âWhat?' I said, needlessly. I knew exactly what she was going to say.
âI miss all that lot,' she said. âAnd I miss those days.'
âMe too,' said Gershwin.
twenty-nine
When I woke up the next morning and found myself face down on the sofa, I thought for a minute that I was back in New York on the Sofa from Hell. Gershwin was asleep on the smaller sofa in the corner of the room and Ginny was curled up in the armchair she'd been sitting in. We must have fallen asleep somewhere after our where-are-they-now conversation because I couldn't remember much else after that . . . apart from the renewing of our pact to stay awake all night by promising to wake each other up if any of us started to nod off.
That whole evening, since the moment I had seen Ginny again, had reminded me what I'd been missing out on by not keeping in touch with my old friends. Talking to them made me feel like I'd known Gershwin and Ginny for ever. They knew the me who had been suspended from school for smashing a stink bomb in an English lesson; they knew the me who had been so drunk at Nadine Baggott's sixteenth birthday party that I'd spent the night asleep in the garden and had to be taken to hospital the next day to be treated for hypothermia. Only they and the rest of the group would remember those times as I did.
Without waking anyone I went to the toilet, grabbed a slice of bread from the bread-bin in Ginny's kitchen to stave off hunger pangs and slipped out of the front door. I checked my watch: it was just coming up to a quarter to six. There was something glorious about being up at this time of the day, still wearing the previous night's clothes, smelling slightly sour, probably looking a bit rough around the edges. It reminded me of parties of the past, the days when I really could go out clubbing until four in the morning. It reminded me of how things used to be.
Unfortunately, when I got home I had another reminder of the old days waiting for me as I came in through the door.
âIs that you, Matthew?'
My mum was standing at the top of the stairs wearing her nightie, her dressing-gown and an uncompromising frown.
âYeah, of course,' I replied. My mum knew it was me.
âWhere have you been all night? You didn't say anything to me about staying out all night. You didn't ring. You didn't do anything. I can't believe you would be so inconsiderate.'
I found myself breathing deeply â always a sign that I'm trying to be patient. My first instinct, of course, was to explain to my mother that at nearly thirty years of age I'd earned the right to come in at six o'clock in the morning, but that wouldn't have achieved anything. Then it occurred to me that she was right: it had been selfish not to tell her. It wasn't her fault that she worried about me. She worried about me whether I was in New York or right under her roof.
âI'm sorry, Mum,' I said, and tried to placate her by heading upstairs to plant a kiss on her cheek. âYou're right, I should've called you. There's no excuse. You haven't been awake all night waiting for me, have you?'
âYou must be joking,' said my mum. âI'm just a light sleeper, that's all. You'd better get off to bed,' she said. âYou look absolutely terrible.'
thirty
To:
| |
From:
| |
Subject:
| Your last several million e-mails . . .
|
Dear Matt
When I logged on at work today I got all of your âI miss you' e-mails and I ended up crying so much I had to go and hide in the ladies' restroom. You should've seen me â my mascara had run so much I looked like a panda. I'm such a wuss.
love
Elaine
PS No more miss yous allowed. Okay?
E, I didn't mean to make you cry.
I'm sorry.
Matt xxx
thirty-one
âMatthew, it's the phone for you,' said a voice in my dreams. âMatthew, it's the phone for you,' it repeated. It wasn't until the third âMatthew, it's the phone for you,' and my mum banged on the door that I woke up and realised that indeed there was a phone call for me. I looked at my watch, lying on the floor next to the slippers my mum had bought me which I had no intention of wearing. It was one o'clock in the afternoon.
âIt's the middle of the night,' I called back to my mum. âGet them to call back at a decent hour.'
âI'm not your skivvy, you know,' said my mum, teasing me. âIf you will go out until all hours then you get what you deserve.'
Grappling with a dressing-gown, I groped my way downstairs to the phone in the hall. âWho is it?' I mumbled, picking up the phone while scratching anywhere that itched.
âI'm sorry, Matt, I know it's a bit early.'
It was Ginny.
âNo, you're all right,' I said, concentrating on a patch of hair just below my navel. âI was just about to get up and go for a jog anyway. A few laps of the park and I'd have been right as rain.'
âYeah, right.' She laughed. âI'd like to see that.'
âWhere are you?' I asked.
âAt home,' she said, guiltily.
âShouldn't you be at work or something?' I said, sitting down on the bottom stair. âI know a lot of things have changed about the education system since I was last at school but surely teachers aren't allowed to stroll into school as late as the kids.'
âI've pulled a sickie,' she admitted. âI feel dead guilty but I wouldn't have been any good to them today, the way I'm feeling.'
âYou were flat out when I left and that must've been about six.'
âI think I woke up when I heard the sound of the front door. That must have been you going, and I think I even thought about getting up, but I was so comfortable that I must've fallen back to sleep. By the time I'd woken up properly at about seven fifteen I just couldn't be arsed to go in.'
âYou art-teacher rebel, you,' I said. âHow are Gershwin and Zoë?'
âFine. Zoë went off to work about seven thirty this morning and Gershwin's still half asleep on the sofa. Which brings me to my point. Have you seen the sky today? It's absolutely bloody gorgeous!'
âI haven't as it happens. It's pretty hard to see when you're in bed, under a duvet and the curtains are closed.'
âNever mind all that. Go and take a look out of a window.'
I partially opened the front door and peered upwards. The sun was bright, the sky near perfect and it looked warm even though it was only January.
âYou're right. It looks like it's going to be great. Is this what you get for going out with a meteorologist?'
