope you find something
relevant and entertaining in what follows.
Snodgrass
I've got me whole life worked out. Today, give up
smoking. Tomorrow, quit drinking. The day after, give up smoking again.
It's morning. Light me cig. Pick the fluff off me feet. Drag the
curtain back, and the night's left everything in the same mess outside.
Bin sacks by the kitchen door that Cal never gets around to taking out
front. The garden jungleland gone brown with autumn. Houses this way and
that, terraces queuing for something that'll never happen.
It's early. Daren't look at the clock. The stair carpet works
greasegrit between me toes. Downstairs in the freezing kitchen, pull the
cupboard where the handle's dropped off.
"Hey, Mother Hubbard," I shout up the stairs to Cal. "Why no fucking
cornflakes?"
The lav flushes. Cal lumbers down in a grey nightie. "What's all this
about cornflakes? Since when do you have breakfast, John?"
"Since John got a job."
"You? A job?"
"I wouldn't piss yer around about this, Cal."
"You owe me four weeks rent," she says. "Plus I don't know how much for
bog roll and soap. Then there's the TV licence."
"Don't tell me yer buy a TV licence."
"I don't, but I'm the householder. It's me who'd get sent to gaol."
"Every Wednesday, I'll visit yer," I say, rummaging in the bread
bin.
"What's this job anyway?"
"I told yer on Saturday when you and Kevin came back from the chinese.
Must have been too pissed to notice." I hold up a stiff green slice of
Mighty White. "Think this is edible?"
"Eat it and find out. And stop calling Steve Kevin. He's upstairs
asleep right at this moment."
"Well there's a surprise. Rip Van and his tiny Winkle."
"I wish you wouldn't say things like that. You know what Steve's like
if you give him an excuse."
"Yeah, but at least I don't have to sleep with him."
Cal sits down to watch me struggle through breakfast. Before Kevin, it
was another Kevin, and a million other Kevins before that, all with grazed
knuckles from the way they walk. Cal says she needs the protection even if
it means the odd bruise.
I paste freckled marge over ye Mighty White. It tastes just like the
doormat, and I should know.
"Why don't yer tell our Kev to stuff it?" I say.
She smiles and leans forward.
"Snuggle up to Doctor Winston here," I wheedle.
"You'd be too old to look after me with the clients, John," she says,
as though I'm being serious. Which I am.
"For what I'd charge to let them prod yer, Cal, yer wouldn't have any
clients. Onassis couldn't afford yer."
"Onassis is dead, unless you mean the woman." She stands up, turning
away, shaking the knots from her hair. She stares out of the window over
the mess in the sink. Cal hates to talk about her work. "It's past eight,
John," she says without looking at any clock. It's a knack she has.
"Hadn't you better get ready for this job?"
Yeah, ye job. The people at the Jobbie are always
on the look out for something fresh for Doctor Winston. They think of him
as a challenge. Miss Nikki was behind ye spit-splattered perspex last
week. She's an old hand -- been there for at least three months.
"Name's Doctor Winston O'Boogie," I drooled, doing me hunchback when I
reached the front of ye queue.
"We've got something for you, Mister Lennon," she says. They always
call yer Mister or Sir here, just like the fucking police. "How would you
like to work in a Government Department?"
"Well, wow," I say, letting the hunchback slip. "You mean like a
spy?"
That makes her smile. I hate it when they don't smile.
She passes me ye chit. Name, age, address. Skills, qualifications --
none. That bit always kills me. Stapled to it we have details of something
clerical.
"It's a new scheme, Mr Lennon," Nikki says. "The Government is
committed to helping the long-term unemployed. You can start Monday."
So here's Doctor Winston O'Boogie at the bus stop in the weird morning
light. I've got on me best jacket, socks that match, even remembered me
glasses so I can see what's happening. Cars are crawling. Men in suits are
tapping fingers on the steering wheel as they groove to Katie Boyle. None
of them live around here -- they're all from Solihull -- and this is just
a place to complain about the traffic. And Monday's a drag cos daughter
Celia has to back the Mini off the drive and be a darling and shift
Mummy's Citroen too so yer poor hard working Dad can get to the
Sierra.
The bus into town lumbers up. The driver looks at me like I'm a freak
when I don't know ye exact fare. Up on the top deck where there's No
standing, No spitting, No ball games, I get me a window seat and light me
a ciggy. I love it up here, looking down on the world, into people's
bedroom windows. Always have. Me and me mate Pete used to drive the bus
from the top front seat all the way from Menlove Avenue to Quarry Bank
School. I remember the rows of semis, trees that used to brush like sea on
shingle over the roof of the bus. Everything in Speke was Snodgrass of
course, what with valve radios on the sideboard and the Daily Excess, but
Snodgrass was different in them days. It was like watching a play, waiting
for someone to forget their lines. Mimi used to tell me that anyone who
said they were middle class probably wasn't. You knew just by checking
whether they had one of them blocks that look like Kendal Mint Cake hooked
around the rim of the loo. It was all tea and biscuits then, and Mind
dear, your slip's showing. You knew where you were, what you were
fighting.
The bus crawls. We're up in the clouds here, the fumes on the pavement
like dry ice at a big concert. Oh, yeah. I mean, Doctor Winston may be
nifty fifty with his whole death to look forward to but he knows what he's
saying. Cal sometimes works at the NEC when she gets too proud to do the
real business. Hands out leaflets and wiggles her ass. She got me a ticket
last year to see Simply Red and we went together and she put on her best
dress that looked just great and didn't show too much and I was proud to
be with her, even if I did feel like her Dad. Of course, the music was
warmed-over shit. It always is. I hate the way that red-haired guy sings.
She tried to get me to see Cliff too, but Doctor Winston has his
pride.
Everywhere is empty round here, knocked down and boarded up, postered
over. There's a group called SideKick playing at Digbeth. And
waddayouknow, the Beatles are playing this very evening at the NEC. The
Greatest Hits Tour, it says here on ye corrugated fence. I mean, Fab Gear
Man. Give It Bloody Foive. Macca and Stu and George and Ringo, and
obviously the solo careers are up the kazoo again. Like, wow.
The bus dumps me in the middle of Brum. The office is just off Cherry
Street. I stagger meself by finding it right away, me letter from the
Jobbie in me hot little hand. I show it to a geezer in uniform, and he
sends me up to the fifth floor. The whole place is new. It smells of
formaldehyde -- that stuff we used to pickle the spiders in at school. Me
share the lift with ye office bimbo. Oh, after, you.
