Authors: Sophia Bennett
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Fifteen Minutes: Part 2
F
inal nine. Recording stars. No Rose. My head feels as if it's about to explode.
Shell-shocked, we're led out of the room by Janet, who's busy radioing details of what's happening to the central control centre. She pauses in the corridor outside and turns to us.
âWe've got a room nearby. You don't mind if we bring the cameras in, do you?'
We shake our heads without really considering it. We're used to the lenses, lights and cables by now. Besides, we have more important things to think about.
I walk quickly down the corridor to catch up with Rose, who's stormed ahead of the rest of us.
âAre you OK?' I ask.
âSure,' she mutters gruffly. âOf course I'm OK. It's only a competition.'
She glares at me briefly, then looks away. Her cheeks are burning. She won't let me put my arm through hers. Instead, she wraps her arms around herself.
âI could see this coming,' she goes on. âI knew I was crazy to come here.'
âBut you're not. You're amazing. You know it.'
She just glares at me and shivers.
Janet tries a couple of locked doors, then finds one that opens onto a small, airless meeting room, with four chairs set around a white-topped table. We each take a chair.
âYou have fifteen minutes,' Janet says, glancing at her watch. âActually, twelve now. But wait until I get the cameras before you say anything, please.' She disappears into the corridor, already barking instructions into her head mic.
For a moment, we do as we're told, sitting in silence, until I really can't bear it any more. I'm not going to sit here saying nothing just because the cameras aren't here yet. Honestly.
âThat man! I can't believe he'd try to split us up. We wouldn't be the Manic Pixie Dream Girls if it wasn't the four of us.'
âIt's fine,' Rose says crisply. âDon't worry about it.'
All the blood seems to have drained from her face, apart from two bright pink spots on her cheeks.
I try to put a hand on her arm, but she pulls it away as if it's been scorched. I've rarely seen her like this, and she's
never been so harsh with me before. Is she blaming me for dancing? It's not really my fault if I can âjiggle' and she doesn't want to. There are a million things she can do and I can't.
There's a long, awkward silence. Eventually, Rose breaks it. Her voice is flat, and she won't look at any of us, not even me.
âLook, it's clear they want you three,' she says. âAnd to be perfectly honest, I hate the stupid song, and I hate the stupid dance moves, and I couldn't do it anyway.'
âOf course you could!' Nell says. âYou were brilliant just now.'
Rose gives us a cold stare. This isn't like her at all. I don't understand.
âI'm holding you back. Just forget about it. It's only a stupid show. You do what you want to do.'
There's a knock on the door and it opens to reveal a cameraman and a sound recordist, with a fluffy mic held high on a boom.
âDon't mind us,' they say, moving in and setting up in the corner of the room. Janet hovers in the doorway.
âRight, girls,' she says, checking her watch. âYou can talk now, but you've only got about ten minutes left, I'm afraid. Then they need you back in the theatre for your decision.' She smiles anxiously.
Rose is already on her feet. âI'm coming with you,' she says to Janet, pushing her chair back. âIt's easier for them if I'm not here.'
Janet looks uncertain for a moment. She's obviously considering the TV value of âdecision with Rose in the room' against the value of âdecision without Rose in the room'. But Rose doesn't give her the chance to make
up her mind. She's already out of the door, and she doesn't look back.
Left alone together, Nell, Jodie and I stare at each other in silence for ages.
Jodie's the first to speak. She looks utterly dejected.
âWell, that was a waste of time. I never thought we'd get so close, though.'
âYeah,' Nell sighs.
âI know,' I say. âExcept . . .'
They both stare at me. I wasn't supposed to say âExcept'. But now it's out there.
My God â why did I say âexcept'?
âExcept what?' Jodie asks.
Everyone's looking at me. My thoughts are a jumble.
âWell, Rose really didn't want to be here, did she? She's always been shy. I know it's crazy, because her voice is fantastic, but think about it. She didn't really want to do George's party, until we made her. And she hates dancing.'
It looks like dancing is part of the deal, and thinking back, I enjoyed that last version we did so much, when we could put in some choreography. To be perfectly honest, it was the easiest it's ever been.
Jodie nods slowly. âI suppose so.'
Nell bites her lip. âI never pictured us as a trio.'
I nod. Neither did I. Now, though, for a moment, I do. Three months ago, we were just a bunch of girls, singing stupid songs in our bedrooms. Now, thanks to Elliot Harrison, we could be on live TV, being watched by millions of people. It would only be for one night â two, if we made it down to the last three acts. I don't believe what Linus said about making us recording stars. But would two nights on TV be so terrible?
