Read I Came to Find a Girl Online

Authors: Jaq Hazell

I Came to Find a Girl

BOOK: I Came to Find a Girl
9.72Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
Contents

Title Page

One

Two

Three

Four

Five

Six

Seven

Eight

Nine

Ten

Eleven

Twelve

Thirteen

Fourteen

Fifteen

Sixteen

Seventeen

Eighteen

Nineteen

Twenty

Twenty-one

Twenty-two

Twenty-three

Twenty-four

Twenty-five

Twenty-six

Twenty-seven

Twenty-eight

Twenty-nine

Thirty

Thirty-one

Thirty-two

Thirty-three

Thirty-four

Thirty-five

Thirty-six

Thirty-seven

Thirty-eight

Thirty-nine

Forty

Forty-one

Forty-two

Forty-three

Forty-four

Forty-five

Forty-six

Acknowledgements

About the Author

I CAME TO FIND A GIRL

Jaq Hazell

Copyright © 2015 Jaq Hazell

All rights reserved.

One

I was happy to hear Flood was dead. I wasn’t as happy as I thought I’d be, but I was happy all the same. His demise was both painful and premature which was only fair and things were as they should be. Only it didn’t last, it couldn’t, because Flood stories sell newspapers.

The initial news reports and obituaries quickly dissipated to virtual Flood hysteria as art critics, columnists, and even business correspondents had their say and that’s when I thought,
enough.

You can take two or three hours or whatever it was, but you can’t take my life. I never wanted to be an artist’s model

never agreed to anything

I was young, stupid even, it hurts to admit that but that’s how it was. And now this, Flood’s video diaries or whatever it is.

I kick off the shoes Marcus Hedley had admired. That’s Marcus Hedley, art dealer, always in
Art Review
’s Power 100 list of movers and shakers in the international art world. “Stunning shoes – girls get to wear such wonderful footwear,” he said, and I just shrugged because it wasn’t my shoes that mattered.

I spread my toes; rubbed raw from walking too far, too fast in heels I’m not used to – and for what? Days before I’d told my flatmate Tamzin that Drake Gallery wanted to see me. “No way,” she said and she was right.

I sigh and reach for my bag. The DVD is on top with a red sticker saying ‘Limited edition’. While the black and white cover photograph shows a woman’s naked torso – model-thin and translucently pale with Celtic-style lettering like a tattoo round her navel. ‘The More I Search the Less I Find’ it says, and at the bottom: ‘The Jack Flood Video Diaries’.

I pick at the cellophane wrapping, my hands shaky.
Get a knife
. I cross the Kermit-green carpet to the kitchenette where our one sharp knife is half submerged in the greasy bowl.
Bloody Tamzin
. I knock on her door. “Tam, you there?”

The double duvet is plumped and smoothed with the Zippy toy her boyfriend bought resting between the pillows – funny how she makes her bed but never washes up.
We are not students any more.

I go to the desk in my room and sieve through my sketchbooks, pens and paints. I have a Stanley knife somewhere. A blunt Stanley knife, there beneath a folder marked ‘NEW IDEAS’. I force the blade downwards and slice into the cellophane that envelopes the DVD’s plastic casing.

Back in the living room, I insert the disc and press ‘play’. The blue-blank screen turns black: no copyright warning, no trailers for forthcoming releases. It’s not like an ordinary DVD. I should’ve known that. “Do watch this, if you can,” Marcus Hedley had said. “You’re an artist yourself, yes?” I nodded, and he said, “Well then, you’ll understand.”
 

Words in white typescript move across the screen: ‘The More I Search the Less I Find – The Jack Flood Video Diaries’. And in the bottom right hand corner, the date and place: ‘Thursday 26 May 2005, the Merchant’s House Hotel, Nottingham’.

Immediately, I burn up and have to change out of my interview clothes. I press ‘pause’ and glance up as legs pass the barred window – an old man in khakis with a skanky dog. No one notices me down here.
I like that
. My first London flat, down a curl of slimy, uneven steps. Too hot in summer, cold and dark all day in winter, but it’s private and the area’s not bad.

