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BOOK: Carnforth's Creation
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Bridget had become breathless with relief. If he’d fallen out with Matthew already she wouldn’t have to say anything. Paul asked Roy whether Matthew had warned him about filming his parents.

‘What do you sodding think?’

Paul glanced at Bridget and frowned. ‘Wonder what he’s up to?’

Roy jabbed at him with his skewer. ‘I
bet
you do … He’s fucking me up. And if you give me any shit about not knowing … when you sure as hell told him to …’

‘Did Matty say Paul had told him to mess you around?’ Bridget’s voice came out thin and scratchy.

‘What if he did, or didn’t?’ snapped Roy.

‘Matthew couldn’t have,’ she cried. ‘His one aim is to make truthful films.’

‘So he gives Paul a chance to sucker twenty million people?’ Roy shook his head slowly. ‘I may not have your degrees, darlin’, but if I
see
you and Matty sittin’ in Paul’s pocket fumbling his wallet, I don’t make out I saw different.’

‘That’s a bloody lie,’ she whispered. Her cheeks were burning; her chest rigid. ‘If Matthew makes a film saying pop’s a cheap commercial swindle, he’ll do it because that’s what
he
thinks, and
not
because …’ She stopped, hardly remembering what she’d said, but knowing she’d gone far beyond anything she’d intended.

Roy’s face looked grey. ‘He thinks
that
?’

‘I … didn’t …’ she stuttered. ‘Didn’t …’

Before Roy could speak Paul leaned forward, and said calmly, ‘Better listen carefully, Roy. If you say a sodding word about what you’ve just bullied out of her, you’ll be looking for a new management.’

Roy slumped back in his chair and stared at the
tablecloth
. ‘Looks like he fooled me good enough to …’

‘Yes,’ breathed Paul.

‘Don’t you worry,’ Roy blustered. ‘Next time that camera rolls I’ll put it right.’

‘Put
what
right?’ Real ice in Paul’s voice.

After giving him a long expressionless stare, Paul changed the subject. Roy left before their coffee arrived. When he had gone, Paul apologised to Bridget. Hanging her head, she said, ‘A really good wife I am. Oh God, Paul, did Matty really tell him lies about you?’

Paul said gently, ‘Wouldn’t you say Roy ought to be grateful to me? There’s got to be
some
explanation.’

Afraid she was going to cry, Bridget got up, muttering about a class. Paul dropped some bank notes on the table and followed.

She was moving like a sleep-walker among the passers-by. As he came up, she turned to him hopelessly. ‘Why does he hate you so? Why, Paul?’ A woman with a heavy basket brushed against her, pushing her towards him. As her arms went round his shoulders, he looked down at her upturned face. ‘God knows,’ he murmured. Perhaps it was their difference in height (though he didn’t think so); but steadying herself, she seemed to pull down on him, as if suggesting a lowering of his head. Seconds after he had kissed her parted lips, Paul noticed Roy on the other side of the road, sitting beside Tony in the front of the Bentley. Determined to prevent Bridget seeing him too, Paul took her arm and walked on with her. Deciding not to mention their kiss, unless she did, he asked neutrally, ‘What did you decide about the picture?’

‘Please take it back,’ she begged, as if her life suddenly depended on it.

‘If that’s what you want.’

‘Yes, yes.’

He raised his free hand and let it drop. ‘All right.’

He watched her go, then rapidly retraced his steps. Roy got out of the car before Paul reached it.

‘Came back to say sorry, and all that … Didn’t mean ter …’

Paul walked past him and opened one of the rear doors.

‘I’d like to go to Wilton Crescent, Tony.’

Tony cast an enquiring eye in Roy’s direction. Paul said kindly. ‘Come on, Roy.’

‘At the double,’ he sighed, flopping into the front seat.

April; May; June. Early July now.

Waiting with his film crew opposite a fish and chip shop in a drab side-street (so typical that, unless knowing his
schedule
, Matthew might have supposed himself in any large industrial town in the country), the reality of Roy’s celebrity was no longer in doubt. Hoarse and shrill chants of ‘Rory Craig’, endlessly repeated, echoed around the Hippodrome. Given Rory’s record sales, Matthew was not really surprised by what he was hearing, yet because everything to date had taken place at several sanitized removes from Roy
himself
, he had nonetheless been caught off-balance by the frenzy of these opening days of the singer’s first nationwide tour.