Doctor Winston does his iceberg cruise through the openplan. So this is
what Monday morning really looks like.
Into an office at the far end. Smells of coffee. Snodgrass has got a
filter machine bubbling away. A teapot ready for the afternoon.
"Mister Lennon."
We shake hands across the desk. "Mister Snodgrass."
Snodgrass cracks a smile. "There must have been some mistake down in
General Admin. My name's Fenn. But everyone calls me Allen."
"Oh yeah. And why's that?" A voice inside that sounds like Mimi says
Stop this behaviour John. She's right, of course. Doctor Winston
needs the job, the money. Snodgrass tells me to sit down. I fumble for a
ciggy and try to loosen up.
"No smoking please, Mister...er, John."
Oh, great.
"You're a lot, um, older than most of the casual workers we get."
"Well this is what being on the Giro does for yer. I'm nineteen
really."
Snodgrass looks down at his file. "Born 1940." He looks up again. "And
is that a Liverpool accent I detect?"
I look around me. "Where?"
Snodgrass has got a crazy grin on his face. I think the bastard likes
me. "So you're John Lennon, from Liverpool. I thought the name rang a
faint bell." He leans forward. "I am right, aren't I?"
Oh fucking Jesus. A faint bell. This happens about once every six
months. Why now? "Oh yeah," I say. "I used to play the squeezebox
for Gerry and the Pacemakers. Just session work. And it was a big thrill
to work with Shirley Bassey, I can tell yer. She's the King as far as I'm
concerned. Got bigger balls than Elvis."
"You were the guy who left the Beatles."
"That was Pete Best, Mister Snodgrass."
"You and Pete Best. Pete Best was the one who was dumped for
Ringo. You walked out on Paul McCartney and Stuart Sutcliffe. I collect
records, you see. I've read all the books about Merseybeat. And my elder
sister was a big fan of those old bands. The Fourmost, Billy J. Kramer,
Cilla, The Beatles. Of course, it was all before my time."
"Dinosaurs ruled the earth."
"You must have some stories to tell."
"Oh, yeah." I lean forward across the desk. "Did yer know that Paul
McCartney was really a woman?"
"Well, John, I -- "
"It figures if yer think about it, Mister Snodgrass. I mean, have
you ever seen his dick?"
"Just call me Allen, please, will you? Now, I'll show you your
desk."
Snodgrass takes me out into the openplan. Introduces me to a pile of
envelopes, a pile of letters. Well, Hi. Seems like Doctor Winston is
supposed to put one into the other.
"What do I do when I've finished?" I ask.
"We'll find you some more."
All the faces in open plan are staring. A phone's ringing, but no one
bothers to answer. "Yeah," I say, "I can see there's a big rush on."
On his way back to his office, Snodgrass takes a detour to have a word
with a fat Doris in a floral print sitting over by the filing cabinets. He
says something to her that includes the word Beatle. Soon, the whole
office knows.
"I bet you could write a book," fat Doris says, standing over me,
smelling of Pot Noodles. "Everyone's interested in those days now. Of
course, the Who and the Stones were the ones for me. Brian Jones. Keith
Moon, for some reason. All the ones who died. I was a real rebel. I went
to Heathrow airport once, chewed my handbag to shreds."
"Did yer piss yerself too, Doris? That's what usually happened."
Fat Doris twitches a smile. "Never quite made it to the very top, the
Beatles, did they? Still, that Paul McCartney wrote some lovely songs.
Yesterday, you still hear that one in lifts don't you? And Stu was
so good looking then. Must be a real tragedy in your life that you
didn't stay. How does it feel, carrying that around with you, licking
envelopes for a living?"
"Yer know what your trouble is don't yer, Doris?"
Seems she don't, so I tell her.
Winston's got no money for the bus home. His old
joints ache -- never realised it was this bloody far to walk. The kids are
playing in our road like it's a holiday, which it always is for most of
them. A tennis ball hits me hard on the noddle. I pretend it don't hurt,
then I growl at them to fuck off as they follow me down the street.
Kevin's van's disappeared from outside the house. Musta gone out. Pity,
shame.
Cal's wrapped up in a rug on the sofa, smoking a joint and watching
Home And Away. She jumps up when she sees me in the hall like she thought
I was dead already.
"Look, Cal," I say. "I really wanted this job, but yer wouldn't get
Adolf Hitler to do what they asked, God rest his soul. There were all
these little puppies in cages and I was supposed to push knitting needles
down into their eyes. Jesus, it was -- "
"Just shaddup for one minute will you, John!"
"I'll get the rent somehow, Cal, I -- "
" -- Paul McCartney was here!"
"Who the hell's Paul McCartney?"
"Be serious for a minute, John. He was here. There was a car the
size of a tank parked outside the house. You should have seen the curtains
twitch."
Cal hands me the joint. I take a pull, but I really need something
stronger. And I still don't believe what she's saying. "And why the fuck
should Macca come here?"
"To see you, John. He said he'd used a private detective to
trace you here. Somehow got the address through your wife Cynthia. I
didn't even know you were married, John. And a kid named Julian
who's nearly thirty. He's married too, he's -- "
" -- What else did that bastard tell yer?"
"Look, we just talked. He was very charming."
Charming. That figures. Now I'm beginning to believe.
"I thought you told me you used to be best mates."
"Too bloody right. Then he nicked me band. It was John Lennon and the
Quarrymen. I should never have let the bastard join. Then Johnny and the
Moondogs. Then Long John and the Silver Beatles. It was my name,
my idea to shorten it to just The Beatles. They all said it was
daft, but they went along with it because it was my fucking
band."
"Look, nobody doubts that, John. But what's the point in being bitter?
Paul just wanted to know how you were."
"Oh, it's Paul now is it? Did yer let him shag yer, did yer put
out for free, ask him to autograph yer fanny?"
"Come on, John. Climb down off the bloody wall. It didn't happen,
you're not rich and famous. It's like not winning the pools, happens to
everyone you meet. After all, The Beatles were just another rock band.
It's not like they were The Stones."
"Oh, no. The Stones weren't crap for a start. Bang bang Maxwell's
Silver bloody Hammer. Give me Cliff any day."
"You never want to talk about it, do you? You just let it stay inside
you, boiling up. Look, why will you never believe that people care?
I care. Will you accept that for a start? Do you think I put up
with you here for the sodding rent which incidentally I never get anyway?
You're old enough to be my bloody father, John. So stop acting like a
kid." Her face starts to go wet. I hate these kind of scenes. "You
could be my father John. Seeing as I didn't have one, you'd do
fine. Just believe in yourself for a change."
