Ecstasy (17 page)

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Authors: Irvine Welsh

BOOK: Ecstasy
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He stops in a bit and looks up. – Don’t worry, he says, – just one of these things.

– Oh, I ain’t worried, mate, I smile, handing him a twenty, for effort n all.

That ABC geezer is still giving it big licks with that ‘Show Me’. What are you gonna fucking show me, you cunt?

– You know, he says, – for a while I thought you were a cop.

– Ha ha ha … nah, mate, not me. The law’s bad news, but’s that all they are, innit. Me, well, I’m more what you might call a fucking catastrophe.

He looks at me for a bit, all puzzled like. He tries to smile, but the fear’s paralysed his queer face before I grab his scrawny neck and smash that sick boat-race against the dashboard. It bursts open and blood splatters all over the bleedin motor. I bash him again, and again, and again.

– YOU FUCKING QUEER-BEAST! I’M GONNA KNOCK YOUR FUCKING TEETH OUT! I’M GONNA MAKE YOUR MOUTH ALL NICE AND SOFT, JUST LIKE
A
NICE GIRL’S PRIVATES, THEN I’M GONNA GET A PROPER FUCKING SUCK!

I saw his face, the Millwall geezer. Lyonsy. Lyonsy the Lion, they call him. He’ll be out again soon. Everytime I brought the queer-beast’s head down he screamed, and everytime I brought it up he pleaded: – Please … I don’t want to die … I don’t want to die …

I was hard now. I pushed his head down on me and pumped and pumped, and he started gagging and puking, his blood and sick spilling over my bollocks and thighs …

– COME ON, YOU CUNT, FUCKING SHOW ME!

… much more blood than the Slag’s when I’m giving her one and she’s on the rag … but I’m coming now and all I can see is Samantha as I’m filling that queer face with spunk … this is for you, gel, this is for you, I’m thinking, but I realise that what I’m doing is shooting into the head of this bleeding monster, this thing …

– OOOOHHHH YOU FUCKING SICK LITTLE PANSY!

Then I pull his head up and watch the blood and spunk and sick trickle out of his burst face.

I should kill him. For what he’s bleedin well made me do, I should fucking well kill him.

– I’m gonna teach you a song, I tell him, switching off the car stereo. – All right? You don’t fucking well sing, you soppy little Yorkshire pudding, I’ll rip your fucking balls right off and stuff them down your throat, all right?

He nods, fucking wretched little pansy.

– I’m foreveah blowing bubbles … SING YOU CUNT!

He mumbles something through his burst mouth.

– Pretty bubbles in the ayyyahhh … they fly so high, nearly reach the sky, then like my dreams they fade and doiii … SING! … fortune’s always hiding, I’ve looked ev-ary-where, I’m forevah blowing bubbles, pretty bubbles in theee …

UNITED!

I fucking well screamed as I slammed my fist into that poof face. Then I opened the door and shoved him out into the park. – Gerrout
orf
it, you fucking horrible sick little monster! I shout as he lays there, fucking well out off it.

I drove off, then reversed alongside him. I felt like running him over, didn’t I. It ain’t him I’m after though. – Oi, queer face, tell your fucking old sick cunt of a boyfriend that he’s fucking next!

Samantha ain’t got no arms, ain’t got no mum or dad, was brought up in a fucking home, all because of some fucking rich old queer-beast. Well, I planned to sort all that right fucking out, didn’t I.

I get back to the flat and there’s a bleedin message on the fucking answerphone. It’s my mum, who never phones me. She sounds really shit up: – Come and see me straight away, son. Something awfay’s happened. Phone me as soon as you get in.

My old mum; never done nobody a bad turn, never in her life, and what’s she got to show for it? Nothing, that’s what. A queer-beast on the other hand, one that made all them kiddies freaks, the likes of them have got the bleedin lot. Then I’m thinking what could be wrong with my mum and I think about the old cunt, the drunken old fucker. If he’s hurt my mum, if he’s laid a finger on my old mother …

London, 1991

It had been three years. Three years and he was coming to see her at last. There had been the phone calls, but now she was actually going to
see
Andreas. The last time had been their one weekend in five years. One weekend since Berlin, when they’d butchered the Emmerich child together. Something snapped in her then, his taunting driving her into a frenzy of violence. She would have done anything for him. She did. The blood of the child, the bitter communion wine of their warped relationship.

