Read The Alternative Hero Online
Authors: Tim Thornton
Alan drew breath to protest but I was already heading through the door.
It was as obvious that Carter would frequent this Blue Posts as it was doubtful they’d ever darken the threshold of the other one.
Crunchy indie music was merrily careering out of a copious-looking jukebox; young alternative-esque people of various shapes, sizes, hairdos and T-shirts were lounging around smoking and notching up empty pint glasses; and the bar staff looked tame. It was clearly a place we’d want to spend time in, Carter or no Carter. Which was just as well.
“Throwing Muses, man,” commented Alan, nodding at the jukebox speakers.
“Never mind all that. Where the fuck are Carter?”
Not there. The pub was small enough to ascertain this within seconds. They might have both been in the loo, but this seemed unlikely. All the more galling was the distinct impression that they
had
been there; I could see several Carter T-shirts in the room, most tables had more empty glasses than seemed possible for the amount of drinkers present, and the general atmosphere was laced with anticipation. This was indubitably the pre-gig drinking hole, and Carter weren’t really big enough yet for there to be several of them. I locked onto an appropriate-looking group of folk and, fortified by the pair of pints inside me, stepped forward.
“Er … excuse me, this may seem like a silly question, but …”
A girl with cropped bleached hair and slightly mad eyes looked up.
“Hahaha! How silly?”
“Er … pretty silly,” I admitted. “You know the band Carter?”
“Yes?”
“You just missed them actually, mate,” volunteered a bespectacled bloke who sat next to her.
“They were here?”
“They were,” confirmed the girl, pointing to a couple of empty chairs. “Right here. And now they’ve gone. Haha!”
“Fuck,” I gasped, turning to Alan.
“Do you know them?” Alan asked the girl.
“Sort of,” she smiled.
“Did they say anything about being interviewed?”
A long-haired guy in a Mega City Four T-shirt across the table suddenly wagged his finger.
“Oi! Are you the fanzine?”
Gingerly I raised my hand.
“I am the fanzine.”
The whole table erupted with laughter and suddenly everyone seemed to be pointing at us. Alan and I stole a quick glance at each other for support.
“You knobs!” screeched the girl. “They’ve just been sitting here slagging you off for the last half an hour!”
“Really?”
“Yes! Hahahaa! ‘These bloody fanzines,’ they kept saying, ‘they always stand you up.’”
“Are you serious?” frowned Alan.
“Yeah!”
“Shit. We were in the wrong pub,” I explained. “It was his fault.”
This heralded another volley of mirth. (“Oh noo, it was
his
fault!”) Alan looked like he was ready to punch someone, probably me.
“It’s all right,” laughed Mega City Four bloke. “They weren’t proper narked off, just taking the piss, y’know.”
“You can apologise to them at the gig if you like,” suggested the girl.
“Ah …” I began. “The problem is, we’re not actually going, um, to the gig …”
“Why not? Come on, it’s only three quid.”
I turned to Alan again. If I’d spent much of the evening feeling relatively grown-up, I now felt about twelve.
“I haven’t enough cash … have you?”
“Um, yeah … but …”
“We’re on the guest list,” the girl continued. “We could try sneaking you in too if you like?”
Once again, all faces seemed to be on us. Alan was clearly finding the situation very tricky to deal with.
“Um … I think we need a private meeting for a moment, man.”
“Okay,” I nodded, and followed him to the door.
“I can’t go,” he hissed into my ear.
“Why not?”
“I promised my mum I’d be back by ten. I’ve got a mock tomorrow.”
“A mock?”
“Mock A-level, dumbo.”
Blimey. First the wrong pub, and now this. The famous Alan Potter was seriously starting to ruin my week. I suddenly caught a mental image of Billy Flushing, grinning stupidly as he always did—but also leading me to the correct pub and then on to the gig, chuckling like a lunatic, arm in arm with the mad blonde girl. I shook my head and he vanished.
“Sorry,” Alan murmured. “I’ll make it up to you. We don’t have to leave just yet anyway. I’ll buy you another pint.”
The Carter guest list crowd had finished their drinks and were now gathering by the door to leave.
“What’s the verdict, then?” beamed the girl. “Are you there, or are you square? Hahahaha!”
The final nail in Alan’s coffin of credibility was still to come. After we’d made our excuses to the group I sat back in one of the pub’s well-worn seats, contemplating this impressive start to my career as a music journalist while Alan went to buy another round. A minute later he was back.