"At least yer had a bloody mother," I growl. But I can't keep
the nasty up. Open me arms and she's trembling like a rabbit, smelling of
salt and grass. All these years, all these bloody years. Why is it
you can never leave anything behind?
Cal sniffs and steps back and pulls these bits of paper from her
pocket. "He gave me these. Two tickets for tonight's show, and a pass for
the do afterwards."
I look around at chez nous. The air smells of old stew that I can never
remember eating. I mean, who the hell cooks stew? And Macca was
here. Did them feet in ancient whathaveyou.
Cal plonks the tickets on the telly and brews some tea. She's humming
in the kitchen, it's her big day, a famous rock star has come on down. I
wonder if I should tear ye tickets up now, but decide to leave it for
later. Something to look forward to for a change. All these years, all
these bloody years. There was a journalist caught up with Doctor
Winston a while back. Oh Mister Lennon, I'm doing background. We'll pay
yer of course, and perhaps we could have lunch? Which we did, and I can
reveal exclusively for the first time that the Doctor got well and truly
rat-arsed. And then the cheque came and the Doctor saw it all in black and
white, serialised in the Sunday bloody Excess. A sad and bitter man, it
said. So it's in the papers and I know it's true.
Cal clears a space for the mugs on the carpet and plonks them down. "I
know you don't mean to go tonight," she says. "I'm not going to argue
about it now."
She sits down on the sofa and lets me put an arm around her waist. We
get warm and cosy. It's nice sometimes with Cal. You don't have to argue
or explain.
"You know, John," she murmurs. "The secret of happiness is not
trying."
"And you're the world expert? Happiness sure ain't living on the Giro
in bloody Birmingham."
"Birmingham isn't the end of the world."
"No, but yer can see it from here."
Cal smiles. I love it when she smiles. She leans over and lights more
blow from somewhere. She puts it to my lips. I breathe it in. The smoke.
Tastes like harvest bonfires. We're snug as two bunnies. "Think of when
you were happy," she whispers. "There must have been a time."
Oh, yeah. 1966, after I'd recorded the five singles that made up the
entire creative output of The Nowhere Men and some git at the record
company was given the job of saying, Well, John, we don't feel when can
give yer act the attention it deserves. And let's be honest the Beatles
link isn't really bankable any more is it? Walking out into the London
traffic, it was just a huge load off me back. John, yer don't have to be
rock star after all. No more backs of vans. No more Watford Gap Sizzlers
for breakfast. No more chord changes. No more launches and re-launches. No
more telling the bloody bass player how to use his instrument. Of course,
there was Cyn and little Julian back in Liverpool, but let's face it I was
always a bastard when it came to family. I kidded meself they were better
off without me.
But 1966. There was something then, the light had a sharp edge.
Not just acid and grass although that was part of it. A girl with ribbons
came up to me along Tottenham Court Road. Gave me a dogeared postcard of a
white foreign beach, a blue sea. Told me she'd been there that very
morning, just held it to her eyes in the dark. She kissed me cheek and she
said she wanted to pass the blessing on. Well, the Doctor has never been
much of a dreamer, but he could feel the surf of that beach through his
toes as he dodged the traffic. He knew there were easier ways of getting
there than closing yer eyes. So I took all me money and I bought me a
ticket and I took a plane to Spain, la, la. Seemed like everyone was
heading that way then, drifting in some warm current from the sun.
Lived on Formentera for sunbaked years I couldn't count. It was a sweet
way of life, bumming this, bumming that, me and the Walrus walking hand in
hand, counting the sand. Sheltering under a fig tree in the rain, I met
this welsh girl who called herself Morwenna. We all had strange names
then. She took me to a house made of driftwood and canvas washed up on the
shore. She had bells between her breasts and they tinkled as we made love.
When the clouds had cleared we bought fish fresh from the nets in the
whitewashed harbour. Then we talked in firelight and the dolphins sang to
the lobsters as the waves advanced. She told me under the stars that she
knew other places, other worlds. There's another John at your shoulder,
she said. He's so like you I can't understand what's different.
But Formentera was a long way from anything. It was so timeless we knew
it couldn't last. The tourists, the government, the locals, the police --
every Snodgrass in the universe -- moved in. Turned out Morwenna's parents
had money so it was all just fine and dandy for the cunt, leaving me one
morning before the sun was up, taking a little boat to the airport on
Ibiza, then all the way back to bloody Cardiff. The clouds greyed over the
Med and the Doctor stayed on too long. Shot the wrong shit, scored the
wrong deals. Somehow, I ended up in Paris, sleeping in a box and not
speaking a bloody word of the lingo. Then somewhere else. The whole thing
is a haze. Another time, I was sobbing on Mimi's doorstep in pebbledash
Menlove Avenue and the dog next door was barking and Mendips looked just
the same. The porch where I used to play me guitar. Wallpaper and cooking
smells inside. She gave me egg and chips and tea in thick white china,
just like the old days when she used to go on about me drainpipes.
So I stayed on a while in Liverpool, slept in me old bed with me feet
sticking out the bottom. Mimi had taken down all me Bridget Bardot posters
but nothing else had changed. I could almost believe that me mate Paul was
gonna come around on the wag from the Inny and we'd spend the afternoon
with our guitars and pickle sandwiches, re-writing Buddy Holly and
dreaming of the days to come. The songs never came out the way we meant
and the gigs at the Casbah were a mess. But things were possible,
then, yer know?
I roused meself from bed after a few weeks and Mimi nagged me down the
Jobbie. Then I had to give up kidding meself that time had stood still.
Did yer know all the docks have gone? I've never seen anything so empty.
God knows what the people do with themselves when they're not getting
pissed. I couldn't even find the fucking Cavern, or Eppy's old record shop
where he used to sell that Sibelius crap until he chanced upon us rough
lads.
When I got back to Mendips I suddenly saw how old Mimi had got. Mimi, I
said, yer're a senior citizen. I should be looking after
you. She just laughed that off, of course; Mimi was sweet and sour
as ever. Wagged her finger at me and put something tasty on the stove.
When Mimi's around, I'm still just a kid, can't help it. And she couldn't
resist saying, I told you all this guitar stuff would get you nowhere,
John. But at least she said it with a smile and hug. I guess I could have
stayed there forever, but that's not the Doctor's way. Like Mimi says,
he's got ants in his pants. Just like his poor dead Mum. So I started to
worry that things were getting too cosy, that maybe it was time to dump
everything and start again, again.
