Fan (9 page)

Read Fan Online

Authors: Danny Rhodes

BOOK: Fan
9.63Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

You traced your fingers over these walls.

You ran through these fields.

You played in these parks.

You grazed your knees on these streets.

You laughed on these corners.

You wept on these benches.

You drank in these pubs.

You pissed in these alleyways.

A morning choked with rain and peeling bells. He went to breakfast then sat about the hotel, read the Sundays, only half interested, thinking about BJ, seeking out a report on a violent showdown between rival fans at the Lincoln v Rochdale game. But there was nothing. It was Division Two for fuck’s sake. Nobody in the nationals gave a shit.

By eleven he was lost in himself, aware only that he wasn’t checking out or heading back south, not yet. He requested another night instead.

‘You can have all week if you want,’ said the girl at the desk.

‘I might need it.’

‘I’ll book you in until Friday,’ she said. ‘If you want to check out at any time just let us know. A sort of daily arrangement.’

‘You’d do that?’

‘It’s a forty-room hotel and we’ve got twenty rooms empty,’ she said. ‘I think we can be flexible.’

He went back to his room, changed and headed into the old town, letting his legs carry him, spent an hour drifting around the market streets, the narrow lanes, before traipsing up the
hill in the direction of the estate. It didn’t take him long to wind up at the hulking new sports complex, the third-generation football pitch, the deserted car park, the soulless athletics stadium where Town played their games. He peered over the fence at the pitch, marooned as it was beyond an expanse of running track and run-off, shallow, partially covered terraces, a characterless concrete stand. It was meant to be better than the old place. It was cleaner, safer, up to scratch, but better? Was it fuck. A grand athletic stadium maybe, but it was no place for a football match. And this is what they’d discovered, the diehards from Tamworth and Guiseley, Matlock and Whitley Bay, a bland, windswept nothingness. A place to visit, tick off and instantly forget.

Somewhere in the distance, the sounds of men shouting, the dull thud of a football. He climbed a grass embankment, stumbled upon the remaining grass pitch, sandwiched between so much concrete and tarmac, a tragic encounter, the pitch cut and bruised by wet autumn, tufts of longer grass in midfield, twenty-two blokes huffing and puffing, a couple of hardy spectators, a boy on his bicycle, an old guy with a dog, one team decked out in odd shorts and socks, manager-less (the bare eleven), rudderless, all at sea. They conceded two goals while he stood there. He watched them asking helpless questions of each other.

The ball bobbled and deviated its way across the surface. The nets had seen better days. The goal area was a sea of mud, the goalposts a multicoloured array of torn-off tape, the remnants of a thousand Saturday afternoons and Sunday mornings. The referee stood in the centre of the pitch watching it all take place around him, good for twenty quid plus expenses, good for nothing except keeping things in order, his face the picture of boredom. Beyond him, the changing rooms, daubed in graffiti, the windows covered in metal sheeting, some of the brickwork chipped away, a couple of beer bottles by the door, a third smashed into pieces. One of the corner flags was bent
at the middle, lopsided, falling over. When a player tried to pull it loose to take a corner, the ref ordered him to put it back. There was a scrape of dog shit near the touchline where Finchy was standing, turds scattered by his feet, out of play, out of mind.

Beyond the bedlam, beyond the mounds of earth, the metal fencing that separated the sports complex from everything else. He could see the empty 3G pitch more clearly from here, pristine in its unemployment, silent, dew on the fibres, a million tiny water drops. Another cheer erupted from the side that were leading. The losing keeper bellowed his disgust, hammered the ball back towards half-way. One of his teammates threatened to throw the towel in, headed for the touchline, telling his keeper to fuck off. The ref stepped in, pointed to his pocket, pointed at the sad excuse for a changing facility. The bloke thought better of it. He pulled his socks up, surrendering authority to the man in black, went steaming into the next tackle that came his way, missed ball and man, ended up on his arse in the smear of dog shit, his actions punctuated by cries from both sides, cries of ‘well in’ and ‘calm down’. The leading team were popping the ball about now, loving their morning, the losers a tragic, shambolic metaphor for the state of the game and England’s sad exit from Euro 2004.

