And with that I threw up all over her kimono.
âSurprise!'
While Christy was cleaning bile off her blouse, back at the table Pete had burst through a Japanese screen door carrying a birthday cake with forty candles. He'd missed the meeting where Jill had barked her invite, and Trent had tricked him into thinking the party was fancy dress. Musical themed. Miles and Meinhoff looked at his army uniform in bewilderment. It wasn't a good moment to come as Captain Von Trapp.
Chapter 15
It was the sound of the letterbox that stirred me. The mail addressed to number 35 was of the depressing post-email kind:
Dine Like a King At The Taj Mahal's All-You-Can-Eat Banquet; Dear Occupant, Did You Know You're Entitled To a 10k Loan?; For the Urgent Attention Of: Mr McDare, This Is Your 3rd Reminder, Please Pay Up Immediately.
No cheques from emigrated aunts or letters from love-lorn sweethearts stationed on the other side of the country. I had bigger fish to get fried by.
I was lying in a pool of my own urine on the sofa of the front room. My suit trousers were splayed on the floor. I gave myself the benefit of the doubt for now and put the brown stains down as mud. I could see only one shoe. My pubic hair had gathered out of the top of my boxer shorts. It was clumped together with ash, or dandruff. Could you even get pubic dandruff? Hmm. My head felt like it had hosted an illegal rave and someone had forgotten to turn the sound system off. Even the surrounding pizza boxes had turned their crusts up at me. A disapproving post-it note from either Craig or Connie was stuck to the television.
I'd pissed my boss off.
I'd pissed our main investor off.
I'd pissed Christy off.
I'd pissed my pants.
In a lifetime of lows, this was a new depth plunged.
And then, out of the corner of my eye, I saw something.
It was the ginger cat.
Hanging from a broken branch.
âHang On In There,' the bubble written caption on the poster said.
Hang on in there.
Where had I heard that before?
Sister Gina. She'd said it to me. Over and over.
HANG ON IN THERE.
So I would.
Chapter 16
âCan I get anyone a cuppa?'
Jill spun around her chair and shot me a look seen on faces the world over at moments of unforgettable social importance: the moon landings, the Kennedy assassination, the moment the plane hit the first tower, the day Bill McDare offered to make a round of hot beverages. Cultural flagstones one and all.
âWhat the fuck are you after?' she said.
âOh, I don't know: friendship, camaraderie, a sense of togetherness, maybe one in return in an hour or soâ¦'
âBut, Bill, you never make tea. NEVER.'
âWell, there's going to be a few changes around here.'
Jill looked at me with equal parts surprise and suspicion.
âOkay, not too much milk.' I trotted to the kitchen and set about my task.
If I had to pick a location for a road to Damascus moment, I'm not sure a blim-burned, piss-drenched sofa would have been in the top three but beggars can't be choosers. Not that I was begging for change. I was quite happy to drink myself silly and be a bit, well, cunty, but when, as now, it threatened my ever being able to (a) work in this town again or (b) have sex with someone whose name I remembered, then things had to come to a head.
I thought long and hard about adding a nip of scotch to my tea.
I needed to pull myself together. What did my generation have to be fucked up about? No scurvy or black plague, no offwiththeirhead monarchs, no World War, no watching yourbuddydiefacedowninthedirt of a tropical jungle. Not even the credit crunch made a difference â we still ran at 100 mph, we just greased the gas differently. Our problem was superfluidity. Cars, communications, TV stations, shoes, socks, drinks, drugs, dicks, cunts. And my problem was: which one or how much?
Well, boo hoo.
Take Christy for example: a dead mother, a boozy absent father, a mother by proxy to a bed-wetting brother in her teens. And did she complain or kill herself with lifestyle choices? Did she fuck. I'd woken up with a start this morning, a dream, or a flashback, running through my mind. It was Christy. She was saying she needed her dad. Sometimes. Not always, but sometimes. She had tears in her big black eyes. Had this happened? Was this Friday? It was hard to know what was real after weekends on the wild side.
I sipped my scotch-free tea and mulled over the next steps. What this sea change needed was a charter to avoid deviation to the old ways. I went back to my desk. It was lunchtime now, the office plate emptying with errand runners and errant lovers off into the outside to scratch their itch until it was nose back to the bullshit time. I thought about the boys outside the building, with their premium strength booze and low rent conversationâ¦
â¦they'd have to wait for a tale of valour from a balaclava-clad Gulf vet. I opened the word processor, clicked âNew Document' and started to type.
This would be my Ten Commandments. This was my Mount Sinai. I knew this Catholic education would come in useful for something.
1. Thou should probably not piss off the boss for sport, belittle colleagues because they wear tank tops and enjoy the countryside, or amble aimlessly towards middle management without an ambitious career goal.
1
2. Thou shalt not be drunk on whisky, wine and mouthwash during work, the walk to work, the walk home from work, the waking hours.
3. Thou shalt not increase uptake of uppers, downers, screamers and/or laughers to compensate for aforementioned lack of alcohol or otherwise.
4. Thou should most probably take notice of Dr Linda Taylor and the intricacies of her Wellness Health Check (and not just because she was a knockout
2
), particularly giving up smoking.
5. Thou should stop littering each and every sentence with words including, but not exclusive of, shit, fuck, cuntface, bugger, arsewipe, dickwad, knob-cheese and shitfuckarsebollocksssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss.
My concentration was broken by a loud, repetitive shriek reminiscent of an orgasmic seagull.
âTea⦠tea⦠do you want a tea?'
âWhat?
âTeaâ¦?'
It was Jill repaying the favour.
âErm, yeah. Go on. Yeah. Milk noâ¦'
âI know.'
I'm sure Moses never had to put up with this.
Right, back to the redemption.