What finally happened was that I met this bloke one day on me way back
from the Jobbie. The original Snodgrass, no less -- the one I used to
sneer at during calligraphy in Art School. In them days I was James Dean
and Elvis combined with me drainpipes and me duck's arse quiff. A one man
revolution -- Cynthia the rest of the class were so hip they were trying
to look like Kenny Ball and his Sodding Jazzmen. This kid Snodgrass
couldn't even manage that, probably dug Frank Ifield. He had spots on his
neck, a green sports jacket that looked like his Mum had knitted it.
Christ knows what his real name was. Of course, Doctor Winston used to
take the piss something rancid, specially when he'd sunk a few pints of
black velvet down at Ye Cracke. Anyway, twenty years on and the Doctor was
watching ye seagulls on Paradise Street and waiting for the lights to
change, when this sports car shaped like a dildo slides up and a window
purrs down.
"Hi, John! Bet you don't remember me."
All I can smell is leather and aftershave. I squint and lean forward to
see. The guy's got red-rimmed glasses on. A grin like a slab of
marble.
"Yeah," I say, although I really don't know how I know. "You're the
prat from college. The one with the spotty neck."
"I got into advertising," he said. "My own company now. You were in
that band, weren't you John? Left just before they made it. You always did
talk big."
"Fuck off Snodgrass," I tell him, and head across the road. Nearly walk
straight into a bus.
Somehow, it's the last straw. I saunter down to Lime Street, get me a
platform ticket and take the first Intercity that comes in, la, la. They
throw me off at Brum, which I swear to Jesus God is the only reason why
I'm here. Oh, yeah. I let Mimi know what had happened after a few weeks
when me conscience got too heavy. She must have told Cyn. Maybe they send
each other Crimble cards.
Damn.
Cal's gone.
Cold. The sofa. How can anyone sleep on this thing? Hurts me old
bones just to sit on it. The sun is fading at the window. Must be late
afternoon. No sign of Cal. Probably has to do the biz with some arab our
Kev's found for her. Now seems as good a time as any to sort out Macca's
tickets, but when I look on top ye telly they've done a runner. The cunt's
gone and hidden them, la, la.
Kevin's back. I can hear him farting and snoring upstairs in Cal's
room. I shift the dead begonia off ye sideboard and rummage in the cigar
box behind. Juicy stuff, near on sixty quid. Cal hides her money somewhere
different about once a fortnight, and she don't think the Doctor has
worked out where she's put it this time. Me, I've known for ages, was just
saving for ye rainy day. Which is now.
So yer thought yer could get Doctor Winston O'Boogie to go and see Stu
and Paulie just by hiding the tickets did yer? The fucking NEC! Ah-ha. The
Doctor's got other ideas. He pulls on ye jacket, his best and only shoes.
Checks himself in the hall mirror. Puts on glasses. Looks like Age
Concern. Takes them off again. Heads out. Pulls the door quiet in case Kev
should stir. The air outside is grainy, smells of diesel. The sky is pink
and all the street lights that work are coming on. The kids are still
playing, busy breaking the aerial off a car. They're too absorbed to look
up at ye passing Doctor, which is somehow worse than being taunted. I
recognise the cracks in ye pavement. This one looks like a moon buggy.
This one looks like me Mum's face after the car hit her outside Mendips.
Not that I saw, but still, yer dream, don't yer? You still dream. And
maybe things were getting a bit too cosy here with Cal anyway, starting to
feel sorry for her instead of meself. Too cosy. And the Doctor's not sure
if he's ever coming back.
I walk ye streets. Sixty quid, so which pub's it gonna be? But it turns
out the boozers are still all shut anyway. It don't feel early, but it is
-- children's hour on the telly, just the time of year for smoke and
darkness.
End up on the hill on top of the High Street. See the rooftops from
here, cars crawling, all them paper warriors on the way home, Tracy doing
lipstick on the bus, dreaming of her boyfriend's busy hands and the night
to come. Whole of Birmingham's pouring with light. A few more right turns
in the Sierra to where the avenues drip sweet evening and Snodgrass says
I'm home darling. Deep in the sea arms of love and bolognese for tea.
Streets of Solihull and Sutton Coldfield where the kids know how to work a
computer instead of just nick one, wear ye uniform at school, places where
the grass is velvet and there are magic fountains amid the fairy
trees.
The buses drift by on sails on exhaust and the sky is the colour of
Ribena. Soon the stars will come. I can feel the whole night pouring in,
humming words I can never quite find. Jesus, does everyone feel
this way? Does Snodgrass carry this around when he's watching Tracy's
legs, on holy Sunday before the Big Match polishing the GL badge on his
fucking Sierra? Does he dream of the dark tide, seaweed combers of the
ocean parting like the lips he never touched?
Me, I'm Snodgrass, Kevin, Tracy, fat Doris in her print dress. I'm
every bit part player in the whole bloody horrorshow. Everyone except John
Lennon. Oh Jesus Mary Joseph and Winston, I dreamed I could circle the
world with me arms, take the crowd with me guitar, stomp the beat on dirty
floors so it would never end, whisper the dream for every kid under the
starch sheets of radio nights. Show them how to shine.
Christ, I need a drink. Find me way easily, growl at dogs and passers
by, but Dave the barman's a mate. Everything's deep red in here and tastes
of old booze and cigs and the dodgy Gents, just like swimming though me
own blood. Dave is wiping the counter with a filthy rag and it's Getting
pissed tonight are we John? Yer bet, wac. Notice two rastas in the corner.
Give em the old comic Livipud accent. Ken Dodd and his Diddymen. Makes em
smile. I hate it when they don't smile. Ansells and a chaser. Even got
change for the jukebox. Not a Beatles song in sight. No Yesterday, no C
Moon, no Mull of Kinbloodytyre. Hey, me shout at ye rastas, Now Bob
Marley, he was the biz, reet? At least he had the sense to die. Like Jimi,
Jim, Janis, all the good ones who kept the anger and the dream. The Rastas
say something unintelligible back. Rock and roll, lets. The rastas and
Winston, we're on the same wavelength. Buy em a drink. Clap their backs.
They're exchanging grins like they think I don't notice. Man, will you
look at this sad old git? But he's buying. Yeah I'm buying thanks to Cal.
By the way lads, these Rothmans taste like shit, now surely you guys must
have something a little stronger?
The evening starts to fill out. I can see everything happening even
before it does. Maybe the Doctor will have a little puke round about eight
to make room for a greasy chippy. Oh, yeah, and plenty of time for more
booze and then maybe a bit of bother later. Rock and roll. The rastas have
got their mates with them now and they're saying Hey man, how much money
you got there? I wave it in their faces. Wipe yer arse on this, Sambo.
