Authors: Mia Castle
We ended up having to get a lift to the Zed with Dean which Dolores thought was completely tragic. (‘Omigod, we might as well be put in buggies and rolled up there by our mums,’ she said when I told her. ‘Okay, meet me there then,’ I said, ‘if you want to get the bus and then walk and get your hair damp and smell like a wet dog when Jazzy D comes to meet you.’ ‘It’s sum-mer; it won’t be raining,’ she retorted. Then she looked outside at the sky. “What time shall I come over?’ she added quickly. We settled on arriving at the Zed at 5.40pm - just late enough to be cool even with parental drop-offs, but not too late that we couldn’t establish a meeting with Jazzy D if he got back to me in time).
I thought having a lift with Dean was completely tragic, too, but for other reasons than it was very uncool. Although it really was uncool. But here are my reasons:
Just to prove how little parents’ opinions affected her, Dolores turned up at my house at 4.30 in what looked like her sports gear – tiny white shorts and an equally tiny and white tight top that made her legs look tanned and endless and her breasticular region look like a mountain range. ‘Too much?’ she said as I looked up her and down.
‘Too little,’ I said, nodding approvingly.
Her face fell. ‘Should I go and get changed?’
‘Don’t you dare.’
She then tried coaxing me into various fashion disasters that Mother Dearest had bought me over the last few months, holding them up one by one while I said ‘Nope,’ ‘Never’, ‘Hideous’, ‘Slutty – no,
not
in a good way’, ‘Are you joking,’ etc until she gave up and left me to it in my one pair of jeans, one decent t-shirt which I’d got at Madrigal Camp the previous summer and was festooned with medieval instruments (pictures of, I mean, not actual medieval instruments), and an old cardigan I’d found in the back of Mum’s wardrobe.
‘Let’
s go, Mother Dearest,’ I said to my mother as she, too, looked us up and down. She appeared a bit misty-eyed at the sight of me in the old cardy, but her eyes positively bulged when she saw Dolores.
‘Goodness! That’s a very …’ (Small? Tight? Flesh-exposing? Burlesque?) ‘… clean outfit, Dolores,’ she said quickly.
Dolores patted her white, glowing bottom proudly. ‘My mum uses that Disappear stuff like in the adverts.’
‘Disapprove, more like,’ I whispered, but thankfully Mum didn’t hear me as she did her best to shield Dolores from view as she clambered into the back of our small car. I didn’t want her suddenly offering to drop Dolores home while she changed into something more suitable …
Dean’s house, it turned out, was at the edge of the university campus. It was rambly and tumble-down, large and shambolic and more-or-less handsome, rather like Dean. It made our three-bed semi look really suburban.
So that’s the kind of house you get when you’re an academic. A scientist. I could visualise it already: me striding off across the university lawns to deliver
a lecture to eager young brains; Ferdy home-schooling the children with his brilliance and his attractive upper lip; long, summer afternoons on the rope swing in the garden, gazing into each other’s eyes having chemical reactions …
Suddenly it was all ruined by Aggie
appearing at the front door. She looked perfectly nice again. Jeans, like me, only tight-ish and faded. White top like Dolores, only loose enough to allow her to breathe. Lace-up biker boots, short jacket in a floral print that she might just have made herself. Perfectly bloody nice. I grimaced at her as we levered Dolores out of the back seat, but she obviously took my expression to mean ‘Check out what my friend is wearing’ and raised her eyebrows just a smidge, with faint sympathetic laughter in her green eyes.
‘Dolores, Aggie. Aggie, Dolores.’
‘Hiiiiiiii,’ they said to each other, fakely. Then, ‘So you’re a big fan, I hear,’ said Aggie with a grin.
‘Totally. Huge.’
Dolores giggled, and suddenly they were both swapping histories of their Double Vision affections and in particular their overwhelming passion for the divine Jazzy D.
‘He’d better be worth all the hype,’ I said to nobody in particular,
then added, ‘as he’s probably changed a bit from when we were at school,’ just to cover myself. But they weren’t listening anyway so I turned and stared at the distant uni buildings and flipped into my internal Oxbridge-versus-local-uni debate. Local uni was winning, unless Freddie preferred Cambridge, of course …
Dean interrupted my daydream. ‘Fancy yourself in there one day, Cat? Rachel tells me you’re quite the scientist.’
‘Maybe.’ For some reason, I suddenly felt all shy. Of Dean, for Dawkins’ sake!
Putting a hand on my shoulder, he swivelled me around until I was looking at a low glass structure that was much nearer to us than the older, more traditional university buildings. ‘That’s where my company has its lab. Rather less grand than the rest of the campus, but it meant we could still live on site and I could walk to work when … when Aggie needed me at home more.’
When his wife died.
That was what he didn’t say. When Aggie and he were left on their own and he needed to be home. Well, they weren’t the only ones who’d been left on their own, were they? I pulled my cardigan around me more tightly and decided to change the subject.
‘Oops! Five thirty. Won’t be there on time if we don’t leave now.’
‘That’s right! Dean, you did get the tickets okay, didn’t you?’ That was Mother Dearest.
Dean pointed to his shirt pocket where the top of one of those little folders that hold tickets was poking out beside a red pen, a green pen and a black pen. ‘Got them right here. Come on, girl
s, change over to my car.’
Mum blew me a kiss. ‘Have fun!’ she said. ‘Say hi to the Divine Jazzy Devaney for me. I’m sure I’d remember him if I saw him.’
I sure hoped I would.
‘I’ll collect you all when you text, okay?’
