“STORYTELLING AT ITS BEST …
From page one, Louise Voss gets you hooked into the world of Helena Nicholls.”
—Now
magazine
“[This] funny debut about surviving fame and friendship is a sort of Gen-X
Anne of Green Gables.”
—Blender
magazine
“A really original idea executed with buckets of style and confidence, head and shoulders above the drippy Bridget Jones imitators clogging up the shelves.
To Be Someone
is a funny, moving, and fabulous debut. Louise Voss hooks you from the first page and doesn’t let go. This is chickfic at its best—with heart, soul, and lashings of attitude.”
—LAUREN
H
ENDERSON
, author of
Strawberry Tattoo
and
Black Rubber Dress
“A superb book … Moving and touching … This is a truly mesmerizing story.”
—What’s Happening South
(UK)
“This debut novel paints a life story so touchingly that you never want
To Be Someone
to end.… Poignant, tender, and never sappy.”
“Impressive … Louise Voss has hit on a smart idea.”
—The Times
(London)
“Beautifully written.”
—OK
magazine
Grateful acknowledgment is made to the following for permission to reprint previously published material:
BMG Music Publishing:
Lyrics from “To Be Someone” by Paul Weller. Stylist Music, Ltd. (PRS). All types of royalties worldwide claimed by BMG Music Publishing, Ltd. All types of royalties in the U.S. administered by Careers-BMG Music Publishing, Inc. (BMI). All rights reserved. Used by permission.
Universal MCA Music Publishing:
Lyrics from “This Is a Low” by Alex James, Damon Albarn, David Rowntree, Graham Coxon, © 1994 Universal Music Ltd. Administered by Universal MCA Music Publishing, A Division of Universal Studios, Inc. (ASCAP). Used by permission.
A Ballantine Book
Published by The Random House Ballantine Publishing Group
Copyright © 2001 by Louise Voss
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by The Ballantine Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto.
Ballantine and colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.
Library of Congress Control Number: 2003091266
eISBN: 978-0-345-46429-3
This edition is published by arrangement with Crown Publishers.
Originally published in Great Britain by Bantam Press, a division of Transworld Publishers, in 2001.
v3.1
Dedicated with much love to
Jackie Graham (1966–1995),
who inspired not only
this book but everyone who
was fortunate enough
to be close to her
.
Acknowledgments
Thanks again to all the same people I thanked in the UK edition of this book, including Errol Kolosine, Regina McBride, and Don Fleming.
Thank you also to Patti Norman, Amy Welch, Christina Foerst, Cindy Maguire, Lida Husik, Brad Koehler, and the women of Regina McBride’s Writers’ Voice workshop circa ‘96–’97, including Naomi, Lydia, and Phyllis.
Thank you to everybody at Crown, especially Kristin Kiser, Steve Ross, and Claudia Gabel.
As before, biggest thanks of all to Matt Voss.
PROLOGUE
Helena Nicholls
c/o Ron Pickett Pickett
Management Services
14a Gloucester Place
London W1
Geoff Hadleigh
Program Director
New World FM Radio
59 New Cavendish Street
London W1
6 August 1998
Dear Geoff,
Thanks for visiting me in hospital back in May. Sorry it’s taken me so long to reply to your kind offer of a nighttime show for New World. I’ve been thinking things over and the answer’s yes, I’ll take the job, if it’s still open. I’m better now, thank God. After a few months of having the Sword of Damocles hanging over me—well, the Penknife of Damocles, at least—I’ve finally been given the all-clear and both ears are once more fully functional. I could start work in a few weeks. I understand that we’re talking about the two
A.M
.–four
A.M
. show.
My only condition is no advance publicity. It’s humiliating enough for the breakfast show DJ to get demoted to the graveyard shift, without having to go through that “how the mighty fall” thing from the tabloids again—I’m sure you recall what it was like after my accident.
Since it obviously won’t be practical for me to play requests, not at two
A.M.
, please find enclosed the proposed playlist for my first show back on air. I know it’s a little unusual, not to mention overzealous, to submit a playlist ahead of time like this, but I just wanted you to know that I’ve put a lot of thought into each record. Believe me, this show will be GREAT for New World FM, you wait and see.