“Cunts wouldn’t serve me,” he announced, flopping down on the seat opposite.
We stared at each other for a moment, swirling the incalculable futility of the evening around our heads like a vintage cider. But I had a plan.
“Shall I have a go?”
“No,” Alan stated firmly.
“No, really. It might be all right for me. You’re taller, but I’ve got an older face.”
“That’s utter bollocks.”
“Just give me the money. What have we got to lose?”
I didn’t tell him I’d suddenly remembered I had a dog-eared photocopy of Billy Flushing’s brother’s driving licence lurking in one of the pockets of my bag. Billy had made one for each of us (with little thought for what would happen if we presented both at the same time). He used his regularly to buy certain extreme items of literature; I had never tried using mine. It put me, if memory served, just a few days shy of nineteen, but was worth a go.
“Two pints of cider and black, please.”
This particular girl behind the bar had a permanent frown, a fierce-looking nose ring and a GBH T-shirt, none of which assisted my acting skills.
“Got any ID?”
“Yeah,” I replied, scrabbling around in my bag and hoping the thing was in one piece. Just about. I presented it to the barmaid.
“You’re almost nineteen,” she noted, scrutinising the threadbare document.
“Yup.”
She shrugged and handed it back.
“Okay, whatever.”
The thrill of having trounced Alan Potter at the booze-buying game sent a flood of confidence through me. I looked over at him
(he was flicking through the jukebox selection) and winked. He mouthed “Fuck off” and turned away.
“Did you put something on?” I asked, as I returned with the drinks and a packet of Quavers.
“Yeah.”
“What?”
“You’ll see,” he grumbled, taking a gulp, as the intro to something I didn’t recognise started up. We sat and listened in silence. “Did I get any change?”
“Yeah,” I replied, handing him a few coppers.
“Fuck’s sake.”
More silence.
“Fucking hate not getting served, man.”
“That’s okay, I did!”
“That’s not the point,” he glared.
I was starting to get the distinct impression Alan was slipping back into school mode. The guy on the record seemed to be singing
“Why can’t I get just one fuck,” but
I was sure I’d misheard.
“So who is this, then?”
“Violent Femmes.”
“Ah.”
I pulled open the bag of Quavers and grabbed a handful.
“So I was wondering,” I began, between crunches, “whether I should just go ahead and pretend we actually met them, for the purposes of the fanzine.”
“Could do.”
“I could make up a few answers, y’know … what I think they would say, study a few of their interviews, that sort of thing. It wouldn’t be too naughty really. This first edition’s gonna be too small to really get noticed anyway.”
Silence.
“Are you all right?”
“Sorry, man. I’m just in a wig. Hate not getting served. Hate the fact that we fucked it up this evening [I decided not to suggest he change the “we” to “I” at this juncture]. Hate being at school. Hate the fact that people in my year are all wankers. Hate having to work at bloody Sainsbury’s. Hate looking seventeen. Hate being seventeen. No one ever told you it was this shit. They say going through puberty and stuff is bad, but that was a fucking breeze. I didn’t even notice it happening.”
I kept quiet for a moment, considering his points.
“Right,” I finally said encouragingly. “Anything else?”
He looked up.
“Failed my fucking driving test yesterday.”
“Sorry. That’s a pain.”
“Yep.”
(“Don’t shoot, shoot, shoot that thing at me, you know you’ve got my sympathy, but don’t shoot, shoot, shoot that thing at me …”)
“I thought a few people in your year were all right, though? Simon Goodfellow? Eric Bastow? He’s a good bloke, isn’t he?”
Alan looked at me like I’d just suggested he eat the contents of the ashtray.
“What gave you that impression, man?”
“What about some of the girls? They seem human. Claire Batey?”
“Slapper.”
“Joanna Clerk?”
“Rich bitch.”
“Gemma Holdingford? I see you hanging out with her a bit.”
“Only so I can copy her biology.”
(“… oh my my, my my mother, I would love to love you lover…”)
“Nicola Cartwright?”
Alan said nothing and sipped his drink. I let the Violent Femmes complete their strange rant and waited for the next song to kick in. Another unfamiliar introduction, but different this time, less quirky, a one-note guitar riff backed by some jangling, midtempo pop. Then the words started and I almost spat out my drink with mirth.