Rose seems to think it would be OK. Think of all the rehearsing we'd do . . . the costumes . . . the professional advice. I never, ever thought I'd get this chance. Rose is the one with the talent. She's always outshone me. She can make it any time . . . but this could be the only chance I ever get.
What if someone gives you a winning lottery ticket and you just hand it right back? What then?
âFive minutes!' Janet calls through the closed door.
âYou've gone very quiet, Sash,' Jodie says. âWhat are you thinking?'
I screw my face up. This is all too complicated. âMaybe we could just
ask
her,' I say. âYou heard what she said. She seemed happy for us to be a trio. Could we maybe just do the TV bit without her?'
âWouldn't she be upset?' Jodie frowns.
âWell, like I say â we'd ask her. We'd get back together afterwards, obviously.'
Nell says nothing. She picks at a loose thread at the bottom of her shorts and looks unhappy. But she doesn't disagree.
âSo, what do you think?' I say, watching both of them.
âYeah, I suppose,' Jodie shrugs, looking very uncomfortable for a girl who so badly wants to be famous that she's already designed the perfume bottle for her fragrance range.
âI don't know,' Nell mutters, dislodging a sequin from her shorts and looking almost tearful about it. âWhatever's best for Rose.'
âTime's up!' Janet announces from outside, before flinging the door open. âReady, girls?'
No. No, absolutely not. Did we come to a conclusion?
What did we decide?
We file out into the corridor, with the camera still filming us from behind.
âYou'll tell her, right?' Jodie says.
Tell her what?
Jodie sees my panicked expression.
âAsk her, I mean. What she thinks. Remember?'
OK. We said we'd ask her. My mouth is dry. Rose didn't want to be in the band, she said so. I'm just going to ask her if it would really be OK to do this bit without her. She can always say no. In fact, I half wish she would, so we all know where we stand, and then we can just go home and forget about it. And I wish there wasn't a camera in my face, and that I could hear more than the sound of my blood pumping in my head.
âShall we go?' Janet asks.
âI just have to talk to Rose quickly,' I explain.
She nods. âSure,' she says. âShe's right over there.'
Rose is waiting at the end of the corridor, with Rob. The colour is back in her cheeks now, just a little. As we walk towards her, Jodie squeezes my arm good luck. I feel sick. But I'm just talking about the TV show. It's not as if we're breaking up the band or anything.
Jodie and Nell fall back. I go forward. I suppose it has to be me.
âSo?' Rose asks.
âEr, hi.' The hostility radiating off Rose â which I still totally don't deserve, by the way â isn't helping. âWe were just wondering . . .' My voice will hardly come out. My throat isn't working, with all the stress. âWe were wondering if you really meant it. About not joining us? Because if the three of us went ahead and got through then
you could come back in the band afterwards and . . .'
âAfterwards?'
âYes.'
âWhen you're not on TV any more?' she checks, coldly.
âWell, yes . . . and . . .'
âSure.'
âWhat?'
âSure.'
âReally? I mean, do you really not mind if weâ?'
She looks at me haughtily. It's not often that I remember how much taller than me she is, but now is one of those times.
âI'm out of the band, don't worry. Say hi to Linus for me.'
âButâ'
Standing there, I watch the blood run out of her cheeks again. Her eyes look searchingly into mine, and then . . . nothing. A rigid, blank stare. She moves past me, down the corridor, and I watch her disappear round a corner.
What have I done? I call out her name.
âRose!'
Janet steps forward and puts her hand on my arm.
âLet her go,' she says gently. âIt must be hard for her.'
Janet's right. Rose needs a hug. But who will give it to her if I can't?
Wait.
Did we just dump Rose from the band? Did
I
just dump her? I can't believe I did that. It's not what I meant at all.
âRose!'
But she's gone.
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Broken
T
here were other things I didn't think about. The look on Sebastian Rules's face when we told him our decision, for a start. The other judges were pleased, but Sebastian's sneer stayed imprinted on my mind for a long time. Another was the fact that we had to share a car with Rose for an hour and a half on the way home, and she didn't say a single word to us all the way.
It was Jodie who reminded me of the worst thing of all: what if we win? I have to say, the possibility hadn't crossed my mind, but what if we actually win and our act goes on a billion screens and makes us famous? It would be just the three of us, without Rose. How could she come back in the band then?
*
On Monday, Rose is not at school. She officially âhas the flu'. I call her granny, Aurora, who says she's in bed.
âIs she OK?' I ask. âCan I come round?'
Aurora hesitates.
âShe asked not to see you, Sasha. Not for a couple of days. I'm sure she'll be fine.'
She's never done this before. Not even when she had real flu. Not being able to see her is shocking.