Hey, Dave, yer serving or what? Drinky here, drinky there. The good Doctor
give drinky everywhere.
Jukebox is pounding. Arms in arms, I'm singing words I don't know. Dave
he tell me, Take it easy now, John. And I tell him exactly what to stuff,
and precisely where. Oh, yeah. Need to sit down. There's an arm on me
shoulder. I push it off. The arm comes again. The Doctor's ready to lash
out, so maybe the bother is coming earlier than expected. Well, that's
just fine and me turn to face ye foe.
It's Cal.
"John, you just can't hold your booze any longer."
She's leading me out ye door. I wave me Rastas an ocean wave. The bar
waves back.
The night air hits me like a truncheon. "How the fuck did yer find
me?"
"Not very difficult. How many pubs are there around here?"
"I've never counted." No, seriously. "Just dump me here Cal. Don't give
me another chance to piss yer around. Look." I fumble me pockets. Twenty
pee. Turns out I'm skint again. "I nicked all yer money. Behind the
begonia."
"On the sideboard? That's not mine, it's Kevin's. After last time do
you think I'm stupid enough to leave money around where you could find
it?"
"Ah-ha!" I point at her in triumph. "You called him Kevin."
"Just get in the bloody car."
I get in the bloody car. Some geezer in the front says Okay guv, and
off we zoom. It's a big car. Smells like a new camera. I do me royal wave
past Kwicksave. I tell the driver, Hey me man, just step on it and follow
that car.
"Plenty of time, Sir," he tells me. He looks like a chauffeur. He's
wearing a bloody cap.
Time for what?
And Jesus, we're heading to Solihull. I've got me glasses on somehow.
Trees and a big dual carriageway, the sort you never see from a bus.
The Doctor does the interior a favour. Says, Stop the car. Do a spastic
sprint across ye lay by and yawn me guts out over the verge. The stars
stop spinning. I wipe me face. The Sierras are swishing by. There's a road
sign the size of the Liverpool Empire over me head. Says NEC, 2 miles. So
that's it.
Rock and roll. NEC. I've been here and seen Simply
Red on Cal's free tickets, all them pretty tunes with their balls lopped
off at birth. Knew what to expect. The place is all car park, like a
bloody airport but less fun. Cal says Hi to the staff at the big doors,
twilight workers in Butlin's blazers. Got any jobs on here Cal? asks the
pretty girl with the pretty programmes. It's Max Bygraves next week. Cal
just smiles. The Doctor toys with a witty riposte about how she gets more
dough lying with her legs open but decides not to. But Jesus, this is
Snodgrass city. I've never seen so many casual suits.
I nick a programme from the pile when no one's looking. Got so much
gloss on it, feels like a sheet of glass. The Greatest Hits Tour. Two
photos of the Fab Foursome, then and now. George still looks like his Mum,
and Ringo's Ringo. Stu is wasted, but he always was. And Macca is Cliff on
steroids.
"Stop muttering, John," Cal says, and takes me arm.
We go into this aircraft hanger. Half an hour later, we've got to our
seat. It's right at the bloody front of what I presume must be the stage.
Looks more like Apollo Nine. Another small step backwards for mankind. Oh,
yeah. I know what a stage should look like. Like the bloody Indra
in Hamburg where we took turns between the striptease. A stage is a place
where yer stand and fight against the booze and the boredom and the
sodding silence. A place where yer make people listen. Like the Cavern too
before all the Tracys got their lunchtime jollies by screaming over the
music. Magic days where I could feel the power through me Rickenbacker.
And that guitar cost me a fortune and where the bloody hell did it get to?
Vanished with every other dream.
Lights go down. A smoothie in a pink suit runs up to a mike and says
ladeeez and gennnlemen, Paul McCartney, Stuart Sutcliffe, George Harrison,
Ringo Starr -- The Beatles! Hey, rock and roll. Everyone cheers as they
run on stage. Seems like there's about ten of them nowadays, not counting
the background chicks. They're all tiny up on that launch pad, but I
manage to recognise Paul from the photies. He says Hello (pause)
Birrrmingham just like he's Mick Hucknall and shakes his mop top that's
still kinda cut the way Astrid did all them years back in Hamburg. Ringo's
about half a mile back hidden behind the drums but that's okay cos there's
some session guy up there too. George is looking down at his guitar like
he's Bert Weedon. And there's Stu almost as far back as Ringo, still
having difficulty playing the bass after all these bloody years. Should
have stuck with the painting, me lad, something yer were good at. And
Jesus, I don't believe it, Paul shoots Stu an exasperated glance as they
kick into to riff for Long Tall Sally and he comes in two bars late.
Jesus, has anything changed.
Yeah, John Lennon's not up there. Would never have lasted this long
with the Doctor anyway. I mean, thirty years. That's as bad as
Status Quo, and at least they know how to rock, even if they've only
learnt the one tune.
Days in me life. Number one in a series of one. Collect the fucking
set. It's 1962. Eppy's sent us rough lads a telegram from down the Smoke.
Great news boys. A contract. This is just when we're all starting to
wonder, and Stu in particular is pining for Astrid back in Hamburg. But
we're all giving it a go and the Doctor's even agreed to that stupid
haircut that never quite caught on and to sacking Pete Best and getting
Ringo in and the bloody suit with the bloody collar and the bloody fucking
tie. So down to London it is. And then ta ran ta rah! A real single, a
real recording studio! We meet this producer dude in a suit called Martin.
He and Eppy get on like old buddies, upper crust and all that and me
wonders out loud if he's a queer jew too, but Paul says Can it John we
can't afford to blow this.
So we gets in ye studio which is like a rabbit hutch. Do a roll Ringo,
Martin says through the mike. So Ringo gets down on the mat and turns
over. We all piss ourselves over that and all the time there's Mister
Producer looking schoolmasterish. Me, I say, Hey, did yer really produce
the Goons, Meester Martin. I got the Ying Tong Song note perfect. They all
think I'm kidding. Let's get on with it, John, Eppy says, and oils a grin
through the glass, giving me the doe eyes. And don't yer believe it, John
knows exactly what he wants. Oh, yeah. Like, did Colonel Parker fancy
Elvis? Wow. So this is rock and roll.
Me and Paul, we got it all worked out. Hit the charts with Love Me Do,
by Lennon and McCartney, the credits on the record label just the way we
agreed years back in the front parlour of his Dad's house even though
we've always done our own stuff separately. It's Macca's song, but we're
democratic, right? And what really makes it is me harmonica riff. So
that's what we play and we're all nervous as shit but even Stu manages to
get the bass part right just the way Paul's shown him.