“I don’t know why I love you…”
“Ah, I see,” I chuckled. “Nicola Cartwright.”
“Fuck off, man.”
“No, that’s fine … I mean, she’s nice! I would.”
“Don’t fucking tell anyone.”
“I promise,” I smiled.
(“How can I get close to you, when you got no mercy, no you got no mercy…”)
“Has anything happened so far, then?”
Alan frowned and took a Quaver.
“Almost, Sunday night before last. We were at the Three Crowns with some others.”
“And?”
“I chickened out.”
He looked so genuinely heartbroken that I decided to stop taking the piss.
“How long have you liked her?”
“Fucking ages, man. I mean, you know, she’s always been pretty and stuff, but there was this nice warm day in September, I bumped into her in the park … she was sitting by herself, wearing … Fuck, man, you’d better promise not to tell anyone this shit!”
“Honestly, I won’t.”
“She was wearing this summer dress and she had her hair in pigtails, totally different to how she looks in school, and some eye makeup, almost … gothic, you could say. But she hadn’t overdone it. So I said hello and she took off her headphones, asked me to join her …
She showed me this compilation tape she was listening to, and man … I just had no idea. You know what I mean? Some of the stuff on there …”
He sipped his drink, overcome with the romance of it all. He nodded up to the speakers.
“There was these guys …”
“Sorry, who are these guys?”
“House of Love, man … and The Cure … and I’m not talking about the pop shit, she had ‘Fascination Street’ and ‘A Night Like This’ on there … ‘Birthday’ by The Sugarcubes … ‘Shelter from the Rain’ by All About Eve … some Pixies and that Violent Femmes one … some Smiths, I think … April Skies’ by the Mary Chain … even that Primal Scream one, ‘Please Stop Crying,’ or whatever it’s called …”
The House of Love finished their ditty and another, more abrasive track started up.
“This one wasn’t on there. I just stuck it on ’cos I like it.”
I shook my head ignorantly Shit. Third song in a row I didn’t know. I may have won the getting-served match, but Alan had won the music game hands down. That was probably the idea.
“‘Wedding Present,’” he obliged. “So anyway, she offered me one of the earphones, and we just sat there listening while the sun went down … I know, man, it’s corny as fuck, but … by the end we were holding hands.”
“Why didn’t you just go for it there and then?” I asked (like I’d have had the guts to do such a thing).
“I was just about to … but then she stood up and said she had to get home.”
“Damn!”
“Yeah. Since then I’ve kind of been in limbo. She says hello briefly
at school, smiles occasionally, but … it’s like I discovered a different person that day.”
“Maybe you did. Maybe she has a twin.”
“Anyway, I had this plan to invite her to see All About Eve, but that got fucked up ’cos of my mocks.”
I pondered Alan’s predicament for a moment.
“So … would you say all this has made you a little … er … preoccupied around school?”
“Yeah, course.”
“So is that why you’ve been bloody blanking me all over the place?”
Alan looked up, frowning. “Nah, man, there’s other reasons for that.”
“Which are?”
“Well, you know how it is, with the whole different-year thing, for a start …”
“Bloody hell. Isn’t that a little bit childish?”
“Well, yeah, but it still makes a difference, man. Girls have a memory for that sort of thing.”
“What, they won’t talk to you ’cos you’re friends with a lower-sixth former? Bullshit.”
“Some wouldn’t.”
“Not the ones worth knowing,” I countered, enjoying myself again. “I bet you Nicola wouldn’t mind.”
“Well, she doesn’t talk to me anyway, so it doesn’t matter.”
“So is this really all about girls?”
Alan looked down sheepishly. I swigged my pint, looking away with calculated indignation.
“It’s also about that cock you hang out with, man,” Alan admitted suddenly.
“Billy?”
“Yeah. He’s a total loser.”
I found myself jumping to my much maligned acquaintance’s defence.
“He’s a lot more intelligent and fun than you might imagine, actually.”
“Don’t care, man. He’s off the scale. You want me to talk to you when we’re at school, ditch the dweeb.”
Ditch the dweeb.
This phrase has festered in my head and formed a little guilt-edged frame around my conscience ever since that night, over seventeen years ago. Alan and I debated this topic until the end of our drinks and part of the way home, but that was essentially what we agreed: I ditched the dweeb, and Alan became my friend.