6. Thou should visit thy mother more often than on days designated special by greetings card companies and should recognise, if not celebrate, the happiness she seems to receive from that wrinkly wanker
3
 Barry.
7. Thou shalt aspire to have thy own four walls and to live in quarters that do not feature an
al fresco
bathroom experience.
4
8. Thou shalt stop being such a cynical bastard.
5
9. Thou should try and engage with the local community and help the downtrodden, in more ways than being a drinking partner to the socially delinquent.
10. Thou should try and find unselfish love.
I felt so worthy I wanted to throw up.
PING. The email window popped up in the bottom right of my screen.
From: carol.cleary@morgan&schwarz.com
To: all@morgan&schwarz.com
Subject: Give-a-garment
Dear all,
As many of you know, not that I like to boast, every Tuesday I help out at the SoupMobile Station in the centre of the city. I'm sure I don't have to tell people as kind as you that it's a great cause and we really do try and âmake a difference' to homeless and hungry people across our city.
Now it's been a while since I last asked you all, but I would really appreciate it if you could have a root around your wardrobes for any old clothes you may have to donate. You know, the kind you don't wear anymore but are in perfectly good nick.
Any jeans, jumpers, joggers or jodphurs (well, perhaps they won't quite be horse riding just yet!!!) you find on your de-clutter will be gratefully received and will go to a good home.
Having seen the gladrags you all wore on Friday night I'm just certain you'll all have some of last season's clothes to give to someone who needs them more.
A point to remember is all donations must be clean and useable. Would appreciate any donations in by next week, before the weather turns too cold.
Many thanks,
Carol
From: bill.mcdare@morgan&schwarz.com
To: carol.cleary@morgan&schwarz.com
Subject: Re: Give-a-garment
Carol,
Have just written a reminder on my hand. In pen. Now if I don't shower in the morning, you'll know. My very own scarlet letter.
I don't suppose you could do with a hand next Tuesday? At the Soup Station or whatever it's called. There'll probably be a lot of stuff for you to carry over and I don't mind hanging around and helping out.
Or not. Wouldn't want to get in the way.
Either way, let me know.
Bill
From: carol.cleary@morgan&schwarz.com
To: bill.mcdare@morgan&schwarz.com
Subject: Re: Give-a-garment
Bill,
That's really very kind of you and I must say, really very unexpected.
I didn't really think it'd be your kind of âscene' if that's what people are saying these days! I'm sure I'll be fine with the clothes bags â Miles has very nicely agreed to my use of the pool car to ferry the donations across the city â but we could always do with an extra pair of hands at the SoupMobile. It can get quite hectic!
Would love to have you on the team if you really mean it?!?
Many thanks,
Carol
From: bill.mcdare@morgan&schwarz.com
To: carol.cleary@morgan&schwarz.com
Subject: Re: Give-a-garment
Carol,
I do mean it.
You could say I'm having a bit of a clear out myself, and not just of my wardrobes.
Looking forward to it,
Bill
PS Oh, and Carol, would appreciate it if you kept this to yourself. Don't really want the rest of the office knowing. You know what they're like.
From: peter.white@morgan&schwarz.com
To: all@morgan&schwarz.com
Subject: Re: Give-a-garment
Hi Carol,
Sounds like a great idea!
Sure I can dig out some old clobber for your charity.
Just one thing though⦠you said the clothes will go to a âgood home'â¦
Aren't they all HOMELESS?
;)
Pete
The trouble with moments of clarity was that the lucidity of your new situation hit you straight between the eyes. And getting hit straight between the eyes hurt like a motherfucker. I was, if not yet killing my babies of hooch, hits and whores, then making the first step towards a pre-meditated smothering. In the court case of McDare v Vice, today would be used as damning evidence against me. If it ever got to that. It would. It would. It would. It would. It would. It would. It would. It would. It would. (The theory of repetition posits that even the best students needed eight repetitions to commit an idea to memory).
It would.
1
Â
Thou shalt not use the term âcareer goal'. Thou cunt
2
Â
Thou shalt not covet thy medical consultant's calves
3
Â
Sincere apologies to the Fifth Commandment
4
Â
Thou shalt not base the location of a new dwelling on the covetousness of thy potential neighbour's wife
5
Â
See footnote 3
Chapter 17
âSo, in a nutshell that's what the SoupMobile Station is all about. Remember, folks, we're giving these guys and gals a âhand up' not a âhand out'. There's a big difference. Now let's go make a difference!'
I was stood in a small, damp Portakabin with five or six other âenablers'. I hadn't taken in a word that had been said for the last twenty minutes. An attempt at rousing had been made by a youngish man by the name of Nick. Behind his beads and sparse post-pubescent beard hid a face, a demeanour, an accent of privilege. I could see it now: the youngest son of the Earl of Bucklebury. When the family entertained, as it often did, he'd always slipped away into the grounds with a handkerchief full of canapes for the gardener before returning to the grand hall and drawing rolled eyes from mother for his muddied soles. After fagging for a singularly brutal master at school he refused his own boy and ended up being bullied by the seniors for his stand. He'd spent summers volunteering for Médecins Sans Frontières in the Democratic Republic of Congo, using the impeccable French he'd learnt from his Parisian au pair to provide logistical support in field hospitals. It was here that he met his first real life black person. And now this. Serving watered down minestrone and on-the-turn bread rolls to miscreants. It made him feel warm inside. His parents, the Earl and Countess, disapproved. This was his adolescent rebellion. The SoupMobile Station his teenage tattoo. Mummy and Daddy were mortified. Why couldn't he be a banker or a barrister like the other children? Bleeding heart liberals were the worst fucking kind. I made a mental note to stop these thought patterns. Nearly three decades of cynicism through the synapses was hard to stop overnight.