Authors: Lucy Ivison
âWing
woman
,' Robin corrected.
âYeah, wingwoman. Or maybe she didn't even know it was a date thing.'
Robin frowned. âI'm not sure about that. That sounds a bit suspect. If you had a boyfriend, I don't think you'd go out with your mate and two other blokes, would you?'
âI don't know,' I said. âMaybe her boyfriend's just cool with that sort of thing. Maybe he's a model or something, and he doesn't need to worry about her going out with other blokes.'
âOr
maybe
,' said Robin, sitting up straight, his eyes twinkling, âshe's not that into him. And
that's
why she got all hot and bothered about meeting a twat like you in a bathroom at a party!'
I let this theory sink in for a moment. A huge grin spread
across my face, and I felt my hangover dissolving. I wished I'd spoken to Robin about this whole Hannah thing earlier; it had all got so twisted and confused being cooped up on its own inside my head. Apparently, a problem shared really was a problem halved.
âYou
might
be right,' I said, still grinning like a maniac. âBut whatever the case, she's still with this bloke. She told me so last night. Maybe it's just too big an obstacle.'
âNah,' said Robin. âThe bigger the obstacles, the more you're meant to be together, I reckon. Look at Ron and Hermione. Obstacles everywhere. But did Hermione give up on Ron when he was dating Lavender Brown? Did Ron give up on Hermione when she was knocking about with that Bulgarian Quidditch bloke? Did they let the pressure of tracking down the final few Horcruxes tear them apart? No. All the drama they went through made it all the more poignant when they finally got together.'
He noticed me grinning and checked himself.
âAt least ⦠I think that's what happened. That's what my sister said, anyway. I don't know.'
I laughed and grabbed the water bottle off him. âIt feels stupid thinking about girls and stuff when we've got bigger things to worry about.'
âWhat do you mean?' he said. âGlobal warming? Because I reckon that'll turn out all right. Fuss over nothing.'
âNo, I mean results. Uni. All that. I know I fucked up French.'
Robin groaned. âYou worry too much, Sam.'
Ben and Chris returned with doorstop-sized bacon sandwiches, and the four of us ate, drank and played Frisbee as the
afternoon sun beat down.
At about 6 p.m. we started getting ready to head out into the main field for the evening. My contact lenses were itching, so I went off to the toilets to take them out. I was slightly pissed off that, if I bumped into Hannah again, I'd be wearing my glasses, which â as Robin likes to point out â make me look like âa crap hipster'.
âI'll be back in a sec,' I yelled.
11
Hannah
I haven't seen a lot of willies. The list is:
1. My brother's (doesn't count).
2. Daniel Radcliffe's in
Equus
at the Gielgud Theatre (a long way away and not aimed at me specifically, so also doesn't count).
3. Freddie Clemence's at Alicia Miller's sixteenth birthday party. (I tossed him off. Well sort of. I had no idea what I was doing so I just watched him do it himself really and occasionally touched it a bit. It was embarrassing. Definitely counts but isn't exactly an impressive list for an eighteen-year-old who isn't a Christian or some sort of freak.)
Number four actual willy-sighting was at the festival. I saw a boy weeing into a plastic bottle.
Waiting in line for the toilets I wished I could wee like that too. Waiting forty-five minutes to do something that you can do on demand at home is pretty depressing. By the time I got to the front I was crossing my legs and in moderate pain.
I saw Sam before he saw me. He was trying to wash his glasses under a tap. When they were clean he tried to dry them on his jumper but it was muddy so just smeared them again. I didn't
know he wore glasses. He wasn't wearing them at Stella's house. Or at Westfield. In the end he put them on wet. And then just as I looked down, he saw me.
It seemed to take him ages to decide what to do. And then he waved. The glands underneath my ears felt weird, like when you eat sour Haribo. My hair was so greasy. I couldn't bear for him to see it up close so I put my hood up. I actually put my hood up like a rudeboy.
Walking through mud takes about ten times as long as normal walking. How many times can you awkwardly smile at someone as they make their way over?