The joke was that she had fantasised about keeping the baby. Them living in Berlin, a Tenazadrine couple, with a baby. She could have been one of the mothers in the Tiergarten in the lazy summer months. But he wanted the baby as a sacrifice, to prove her devotion to what they were trying to do.

When she killed the baby, part of her died with it. When she surveyed its small, broken, armless corpse, she realised that her life was also effectively over. She wondered if it had ever really started. She tried to remember times she had felt truly happy; they just seemed like embarrassingly small harbours of respite in a life that was a sea of torment. No, there was no chance of happiness, only opportunity for further revenge. Andreas kept saying that you had to get beyond the self, beyond the ego. Agents of change could not be happy.

Samantha had been in shock, almost catatonic herself for the best part of two years. When she came out of this trance, she found she didn’t love Andreas any more. Moreover, she couldn’t feel her capacity for love. She was going to see Andreas for the first time in three years, and the only person she could think about was Bruce Sturgess.

Now they’d found Sturgess. He was hers. Andreas, she chillingly acknowledged, she now had no feeling for. All she wanted was Sturgess. He was the last.

The other one, the one in the cottage in Wales, had been easy. He was unguarded. They had seen him in the lounge bar in the village. She had often thought that when she crawled through that window, she’d feel fear. But no, nothing. After that time in Germany, nothing.

Andreas came to the door. She noted dispassionately that his hair had thinned, but his face retained that youthful freshness. He wore steel-rimmed glasses.

– Samantha, he kissed her cheek. She froze.

– Hello, she said.

– Why so sad? he smiled.

She looked at him for a while. – I’m not sad, she said, – just tired. Then, without bitterness, she told him, – You know, you’ve taken away more of my life than the Tenazadrine crowd did. But I don’t hate you for it. It had to be that way. It’s the way I reacted to it all, it’s my nature. Some people can let go of pain, but not me. I want Sturgess. After him, I’ll achieve some kind of peace.

– There can be no peace as long as an economic system founded on exploitation …

– No, she raised a hand to silence him. – I can’t take on that responsibility, Andreas. There is no emotional connection. I can’t blame a system. People I can blame; I can’t abstract myself to the level of taking out my anger on a system.

– Which is precisely why you will remain a slave to that system.

– I don’t want to argue with you. I know why you’re here. Keep away from Sturgess. He’s mine.

– I’m afraid I cannot risk …

– I want first shot at the bastard.

– As you wish, Andreas said, rolling his eyes. – But I came tonight to talk about love. Tomorrow we plan, but tonight is for love, no?

– There is no love, Andreas, fuck off.

– So sad, he smiled, – Never mind! Tonight will be for drinking beer instead. Perhaps go to a club, yes? I have not had much time to catch up with all the acid house and techno stuff … I have taken the
Ecstasy
of course, but just in the house with Marlene, to be all loved on … or loved up, is it …

She froze, then, at the mention of the other name, at what it might mean. He confirmed it with a picture of a woman and two small children, a baby and an infant. The image was one of idyllic contentment. Samantha stared at the photograph, at the look of love and pride on Andreas’s face. She wondered what sort of expression her own father must have had when he saw her for the first time.

– No peace until the end of the system, eh, she laughed coldly. It was a harsh distant laugh, and it seemed to unnerve Andreas. She smiled contentedly. It was the first time she’d seen him uneasy in this way and she felt pleased that she had been the cause of it. – All those little limbs … she continued, intoxicated by her sense of power over him.

His claw snatched the picture from her. He scowled, – I am here, am I not? Am I enjoying the peace and contentment? No. Sturgess is here, and I am here, Samantha. Part of me is always here, always where he is. You see, I too cannot let go of the pain.

You Want Some?

When I get round to my old girl’s place the first person I notice is The Slag. – What’s she doin here? I ask.

– Don’t you talk like that, David! That’s the mother of your wee boy, bichrist, my old gel says.

– What’s happened? Where’s Gal?

– He got taken into the hospital, The Slag says, cigarette in her hand, blowing out that fucking sick smoke through her nose. – Meningitis. He’s going to be all right though, Dave, the doctor said so, didn’t he, Mum?

That fucking slag, calling
my
old mum Mum, like she was part of things here.

– Aye, we goat a wee fright, but he’s all right.

