Authors: Ned Boulting
It wasn't Kemp, I established, as I rode past him. I had been too shy to stop. This often happens to me, but normally at weddings. I fear most of all those painful reunions and cold introductions on the way into churches, and will go out of my way to postpone them until the last possible minute, even if that means driving past the churchyard half-a-dozen times with one eye on the dashboard clock, before finally parking up and entering the fray. This was no different.
Out of sight now round a bend in the road, I executed an awkward U-turn, and approached again the man in the cap by the side of the road. This time, as I neared him, I saw he'd been joined by another, similar figure. They seemed to be making each other laugh. That was enough to put me off again, and I rode past for a second time, quite unable to pull over and introduce myself.
Another U-turn, which I conducted in the full realisation that the Metropolitan Police would by now have picked up on my aberrant cycling behaviour through any one of the hundreds of CCTV cameras that bristle from lampposts all along Regent's Park. This time I took a deep breath, and I came to a halt. By now a third man, also not Gary Kemp, had joined them. My arrival made it four.
The first man noticed me, initially with blank suspicion, then with mild recognition.
âHello,' he said, reasonably enough.
I took my helmet off, and introduced myself. âI'm Ned.'
âYes.' He seemed faintly amused and mildly curious. âGood to have you with us.' But he didn't offer his name in return.
From the other two people who weren't Gary Kemp, I felt more scrutiny. I judged that it would help allay their suspicions if I offered up my credentials for gate-crashing their party.
âI was invited by Gary Kemp to join you.' This much, of course, was true. But the moment I found myself actually saying it, the less plausible it sounded. In fact, as the words tumbled from my mouth, they sounded absurd. I might as well have strolled onto the set of
Mamma Mia
and claimed that I'd been sent there by Colin Montgomerie.
But my reasoning seemed to appease them, even if, when I told them I was going to do an interview with him, it cast me out at an increased distance from their clique. I was now definitively, on the outside. âI don't know where Gary is. He's normally the first one here.' The man with no name effected some introductions. âThis is Lee.' The second man-who-wasn't-Kemp nodded at me. âAnd this is Nadav.' I instantly knew that Nadav was not a name I would be able to remember.
The bloke whose name I'd just been told was fiddling with his brake cables. He offered me a friendly enough âHi'. And then he returned to his bike. Since the other two men had returned to the conversation that I had interrupted, I strolled over to him, already dreading the conversation I was about to begin about bikes.
âWow. What a great bike. What is it?' Actually, it categorically was magnificent. It was a skinny steel beauty with a custom paint job to die for. Well, maybe not to die for, but definitely to pay lots of money for.
âOh this old boneshaker? It's just a silly thing really. But I kind of like it.' He had a strong, but very Anglo, South African accent. He went on to tell me the name of the exclusive Italian bike builder who had custom made it for him, but I was no longer taking it in. I was busily wondering who on earth this man might be in real life. He was tall and, like the rest of our tiny peloton, in his trim-if-grey mid-fifties. And, also in common with the others, well groomed and perfectly presented in ochre shades of retro woollen cycling garb, complete with kid skin gloves. I was, by now, violently self-conscious about my neon nylon top.
âYou should have been here last week. This thing was off the road and I had to use David Millar's time-trial bike.'
âI really don't know where Gary's got to.' The first non-Kemp broke in. âI guess the baby?'
We all agreed that the presence of a newborn might have detained him. It was clear that the other riders wanted to get going, Kemp or no Kemp. This presented me with a slight dilemma. Should I continue with the ride, uninvited though I was by the other remaining members, or gracefully bow out. I ploughed on.
And into the heart of the New Romantic Ride.
And now I know what they're saying
In the music of the parade
We made our love on wasteland
And through the barricades
We set off in an anti-clockwise loop on the main road, circling Regent's Park. By now there were five of us, as we had been joined at the last minute by Simon Mottram the founder and owner of Rapha, cycling's most exclusive brand. I knew Simon a little (he was often to be seen at races), so was pleased he had arrived. But now our numbers were suddenly uneven. This made the politics of the peloton fraught with complication.