âHey,' I said.
I thought he might lean in to kiss me, but he didn't, thank god.
âHey,' was all he said before a girl behind me tapped my shoulder.
âAre you waiting?' she asked. Which is a fucking stupid question when you've been standing in a line for longer than you do for Air at Alton Towers.
I nodded. And then I said to Sam, âJust a second.'
And walked to the portaloo and opened the door.
JUST. A. SECOND.
I don't know how that came out of my mouth or what I meant by it. I basically ordered him to wait. Like we were friends. Like I had something to say to him. Like when I'm telling my mum something and am texting at the same time. I just sat on the weird metal toilet with blue liquid in that stank and had no toilet paper and freaked out. I wanted to text Stella and say I had met Toilet Boy by the
actual
toilets and that she had to come NOW.
But my phone had no reception.
The hood was ridiculous. Even rudeboys must take their hoods down to wee.
Sam was waiting by the taps when I came out. Whenever I am with boys I just end up saying the most boring Mum-ish things.
âAre your glasses OK?'
âYeah, I really hate being blind.'
âMy nan always says I shouldn't marry a man who wears brown suits, has facial hair or needs glasses.'
He laughed. I'd basically told him he was a genetic failure. What I meant was, âYou are so fit and I think you might be The One.'
I told him about how long I'd been waiting for the toilet and about the boy weeing in the bottle.
âWhat are you guys doing now?' he asked.
I felt put on the spot. I didn't actually know. I didn't have a cool plan to meet up with cool people like he probably did. We'd seen the acts. I guess we were just going to wander around and maybe dance a bit somewhere and then go back to the tent. We are a bit lame really.
My nan always says fortune favours the brave. But I didn't do the next thing out of courage. I did it so I didn't have to share him with anyone else. âI've kind of lost the others.'
âOh shit, that sucks.'
âHave you got reception?'
âNo.'
âMe neither.'
I felt like a lost child or something. I wondered if he felt
compelled to stay with me. He probably wanted to get back to Yellow Hot Pants, who had impossibly perfect hair she didn't need to cover with a hood, and somehow wasn't splattered from head to toe with mud.
I wanted to tell him it was OK for him to leave. I knew exactly where the girls were. Grace had told me ten times before I left that they would be by the Innocent smoothie stand.
âDo you want to get some food?' he said.
I nodded and we wandered off. For a bit I triple-checked everything I said in my head first but then we just talked. Not like talking to a friend, but still talking. Still saying things you actually think. For a while we walked in silence and it wasn't that weird.
A man dressed all in yellow gave Sam a Happiness Token.
âHey man, get happy! Here's a Happiness Token for you and your girl,' he said.
My stomach flipped because he had presumed we were together.
Sam didn't say, âShe's not my girl. My girl is currently taking cool Instagram pictures of her yellow hot pants because she is incredibly hot'. He just said, âI guess so, cheers', and gave me the token.
We walked to a field I had never been into and passed a tent with a sign outside that read,
Silent Disco
.
So we went in and took some headphones and danced around. Not mental and pilled-up and crazy like the other people in there, but sort of like kids at a wedding. We just bopped about. Sam didn't seem that bothered about being cool. At one point
this crazy old hippie started waltzing with him and he just went along with it.
Sam was awkward and gangly and sometimes he looked sort of anxious but he seemed really kind too. When we left there was a shoe on the ground and he picked it up and put it on a bench so the person who lost it might find it.
We walked further as the sun started to go down. We bought some cider and talked about what might happen if you went to the end of the universe and what you would fall into if you fell off the edge. And then we talked about what duvet covers we had when we little and how mums always buy cheap biscuits so they last longer.
We passed this opening where a pagan priestess was conducting non-legally binding marriage ceremonies and watched some crazy drunk people, mostly pissed best mates, pretend to get married and dance around runes.
I could hear the soundtrack to
Bugsy Malone
playing. I love
Bugsy
. I've got the limited edition DVD.