âI don't get it!' I complain to Mum, as we're preparing supper. âShe's my best friend. It's all about singing in public and she never
wanted
to sing in public in the first place. We had to make her. Why is she taking it so badly?'
Mum stirs the soup in silence.
âWhy, Mum?'
âDo you really need me to answer?'
I sigh. âShe could always have said no,' I point out. âWe gave her the option.'
âUh huh,' Mum says.
In the silence that follows, I imagine if it had been the three of
them
, asking
me
if I wanted to stay or go. If you have any pride at all, there is only one answer to that question. Now, too late, I realise it wasn't really an option at all.
Two days later, we get the official news from Ivan Jenks: we're in the final nine. We'll be filming on national TV in March: three live finals on consecutive days at the start of the holidays, showcasing three acts each. The public will vote and the winner from each night will go into a grand final on the fourth and final show. The performances will also be streamed live to over five million phones and
computers in the UK (the billion comes later, when the ad goes out worldwide). Meanwhile, we're going to be interviewed by a presenter called Andy Grey for the backstory bit of our slot, but we mustn't tell anyone about the decision to drop Rose, because they want to âpreserve the drama'.
I don't want to preserve the drama at all. I hate the drama. My best friend isn't talking to me. I want the drama to go away. However, it turns out that we all agreed to do whatever the producers say when we signed all those release forms on the audition day. So outside of home, the drama gets preserved.
Rose ârecovers' from the flu and comes back to class, but still looks under the weather. At school we are heroes. The Head asks us to sing âSunglasses' at a special school assembly. Rose plays her guitar, as before, but at a very slight distance from the rest of us. I really don't feel like dancing. However, everyone sings along and loads of people promise they'll vote for us. In our class, nobody seems to notice that Rose still isn't talking to me.
The Killer Act homepage shows nine videos now, under the banner LIVE SHOW PERFORMERS!!! They include us, the street dance group, two rock bands (Jodie fancies all the members), an eleven-year-old opera singer, a boy band, two female soloists, and a ukulele orchestra called Me and Uke. We watch them all, and they're all fantastic. Our video is still the original âSunglasses' with the four of us, and me in my pyjamas. Totally preserving the drama.
One day in February, Andy Grey arrives after school with a cameraman to film our backstory slot. Andy will be the presenter on the live finals, and it's a chance to get to
know him. We feel as if we already do: he presented children's programmes when we were growing up and I'd swear he was the guy who taught me to count. I still remember him standing cheerfully in front of a screen of bouncing cartoon bubbles, singing âMy ARMS and my LEGS make FOUR'.
Andy still looks like a big teenager himself, with black hair, white teeth, a wide smile, and a gentle West Country burr to his voice that makes us feel at home. We kind of are anyway, because they decided to film us in Jodie's bedroom, which was the tidiest.
Jodie, Nell and I sit on Jodie's bed for an hour, under a shelf full of riding cups and rosettes, talking to Andy about how much we've always loved to sing together. I keep waiting for the moment when Andy will mention Rose, and ask what it was like to lose her, but that doesn't happen. Maybe they're going to try and pretend she was never part of the band. But how could they do that? There she is, on our original video, and on our band page.
That page hasn't changed at all. We don't know what to say on it now. Jodie emails someone at Interface for advice, but they never get back to her.
Meanwhile, we get several invitations a week to do gigs and parties all over Somerset. We can't do them, because now we're a trio and people are expecting a quartet. So we say we're busy rehearsing. The team at Interface have sent us a video â performed with professional dancers â of the song they'd like us to do for our performance. It's an old number by Nancy Sinatra called âThese Boots Are Made For Walkin', and the wardrobe director thinks it will provide a great opportunity to showcase our legs.
We rehearse together, over and over, in Jodie's room, to
get the song right and perfect the routine. The choreography is easy now that it's the three of us â just as I thought. Jodie and Nell enjoy dancing almost as much as I do. But vocally, we sound scratchy and light. At least, I think we do. Andy told us not to worry. He says it's amazing what they can do these days with auto-tuners and post-production. But I miss the warm, smoky tones of Rose.
She still won't talk to me, or see me after school. It's like a permanent, dull, physical ache. Her spare guitar â the one she keeps in my room â sits there in the corner, reproaching me. Several of my eyeshadow palettes are really hers, and she has a lot of my bracelets and books. I don't know what to do with her stuff. We're like some married couple splitting up.
And I still don't understand it, not really. I get her being angry with me, of course I do, but this is worse than anger â it's deeper. I've apologised by phone, text and email, written her a letter and sent her a card. Still nothing. I don't know what else to do.