The roads around the park are wide, unusually so and quiet for Central London. They can easily accommodate two cyclists riding side by side. But not three. As a result, since our group now totalled five, one rider would always be supernumerary. Quite often, and quite understandably, this was me, riding out the back, alone with my thoughts.
The pace was very gentle though, and the chatter ahead of me fluent and friendly. Old pals. Occasionally, shreds of sentences would catch in the wind and drift back through our little bunch to me at the rear.
â. . . I'd never seen the place so deserted . . .'
â. . . he's had to sell up. I haven't seen him since that thing he did at the White Cube . . .'
â. . . couldn't believe it when she showed up. Especially after what happened last year . . .'
I was lulled into a false sense of familiarity. As if I too had been meeting up in the park with this bunch of friends for years. As if I had decades of shared history to paw over as we rode. I could get into this.
The man they called Nadav (his name had suddenly come back to me. Or rather it hadn't. But for the purposes of this narrative, let's just say I had remembered it . . .) dropped back on his fancy Italian bike, and we found ourselves riding together.
âDid you feel a bit strange riding a time-trial bike round the park last week in this group?'
âYah. It was a bit surreal. That's for sure.'
âAnd you said it was the same as David Millar's Cervelo from the Tour?' I asked, more as a matter of form, than from any genuine interest.
âNo. It
was
David Millar's bike. He gave it to me'
That shut me up. But, unfortunately, not for long enough.
âI've just finished reading his book,' I told him. It was true.
âWhat did you think?' asked Nadav, with a sideways glance.
âI enjoyed it.' I thought briefly about the book, Millar's revelations and, at times, self-flagellation. The image of himself that he has embraced over recent years has an element of theatre about it. The cover photo illustrated this perfectly; moodily lit, dark and soulful, with a hint of menace. I thought it was a bit daft.
âThe picture didn't look much like him, though.'
âOh.' There was a pause that was significant enough to signify something. âHow do you mean?'
âIt's just not the David Millar I have known down through the years. It looks like someone else.'
âI'm surprised you say that.' Again that pause. âWhen I took the portrait, David loved it.'
And with that, the portrait photographer injected a minute amount of pace. Just enough to gap us. Not for the first time, I was left alone with my thoughts.
Without me noticing it, we were now six. We had been joined by another sprightly little chap, also of a certain age, riding a tiny powder blue chrome and steel touring bike with a hand-stitched leather saddle pouch. He rode with a very high cadence, right at the front of the group. Simon Mottram told me his name was Kadir (another name I was destined instantly to forget, even though for the purposes of the narrative . . . etc.), and that he makes these bikes himself. âYou should go and talk to him. You'd have so much in common.'
I looked at Simon sceptically.
Building bikes, it seemed, was not all that Kadir did. He had spent the previous day at a photo shoot with Mark Cavendish, supplying odd items of cycling bric-a-brac and nostalgia for the set. His private collection of bicycling artefacts had furnished the photographer with retro props for Cavendish to variously hold, clasp, throw, sit on or slap to his head.
The other surprising thing about Kadir was his speed. After about forty-five minutes of meandering round the park on the outside, the bunch instinctively headed through some gates and onto the internal ring road inside the park. Here the pace quickened. After one kilometre, there was a slight incline, and, wordlessly, everyone started to sprint. I had no idea what was happening.
When, after about ten seconds, we crested the âsummit' (Kadir had comfortably beaten everybody), the pace slackened again, as everyone caught their breath. I dropped back to Simon Mottram.
âWhat the hell was that all about?'
âWhere there's a hill, there's a race.' He winked at me.
A hill! It must have risen no more than about six feet over a hundred yards. Before I knew it, we had nearly completed a full circuit, and the race started to heat up again, as the âhill' approached. This time I was better positioned for the sprint, finishing second, but still some way behind the pocket rocket that was Kadir. I couldn't help it, a loud guffaw escaped me. Partly due to the effort involved in trying to catch the pint-sized cycling nostalgist. But equally, it was the absurdity, the pyrrhic nonsense of it all.