âI love Bugsy Malone.'
It came out of my mouth before I could stop it. I made a mental note to say something effortlessly cool later to make up for it.
We walked towards the tent â which had a sign saying âMAD HATTER'S TEA PARTY' hanging above the entrance â and Sam grabbed my hand and pulled me in. Inside there was a band playing and a woman in a slinky dress and feather boa was singing Nina Simone songs.
There were little round tables and people drinking out of tea cups. And a massive trunk that people were pulling clothes out
of and dressing up in. When I looked over at the dance floor everyone was in fancy dress. I pulled a red satin floor length ball gown out, took off my hoodie and pulled it on over my vest and shorts. My wellies stuck out of the bottom. I knew my bra was showing but it felt stupid to put my hoodie back on.
A girl trying on a tiara next me said, âYou look
amazing
in that dress.'
Sam nodded and smiled at me. âYeah, you do. Although, you've somehow managed to get mud on your
neck
. That's pretty impressive.'
I had mud everywhere. Sam had put on a bowler hat and a black suit that was far too big for him.
A man dressed as a white rabbit took our drinks orders. We both asked for gin and tonics and he served them to us from a teapot.
We danced around some more and a woman in seamed tights with victory rolls in her hair took a Polaroid picture of us.
We sat on velvet cushions and talked to the people around us while we drank our gin. Then we got up and tried to do the tango.
Finally, the tent closed so we changed back into our clothes and walked out into the night. People were starting to make their way back to their tents.
âWill Stella and the others be worried about you?'
âNah, we're cool about stuff like that.'
Grace had probably called the police and my mum, and the BBC for good measure.
Because of the mud and everyone trampling I hadn't sat down
outside since we got here. But outside the costume tent the grass was still intact.
Sitting down and looking around at how empty the field was made me realize how late it was.
âI feel like a cup of tea.'
âOr some hot Ribena.'
It was the first time either of us had brought up that night. The night he had pulled Stella. I wanted to deflect from the memory of me wanting him.
âWill your mates be worried?' I asked him.
âNah, they'll be fine.'
âOh, cool.'
He stared down at his feet.
âHow come your boyfriend couldn't make it?'
âErm ⦠He had to work.'
âThat sucks. Where does he work?'
âAt Morrisons.'
Even my fictional boyfriends are crap. Why didn't I say he was on a gap year? Or that he worked in a club?
We looked at the stars for a bit. If it was a film, he would have kissed me then. But if it was a film I would look like Yellow Hot Pants. And not invent fictitious shelf-stacking boyfriends.
Sam
I should probably have kissed her when we were lying under the stars. I kept thinking, âNow! Do it now!' But it just seemed
like such a cliché. Maybe girls are into clichés, though. Crap romantic comedies are full of them.
Of course, the main reason I didn't go in for the kiss was her boyfriend. I couldn't figure it out. If she was really with him, what was she doing lying in a field with me? Maybe Robin had been right.
I didn't feel like I needed to impress her. With Panda and Erin and Jo and pretty much everyone else I've ever fancied, I was always conscious of sounding like a dick. I couldn't allow a single sentence to leave my mouth without first running a mental X-ray scan on it, in case there was something stupid or uncool concealed inside.
It felt weird to think that me and Hannah had only really known each other for about seven hours. As we lay there I felt as comfortable with her as I do with Robin or Chris. More comfortable, actually.
Neither of us knew anything about astronomy so we took it in turns to make up constellation names. She pointed out âKim Kardashian's Bum'. I pointed out âSimon Cowell's Hair'.
My phone had run out of battery so I couldn't tell how long we stayed there, but by the time we finally stood up, the sun was rising.
We walked back towards our tents through the main field. It was pretty much deserted compared to the previous night â just a few barely conscious bodies on the ground, most of them still clutching cider bottles or long-expired spliffs.
We passed through a little encampment of unbearably twee stalls where dreadlocked students were flogging tarot cards and
hand-crafted wind chimes.