Read Boy Who Made It Rain Online
Authors: Brian Conaghan
Tags: #Romance, #Crime, #Young Adult, #Bullying, #knife, #Juvenile
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Brian Conaghan
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The Boy Who
Made it Rain
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The right of Brian Conaghan to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved
© Sparkling Books Ltd 2011
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organisations, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author
'
s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or places is entirely coincidental.
Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be copied electronically or otherwise, nor transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the publisher
.
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Cover image © istockphoto.com/Bodhi Hill
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BIC code: Â Â YFS Â
ISBN: Â Â
978-1-907230-37-0
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Edited by Anna Alessi.
First published in paperback in June 2011 under ISBN 978-1-907230-19-6Â
Brian Conaghan was born and raised in the Scottish town of Coatbridge. He is a graduate of Glasgow University, where he received, among other qualifications, a Master of Letters in Creative Writing. After living and working in Italy for five years he now teaches English in a Dublin Secondary School.
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Education is like a double-edged sword. It may be turned to dangerous uses if it is not properly handled.
Wu Ting-Fang
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For Orla
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A huge hug goes out to my friends and family. A special thanks to Anna Alessi and everyone at Sparkling Books for their support, encouragement and belief throughout this process and, of course, to all the school kids I have taught over the years, without whom this book would never have been written.
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We met when Clem first came to our school. It was two weeks into term. He was from somewhere down in the south of England. I don't know. I'd never heard of the place. Still haven't, even though he told me about it loads of times. Sounds rubbish wherever it is though. He had a funny accent, that's why everyone sort of fancied him. Including most of the
out
guys. Cora said he had that Robbie Williams thing going onâ¦all the guys wanted to be him and all the girls wanted toâ¦well, you know. He didn't say much at first; just did his work and kept his head down. Bore a minute.
Yes, he was smart. Dead smart. He'd read all these things that we couldn't even pronounce, all this foreign stuff. Get a life, right? But he wasn't a big-headed bragger or anything like that. I wasn't much of a reader so I thought I was well out of his league. Not that I really wanted to be in it in the first place. I usually find all that stuff dead boring. Reading and all that.
English was his thing though; he sat down the front like a pure teacher's pet. He was into challenging them all the time. The teachers. Having all these debates about dead dull stuff. Nonsense. Boreathon, right? I thought Miss Croal flirted with him from day one. She was one of those fresh-out-of-training- college teachers. And they're all the same. They come breezing in with heads full of Hollywood films and a desire to âmake a difference.' Airheads with no clue whatsoever. To tell you the truth it was kind of embarrassing watching her make an eejit out of herself. Revelling in thinking she was this kind of fountain of knowledge. Fountain of lavvy water more like! Honestly, Miss Croal was as bright as a blackout. No, I didn't take the mickey. Not my style, I'm a passive observer. Yes, some people did. But not bullying or intimidation, or anything like that. Well, it's a bit of a red neck, but my friend Cora used to say
Miss Croal's gagging for her hole
when she started flirting and flicking the eyes to all the guys. Once she actually said it to her face, but in rhyming slang.
She said, erm,
gantin for your Nat King, Miss?
Croal would never have guessed what it meant. She was probably from the posh part of town. The West End or something.
She was like that, Cora, real brash, in your face stuff. But she was a howl.
Yes, he was different from the other guys and not just because he was clever, or good-looking. Well, he wasn't good-looking in a conventional sense, but he could've definitely been one of those
Benetton
models. You know, the ones who are borderline ugly. That's what Cora thought anyway. There were loads of girls who thought he was like all Mr Mysterious, but to me he was more like Mr Weirdo. I said to Cora that there was something no right about him, like concealing a secret or something. Sometimes I'd catch him staring right at me, not in a freak-show way, more in a crying-out-for-a-friend way.
Was I popular? When I was in fifth-year all the fifth- and sixth-years kept asking me out. I kept telling them to blow town. Which is a way of saying go away. Or rather Cora did on my behalf. None of them did anything for me. I snogged a couple of them but nothing beyond that. Or enough to get the heart cartwheeling. I wouldn't have gone that far with the guys at my school. No way. So, yes you could say that I was popular, but I wasn't a bitch or anything like thatâ¦it wasn't like
The O.C.
it was real life, and we were into keeping it real.
Real
real not in the rap way. I had friends from all the groups. Apart from the NEDs that isâ¦Up here we call them NEDsâ¦means Non Educated Delinquents. Could be a lot worse I suppose, like TITsâ¦Total Idiot Thickos.
He was just differentâ¦wellâ¦becauseâ¦becauseâ¦well for a start, he had an accent. Anyone who had a different accent was automatically deemed to be cool. It's a sort of unwritten law in schools, isn't it? I mean if I went to an American school I'd be fighting them off with a big stick. He said words like girl and film without pronouncing the R or L properly. Gewl. It was kind of cute. And then there was his name. Most guys here are bogged down in all this I-want-to-be-Irish guff. Just because they were seventeenth generation Irish, or something like that, they all thought they were pure dead Irish. I mean, get a life! I blame their parents. Look around, everyone's called Liam, Keron, Conor, Sean, Niall or some other duff Irish name. It's really boring and predictable. So when we first heard the name Clem we thought it was pure hilarious. Then we realised that the name Clem made him sort of stand out from all the Irish wannabes. It was bomb how his name had that whole alliteration thing going on as well, Clem Curran. You know, C and C. That's one thing I can thank Miss Croal for. I'm not exactly like Shakespeare at English but she explained what alliteration was by using his name as an example, that's how it sunk in. When I'm an old woman, forty or fifty or something, and I hear the word
alliteration
I'll automatically say âClem Curran' in my head. âCool Clem Curran' I said to Cora. âClassy Cora and Cool Clem Curran cruising and kissing in a convertible coupe' she said back. I don't think kissing counts but. Suppose that was the start of it. No, it was that badge.