So as not to attract attention, Matthew and his crew were awaiting Roy’s arrival in a hired van, innocent of all TV insignia. It was another indication of Roy’s (and Paul’s) success, that they were parked neither by the stage-door nor the main entrance of the massive Edwardian variety theatre, but outside a small service-door, normally used by catering staff on bingo nights. While fitfully participating in a
conversation
that had moved on from mortgages to motor racing, Matthew pondered anxiously.

In the past week he had lost all sense of what the film was
meant to be saying. Matthew’s desire to present Paul as an old-style romantic trying to foist a dying personality cult on to a modern consumer art form, had quickly bitten the dust. On reflection it had become wonderfully clear that poets, artists, and other doyens of elitist culture were crass amateurs of this cult in comparison with the smallest gods of democratic entertainment.

A nudge from the cameraman drew his attention to a new note of excitement rising above the steady hubbub reaching them from the far side of the Hippodrome.

Their gear prepared, the crew set-up rapidly while the high-pitched keening of a siren grew louder, accompanied by cries absurdly mimicking its rising and falling notes.

‘Board in,’ shrieked Matthew, as a policeman on a
motorbike
materialized between the
Lord
Palmerston
and the undertaker’s a hundred yards down the street. An eye-blink later the bonnet of a black Austin Princess swung into view, the rest of the car obscured by another police-outrider and twenty or thirty running girls. ‘I want you wide on this,’ Matthew whispered to the cameraman – though with the din bouncing off the shop-fronts there was no danger of his voice reaching the mike.

Another motorbike; another black car, containing the backing-group; a police car; and finally Paul, in what
must
be a hired white Jaguar. All this Matthew perceived in
fragments
, because, hurtling past him now, like magnetized particles of every shape and colour, were girls and more girls. Arms outstretched, feet drumming, mouths opened to their widest extent, they were pouring into the street not only from the direction of the cars, but from the front of the building too, as though sucked irresistibly into the vortex of a
whirlpool
. Bemused, Matthew saw the umbilical sync-lead,
connecting
cameraman and sound-recordist, part, while both surged towards the service-door, impelled by forces greater than duty to snatch, from the tide-race, blurred images of Roy’s floundering five yard dash to safety.

*

Matthew was filming in the large dressing room which Roy, big star or not, was obliged to share with his group. Out front a support band was playing for the half-hour till ‘Rory Craig’ was due on stage. Already Matthew sensed a
significant
change in Roy since he had interviewed him. Every trace of resentment had gone; and, though nervous, he exuded pure confidence. And indeed, when thousands
worshipped
an individual as a divine being, applauding his every utterance as revelation, making public worship of his voice and body, it would be strange were he to go on seeing himself as the slave of circumstance rather than its master.

Though four or five years younger than all other members of his group, who had played sessions for some of the biggest names in the business, Roy grinned broadly when asked how he got on with them.

‘They’re learning,’ he grunted, lolling in front of the mirror, while a girl in a pink leotard outlined his eyes. ‘Typical studio men … plenty of technique but no balls.’ He stroked the girl’s bottom. ‘It’s not like we’d played together three years in a tin-hut before making it.’

‘He’s got us taped,’ admitted a man with a droopy
moustache
and hair tied back in a pigtail. ‘Four jerks thrown together ’cos we can play.’

On the shelf under the mirror was a tin of Yardley’s shampoo, ‘for men’, to which some wit had added ‘and Rory’. A member of the group, who Matthew knew as ‘the drummer’, was leafing through a pile of fan letters just delivered to the theatre.

‘“Dearest Rory,”’ he read breathlessly, ‘“I had a
fantastic
dream last night. Your car was passing my house when you had a puncture, so you had to come in and phone the garage. We got talking and you weren’t at all the draggy big-shot star but …”’ He broke off and whistled. ‘You won’t believe this. “Before you went, you asked to use the lav and I remember telling my mum she was never to clean it out again.” You ought to piss in bottles, old son; we could sell ’em at five quid a slash.’