I rush down the corridor to my room where I lay my trousers and shirt on the bed. They don’t look so smart any more. They didn’t work. I pull on an old Santa Cruz surf T-shirt and shorts then head back to the TV. The disc resumes. I feel sick and clench my fists as I watch a figure emerge from the gloom of the low-lit room.

It’s Jack Flood, of course, and as he walks towards the camera my stomach tightens and I have to grip the edge of the sofa to force myself to stay and watch.

Jack Flood’s dark hair frames an intense, inscrutable expression. He’s dressed in a black shirt open to his navel – whippet thin, wasted even. And he’s in a hotel room, that hotel room, the one with the bronze satin bedspread and crystal chandelier amongst other empty trappings of a boutique hotel. To think I was so impressed by that place, by its look – its obvious statement of nowness.

Movement in the window above catches my eye – another pair of old, slow stranger’s legs, but no Tamzin.
When’s she due back?
I try to remember what shift she’s on but all I can recall is her wishing me luck. We had assumed Drake Gallery were interested in my work.
How stupid was that
.

Jack Flood looks directly at me. He’s contained within the box of the chunky old TV but still it makes me shaky to see him like that, looking out, blatantly staring. “I never stop looking,” he says. “Got to keep looking and seeing – it’s a lost art.” He walks round the hotel room as if he’s searching for something, then pauses and slowly turns to face the camera. “My name is Jack Flood and I am an artist.”

“Yeah, a fucking shit one,” I say, even though he won awards and made heaps of money, and still does.

What do I ever make? Call yourself an artist, Mia; you’re having a laugh
. I remember that day, the morning-after, when I arrived at college, in my studio space, took one look at the sketches pinned to my white boards and immediately pulled them down in a silent frenzy before seeking out the large black bin to dump them in.
But that was then and this is now, and still I’m getting nowhere fast.

“What is art? How can you tell? Is it all rubbish?” Jack Flood says to camera. “These questions will probably go unanswered but what I can provide is an insight into the life of an artist: where I find my inspiration, what motivates me, how I make art. What do artists do all day? Is it, as many suspect, a piece of piss?”

He retrieves a piece of paper from his pocket. “Rough guide to Nottingham – literally,” he says. “I asked the concierge, where’s best avoided? Forest Fields, St Ann’s, Mapperley, the Meadows – they may sound all right, but Forest Fields is the red light area and the Meadows and St Ann’s are notorious for gun crime – they’ve got territorial issues. It’s the drugs – it’s gang warfare. Then there’s the binge-drinking in the city centre – the fighting, the puking and fucking in alleyways.” At a side table piled with photographic equipment he selects a small camcorder, turns, and approaches the camera that’s filming.

I move back from the TV, to the furthest corner of the sofa, as if he could come out and get me.

The film cuts to Flood’s handheld camera as he films his exit route out of the suite and down a narrow corridor. He opens a fire door and makes his way down the hotel’s winding backstairs and through the circular reception – decorated in Schiaparelli-pink, paisley-print wallpaper. He spins round the revolving glass door and out onto the cobbled street.

Daylight: his camera does a 360-degree scan taking in the museum across the road, the pub next door and a nearby church.
It’s the Lace Market area – streets I know well, streets I loved until Flood ruined it all. Again, I force myself to unclench my fists in an attempt to feel less tense.

“Taxi!” Flood shouts in that assertive, arrogant way of his.

A white saloon car draws up alongside, and Flood points his camera lens through the open passenger window towards the driver – a youngish man with sandy hair and pitted skin. My stomach twists.
I recognise him
.

“I want to see Nottingham,” Flood says.

“Why you film?” The driver’s accent is deep and guttural – Eastern European.

“I film everything – a sort of cultural record, if you like. Are you free or what?”

The driver nods and Flood enters the cab’s spotless black vinyl interior.

“Show me the real Nottingham,” Flood says.

“I am not clear what you ask of me?”

“The real Nottingham – not the castle or the Robin Hood Experience – I want to see where people live. I have a shortlist.” Flood passes him a piece of paper.

The driver shakes his head. “These places – they are no good.”

Through the side window Flood films blue sky and the church’s honey-coloured stonework. An empty street – he cuts back to the cab’s interior with its black vinyl seats and the back of the cabbie’s sandy-coloured head. “I need a driver for a few hours,” he says. “I’m sure we can come to some sort of arrangement?”