And on lap three, I got him. He didn't see it coming. I blind-sided him, and by the crest of the ascent, I blasted over the line at least three lengths to the good.
Behind me, Simon Mottram had commentated on my win. âKadir holding his line, but Boulting's coming, Boulting's closing all the time. Boulting takes the win!' It is worth reminding you, as you read this, that we were all professional men in our forties and fifties.
I eased off on the pedals, allowed myself to freewheel. As I rolled along, Kadir acknowledged my victory with a nod, Nadav patted me on the back, âNot-Kemp One' offered his congratulations in the form of a broad grin, but âNot-Kemp Two' rode past with a stony demeanour.
Together, he and I rode in to the café towards which everyone seemed to be gravitating.
âWhat is it you do, then?' I asked him. I wanted to eradicate any chance of insulting his work before I knew what it was.
But âNot-Kemp Two' simply didn't answer. He just grinned cryptically. I didn't know whether or not I should repeat the question (perhaps he hadn't heard). And I didn't know for how much longer I should hold my expression of curiosity, head half-cocked to one side. He remained silent. I eventually un-cocked my head.
We stacked our bikes up at the café, shared a little idle chat about the Belgian Classics. I produced a copy of
How I Won The Yellow Jumper
from my rucksack. I had intended to give it to the former Spandau Ballet man. Instead I offered it to Nadav, as a certain type of peace offering, which to his great credit, he politely accepted.
But that, in itself, provoked a flurry of awkwardness. He had no bag, and his beautifully tailored back pockets on his retro merino jersey wouldn't stretch to holding the book. So the cursed thing just sat on the table in front of us, its jokey type-face and primary-coloured illustrations looking tawdry and unamusing. I wished fervently that I'd left it mouldering in the depths of my rucksack, nestling against a cereal bar.
Then âNot-Kemp One' looked at his watch, sighed and left.
âBetter go. Got a bloody radio show to present.'
Of course he had a radio show to present. Didn't we all?
It had been that kind of day. But there had been no Gary Kemp.
On returning home, I emailed Simon Mottram. Who were all those other people in the park, I wanted to know? His reply, and a little Wikipedia work threw up the following cast list for the New Romantic Ride:
Bob Elms
(Not-Kemp One). Wrote for the
Face
and
NME
in the 1980s. Dated Sade. Invented the name of the band Spandau Ballet. Has presented numerous TV shows, and now hosts a long-running show on BBC London.
Lee Barrett
(Not-Kemp Two). A major figure in the 1980s club scene. Discovered Sade, and went on to manage her. He asked her, âCan you sing?' She failed the audition, but got the job anyway.
Kadir Guirey
. A leading light in the 1980s' skateboarding scene, Guirey also appeared on
Top of the Pops
with a band called Funkapolitan
.
He was their lead singer. Now a leading collector of cycling memorabilia.
Nadav Kander
. A world-renowned photographer. He has exhibited in every major gallery from new York to London and in 2009 was named International Photographer of the Year.
Then another email pinged into my Inbox. It was from Gary Kemp.
Dear Ned,
I am mortified and so sorry. My wife asked me to do the school run today, and so I didn't do the ride. I forgot it was with you. So sorry as you came such a long way. Can I come over to you? Let's talk.
Gary.
âSo sorry as you came such a long way' could have been a
Spandau Ballet
lyric, I thought. I told him there really was no need to apologise, that Lewisham was not such a distance away, and that I'd enjoyed it, anyway. I recounted my points victory over Kadir.
Kadir is fast! My God, you must be good!
Could we meet next Friday, perhaps?
Absolutely. In the diary now.
G.
Next Friday dawned. At 6.30 in the morning, I received an email. Again it was from Gary Kemp.
Hi Ned,
I've got a bloody Achilles injury that has flared up over night so cannot make it. Please let me know that you got this. We will get there.