‘What about spunk? That’d be big money,’ suggested the
base guitarist, pulling on tight satin trousers.

‘Do you mind,’ said the girl in the leotard, as she
back-combed
Roy’s hair. ‘You won’t get
that
on the telly.’

‘This is the permissive society,’ Roy told her, fingering his gold-studded leather collar. ‘Strictly for the S-M birds,’ he said to camera. ‘Sado-masochistic, for those who can read or write.’ He stared into the mirror and frowned. ‘I gotta level with you about these guys. Their sound’s so damned solid I can lean on it … which means I can really let go … get intuitive, add a few bars, change this or that, and know they’ll be right behind me, not sticking to the arrangement. Wait tillya hear Len’s slide-work and violin bow on acoustic guitar … amazing.’

Len grinned as he flipped a pill on to his tongue. He was fair and balding with a humorous face. ‘That’s nice, Roy.’ He turned to the drummer. ‘How long till he’s sick of live gigging? Coupla months?’

Paul appeared in the doorway and leaned against the frame. ‘Just in case anyone’s wondering, that was a salt tablet Len took. He sweats a lot.’ The drummer returned to Len’s remarks.

‘The worst bit is the same old dopey questions … and every time you’ve got to answer like you’ve never heard the sods before. The journalists are as dumb as the punters; wouldn’t know a harmonic from a gin and tonic if you stuck it up their ass.’

‘Thasright,’ agreed Len, donning a floppy gold cap which hid his baldness. ‘You gotta mess around and create some day.’ He sat down next to Roy. ‘Thaswhy so many serious groups are building their own studios. Not
just
to get away from the musak in the lobbies, and the whole hamburger and heroin hassle of touring.’

Paul left the doorway and, keeping out of shot, got to where he could wink at Roy. The make-up girl stepped back to admire her work, and Roy laughed at Len, ‘Oh yeah, fame’s a hard trip … I mean that’s the smart thing to say if you’re coining it and screwing everything that moves. Keep still, darling,’ he warned the girl, who stuck out her tongue.
‘Well that’s crap, man,’ he shouted. ‘I can feel the
atmosphere
even in here. I can’t see ’em but I can
feel.
And when that curtain rises and I see those arms flailing like a forest of fucking windmills, I’ll get so tight inside, so damned electric, I could blow apart … like being God in a hurricane.’

Len shrugged. ‘
He
got bored when he’d made the world.’

Paul leaned on the back of Roy’s chair and stared at Len. ‘I guess it’s easier moaning about pulling in five hundred a week than quitting to make a masterpiece.’

Roy laughed, ‘“Got no freedom” has to be the softest cop-out there is, specially if you’ve got money in the bank.’

Len smiled. ‘Nice bit of HMV, Roy.’

‘What?’

‘His Master’s Voice, actually mate.’ He sucked in his cheeks. ‘That collar of yours reminds me of something.’ Len made a show of thinking. ‘The sort of choker millionaires stick on their poodles.’

Roy flicked off Len’s cap. ‘You oughta get a wig, Len. We’re not playing the old folks’ homes yet. Just ’cos Paul’s a promoter, doesn’t mean he’s gotta be wrong.’ He got up. ‘And while I’m on the subject, I’d like to say something to you lot pretending not to be here.’ He stabbed a finger in the direction of Matthew and his crew. ‘That time I wittered about being suckered by Paul, I was talking bullshit. Must’ve been the biggest fink in dreamland not to see how he’s got this game sassed.’ He moved closer to the camera ‘And
that
goes
in
the
film,
because if it doesn’t it’ll be lies. You got a roomful of people heard me say it. Okay, you can cut now.’ Matthew did not say anything, so the cameraman kept running. Roy stuck his face right up to the lens and
whispered
huskily, ‘Hie there, teenyboppers, you wanna get real close to me? Mmmmm … trouble is, I got a problem with …
bad
breath.
Really knocks you out. Wow!’ He turned away and said, ‘Everybody out … got to get myself together now.’