âI wish,' she said. âListen. Gershwin and I were just talking and as we both appear to have taken the day off, and as you're not doing whatever it is you're not doing, and as it's a nice day â the sort of day that three old friends
should
spend together â we thought we should do exactly that. Are you in?'
I looked at my watch again and wondered if I was still tired. I was. Very. But I still found myself saying, âGive me time to have a shave and I'll be raring to go.'
thirty-two
âDo you know what this reminds me of?' said Gershwin, passing the bottle of Thunderbird to me.
âThe summer we finished our A levels?' I enquired.
âHow did you guess?'
âI was thinking exactly the same thing.'
âMe too,' said Ginny. âFantastic, isn't it?'
By the time I'd got round to Ginny's a little after two o'clock, she and Gershwin had made a plan for what was left of the day. First, we drove to a Little Chef near Halesowen and partook of a satisfying all-day English breakfast and unlimited toast. Next we stopped at a nearby off-licence to buy a bottle of Thunderbird, for old times' sake, and finally we drove to the nearby Clent Hills, and armed with jackets and coats we climbed a hill, opened the Thunderbird, lay down on the grass and did nothing but talk and stare at the sky.
2.52 pm
âDo you know what I was doing this time last year?'
âWhat?' asked Ginny.
âI was locked in my office in Manhattan for a month training new recruits. Me, Matt Beckford, from King's Heath, in Manhattan. I was working from five thirty in the morning until ten o'clock at night. I even cultivated a nice stress-related stomach ulcer into the bargain. And now here I am lying in a park, one year later, with beer, fags, friends. What more does a man need?'
âI've often thought about downsizing,' said Ginny. âY'know, going part-time and doing something interesting with my life. I mean, what use is money if your life's too busy?' She stopped suddenly, belched, took another sip of the Thunderbird and passed it to me. âThat was a big one.' She giggled, then sighed while gesturing to the air. âHow did we let all of this drift away?'
âIt just happens, doesn't it?' said Gershwin. âLife gets busy. Priorities change. We have only ourselves to blame, really.'
âToo true,' said Ginny. âWe're mad for letting it happen. We get older and don't realise what's happening and it's only whenâ'
ââyou get to our ageâ' I chipped in.
ââthat you realise how important stuff like this is,' said Gershwin.
3.05 pm
âUntil I turned twenty-nine I was quite into the idea of thirty,' I said, rolling over on to my front. âI knew I wasn't about to start swapping vodka shots for Horlicks and, all right, I started to be as interested in the fluctuations of the interest rate as I was in the football results back home but I never wanted to be one of those people who are scared of growing older.' I paused, feeling my mind go off at a tangent. âD'you know how some people in their thirties feel exactly like they did when they were twenty-four?'
âYeah.' Ginny nodded vigorously, as if this was a self-knowledge quiz in a women's mag. âI don't think I've changed since I was about twenty-six. Old enough to feel mature but young enough to still be stupid.' She laughed. âHow about you, Gershwin?'
Gershwin scratched his head vigorously. âWhen Charlotte's around I feel about thirty-five. I feel like a dad. It's a nice feeling, though. When she's not around I could be anything from fourteen to twenty-six.'
âI think I've always felt thirty inside,' I said. âI've always felt that life takes a bit more effort than I've actually got.'
âHe's right, you know,' said Ginny to Gershwin. âMatt's always been the old fart of our gang. Judgemental. Inflexible. Mr Dad.'
âThank you both kindly,' I said sarcastically. âIt's true, though. I am a bit of a dad sometimes.' I framed a question, then posed it. âWhen did you feel that you were actually a fully fledged grown-up?'
âWhen Charlotte was born,' said Gershwin.
âWhen Mum died,' said Ginny. âWhat about you?'
âI dunno. I think I'm still waiting.'
3.23 pm
âWhen you think about it, thirty's not a big deal these days, is it?' said Ginny. âIt's like a whole generation got together and decided to delay real life just that little bit longer. These days, you can't really tell the thirty-year-olds from the twenty-year-olds, except that we've usually got more money . . .'
â . . . and less hair . . .' I added.
â . . . and fewer clothes in our wardrobes that we regret buying . . .' said Gershwin.
âThirty is just like being twenty, probably more so,' said Ginny. âForty is the new thirty.' She nudged me with her elbow. âYou've got another ten years before you really have to worry.'
âBy which time hopefully forty will be the new something else,' I replied.
âAhhh,' said Gershwin. âBut what does that make twentysomethings? The new teenagers?'
None of us could come up with an answer to that one.
3.37 pm
âHands up, who's got any grey hairs?' said Ginny.
Gershwin and I waved our hands in the air.
âI've only got one,' said Gershwin. âIt's just by my temple. Zoë was going to pluck it out but I told her not to in the vain hope it might make me look distinguished.'
âI haven't got any,' said Ginny. âBut I've been dyeing my hair for so long I have no idea what my real colour is any more. What about you, Matt?'
âTwo,' I revealed reluctantly. âOne that pops up every now and again on my chest and one that's . . . well, for the sake of any delicate stomachs round here, let's just say it's one that makes its appearance lower down.'
âLower than your navel?' said Ginny inquisitively.
âLower.'
âBut higher than, say, your knees?'
âYes,' I said dolefully.
Ginny let out a scream of laughter.
âNo,' said Gershwin incredulously. âYou're having me on?'
âI kid you not,' I replied.
âCan we see it?' asked Ginny, sniggering wildly. âGo on, please.'
âNever,' I said, trying to maintain my dignity while the others creased up. âNever in a million years.'