As he was leaving he heard the old bloke talking to the manager of the decent lot. He was pointing at the shit on the player’s back and at the 3G pitch through the fence.

‘You’re fucking joking,’ he said. ‘At £100 a pop? We get the grass for half that.’

‘Aye, and the shit to go with it,’ said the old bloke.

They both laughed. The bloke with the shit up his back had stopped somewhere near the centre spot. The ref headed his way and blew his whistle. Twenty-one blokes turned to look at the guy with shit up his back but no fucker went over to help him remove it.

Finchy stuffed his hands in his pockets, remembering this
place at 3 p.m. on a Saturday when he was a boy, a wide open space, no sports centre, no athletic stadium, no fucking indoor bowling club, just six pitches laid out in a grid and six matches, the spaces between each pitch lined with people, him and the lads playing football behind one of the goals, using the back of the net, winding up whichever keeper was occupying the goal, racing on to the pitch at half-time for five minutes of goalmouth action, looking at the players like they were fucking heroes. He could smell the embrocation oil, the well-spent sweat, the leather of his boots. All of this to the sound of a transistor radio that barked the scores from north and south, east and west, listening out for the Forest score, listening out for Liverpool, hearing that Paisley’s boys were behind, laughing about it, shuffling home for tea at 4.30 p.m., arriving in time to watch the vidiprinter on Grandstand, watching the scores come in, Liverpool winning now, Liverpool always fucking winning.

He wandered down the alley between the sports centre and the school, an alley formed by two twelve-foot-high metal security fences, each metal strut topped with a fuck-off spike. They might have been two prisons placed side by side, but they weren’t fucking prisons. They were anything but prisons.

He didn’t intend to linger outside the house he’d grown up in for any great lapse of time but he did. It took a kid on a bicycle shooting past him and telling him to ‘fuck off’ to drag him out of himself, drag him to the line of shops where he wrestled with visions of the old and the new. The hairdressers, once the launderette, where his mam earned a few quid each week. The co-op, swallower of the newsagents where he’d earned his pocket money as a paperboy. The squalid council flats above. The little car park.

He traipsed to the top of the street, on through the bollards into the jitty, made his way to the courts, feeling as conspicuous now as he’d felt when he’d first ventured beyond the threshold his parents administered when he was a child.

He could hear his mam’s words.

‘Go anywhere you like but don’t go there.’

It stuck tight for a while and then it loosened. Like everything. Of course it fucking did.

Fuck all had changed. There were still houses displaying the damage of a warzone where no war had been fought. There were still gateposts without gates, fence posts without fencing, windows without glass, kids without clothes, lawns without grass. More satellite dishes, more cars crammed into too few spaces, more dialects, more languages, too many to mention. So that had changed.

That and nothing else.

The deadland was harder to locate, much of it eaten up by concrete and metal. There were modern units, clean edges, neat lines.

And fences. There were fences.

Fences where there had been no fences.

Patches of the deadland. In the small unoccupied spaces the sprawl had missed. Remnants. And they responded when he stumbled upon them, spoke out to him in a quiet whisper, told him not to forget or forsake them

Not to let them be squeezed to nothing.

There was no fucking danger of that. To dispose of them was to dispose of himself.

In 1980 they were going to build.

Eight years old, trampling through the deadland, the place where the estate petered out and the great beyond began.

The place where everything reached a standstill.

Chewed-up fields.

The deadland in the height of summer. Rabbit runs through the scrub. Haphazard mounds of earth.

They were going to build.

An unintentional landscape. The ‘mud hills’, the industrial tyres, the canisters and the timber, the discarded carpets, the pallets, the tarpaulin-covered dens, the stink, the dirt, the fucking ferocious freedom of it all.

The
money dried up.

A dumping ground.

Pushing through the undergrowth. Dragging bits of wood. Dragging bits of carpet. Hammer and nails. Porno mags. Ciggies.

No, you can’t have any spends.

Crawling deep into the growth. In groups. In gangs. Days in the deadland. Dawn to dusk. The dry heat of summer. The old town baking in the dry heat of summer.

It doesn’t grow on effing trees.

The deadland.

Brown in the heat.

Worn through.

A deferred landscape.