Silence. The amps are humming. Okay, says Mister Martin, putting on a
voice, That was just great lads. An interesting song. Interesting?
Never one to beat about the proverbial, I say, yer mean it was shit,
right? Just cos we wrote it ourselves and don't live down Tin Pan bloody
Alley. But he says, I think we're looking at a B side for that one lads.
Now, listen to this.
Oh, yeah. We listen. Martin plays us this tape of a demo of some ditty
called How Do You Do It. Definite Top Ten material for somebody, he says
significantly. Gerry and the Pacemakers are already interested but I'll
give you first refusal. And Eppy nods beside him through the glass. It's
like watching Sooty and bloody Sweep in there. So Ringo smashes a cymbal
and Stu tries to tune his bass and George goes over to help and I look at
Paul and Paul looks at me.
"It's a decent tune, John," Paul says.
"You're kidding. It's a heap of shit."
Eppy tuts through the glass. Now John.
And so it goes. Me, I grab me Rickenbacker and walk out the fucking
studio. There's a boozer round the corner. London prices are a joke but I
sink one pint and then another, waiting for someone to come and say,
You're so right John. But Paul don't come. Eppy don't come either even
though I thought it was me of all the lads that he was after. After the
third pint, I'm fucking glad. The haircuts, the suits, and now playing
tunes that belong in the bloody adverts. It's all gone too far.
And there it was. John Quits The Beatles in some local snotrag called
Merseybeat the week after before I've had a chance to change me mind. And
after that I've got me pride. When I saw Paul down Victoria Street a
couple a months later yer could tell the single was doing well just by his
bloody walk. Said Hi John, yer know it's not too late and God knows how
Merseybeat got hold of the story. He said it as though he and Eppy hadn't
jumped at the chance to dump me and make sure everybody knew. There was
Macca putting on the charm the way he always did when he was in a tight
situation. I told him to stuff it where the fucking sun don't shine. And
that was that. I stomped off down ye street, had a cup of tea in
Littlewoods. Walked out on Cynthia and the kid. Formed me own band. Did a
few gigs. Bolloxed up me life good and proper.
And here we have the Beatles, still gigging, nearly a full house here
at the NEC, almost as big as Phil Collins or the Bee Gees. Paul does his
old thumbs up routine between songs. Awwrright. He's a real rock a roll
dude, him and George play their own solos just like Dire Straights. The
music drifts from the poppy older stuff to the druggy middle stuff back to
the poppy later stuff. Things We Said Today. Good Day Sun Shine. Dizzy
Miss Lizzy. Jet. They even do How Do You Do It. No sign of Love Me Do, of
course. That never got recorded, although I'll bet they could do me
harmonica riff on ye synthesizer as easy as shit. It all sounds smooth and
tight and sweetly nostalgic, just the way it would on the Sony music
centre back at home after Snodgrass has loosened his tie from a hard day
watching Tracy wriggle her ass over the fax machine in Accounts. The
pretty lights flash, the dry ice fumes, but the spaceship never quite
takes off. Me, I shout for Maxwell's Silver Hammer, and in a sudden wave
of silence, it seems like Paul actually hears. He squints down at the
front row and grins for a moment like he understands the joke. Then the
lights dim to purple and Paul sits down at ye piano, gives the seat a
little tug just the way he used to when he was practising on his Dad's old
upright in the parlour at home. Plays the opening chords of Let It Be. I
look around me and several thousand flames are held up. It's a forest of
candles, and Jesus it's a beautiful song. There's a lump in me throat, God
help me. For a moment, it feels like everyone here is close to touching
the dream.
The moment lasts for longer than it decently should. Right through No
More Lonely Nights until Hey Judi peters out like something half-finished
and the band kick into Lady Madonna, which has a thundering bass riff even
though Stu is still picking up his Fender. And the fucking stage starts to
revolve. Me, I've had enough.
Cal looks at me as I stand up. She's bopping along like a Tracy. I
mouth the word the word Bog and point to me crotch. She nods. Either she's
given up worrying about the Doctor doing a runner or she don't care. Fact
is, the booze has wrung me dry and I've got me a headache coming. I
stumble me way up the aisles. The music pushes me along. He really
is gonna do C Moon. Makes yer want to piss just hearing it.
The lav is deliciously quiet. White tiles and some poor geezer in grey
mopping up the piss. The Doctor straddles the porcelain. It takes about a
minute's concentration to get a decent flow. Maybe this is what getting
old is all about. I wonder if superstars like Macca have the same problem,
but I doubt it. Probably pay some geezer to go for them, and oh, Kevin,
can yer manage a good dump for me while yer're there?
Once it starts, the flow keeps up for a long time. Gets boring. I flush
down ye stray hair, dismantle ye cigarette butt, look at the grouting on
the tiles, stare around. The guy with the mop is leaning on it, watching
me.
"Must be a real groove in here," I say.
"Oh, no," he laughs. "Don't get the wrong idea."
I give percy a shake and zip up. The last spurt still runs down me
bloody leg. Bet that don't happen to Paul either.
The wrong idea? The guy's got the plump face of a thirty year
old choirboy. Pity poor Eppy ain't still alive, he'd be in his fucking
element.
"I think all queers should be shot," fat choirboy assures me.
"Well, seeing it from your perspective..." The Doctor starts to back
away. This guy's out-weirding me without even trying.
"What's the concert like?"
The music comes around the corner as a grey echo, drowned in the smell
of piss and disinfectant. "It's mostly shit, what do yer expect?"
"Yeah," he nods. His accent is funny. I think it's some bastard kind of
Brummy until I suddenly realise he's American. "They sold out, didn't
they?"
"The Beatles never sold in."
"Bloody hypocrites. All that money going to waste."
Some other guy comes in, stares at us as he wees. Gives his leg a
shake, walks out again. Choirboy and I stand in stupid silence. It's one
of them situations yer find yerself in. But anyone who thinks that The
Beatles are crap can't be all bad.
"You used to be in the Beatles, didn't you?"
I stare at him. No one's recognised me just from me face in years. I've
got me glasses on, me specially grey and wrinkled disguise.
"Oh, I've read all about the Beatles," he assures me, giving his mop a
twirl.
I've half a mind to say, If yer're that interested give me the fucking
mop and yer can have me seat, but there's something about him that I
wouldn't trust next to Cal.