We all nodded. Having delivered the usual safety precautions, as well as a few more comments directed straight at Dolores like ‘go everywhere in pairs’, not that she noticed, Mum dipped back into the car and grabbed a carrier bag that I hadn’t noticed before.
‘I’ll put dinner on for when you’re back, Dean,’ she said, and then whisked into the house.
His house.
His rambly, tumbledown house.
As if was
her
house.
Yikes.
There was too much to accomplish during the evening to dwell on that for long, but it set off a few alarm bells, like – did she have a key for Dean’s? Did Dean have a key for our house? Was I going to come downstairs and find Dean in the kitchen? Even worse, was I going to go upstairs and find Dean in our bathroom? Or yuck yuck yuck yuck yuck, even worse, would I go upstairs and find …
Aggie
in our bathroom? It was all too hideous to ponder at this critical stage of my plotting.
So I concentrated on Jazzy D.
Dean dropped us as near to the main doors of the arena as he could get us, which was about a mile and a half away. ‘See, Aggie? This is why I suggested you didn’t drive yourselves here – there’d have been nowhere to park nearby.’
‘Yes, Daaaaaad,’ she said amiably in a tone so like the one I took with Mum that I did a double-take at her. She winked. Seriously. Winked at me in a “we’re in this together” sort of way.
‘This is where we’ll meet you afterwards,’ he was droning, averting his eyes from the sight of Dolores prising herself out of the car like a rabbit from a hat. Jessica Rabbit from a hat. Only in less clothes.
Aggie gave him a thumbs up while I wondered about that “we” thing for moment, and then decided that it would have to go on the list of “Things I will discuss with Mother Dearest when she and I are alone again, along with #1 What is going on with keys and making dinner at Dean’s?”
Anyway, it’s a good job we arrived when we did (my suggestion, might I add) and where we did (okay, Dean’s suggestion but where I would have said anyway) because the crowd waiting for Double Vision was freakin’ enormous. There were so many long legs and toned tummies on show that I feared for a moment that even Dolores might be overshadowed, but then I saw her flash a smile at the guy selling programmes and from the way he watched her walk away, I knew that we were home and dry.
‘That’s it, Dolores! Work those shorts,’ I muttered to her out of the side of my mouth.
To my surprise, Aggie (who I’d forgotten about, to be honest) suddenly giggled behind me. ‘They are very short shorts, aren’t they? I’m so jealous!’ she added in a totally non-jealous voice. ‘I’d never get away with those. Even if Dad would let me out of the house in them.’
‘Mum wouldn’t. She barely let Dolores out of the house. She’s really strict about clothes, and curfews, and … oh, you know, just about everything.
Bor
ing!’
This was another total lie, at which I seemed to be becoming rather expert, as Mum is pretty relaxed about most things and would probably quite like me to ever ask her about suitable clothes or to ever need to discuss curfews and so on, seeing as
I never leave the house. I like the house. Why go out?
So the subtext of this whole pile of boloney was: Mum’s awful. You’d hate her. Stay away. Keep Dean away too, while you’re at it. And don’t even think about getting keys and turning up in my bathroom.
Aggie gave me another of her cryptic glances and then we plunged into the flesh-fest after Dolores, who was somehow still managing to cut a swathe through the crowd even though it was 99% female. I reckon the Divvies (Double Vision fans) just knew their leader when they saw her. She who would be crowned Queen of the Divvies. She who would marry King Jazzy the Divine and fulfil all their dreams for them …
As
long as we got to meet Jazzy. Remember him? My matey mate mate old buddy from school? Oh, and super mega-star lead singer of the biggest band in the country and possibly the world. All at once I remembered why we were actually at the Zed.
And so did someone else.
‘I can’t believe we’re actually here, and we’re actually going to meet the Divine Jazzy D,’ squeaked Aggie, glowing happily as she held her programme above her head and shoved through the crowd beside Dolores. The two of them high-fived and squealed in unison.
‘Keep your voice down!’ I hissed. ‘You don’t want everyone knowing we’re going to meet Jason.’ I decided to use his real name to sound more, well, real. Like I really knew him. For the millionth time that day, I wondered if my letter had ever got to him.
Aggie nodded quickly. ‘Sorry. You’re absolutely right. So are we meeting him before,’ she said, under cover of the double-page spread of Jason and his pectoral muscles which could frankly give Dolores a run for her money, ‘or after the show?’
‘After,’ I said quickly. ‘Definitely after.’
As I wasn’t at all interested in hearing the “guys”, I’d already planned to spend the whole show tracking down Stephen Scowl or a door with stars on it, and finding out just where the “guys” would be after the event. Then I could be standing by with Dolores the Decoy, and Nerdy Ferdy/Freddie would be mine. I mean, Aggie could get to meet him and make her dreams come true …
So that’s what I did, after we’d spent forty five minutes squashed into each other and everyone else while we waited for the main doors to open at 6.30pm, and then the next
seventeen minutes climbing a million stairs like something out of Kung Fu Panda to find our seats, and then a total of fifty two minutes going back down them, finding the loos while Dolores re-did her lip-gloss, and then clambering back up them again. At 8pm the support band came on (can’t even remember their names, but felt very sorry for them as everyone just started doing Mexican waves and shouting “Double Vision” and “Jazz-eee, Jazz-eee, Jazz-eee” right over the top of all their songs), and then finally, FINALLY, at just after 9pm the lights all went dim and then flashed on again in a rainbow of laser beams, and the crowd went ballistic. Several small girls beside me started to cry. One of them was Dolores.