– Yeah, we was ever so worried, The Slag says.

I look at the fucking cow-faced slag, – Where abouts is he?

– Ward Eight of the London …

– If anything happens to him, it’s down to you! I snap, then I run over to her handbag on the table and pull out her fags. – You and this! This fucking snout in his fucking lungs all day every day! I crush the cigarette packet. – If I ever catch you smoking round my boy again, I’ll do to you what I did to that flaming packet of snout! You shouldn’t be here! You ain’t got no business here! You ain’t nothing to do with me no more, you understand!

I’m right out the fucking door and my old mum’s shouting on me to come back, but I’m off. I go round to the hospital, my heart racing. That fucking slag had to make him ill with her snout at this precise moment in time when I got things to do. When I get there, the little un’s asleep. He looks like an angel. They tell me he’s gonna be all right. I have to leave. I got a date.

I’m proper wound up when I get round to that fucking place. I’ve been watching them; I’ve seen them coming and going, but now I’ve got to go in for the first time.

It gives me the fucking creeps. I get a quick proposition from a beast already, who rolls his eyes and says something about a party in the toilets. I tell him where to fucking well get off. There’s only one I want, and he’s at the bar. Easily clocked: he’s the oldest cunt here. I’m over and sitting down beside him.

– A large brandy, he says to the barman.

– That’s a very distinguished accent you got there, I tell him.

He turns and looks at me with that queer-beast face: the mouth loose and rubbery, those dead, girlish eyes. It makes me feel proper sick n all, him looking me up and down, like I’m a piece of fucking meat.

– Let’s not talk about me. Let’s talk about you. Drink?

– Eh, yeah. Whisky please.

– So, I suppose I should ask if you come here often or something equally bland, he smiles.

Filthy fucking old cunt.

– First time, I say. – To tell ya the truth, I felt I wanted to for a while … I mean, I’m sorry talking to you like this, but I thought that as, well, as an older bloke, you might be a bit discreet. I’ve got a wife and a kid and I don’t want them to know I’ve been here … to a place like this … I mean …

He raises his sick, manicured hand as if to shut me up. – I think we have what our economist friends might term a mutual coincidence of wants.

– You what?

– I think we both want a bit of good sport, but in secret, with discretion assured.

– Yeah … discretion. That’s what I want. Good sport, yeah. That’ll do me fine.

– Let’s get out of this fucking pit, he snaps, – this place gives me the creeps.

I feel like saying to him, well, you shouldn’t be such a sick old
queer
-beast then, should ya, but I button it, and we leave. Samantha’ll be waiting, back at the yard, where I gave her the keys.

For a bit I thought that this thing, old sick trousers here, wasn’t into going back over to the motor yard at the East End, but it seemed to turn the diseased beast on, the thought of fucking well slumming it. Well, we’ll see how much it turns him on in a minute.

We take my motor, and while we drive in silence I’m looking at that wrinkled, tortoise head in the mirror; he reminds me of that Touche Turtle cunt from the cartoons; and I’m thinking about how Samantha’s using me and I’m acting like a big fucking soft blouse but it don’t matter cause when you feel about someone like I feel about her you’ll do anything, anyfuckingthing for them and that’s all there bleedin well is to it and I’m going to fucking send this thing to the next fucking world, to a hell for the sick and diseased minds …

The Yard

I’ve got ABC on the car stereo and I’m just getting into ‘All Of My Heart’ which makes me feel so sad when applied to my own sort of personal circumstances. I feel like crying like a girl and I can tell I’m giving off a poof-house vibe because the queer-beast is asking me:

– Is everything all right?

We’re at the yard. I stop the motor.

– Yeah … I mean … you been around a bit, mate. It’s just that I feel confused. Just cause you n I are like going to do it, like, it don’t mean that we don’t love our own now, does it …

The sick fruit puts a hand on my arm. – Don’t worry. You’re just nervous. C’mon, he says, getting out the car, – we’ve gone too far to turn back now.

He’s right n all. I get out and head for the lock-up. I undo the padlock and swing open the doors. I shut them behind us, then I lead him through the back towards the garage.

Samantha clicks the lights on, and I wrap my hand around this Touche Turtle cunt’s scrawny throat and smack the sick monster in the face with my nut. Glasgow kiss, the old man calls it. I push him to the ground and boot him in the bollocks.

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