"Hey," he smiles. "Listen in there. Sounds like they're doing the
encore."
Which of course is Yesterday, like Oh deary me, we left it out by
accident from the main show and thought we would just pop it in here. Not
a dry seat in the bloody house.
Choirboy's still grinning at me. I see he's got a paperback in the
pocket of his overall. Catcher In The Rye. "They'll be a big rush in a
minute," he says. "More mess for me to clean up. Even Jesus wouldn't like
this job."
"Then why do yer do it? The pay can't be spectacular."
"Well, this is just casual work. I'll probably quit after tonight."
"Yeah, pal. I know all about casual work."
"But this is interesting, gets you into places. I like to be near to
the stars. I need to see how bad they are." He cracks that grin a little
wider. "Tell me," he says, "what's Paul really like?"
"How the fuck should I know? I haven't see the guy in nearly thirty
years. But, there's...there's some do on afterwards...he's asked me and me
bird to come along. Yer know, for old times I guess." Jesus, John, who
are yer trying to impress?
"Oh," he says, "and where's that taking place? I sometimes look in, you
know. The security's round here's a joke. Last week, I was that
close to Madonna." He demonstrates the distance with his broom.
Cal's got the invites in her handybag, but I can picture them clear
enough. I've got a great memory for crap. They're all scrolled like it's a
wedding and there's a signed pass tacked on the back just to make it
official. Admit two, The Excelsior, Meriden. Boogie on down, and I bet the
Lord Mayor's coming. And tomorrow it's Reading. I mean, do these guys
paarrty every night?
Choirboy grins. "It's here at the Metropole, right?"
"Oh, yeah, the Metropole." I saw the neon on the way in. "That's the
place just outside? Saves the bastards having to walk too far." I scratch
me head. "Well maybe I'll see yer there. And just let me know if yer have
any trouble at all getting in, right?"
"Right on." He holds out his hand. I don't bother to shake it -- and
it's not simply because this guy cleans bogs. I don't want him near me,
and I somehow I don't want him near Paul or the others either. He's a
fruitcase, and I feel briefly and absurdly pleased with meself that I've
sent him off to ye wrong hotel.
I give him a wave and head on out ye bog. In the aircraft hanger,
music's still playing. Let's all get up and dance to a song de da de da de
dum de dum. Snodgrass and Tracy are trying to be enthusiastic so they can
tell everyone how great it was in the office tomorrow. I wander down the
aisles, wondering if it might be easier not to meet up with Cal. On
reflection, this seems as good a place as any to duck out of her life. Do
the cunt a favour. After all, she deserves it. And to be honest, I really
don't fancy explaining to Kevin where all his money went. He's a big lad,
is our Kev. Useful, like.
The music stops. The crowd claps like they're really not sure whether
they want any more and Paul raises an unnecessary arm to still them.
"Hey, one more song then we'll let yer go," he says with probably
unintentional irony. I doubt if they know what the fuck is going on up
there in Mission Control.
He puts down his Gibson and a roadie hands him something silver. Stu's
grinning like a skull. He even wanders within spitting distance of the
front of the stage. A matchstick figure, I can see he looks the way Keith
Richards would have done if he really hadn't taken care of himself.
He nods to George. George picks up a twelve string.
"This one's for an old friend," Paul says.
The session musicians are looking at each other like What the fuck's
going on? Could this really be an unrehearsed moment? Seems unlikely, but
then Paul muffs the count in on a swift four/four beat. There's nervous
laughter amongst the Fab Fearsome, silence in the auditorium. Then again.
One. Two. Three. And.
Macca puts the harmonica to his lips. Plays me riff. Love Me Do. Oh,
yeah. I really can't believe it. The audience are looking a bit bemused,
but probably reckon it's just something from the new LP that's stacked by
the yard out in the foyer and no one's bothered to buy. The song's over
quickly. Them kind of songs always were. Me, I'm crying.
The End. Finis, like they say in cartoon. Ye Beatles give a wave and
duck off stage. I get swept back in the rush to get to ye doors. I hear
snatches of, Doesn't he look old, They never knew how to
rock, Absolutely brilliant, and How much did you pay the
babysitter? I wipe the snot off on me sleeve and look around. Cal catches
hold of me by the largely unpatronised tee shirt stall before I have a
chance to see her coming.
"What did you think?"
"A load of shit," I say, hoping she won't notice I've been crying.
She smiles. "Is that all you can manage, John? That must mean you liked
it."
Touche, Monsieur Pussycat. "Truth is, I could need a drink."
"Well, let's get down the Excelsior. You can meet your old mates and
get as pissed as you like."
She glides me out towards the door. Me feet feel like they're on
rollers. And there's me chauffeur pal with the boy scout uniform. People
stare at us as he opens the door like we're George Michael. Pity he don't
salute, but still, I'd look a right pillock trying to squirm me way away
from a pretty woman and the back seat of a Jag.
The car pulls slowly through the crowds. I do me wave like I'm the
Queen Mum although the old bint's probably too hip to be seen at a Beatles
concert. Turns out there's a special exit for us VIPS. I mean, rock and
roll. It's just a few minutes drive, me mate up front tells us.
Cal settles back. "This is the life."
"Call this life?"
"Might as well make the most of it, John."
"Oh, yeah. I bet you get taken in this kind of limo all the time.
Blowjobs in the back seat. It's what pays, right?" I bite me lip and look
out the window. Jesus, I'm starting to cry again.
"Why do you say things like that John?"
"Because I'm a bastard. I mean, you of all people must know about
bastards having to put up with Steve."
Cal laughed. "You called him Steve!"
I really must be going ta bits. "Yeah, well I must have puked up me
wits over that lay by."
"Anyway," she touches me arm. "Call him whatever you like. I took your
advice this evening. Told him where to stuff it."
I look carefully at her face. She obviously ain't kidding, but I can't
see any bruises. "And what about the money I nicked?"
"Well, that's not a problem for me, is it? I simply told him the truth,
that it was you." She smiled. "Come on, John. I'd almost believe you were
frightened of him. He's just some bloke. He's got another girl he's after
anyway, the other side of town and good luck to her."
"So it's just you and me is it, Cal. Cosy, like. Don't expect me to
sort out yer customers for yer."
"I'm getting too old for that, John. It costs you more than they pay.
Maybe I'll do more work at the NEC. Of course, you'll have to start paying
your sodding rent."
I hear meself say, "I think there's a vacancy coming up in the NEC
Gents. How about that for a funky job for Doctor Winston? At least you get
to sweep the shit up there rather than having to stuff it into
envelopes."
