Read I Think I Love You Online
Authors: Allison Pearson
“That’s just it. He said, and I quote, ‘I’m certainly not going to reveal them to eight hundred fifty thousand people.’ ”
“Ooh, the meanie. And where did he get that number from, I’d like to know? Why aren’t they all reading this magazine?” Bill couldn’t tell whether Zelda was being serious. Everything was upbeat to her, even bad news. Especially bad news. When the end of the world came, she would announce it like a jingle for Tropicana.
“Anything about England?” she went on.
“Yes, he said he was enchanting. Sorry, that it was enchanting and he was enchanted.”
“Excellent. There’s half your piece written for you, practically. The home-grown interest.”
“Except he said exactly the same thing about Australia. And Germany. And he thanked the fans for their support.”
“Lovely. I do like it when stars are polite.”
“And someone asked him about the hysteria, you know, the trail of destruction he leaves wherever he goes. Not actual destruction, nobody dies, but the stuff we deal in, broken hearts and what have you.”
“And what did David say?”
“He said he hates being blasé about it, the hysterics, but it’s just there, it’s part of his life. And, what was it, hang on a sec …” Bill flipped pages again. “Yes, this is it: ‘I think eventually it’s going to pass on, as all things do.’ ” Bill closed the pad. “Quite the philosopher, our boy Dave.”
“Quite.” Zelda was unsettled, he could see. She gazed down at the blotter. Talk of passing on made her feel as if they were discussing
the deathbed of a loved one. Then she remembered something more cheering and looked up at Bill.
“And what about going to his hotel suite afterward, for a heart-to-heart? Just for our girls. Did that work out all right?”
Now it was Bill’s turn to hesitate. He swayed a touch, steadied his nerve and replied: “No dice, I’m afraid. They cocked up the timings. Couple of people had a quick shot and then they sent the rest of us away. I was livid, I can tell you. Kicked up a fuss, but by then he’d left the building, apparently. Last seen heading down Queensway in a Bentley, with a couple of convent girls hanging on to his exhaust.”
“Thank you for that, William. What a pity. Anyway”—Zelda rose from her desk—“we must use what we can. You’ve got enough to go on, haven’t you? You don’t have to make an awful lot up. The feeling of David is what we aim to convey, after all, the essence, and that should be easier now you’ve seen him close up. Am I right?”
“Completely.”
“It’s a funny thing to say, William, with your job being what it is, but …” Here she stretched out her arms, as though about to burst into song herself, and said, “Do try to tell the truth.”
“David
Cassidy
?” Ruth sat up in bed. “David Cassidy?”
“Well, as I say—”
“David
Cassidy
?” It was like someone paging his name at an airport. “You went to see David Cassidy? What are you, a twelve-year-old girl?”
She got up and walked to the basin, ran cold water into the tooth mug, and drank it down. Then she turned to face Bill. “David Cassidy?”
“That is his name, I admit.”
“Don’t get smart-arse with me, Bill. I mean, I know your job has a wide brief or whatever it’s called, you have to cover a load of stuff, but … David Cassidy?” Ruth made motions with her hands, which he could hardly see in the half-light.
They had woken up, with spring rain on the tin roof of next door’s garden shed, and, since they happened to be awake, made love. English to a fault, Bill thought as he lay there: sex not as mad urge, as a pulse of
something irrepressible and strong, but as something brought on by weather—bad weather, at that—to fill the time. On the other hand, to do it at three o’clock in the morning (that most mysterious of hours, when you normally woke, if you woke at all, to fret about having no money, or dying young) gave it a strange and suspended air, and Bill wondered if, come the morning, he would find it hard to remember, like a dream. On the other hand, that meant drifting back to sleep, and thus far there had been no drift; they had lain there, twined in each other, and talked of nothings, sweet or otherwise, and Bill had somehow convinced himself that now would be as good a moment as any to broach a delicate matter. That, he now saw, had been his first big mistake of the day, and it wasn’t yet dawn. Too early for an error, surely, even by his blundering standards.
“David Cassidy?”