All the best, and thanks for the lilies,
Helena Nicholls
Contents
Waking Up in Hospital
A Beach at Low Tide
The Plan
Space with Cerys of Catatonia: The Ballad of Tom Jones
INTRUSION
Jackie Wilson: I Get the Sweetest Feeling
Daisies and the Guinea Pig
Sandie Shaw: (Get Your Kicks on) Route 66
Making Amends
Glen Campbell: Wichita Lineman
Ruby’s Toes
Blondie: Sunday Girl
Friends
Jimmy Cliff: Sitting in Limbo
I Hear Thunder
Carole King: Home Again
My Messed-Up Head
Elvis Costello and the Attractions: Oliver’s Army
Home Sweet Home
Dexys Midnight Runners: There there My Dear
You Look So Different
Japan: Ghosts
Sam’s Treacherous Blonde
The Jam : To Be Someone
Mary Ellen Applebaum
Robert Wyatt.: Shipbuilding
Not Such a Coincidence
The Big Blue Ost: Deep Blue Dream
Fame
The Cure: Lovesong
HappY Mondays: Kinky Afro
A Familiar Hand
Randy Newman: I’ll be Home
Cynthia
Massive Attack: Safe from Harm
The Delectable Sandie
Sinead O’connor: Nothing Compares 2 U
Thinking about God and Toby
Ann Peebles: I Can’t Stand the Rain
“I Like Stings”
Blur: THis is a Low
Fifty Quid
The Sundays: Here’s Where the Story Ends
Playlist
THE BALLAD OF TOM JONES
Space with Cerys of Catatonia
I GET THE SWEETEST FEELING
Jackie Wilson
(GET YOUR KICKS ON) ROUTE 66
Sandie Shaw
WICHITA LINEMAN
Glen Campbell
SUNDAY GIRL
Blondie
SITTING IN LIMBO
Jimmy Cliff
HOME AGAIN
Carole King
OLIVER’S ARMY
Elvis Costello and the Attractions
THERE THERE MY DEAR
Dexys Midnight Runners
GHOSTS
Japan
TO BE SOMEONE
The Jam
SHIPBUILDING
Robert Wyatt
DEEP BLUE DREAM
The Big Blue OST
LOVESONG
The Cure
KINKY AFRO
Happy Mondays
I’LL BE HOME
Randy Newman
SAFE FROM HARM
Massive Attack
NOTHING COMPARES 2 U
Sinead O’Connor
I CAN’T STAND THE RAIN
Ann Peebles
THIS IS A LOW
Blur
WAKING UP IN HOSPITAL
T
HERE WAS A STORY ABOUT A DRUNKEN SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY
shepherd I discovered in a book at school once, when Sam and I were doing a history project about Salisbury Cathedral.
When I awoke in hospital a day after the accident, I was oblivious to the operations that had removed my damaged eyeball, reconstructed my nose, wired my jaw, and stitched my cheek, and I did not realize that I was deaf in one ear, but I clearly remembered that legless peasant.
It was the annual Whit-Week fair in the cathedral close, cattle and sheep for sale in rickety wattle pens, urchins peddling ribbons and knickknacks, a well-patronized ale and cider tent; merchants, farmers, and the usual cast of pickpockets and tricksters milling around. Anyway, a local shepherd patronized the ale tent so thoroughly that he convinced himself and his friends that he’d suddenly learned to fly. Before anyone could stop him, he bolted into the cathedral and up the little staircase hewn from the thickness of the nave walls, right to the top of the tower. At the point where tower meets spire, there was a room with doors that opened out onto all four vistas of the surrounding valley. He opened the door overlooking the festivities beneath, spread his arms wide, and leapt into the void, planning to sail away over the cattle pens and maypole dancers. Predictably enough, he couldn’t fly. But the memorable part of the story was that, because he was so drunk, he staggered away completely unhurt. A little dazed and confused, probably, but then he was that
before
he jumped three hundred feet to the ground.
Though I couldn’t remember at first what had happened to me, I knew that I’d had some kind of fall, because all I could think about was that peasant plummeting down to earth, headfirst. In the past I’d always imagined him sort of floating down to the soft green grass of the cathedral close, a soporific smile on his pissed face, falling in slow motion like a Disney character drifting off to sleep on a pile of feathers. Now, however, he fell through my mind like a boulder, gathering speed, leaving a crater in the lawn outside the north front.
I envied him the miracle of his intact skull. I didn’t know what state my own was in, but I had an unbelievable headache, and my whole face hurt like hell. Hazily I remembered something else I learned at school: that if you dropped an egg off the top of the cathedral, it wouldn’t necessarily smash, not if it landed the right way up. I began to envy the egg.
In my morphine-sodden mind, I saw an image of my nose breaking on a dark floor like a wrong-way-up egg; and then like a flour-bomb, a great cloud of cocaine spilling out on impact. This was more information than I felt able to handle, so I went back to sleep again.
The next time I opened my one remaining eye there was a familiar face peering anxiously at me, wavering in and out of focus.
“Another flagon of ale, wench,” I mumbled, but all I heard was “Mmmh, mmmh, mmmh.” It seemed that someone had their hand over my mouth. Not funny, I thought, trying to shake it off. The movement set every nerve in every cranny of my skull jangling and pulsing with yet more pain. Christ, have I ever got a hangover. Or did I fall off a roof? My brain couldn’t fully articulate the scenario, but I had an embryonic vision of myself having performed some vastly heroic action, saving someone from a fire or something. Goody, I thought vaguely. That’ll do my public profile good.
