Playing Out by Paul Magrs (free biff chip and kipper ebooks TXT) š
- Author: Paul Magrs
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At the moment, though, Iām still thinking about Andrewās dad, even though I donāt want to, but talking to him just then, just when the party was reminding us of the seventies and all, well, it seemed sort of right to me. It brought lots of it back in a flash. Mind, faces round here have changed. Even the ones that were here in the seventies, theyāve changed. Weāre all a good sight more haggard. Timeās been having its revenges and all our bairnsāthe bairns who in the seventies were in their polyester Incredible Hulk T-shirts and pigtails and played with Bionic Men and Sindiesātheyāre all grown up themselves now. And I mean, really, God knows what theyāre up to. They donāt tell you owt.
Thereās a lot of drink at my party. The whole night comes to me in snatches and bits I donāt recall. At one point Iām drinking out of a paper cup for some bloody reason, and Iām sitting on the stairs with that Peggy, Samās mam, and all I can think is, but I never bought any paper cups! The party, Peggyās saying, dead seriouslyāand weāre the best of mates by nowāthe party has run away on its own steam and we must be ready for anything to happen.
Peggy starts some long, daft story about a baby left in her care since last Christmas. She reckons it fell out of the sky in a shower of feathers, but sheās more pissed than I am and, quite honestly, Iām starting to think that everyone at my party is bloody daft or mad. And suddenly thereās Elsie tottering out of the downstairs toilet, pissed as a hatter and clutching a bottle of Pils.
āHee hee! Iāve got the Lord in me!ā she screams at us on the stairs and she looks frigginā manic.
Quick as a flash Peggy yells back, āAy, and Iāve had him in me anā all and he was crap!ā
We piss oursels laughing and Elsie doesnāt get it, which makes it funnier. She staggers down me hallway and falls flat on her face. We cackle a bit longer, waiting for her to get up. Which she doesnāt.
The next thing I remember sees us all sitting round Elsieās cooling corpse on my Redicut rug in the living room. Itās past midnight and the musicās off now. Like a bloody vigil. Some buggerās found me emergency candles and everyoneās sitting round Elsieās body, watching Tom stooped over her. For some reason Iām the only one talking.
āIf we have a power cut,ā Iām saying, āone of you buggers is gonna buy me new candies. If Iām caught short in a blackout . .
And then I look at Elsie, along with everyone else.
We all look shattered, in our party clothes. No one looks as white as Elsie. Sheās got an even dafter look on her face than usual.
āI wouldnāt give her the fuckinā kiss of life. Iād kiss me own arse first.ā
Yes, I know. Iām ashamed of it all now and all the lasses have reminded me of the horrible details. Mind, we can still have a laugh about it.
I can see everyone gasping and watching Tom rub Elsieās hands and breathe warm, foisty air into her face. Honestly, itās better than the Paul Daniels show and Elsieās that Debbie Magee, his tart.
Then sheās got a pale-blue glow all around her and she sits up like a fuckinā zombie.
Whey, I scream liked Iāve never screamed before.
That starts some of the other lasses off, who think Iāve seen something they havenāt seen. Janeās nearly hysterical by the time Elsie has coughed three times in a row and started to sing in a really high-pitched voice that Ken Dodd song, āHappinessā.
āHappiness. Happiness.
The greatest gift that I possess.
I thank the Lord that I possess the greatest gift and thatās happiness.ā
Then she passes out again and Tom cries out at the top of his lungs, āPraise the Lord!ā
No one round hereās that religious, so no one adds anything to that, only dirty Simon, Sheilaās husband, pipes up, āAre we all doing turns then? Cause weāve got wor karaoke tape we could bring round for yers, if yer like. Itās a fuckinā hoot.ā So they do and the partyās going on till dawn.
Joanne and Andrew haul me up to bed eventually, while itās all still going on. Through the floorboards I can hear Jane belting out āI Will Surviveā and then āAgadooā with Nesta and then she comes up with Fran to check on me and Iāve been sick on me dressing table.
Apparently, before I fell asleep, I was crying and saying that I wanted Ericāme bloody boss!āinside me again like he was when I was seventeen and he was twelve.
Iād never say that unless I was paralytic and I reckon I was because I never made it to the shop for work the next morning.
THE FURRIER THE BETTER
How was I to know she was married to the man who owned my lighthouse? Adele will never forgive me, but I had no choice. I was coerced. I was oppressed. But Adele wonāt listen to reason. She of all people should sympathise with a pure and simple case of oppression. But still she wonāt forgive me for doing what the wife of the man who owned my lighthouse made me do. After all, she neglected to tell me they were her parents.
I wouldnāt care, but it was all Adeleās fault in the first place. She made me go on Kilroy with her for moral support.
That began the sequence of events which culminated in the appearance of furry emerald crocodile skins on the bowed backs of every rich bitch in this country and beyond. Adele holds me responsible for all of it. Because of me she has even more high-street targets for her buckets of pigās blood.
But let me backtrack. Let me fill you in. I want to savour each fragment of my decline. At the time I was barely sensible. In my current penury
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