It's so bad that I can't sleep. Every time I try, I find those fifteen minutes running through my head. Not the first, golden fifteen, when we wrote the song, but the second, black fifteen, when I talked myself into
asking if it was OK if we temporarily dumped her
. Which is what I was effectively saying. The shocked looks on Nell and Jodie's faces. The countdown from Janet outside. All to please Roxanne Wills and a guy with baggy jeans and TV teeth, who I've never heard of. The sheer stupidity of it all.
With a week to go, I drag myself out of bed in the middle of the night, wrap a coat around me over my pyjamas, slip into my wellies and let myself out of the
cottage as quietly as I can, so as not to wake Mum. I use my phone as torchlight. According to the screen, it's 12.45 a.m. This may not be my best idea ever, but I simply have to talk to Rose. I walk down the lane and up the path to her house, then round the side till I'm just below her bedroom window.
âRose! Rose!'
It's hard to shout and whisper at the same time, but I do the best I can. Nobody in the house seems to stir, but one of her granny's dogs comes to the side door and plants her paws on the pane in the middle, staring at me. She's a rescued greyhound called Leila, who knows me well. I go over quickly, to reassure her it's me, and she looks a bit surprised, but ambles off back to her bed by the Aga.
âRose!
Rose!
'
Nothing. I search round the house and farmyard for something to catch her attention: gravel, small pebbles . . . anything that I could throw at her window without breaking it. In the dark, though, I can't find a thing. I send her a text, telling her I'm outside, but I'm convinced she'll have turned her phone off, or be too fast asleep to hear it.
To my amazement, I hear the sound of creaking wood and rattling glass. Looking up, I see her raising the sash window and staring out, her red-gold hair hanging loosely round her face.
âWhat on
earth
are you doing here?'
âI had to see you!'
âYou see me at school.'
âYou never talk to me.'
She looks angry, surprised, frustrated. She rolls her eyes.
âStay there. I'm coming down.'
Two minutes later, she pulls the bolt on the side door and lets me into the kitchen. Leila raises her head from her dog bed for a moment, then goes back to sleep. Rose stands in her dressing gown and bare feet, hands in pockets, watching me.
âSo?'
âI need to know,' I say, searching for the words.
âKnow what?'
âWhy sorry isn't enough. I've said it so many times. I'm sorry, Rose. It's not the same without you. Please come back.'
âI can't.' She gives me a pointed look.
âYou can,' I plead. âI mean . . . not for the TV thing. Oh God. Linus is crazy, but it's only for one performance. Two at the most. After that. Please.'
I stand in the middle of the kitchen floor, with my begging face on. Rose doesn't look quite so cold and distant as before, but she doesn't ask me to sit down. She doesn't break into a gentle smile and forgive me. Something has changed. Something is broken.
âLinus was only pointing out the obvious,' she says. âI don't fit.'
âBut you do. We don't have to do the dancing. That's not why we got together.'
âIt's not about the dancing,' she says, shaking her head at me, like she's talking to a child.
âWe don't have to do big gigs. Not after this, anyway. Not if you don't want to.'
She shakes her head. âIt's not that, either.'
âI don't get it,' I moan. âYou're brilliant, Rose. Better than you know.'
âNo,' she says, her lip wobbling. âYou
don't
get it, Sash.
There were only two people who ever made me feel special. And one of them . . .' She bites her lip. âOne of them . . . whatever.' She can't talk properly. Tears come. She fights her way through them. âAnd then there was you.'
We stand there, facing each other, in the cold, moonlit room. Our tears are silent. The only sounds are her gran's old kitchen clock ticking and Leila snoring in her sleep.
âI'm so sorry.'
âI know,' Rose says sadly. âAnd I know you didn't mean it.' She moves forward to give me a quick hug, then pushes me back. âIt's good this way. I need to work out . . . some things.'
âWhat things?'
âWhat I want. Who I am. I meant it when I said I didn't want to jiggle or sing those tunes. I was kind of hiding in the band. This is good. Really.'
This is SO. NOT. GOOD.
This is terrible. I feel awful. I'm crying buckets. NOT. GOOD. SERIOUSLY.
âYou'd better get some sleep,' she adds. âYou'll need it for later.'
What she actually means is goodbye.
There is, however, just one tiny chink of hope. The day before we're due to leave, a plain white envelope is posted through our letterbox, with âS' written on the front. I open it and a piece of coloured paper flutters out. It's an odd shape â a bit like a leaf that's been partly eaten by a caterpillar. That's all there is.
I show it to Mum.
âWhat do you think this is?'
Mum holds it up to the light and turns it in her hands for a while.
âI couldn't be sure, but I'd have said it was a cut-out of a leotard. Does that mean anything?'
It feels like a thin ray of sunlight in a darkened cave.
Most people would have sent me an email. Only Rose would think of posting a seminal leotard.