I had a
Bright Eyes
badge on my bag. Not the wee rabbits!
Bright Eyes
, the band. They were my favourites at that time. Not now. I still like them and all, but you know what young people are like. We change our favourite things from one week to the next. From one day to the next. Anyway, I was listening to loads of
Bright Eyes
stuff, couldn't get enough of them. So I went out and bought some badges for my bag. You know this fad with bags full of badges? I was tapping into it. If my mum put badges on her bags I'd be pure morto⦠Mortified.
Right, so me and Clem were partnered together in our Italian class to do some role-play stuff about tourists asking for directions in Rome, or somewhere like that. I mean, when will that ever come in handy? Don't get me started on language classes at our school. Anyway we were giving it all the âyou need to go straight down the road and turn left then take the first right and then you will see the Spanish Steps' jargon, all in Italian of course, when he clocks the
Bright Eyes
badge on my bag.
âI didn't know you were an emo chick', he said.
I said, âwho are you calling a flippin emu? And never call me a chick again.'
I didn't actually say the word flippin, did I?
Then when he told me what emo meant I felt like a total Paris. Then we had a conversation about music and school and students and teachers and just general angsty teenager car-crash stuff. He had some good chat. He told me where he was from, but it sounded too dull so we spoke about me. When I went home that night I was thinking about him loads and the next day I sort of fancied him.
I'd just then discovered
The Smiths.
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Oh my God! It's not as if I fancied Clem or anything. Rosie's a pure liar if she said that. I can't believe people would even think that. That's a pure riot. We spoke about him:
A. Coz he was new to the school
and
B. Coz that's what we do when chatting about the guys.
All girls do that. You should hear what they say about us, by the way. Someone put it around that I gave this wee third-year a five-ten-double-ten after the third-year discoâ¦A hand jiveâ¦you know, pulled him off. Then I heard all these wee third-years whispering to each other in the corridor. So I went to the guy with the motor gub and said that I'd boot his nose through his ear if he didn't say it was a load of crap. Let's say he quickly took it all back. I mean, why would I turn up at a third-year disco in the first place? I'm not into jigging away to
The Jonas Brothers
thank you very much. What I'm saying is don't believe everything you hear in here that's all. All it takes is one text message and the next thing you're the biggest slut in the whole school. Sometimes I wish I could go back to the olden days when they didn't have mobiles. My mum still talks about those days. Can you imagine it but? You'd be pure Billy No Mates.
Actually Rosie knew that I sort of fancied Conor Duffy. Even though he was into like football and all that male bonding crap, which is way uncool. I still liked him. Away from his pals he was actually okay. I could just about stomach all that
hail! hail! the Celts are here
drivel but there's no way I could've put up with all that we're-from-the-hood mince. Yeah right, in Glasgow? And you should hear the way they talk, as if they're from the manky part of town, with that pure cartoon Glasgow accent. It's totally put on coz I've heard the way some of them talk to their mums, and it's a billion miles from what comes out their traps in school. But I definitely drew the line at all the hip-hop singing and references. I mean have you heard
50Cent
and
JayZ
done in a Scottish accent? Sounds like an idiot with a speech impediment. I still liked him though.
It's like one of those guiltyâ¦thingymajigsâ¦pleasures, that's right. A guilty pleasure. Rosie said he was a bit of a tosser, so I tried not to like him. No, I don't always do what Rosie tells me to do. You listen to your mates, don't you? I'm not hiding stuff here.
Clem?
Clem was okay, in a boring I'm-into-books-and-reading-all-the-time type of way. He had a funny name and a funny accent. Some girls are attracted to all that. They were all saying he was the spit of some guy from
The OC
 but I never watch
The OC
so I couldn't really say. Too much teeth for my liking. To me it was like listening to someone off
Eastenders
or
Hollyoaks.
That's the most erotic it gets hereâ¦No, I don't mean thatâ¦Different, that's allâ¦Exotic then. Erotic exotic same thing.
After about a week in school he had everyone eating out the palm of his hand. I called it the Robbie Williams effect. You know, all the guys want toâ¦how do you know? Anyway there were some girls, especially in the year below, who were slobbering whenever he passed by them in the corridor, like they were at some
JLS
music store gig. It was pathetic. Believe it or not Miss Croal was the worst though.
She was practically salivating every time he came into her English class. Even I was embarrassed for her. No, I never gave her a hard time over itâ¦well, maybe the odd wee comment here or thereâ¦nothing nasty.
Sometimes these new teachers need to be put in their place. It happens to them all. They're all full of innovation. It's so annoying. I mean, just give us a book and let us read it, or we'll pretend we're reading it. We don't have to examine what every blinking word means. I didn't even want to do English, it's not like I was going to do it as a career or anything like that. It's a boring head wreck. Worse than going to the school mass. I still look in the dictionary for swear words in English class to keep it exciting, that's how bad it is. Why do schools force everybody to do it? It doesn't make any sense. I say let all the nerds do it if they want and let the rest of us do extra classes on the subjects we enjoyâ¦I sort of wanted to be a vet, but I'm mince at Biology and I don't really like the sight of blood. But I do like animalsâ¦who knows, maybe I'll do a drama course or something, I don't know yet. My guidance teacher suggested beauty therapy, and I was like: Christ on a bike, Sir, I'm not
that
thick.