"What are you talking about, John?"
"Forget it. Maybe I'll explain in the morning. You've got influence
there, haven't you?"
"I'll help you get a job, if that's what you're trying to say."
I lookouta ye window. The houses streaming past, yellow widows, where
ye Snodgrasses who weren't at the concert are chomping pipe and slippers
whilst the wife makes spaniel eyes. The kids tucked upstairs in pink and
blue rooms that smell of Persil and Playdough. Me, I'm just the guy who
used to be in a halfway-famous band before they were anybody. I got me no
book club subscription, I got me no life so clean yer could eat yer bloody
dinner off it. Of course, I still got me rebellion, oh yeah, I got me
that, and all it amounts to is cadging cigs off Cal and lifting packets of
Cheesy Wotsits from the bargain bin in Kwicksave when Doris and Tracy
ain't looking. Oh, yeah, rebellion. The milkman shouts at me when I go
near his float in case The Mad Old Git nicks another bottle.
I can remember when we used to stand up and face the crowd, do all them
songs I've forgotten how to play. When Paul still knew how to rock. When
Stu was half an artist, dreamy and scary at the same time. When George was
just a neat kid behind a huge guitar, lying about his age. When Ringo was
funny and the beat went on forever. Down the smoggily lit stairways and
greasy tunnels, along burrows and byways where the cheesy reek of the bogs
hit yer like a wall. Then the booze was free afterwards and the girls
would gather round, press softly against yer arm as they smiled. Their
boyfriends would mutter at the bar but you knew they were afraid of yer.
Knew they could sense the power of the music that carried off the stage.
Jesus, the girls were as sweet as the rain in those grey cities, the
shining streets, the forest wharves, the dark doorways where there was
laughter in the dripping brick-paved night. And sleeping afterwards, yer
head spinning from the booze and the wakeups and the downers, taking turns
on that stained mattress with the cinema below booming in yer head and the
music still pouring through. Diving down into carousel dreams.
Oh, the beat went on alright. Used to think it would carry up into
daylight and the real air, touch the eyes and ears of the pretty dreamers,
even make Snodgrass stir a little in his slumbers, take the shine off the
Sierra, make him look up at the angels in the sky once in a while, or even
just down at the shit on the pavement.
"Well, here we are," Cal says.
Oh, yeah. Some hotel. Out in the pretty pretty. Trees and lights across
a fucking lake. The boy scout opens the door for me and Cal. Unsteady on
me pins, I take a breath, then have me a good retching cough. The air out
here reeks of roses or something, like one of them expensive bog
fresheners that Cal sprays around when our Kev's had a dump.
"Hey." Cal holds out the crook of her arm. "Aren't you going to escort
me in?"
"Let's wait here."
There are other cars pulling up, some old git dressed like he's the
Duke of Wellington standing at the doors. Straight ahead to the Clarendon
Suite, Sir, he smooths greyly to the passing suits. I suppose these must
be record industry types. And then there's this bigger car than the rest
starts to pull up. It just goes on and on, like one of them gags in Tom
and Jerry. Everyone steps back like it's the Pope. Instead, turns out it's
just The Beatles. They blink around in the darkness like mad owls, dressed
in them ridiculous loose cotton suits that Clapton always looks such a
prat in. Lawyers tremble around them like little fish. Paul pauses to give
a motorcycle policeman his autograph, flashes the famous Macca grin. Some
guy in a suit who looks like the hotel manager shakes hands with Stu. Rock
and roll. I mean, this is what we were always fighting for. The Beatles
don't register the good Doctor before they head inside, but maybe that's
because he's taken three steps back into the toilet freshener
darkness.
"What are we waiting for?" Cal asks as the rest of the rubbernecks
drift in.
"This isn't easy, Cal."
"Who said anything about easy?"
I give the Duke of Wellington a salute as he holds ye door open.
"Straight ahead to the Clarendon Suite, Sir."
"Hey," I tell him, "I used to be Beatle John."
"Stop mucking about, John." Cal does her Kenneth Williams impression,
then gets all serious. "This is important. Just forget about the past and
let's concentrate on the rest of your life. All you have to say to Paul is
Hello. He's a decent guy. And I'm sure that the rest of them haven't
changed as much as you imagine."
Cal wheels me in. The hotel lobby looks like a hotel lobby. The Tracy
at reception gives me a cutglass smile. Catch a glimpse of meself in the
mirror and unbelievably I really don't look too bad. Must be slipping.
"Jesus, Cal. I need a smoke."
"Here." She rumbles in me pocket, produces Kevin's Rothmans. "I suppose
you want a bloody light."
All the expensive fish are drifting by. Some bint in an evening dress
so low at the back that you can see the crack of her arse puts her arm on
this Snodgrass and gives him a peck on the cheek. That was
delightful, darrling, she purrs. She really does.
"I mean a real smoke Cal. Haven't you got some blow?" I make a
lunge for her handbag.
"Bloody hell, John," she whispers, looking close to loosing her cool.
She pushes something into my hand. "Have it outside, if you must. Share it
with the bloody doorman."
"Thanks Cal." I give her a peck on the cheek and she looks at me oddly.
"I'll never forget."
"Forget what?" she asks as I back towards the door. Then she begins to
understand. But the Duke holds the door open for me and already I'm out in
the forest night air.
The door swings back, then open again. The hotel lights fan out across
the grass. I look back. There's some figure.
"Hey, John!"
It's a guy's voice, not Cal's after all. Sounds almost Liverpool.
"Hey, wait a minute! Can't we just talk?"
The voice rings in silence.
"John! It's me!"
Paul's walking into the darkness towards me. He's holding out his hand.
I stumble against chrome. The big cars are all around. Then I'm kicking
white stripes down the road. Turns to gravel underfoot and I can see blue
sea, a white beach steaming after the warm rain, a place where a woman is
waiting and the bells jingle between her breasts. Just close your eyes and
you're there.
Me throat me legs me head hurts. But there's a gated side road here
that leads off through trees and scuffing the dirt at the end of a field
to some big houses that nod and sway with the sleepy night.
I risk a look behind. Everything is peaceful. There's no one around.
Snodgrass is dreaming. Stars upon the rooftops, and the Sierra's in the
drive. Trees and privet, lawns neat as velvet. Just some suburban road at
the back of the hotel. People living their lives.
I catch me breath, and start to run again.
 ©
Ian R MacLeod 1992, 2000
'Snodgrass' was first
published in In Dreams, edited by Paul J McAuley and Kim
Newman (Victor Gollancz, 1992).
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