Interrupted. Forgotten. Abandoned.

The whole fucking town and all of its people.

The money dried up.

He worked his way through the maze of alleys and cut-throughs towards the canal, worked his way down to the canal bank that was clotted with algae, all detritus and stink.

He felt his heart break.

Kids in the deadland. Traipsing through the dead growth to the canal. Scrambling and scrabbling at the bank, flirting with the dark water.

Children of the deadland.

‘An honest day’s work for an honest day’s pay,’ said Maggie.

But there were no fucking jobs.

He dropped in on his parents. The least he could do. The two of them pleased to see their eldest but the undercurrent always there. He was thirty-three years old. He’d been with Kelly a while now. There was still no sign of a wedding. There was still no sign of…

He refused them access, joined them for Sunday lunch pleasantries instead, for beef and Yorkshire pudding, for apple pie and custard, then he slipped away, promising a proper visit at Christmas, him and Kelly, for a few days, so things weren’t
such a rush, so his mam could get the house ready, so they could all sit down and have a good chat about everything.

His dad accompanied him to the garden gate.

‘I heard about your old mate,’ said his dad. ‘So did your mother, though she didn’t want me to mention it.’

‘That’s why I came up,’ he said. ‘It was meant to be a flying visit.’

He closed the gate behind him, stood there, his dad on one side, him on the other, the autumn wind buffeting the trees, his fingers on the cold iron, his dad’s fingers on the cold iron, drops of water shivering on the cold iron.

‘It’s about time you sorted yourself out,’ said his dad. Not a question. Never a question. ‘You’re thirty-three years old.’

He nodded.

‘I am,’ he said. ‘I am.’

 

When he was done with it all, when he was spent, he made his way back towards the hotel, breathing in the malt from the maltings, breathing in another clutch of memories, cutting through the tunnel under the railway, piss alley, into the town centre and on to the park where the river ambled, over the white bridge and towards the hotel, stopping off at The Lion to catch the Sunday game, eyes roving from face to face, seeking out familiarity, finding none, considering how it was possible to become so detached from a place that had raised and nurtured him at its bosom for so many years and yet so attached that he felt he could take just one unremarkable step backwards, wind up where he’d started and not even know the fucking difference.

And he called his place again, of course he fucking did. The phone rang.

And rang.

And rang.

He pictured it, crying out in the kitchen, yearning for a palm to clutch it.

It clicked to answerphone, to Kelly’s ghostly voice.

He didn’t bother to leave a message.

It was Lacoste and Ralph Lauren, Barbour and Burberry.

It was Lyle & Scott, Paul & Shark.

It was Fila and Benetton, Ellesse and Adidas.

It was Pringle and Patrick.

It was Nike.

It was all of these things.

King’s Cross.

Saturday, 5th December 1987.

Seventeen days.

The dead smell. Human fucking flesh. He catches scent of it the moment he steps off the train. Perhaps it’s in his head but he catches fucking scent of it all the same. It’s melded into the walls, into the charred metal and melted plastic. Two fucking weeks and it’s still there. One fucking cigarette. One discarded match. Piles of rubbish, rat hair, fluff, sweet wrappers. A wooden escalator, sixty years old. And tunnels, draughts from passing trains, tubes and shafts, solvent-based paint, a bastard blowtorch.

A funeral pyre. A cremation pit.

Choking black smoke.

Death by asphyxiation.

But the station’s open for business and here they are about their business, lads, taking the piss, looking out for colours, wearing their own in little ways, the tucked-away scarf, the subtle enamel badge, the East Midlands accent.

Forest till I die.

Underground, overground. Edgware Road. Earl’s Court. Parson’s Green. City to suburb. Concrete metropolis to leafy lane. SW19. A stone’s throw from the dog track. No sign of the fucking tennis. A right fair walk from the station, mind. No fucking crowd. No sign of a Div One ground or football match. Just a December day. No fucker about. It might as well be the fucking Simod Cup.

And there it is.

Plough Lane.

‘A shithole.’

‘Fucked if I’m coming here again.’

‘Where’s Bob’s bus when you need it?’