I reached a hand up toward my face to try to wrest away the joker who was preventing my speech, but someone restrained me gently.
It was my mother, her face looming into mine, lips moving but no sound. She looked awful, red-eyed, with her normally immaculately coiffed hair all whooshed messily upward and to the side, as if she’d just spent an hour with her head stuck out the window of a moving car.
It wasn’t until she shifted position so her mouth was near my right ear that I could actually hear what she was saying. “Don’t try to talk, darling, your jaw is all wired up because you broke it in the fall.”
Oh, a broken jaw. Well, that would soon mend, I thought. But it must be serious if Mum had flown over from New Jersey (she’d hardly been back at all since we emigrated there in 1980). Besides, judging by the throbbing, I thought it must be my nose that was broken.
I gave a pathetic whine and pointed toward it. Mum stroked the back of my hand with her finger as if I were a newborn kitten. Her voice was strained and distorted, as if she were speaking to me from the bottom of a fish tank.
“You broke your nose as well, sweetheart.”
This was getting worse. I tried to glance across the bed, to see if Dad was there, too, but there was something heavy resting on my left eye, and I couldn’t turn my head far enough to see out of my right. Oh, no. Not my eye, too.
Mum read my mind. “I’m so sorry, Helena darling. You got some glass in your eye, and the doctors had to operate. Don’t worry about it for now, though. Just try and get some more sleep.”
My free eyebrow crumpled up with consternation. Even through all the painkillers I could tell she was keeping something from me, but I didn’t feel ready to find out what. This all felt like a weird, horrible dream. Perhaps the cocaine had been laced with PCP or something, and I was hallucinating.
Oh God, the coke.
Oh God, the nightclub.
Oh
God
, the seesawing with Justin.
Shit. What had I done?
A big nurse with hoofy shoes came in and stuck a needle in my arm, without asking permission. I wondered if this was how it had been for Sam at the end, this awful swirly painful feeling, as much emotional as physical, knowing and yet not knowing what was going on. Seeing details but not the big picture. Other than to visit Sam, I’d never been in hospital before. It was a disturbing shift of perspective, for me to be the one lying propped up in Sam’s place. She’d lain there for so many weeks, white on white, a tube in her throat to breathe through. As I floated back off to sleep, I imagined that I had become Sam—a comforting feeling, because it meant that she was still alive. Or maybe I was dead.
The doctor officially broke the news about my eye, very gravely and slightly patronizingly, as if I were a small child whose hamster had died. I half expected him to say, “Your eye has gone up to live with Jesus,” but instead he began to talk about “options”—prosthetics, breakthroughs in medical science, blah, blah—until I cut him off. I’d always been really squeamish about eyes in general, to the point where I’d nearly passed out when Sam once explained to me how the doctors had operated on her cataracts, so the thought that my eyeball had actually been
removed
was too much to bear. Denial was clearly the only sensible option.
After a week in hospital, once I was vaguely
compos mentis
again, I made them move me to the second floor. My original ground-floor room came complete with paparazzi jostling about on stepladders outside, and I couldn’t stand having the blinds pulled down day and night. It was bad enough having only one eye and one working ear, let alone dwelling in permanently artificial light.
Apparently the police came regularly and moved them on, but they were constantly hassling the receptionists and nurses, claiming to be relatives, friends, therapists. One even tried to convince the staff nurse that he was my personal tarot card reader. I hadn’t had so much press attention since Blue Idea broke up, and I’d almost forgotten how hideous it was.
I couldn’t understand why the press was so interested in my accident. Yes, I was still pretty well known in London, since I had the New World breakfast show, but I tried to keep a low profile, and didn’t really go out to the groovy places much anymore. Then I found out. One of the hospital cleaners slunk into my room about a week after I arrived, clutching a blurry tabloid, all soft and graying from too much handling.
“Didn’t want to bother you before, Miss Nicholls, what with you being so bashed up an’ stuff, but wouldya autograph this for me sister? She loved Blue Idea, cried for days when you all split up—a nasty business, weren’t it? ”
I couldn’t believe my eye when I saw the headline and accompanying picture.
SEEMED LIKE A BLUE IDEA AT THE TIME!
it pulsated at me. And the picture—oh Jesus, the shame. Me on Justin’s back, legs kicked in the air, stockings and a flash of knicker showing, eyes closed and a goofy expression. To think I’d believed we looked cool.
A few too many at the UKMAs, chaps? Shortly after this picture was taken at Britain’s top music industry award show, these high jinks ended in near tragedy for Helena Nicholls of former chart-topping band Blue Idea. Nicholls, 31, now a DJ at top London station New World, is in intensive care with extensive facial injuries, including the loss of her left eye. Her fellow band member and now successful solo artist, Justin Becker, 33, escaped unharmed.…
The piece rambled on about Justin for a couple more paragraphs and then concluded with a firsthand account that we were both “off our trolleys on drugs.” I was outraged, until I remembered that it was true.