“Look, love, as I said, it was a one-off. Normally, someone else handles all that stuff. You know me. I really only function when I’m working on things that I know about, you know, bands I really like.” He coughed, as if his breath couldn’t bear the sheer flow of lies that were tumbling out of him, in the wake of one small truth. “I mean, I was slated to do this Led Zeppelin thing, fantastic chance to talk to them, nothing to do with a show, so no hurry involved, just me and them sitting around.” Ruth was sitting on the end of the bed now, looking at him. She wore one of his T-shirts, the one with a burn on the hem. Some unlucky encounter with a joss stick, just before his final exams.
“And, and, and then this guy Scott, in the office? He comes up and says, do us a favor, Bill. I’ve got a doctor’s appointment that my girlfriend can’t know about, and it’s got to be today. Some medical bollocks. Probably about bollocks, actually.” Ruth sighed, and Bill hurried on: “Anyway, he says, will you go and sit in at a press conference for me, maybe a one-on-one? David Cassidy, the one all the girls like. Just take a few notes, bring them back here and I’ll work ’em up into something for the mag. Please please, and all that. So, being a sucker, I say yes, and he says he’ll switch with me one of these days. You know, take my place on the Stones tour bus for three days in Sweden. Which of course I’ll be more than happy to give up.” Bill paused for a laugh, which didn’t come. Ruth was quieter than the rain.
“So I go and, you know what? It’s actually quite interesting, in that way that, you know, it’s like a wildlife documentary. See the pop star in his natural habitat. You go into the press conference, and all those total weirdos are sitting there with their lists of questions. I mean, Ruth, you should see them. These people from, I don’t know, magazines called
Tune Up!
and
The Rock Files
and
Sha-La-La-Weekly
. Not just
NME
and
Melody Maker
, those blokes are relatively normal, but mags you’ve never heard of. And none of them smile, and none of them wash, and you just know they all go back home in the evenings and get stoned and listen to Kraftwerk. Honestly, I was like the most normal guy there. You’d have been proud of me.”
Ruth pulled up the sleeve of her T-shirt and scratched her shoulder. And she yawned.
“And everyone asks Cassidy the same old questions, what do you want to do next, what kind of sound were you trying to achieve in the new album, rhubarb rhubarb, and the poor guy, I mean the guy, just sits there and bats back these answers, and you can see how totally not into it he is. And then this woman with Carole King hair gets up and asks what he really hates about his life, which I thought was kind of daring, none of us men would ever ask a question like that. I mean, for one thing, we think it’s a bit rude to get that personal. And second, all of us just think, great life anyway, trillions of records, get your own jet, shag-o-rama, what’s to complain about? And David gives her the eye, and he says—”
“David? He’s David now? Where is this going, Bill?” He couldn’t tell whether Ruth was thoroughly angry, all the way through, or whether she was enjoying herself, relishing his humiliation for a laugh. Would she tell her girlfriends about it, over coffee? Would she ever go to bed with him again?
“Okay, you win,” he said. “Look, Ruth, I’m sorry, okay? I know you want me to spend every minute of every day writing about Pink Floyd or Fleetwood bloody Mac or answering the phone from Lennon, asking me to join him in a bed-in, but, come on, love …”
Bill was no good at anger. He lacked the skills for it, and the stamina, especially when his cause was weak. Deceit he could manage; envy, too, in his greener days, when other boys got off with other girls; sloth
he needed to work on, put in some effort there, being still too industrious by half; but wrath would never be his weapon. He wondered whether Cassidy got mad, raged at his entourage, slammed doors and smashed guitars. Not a chance. And what did he matter, anyway?
“Cup of tea?” said Bill. Thus had Englishmen, for the past two hundred years, gently sought to douse the flames of argument. When in doubt, when in a stew, when in disgrace with fortune and men’s eyes: put the kettle on.
“Bit early,” said Ruth, annoyed with herself for accepting the offer of peace, but dying for a cuppa.
“Well,” said Bill, chancing it, as he got up, “thirsty work and all that. Your fault for waking me up and demanding physical exercise.”
“Excuse me,” said Ruth, and threw a pillow at him, missing by half a room. Women could do everything, and soon enough they would, and good luck to them, about time they ran the place; but still, you had to say, with the best will—they couldn’t throw. Never could, never would. That was something for his sex to cling to, Bill thought.