He’s seen this many people at Meadow Lane. And that on a Tuesday. A better atmosphere at the Lane as well. But here they are watching Forest trying to stroke the ball around whilst the Wombles lump it. Here are Carr and Rice shitting bricks on each wing, looking like kids against Sanchez and co. Here’s Fash the Bash bruising it out, giving Chettle an elbow, a knee, a fucking hard afternoon. Here’s Clough Jnr nervously twitching each time he receives the ball with his back to goal. Tackles come straight through him, raking studs, swinging fists, no fucking protection. Clough Snr motionless on the touchline. Only Psycho looks up for it, in his element, carrying the others. Not for the first time. The Forest end uninspired. Tail ends of half-engineered songs drift up and out over the back of the open terrace, disappear into the December air.

Plough fucking Lane. There are more exciting ploughing matches.

Half-time. Nil fucking nil. He can hear his dad chuckling in the kitchen, the radio droning away.

‘When have you been to a fucking ploughing competition?’ asks Jeff.

‘I dunno. When I was a kid, maybe.’

‘Sad bastard.’

‘At least we got outside. You and your fucking darts.’

‘Plenty of tits.’

‘When you were seven?’

‘I’ve always been a tit man, mate. Gaaahhhhhhhhhh.’

‘Fuck off, Jeff.’

Black Jack. Capable of fluctuation. Good to have on your side.

‘Plenty of tit in the Shovel last night.’

‘Don’t get started on your fucking barmaid stories.’

‘Nope. Donna. Barmaid’s best mate. Her bloke’s in the nick until New Year. Gagging for it.’

‘And you’re the man to supply it.’

‘If she wants it.’

‘Well, she won’t want it from you.’

‘Not what she was saying last night.’

‘What’s her bloke inside for?’

‘GBH.’

‘Ha ha. You fucking idiot. RIP Jeff-er-y.’

Laughter. Always laughter.

Some of them fuck off for burgers. The rest shuffle about on the terrace in the December gloom, flicking through the programme.

‘At least Courtney’s not reffing.’

‘Cunt.’

The second half no better than the first. Webb strolling about.

‘Do some work, you lazy bastard!’

Psycho flexing his muscles, puffing out his chest. Wilkinson up top, hands on hips.

Minutes tick by like hours. Stoppage after stoppage. The ball in the air. The ball in the stand. The ball lost in SW20.

A Wimbledon corner. An unchallenged header. One fucking nil to the Crazy Gang.

‘How much for this shit?’

A late equaliser. A 1–1 draw.

Forest we love you…

For better, for worse.

Even on days like this.

Even in places like this.

Back through the city, back through the blackened station. Stevenage. Peterborough. Lager from a can. All the way home. Geordie fans in the next carriage. Mad as fuck. Wanting to be like them.

‘With an N and an E and a Wubble U C…’

BJ in his element, lapping up the banter.

‘He’s not Black and his name’s not Jack…’

Their hometown, emerging out of the darkness.

‘Straight down the Bell?’

Fuck that. He’s knackered. It’s home for tea, to change, to do his hair, to get himself looking presentable. No wonder the other fuckers never pull. And he needs something inside him, something to soak up the beer. He isn’t like them. He can’t sink it like they can. It always comes up again.

He’s three pints behind when he gets into town but that’s alright. By half-eight he’s in the Hound, programme neatly folded in his back pocket.

A badge of honour. A validation.

Catching up with Lincoln and County and Portsmouth, sharing stories.

‘At least you cunts got a point.’

‘It was shit.’

‘Not as shit as 0–3. What a fucking shambles.’

‘Bury? Rather you than me, mate.’

At closing he shuffles home, worse for wear but not so bad, not really, munching on kebab and chips, keeping his place in line amongst the late-night revellers on the long road back, not wanting to overtake or be overtaken, not wanting to gain on anybody, not wanting to be gained upon.

Happy to be invisible.

Other books

Darwin's Paradox by Nina Munteanu
The Tree Where Man Was Born by Peter Matthiessen, Jane Goodall
Damaged by Lisa Scottoline
In Touch (Play On #1) by Cd Brennan
Homecoming Weekend by Curtis Bunn
Edie Investigates by Nick Harkaway
Passion's Law by Ruth Langan
Branded by Tilly Greene