I screwed up the paper in fury, trying to scream as loudly as I could through my wired-up jaw at the hapless cleaner to get out, leave me alone, fuck off. But the only sound I managed to produce was a high-pitched groan, like a rutting dolphin or a ferret in a trap. Thankfully it was enough to summon a passing nurse, who realized what was going on, ejected the cleaner, removed the tabloid, and administered a sedative.
So it was no great surprise when I received a visitor a couple of days later. It was Geoff Hadleigh, the boss of New World. He brought me an enormous bunch of white lilies, and I didn’t have the energy to tell him that I couldn’t stand them, their sickly perfume and funereal smell, and their nasty, staining orange pollen.
Thankfully my jaw had been unwired the day before and I could talk again, after a fashion, although it was really embarrassing. One of my front teeth had broken in half horizontally, and the other one had split vertically, resulting in a ludicrously thick spluttering lisp, as my tongue couldn’t decide where to put itself (I didn’t even want to think about the aesthetic effect). It all just added to the humiliation.
Geoff was a weaselly, gummy sort of man, skinny and loose in his jeans in a manner indicating underendowment. We’d never really got on; his deputy program director, Gus, had originally hired me for an evening shift, so I wasn’t one of Geoff’s “people.” Plus Geoff had obviously never thought that in just a few months I’d build up such a big following. Eventually, when the slot had come free, he’d been pressured by Gus, the other board members, listeners, and production staff to promote me to the coveted breakfast show, where I’d worked to prove myself day and night: researching, broadcasting, writing, taking hardly any time off.
My “trademark” as a DJ was to take requests on air from the public, but I would play their selected record only if they could give a valid reason for why it was so important to them. What they were doing when they heard it, what they’d felt, wore, ate, touched, said, and why this was memorable.
I was tough, too. My listeners knew it wasn’t enough to ring up and say, “Please play ‘The Power of Love’ because my girlfriend and I were dancing to it when I proposed”—oh, no. I wanted to know what her exact response was, what kind of party they were at, what sort of shoes she was wearing, what brand of perfume.
People confessed secrets, scandals, tragedies to me. They sometimes cried, or said how much better they felt for getting whatever it was off their chest. The press had in the past compared me to a disc-spinning Frasier Crane, or “Claire Rayner in a DJ booth.”
Damn, I was good at it. “God is in the details,” I always said, and, “It’s not just about the music.” It was so important to set the scene, get people to dredge their minds for even the tiniest little piece of extra information. It made the record even more precious to them, while giving them a few minutes of fame and a Londonwide audience.
At first I worried that people would find it all too self-indulgent, and get bored listening to strangers’ stories of woe, but I was wrong; the format was a runaway success. Listeners really did want to know why “Only You” by Yazoo reminded Sharon from Herne Hill of how she once hid behind a crumbling car-park wall, in school uniform. When they found out it was because she was two-timing her boyfriend with an amber-eyed sixth-former, and that the amber-eyed sixth-former was killed in a car crash six weeks later, there were tears all round the M25.
But my novel format was another reason Geoff Hadleigh wasn’t my biggest fan. Commercial stations had strict quotas of records to stick to, playlists A, B, and C. He thought I’d never be able to fit requests in around the morning rituals of news, travel bulletins, ad breaks. But I had. We’d struck a deal whereby I could get away with sixty percent playlisted tracks and forty percent requests, unheard of on a breakfast show. It hadn’t made me popular with the other DJs, but I didn’t care. I knew I was a good DJ.
It felt so different from being in Blue Idea, where, even though I’d written the songs, I’d never felt that it was truly my achievement, because it was a group effort. New World was a whole new and revelatory ball game, where I’d succeeded because people liked my personality. Plus I didn’t have to go on tour for months at a time. It had come to mean everything to me. And my hard work had paid off—I’d doubled the station’s breakfast-show listenership in less than a year.
“Hello, Helena, you look … um … well, you
have
been in the wars, haven’t you? ”
“I thuppothe you’re here to fire me, aren’t you, Geoff?” I said, as if my mouth were full of peanuts.
He sat down on a chair next to the bed, pulled a capacious handkerchief from his jeans pocket, and blew his nose with a squeaky sound like a balloon deflating. I wondered if I was supposed to think he was crying.
“Of course not, Helena. We at New World would hate to lose you!”
“But?”
“But—you’re going to be recovering from this … accident for quite some time, aren’t you? You must realize that we can’t just get a
temp
to cover for you. Our listeners need continuity in their DJ, especially in the morning-drive time. By the time you’re well enough to come back—if ever—they will have gotten used to—”