He filled the kettle, which shared the same plug as Ruth’s stereo and hair dryer, and made tea. The milk in the small waxy carton had seen better days; he could feel the congealed lumps as he poured, but he fished them out with a spoon and stirred. Back in bed, Ruth clutched her mug with both hands and blew on the steam: another unfakeable mark of womankind. No man would ever use both hands to hold a cup of tea, unless he was one day’s march from the South Pole, with one chum dead in the snow, dogs all eaten and six fingers about to drop off. And even then he would look around the empty tent to check, in case anyone thought it was girly.
“Bill, can I just say?”
“Yes?”
“I love you and everything, but—no, listen. You’re funny and clever, cleverer than me in some weird way, although you know bugger all about Anglo-Saxon coinage. And I think that, whatever you say, deep down you have the makings of a romantic, though someone’s going to have to dig around for ages to get there. And Lord knows what they’ll find.”
“Coins.”
“Shut up, I’m talking.” Ruth put down her tea and looked at her boyfriend. The dawn sifting through the blind made the light in the room golden and granular. It settled on the naked Bill, delineating his shoulder, his arm and the curve of his buttocks. Exposed to the air, his cock, which had been slack and sleepy, began to stir, curious to see if there was more. Bill was lovely-looking, but he would never make a ladies’ man, Ruth thought with satisfaction. To be one of those you needed a wholly unironic sense of being male. Bill was armored in irony. And he had this radar that detected any incoming seriousness and shot it down before it came too close. If he ever stopped joking, if he ever took the armor off, she wasn’t quite sure what would be left. Some small part of Ruth, private even to herself, suspected that he didn’t really love her; but she was safe because he was far too polite to walk out. Bill’s everyday uniform was a leather jacket and flares, but she knew that underneath he was such a gentleman he might as well be wearing a cravat and a coat with tails. It was hereditary. His father, who worked for an insurance company after taking early retirement from the Royal Air Force, may not have read any of the poets that Bill loved, but he had the same nobility. The knowledge that Bill would never leave her, not unless he was asked politely but firmly, made Ruth feel powerful and sad at the same time.
“Go on,” he said, yawning and pulling the sheet over them. “You told me to shut up, then you stopped.”
“I was just thinking that the music thing actually means a lot to you. It may, and I’m guessing here, I think it may actually be the coins. You know, Jimi Hendrix may turn out to be your buried treasure. Your one true love. Which is fine by me, because he’s dead. And he burned all his guitars. Or if not him, then someone else. But. God, Bill, I hate to say it, but, David Cassidy.” She gave a heavy sigh, and her shoulders slumped.
“I know, I know. But it was only a one-off, for God’s sake.” Bill listened to himself, in some confusion. Christ, he sounded as if Ruth had caught him sleeping with a pop star, not writing down his words on a pad from WH Smith. “And besides …” This was his trump card, though it could go horribly wrong. He played it anyway. “He likes Jimi Hendrix.”
“Who does?”
“David. I mean Cassidy.”
“Really?” Ruth lifted her head and stared at him, curious despite herself. The ploy had worked. “How d’you know?”
“He told me. Actually, better than that, he showed me.”
“You mean you asked a question at the press thing?”
“No, later on, in his room.”
“You went to his room? His hotel room? What, did he book it for the afternoon, just the two of you?” Ruth had the grace to laugh at this. “Did he let you use the minibar afterward? I hope he bloody well paid.”
“Well, obviously I was bitterly disappointed that that didn’t happen,” said Bill. He took a sip of sweet tea, and felt himself waking up. “So what happened was, before your filthy little mind goes any further, is that they take basically a whole floor of this horrible place, and you all sit there in the anteroom of his suite—”
“Like groupies.”
“Exactly like groupies. And wearing no bras, either, like most of them. And you wait your turn, and every fifteen mins or so this guy comes out, sort of smoothie but a heavy, too, tie-and-jacket type, and he ushers you in. And you get your allotted time, and ask Cassidy which direction his music is going in, and how he likes England, and does he have any message for his fans. And then you get up and shake hands and leave.”
“But that’s not what happened with you.”
“That’s not what happened with me. There’s a bit of a break in the routine, for some reason. And then I hear music, of all things—”
“Music? From a pop star?”
“I know. The last thing you’d expect. So out comes the jacket guy and takes me in, then gives Cassidy the nod and slips to another room. And, Ruth, I swear to you, the kid is sitting there, on a sofa, got his guitar across his knees and he’s going …”