As Matthew was leaving, he saw Paul and Roy exchange confiding glances.

*

There had been bedlam in the auditorium ever since the last band left the stage and the roadies began setting up the amps and mikes for Roy’s group. Gemma had just come down from the bar in the circle lobby where she had been drinking with a couple of journalists.

At the back of the packed house she had a peculiar sense of
déjà
vu
– stewards pouncing on boys standing on their seats, girls squirming in foetal positions, nurses waiting. The excitement was genuine and growing, but she couldn’t help feeling something had changed in the past few years; as if, without knowing it, these kids were living-up to notions of what was expected now. They
knew
the ritual, which not long ago was being invented. In a business fuelled by change, it was as hard to follow upheavals as to make them.

When the curtain rose, and the boys started clapping, and the girls waved their arms like branches, Gemma suddenly felt better. The band kicked off with a light shuffling beat; restless, nervous, raising the tension until the moment when Roy bounded out from the wings and screeched, ‘Hiya! We’re gonna have a ball, right?’ And like a children’s panto, a great shriek of ‘Right!’ came blistering back. Roy walked no way she’d seen him walk before: right back on his heels, head thrown back; a kind of bouncy strutting in time with the beat. He stood still for a moment, then whipped the mike off its stand and slammed into the first line of
Getting
Clever.
And though screams were coming from all over the hall and the band was blasting like a jet, Roy was still getting across: the perfect blend of delinquency and effeminacy – enough of each to excite a teenage girl without threatening too much. Only now, not trying to listen, did Gemma realize what a performer he’d turned into. One moment hunched and remote, clutching the mike-stand; the next singing to
individual
girls, skipping to the edge of the stage, then dancing back teasingly.

Next a floating lyrical number; individual members of the band excelling themselves with variations; and Roy, very still at the centre of a fixed spot, singing with quiet clarity:

‘Going nowhere

Is no place to go to…

Give me one break, honey,

And I’ll do my best to show you

Somewhere you’d rather be,

Up in my dream-machine, riding a cloud with me …’

Plenty of sobbing when this one ended, and more when he wrapped himself round an old blues number, going down on his knees in cathartic agony before the end. Obviously he would lift them after this; but that didn’t spoil it; she admired the way he rode the change of mood as smoothly as an aircraft climbing.

Then a murderous solo on drums, and Roy stripped off his loose shirt. Underneath he was wearing the kind of clinging high-waisted trousers that mime artists wear. Gemma watched him loosen a thick jewelled belt, and for the first time wanted to laugh; at any rate till the band cracked into a pounding rhythm, faster and faster; a steam-train; lovers before orgasm; louder, louder, until Gemma almost relived
her
first rock ’n’ roll concert: the woof of the sound, the floor vibrating, the certainty that any moment the audience would either burst, or go with it … screaming, weeping, anything. Screams were rising around her; sharper, longer; explosions of release, like on the big-wheel, falling. Suddenly the drums relented and slowed. A pause; then Roy whined like a chain-saw,

‘Wanna hear about the little hitch-hiker?’

He lashed the air with his belt.

‘Wasn’t a guy I knew didn’t wanter spike ’er.’

Gemma hadn’t known how this would sound live; whether Roy could manage enough aggression with his
predominantly
pretty looks. But she had counted without the rawness he could inject, backed by the power of his band.

‘Little hitch-hiker …

Wore hot-pants;
were
they hot

Damn near showed evrathing she’d got …

I oughta know … talkin’ about the little
hitch-hiker
…’

Another swipe with the belt; this time cracking it on the floor.

‘Used ter act mean with me in the bar,

Said she didn’t ever go too far …

’cept with guys who played guitar …’

A swift glance back at the band.

‘Little hitch-hiker …’

And now he was really moving with his body; no pumping crotch thrusts at the audience, but a stomping victory march.

‘Shouldna hitched a ride in my truck,

Honey, wasn’t
that
some kinda …
luck
?’

Crack went the belt.

‘Wanna hear about the trucking rapist?

Vans and trucks are where it’s safest.

Tellin’ yer so … Oh, yes …’

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