The driver’s frown is visible in the rear-view mirror. “These places you want to go – there are shootings.”

“It’s hardly Jamaica.”

“A girl – she was killed after Goose Fair. She was I think thirteen, and a few months back a boy was shot in Radford. It is crazy place.”

Flood films the silent street. Sunlight on sandblasted stone contrasts with adjacent dark Georgian brickwork. The restored period buildings are immaculate and on the road pristine cobblestones remain intact.

“Drive me around; I’ll make it worth your while – an extra twenty, say.”

The driver looks in the rear-view mirror. “Okay. Where you want to go?”

Jack Flood consults his list. “Meadows, St Ann’s, Forest Fields – actually, my friend, let’s start in Forest Fields.”

The driver checks his mirrors and pulls out.

“Where you from?” Flood asks, as he films a blue, bejewelled elephant hanging from the rear-view mirror.

“Poland.”

“What’s your name?”

“Maciek.”

“Magic.” Flood laughs.

“To English it sound like magic, but say like
ma-check
.”

“You like art, Maciek?”

The driver shrugs. “Old paintings I can appreciate.”

The camera moves outwards shooting: shops, bars and restaurants as the cab loops round the one-way system and stops at traffic lights where Flood focuses on a couple of teenage girls with long, straightened hair and matching black and white polka dot skirts. As if he’s talking to himself Flood says, “It’s all art.”

Back at the suite, Flood takes a call. “Hello – yes – okay – okay, if I must. Tell him five minutes.” He changes into black jeans, a T-shirt, trainers and jacket, and from the bedside table he lifts a glossy white card that he reads aloud: “Now That You’ve Gone Were You Ever There?” He half-smiles and goes to a side table, where he selects a small, compact camcorder and exits.

Did he film everything?
A sickly feeling rises in my throat and I pause the disc, aware of what’s coming next.

The glossy white card was the invite to the private view for Flood’s show. ‘Now That You’ve Gone Were You Ever There?’ it said, with a close-up of a pubic hair like a question mark, and there was small print on the back that I read aloud to my housemates. “‘Future Factory is proud to present work that engages with the more pressing issues in contemporary society. As a result, some work in our programme may cause offence’ – that has to be worth a look, don’t you think?”

My housemates were sitting on the collapsed green sofa and two rest-home-type chairs in the living room of our three-storey Victorian terrace in Forest Fields, Nottingham. There were five of us back then, all students, and I was standing in the doorway, having rushed back, excited that I’d managed to secure enough invites for everyone.

But Tamzin rolled her eyes and Kelly groaned. I didn’t get it. This was just the sort of happening event I’d been looking for, but then perhaps I was more easily impressed than the others having come from ‘Bumblefuck’, as my friend back home calls it.

Stowe-on-Sea is a bland, sprawling suburb next to a pebbly stretch of grey water on the South Coast: one curry house, one amusement arcade, a couple of caffs left over from the Fifties and endless retirement flats with sea view. ‘Stowe’ actually means ‘place’, so it’s Place-on-Sea, like it may as well be Nothing-on-Sea. The sort of living hell you have to escape to such an extent that I dared not live while I was there. Boyfriends were out of the question. No one was going to get under my skin; nothing would bind me to that place. So, once I got out I needed to catch up. I’d missed out and that made me desperate for glamour and excitement and to have a good time. So it didn’t take much to impress me back then. Even so, we were all into art, apart from Slug who was the only non-art student among us, having filled the small, dark room no one wanted. (We’d had to advertise it on the Student Union notice board and Slug was the only respondent. I had wanted to hold out for someone more interesting, but it would have meant we’d incur more rent and none of us could afford that.)

BOOK: I Came to Find a Girl
9.72Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

La peste by Albert Camus
Code Noir by Marianne de Pierres
The Mermaid Collector by Erika Marks
Adrian Lessons by L.A. Rose
Certain Jeopardy by Jeff Struecker, Alton Gansky
MWF Seeking BFF by Rachel Bertsche
For Their Happiness by Jayton Young
Rust On the Razor by Mark Richard Zubro