Authors: Tony Macaulay
I practised hard to enunciate my words properly, but in the end I had to accept that I would never be able to pronounce an âs' normally while wearing my brace. And so I had great difficulty with all the most important words in life, such as âSSchowaddywaddy', âsschex', âProtesschtantsschs' and âCatholicssch'.
This new handicap caused great upset in many different areas of my life. At home, my wee brother had great fun, repeatedly asking me the name of the spaceship in
Star Trek
. After my third attempt at â
SSchtarsschip Enterprissch
', I realised he was doing it on purpose.
At school, after our first performance of
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn
, I overheard our female Huck mimicking me to wee Thomas O'Hara. âHi Tom SSchawyer!' she said, before bursting into laughter. It was interesting that she never did this in front of me. Huck obviously didn't have the balls.
This was all very embarrassing, but when it started to affect my profession it was clearly becoming a much more serious problem. When collecting the paper money on a Friday night, for instance, I had great difficulty in communicating to Mrs Charlton with the Scottish accent who lived in No. 102 that she owed me £1.66. âI dinnae ken what yer saying, love,' she repeated after several vain attempts on my part to communicate the detail of her weekly papers bill. In the end, I had to write it down. It all seemed so inconvenient, and yet I knew that I would have to persist though pain and embarrassment, otherwise I would grow up to look like the undead.
Sharon Burgess of course didn't have to get a brace. Her teeth were perfect. They were white and straight and lovely, like Marie Osmond's. My sweetheart's pure teeth just made me want to kiss even more. Big Ruby at the caravan had taught me how to kiss properly in the sand dunes. It was a different type of kiss to any I had ever experienced before â nothing like the sort of kiss you would get from your granny at Christmas or from your Auntie Doris who was a lovely singer in Lambeg. No, this was real kissing. Big Ruby had said it was called a French kiss. I couldn't for the life of me understand the connection, because Big Ruby was from the Newtownards Road and had never even been to France. But she was very generous nonetheless, taking the chewing gum out of her mouth especially so as to show me how to use my tongue. She also told me that if you ran your fingers through the girl's hair when you kissed her, it meant you really loved her in your heart. My first real kiss with Big Ruby was pleasant enough, although it was slightly ruined when a cheeky breeze off the Irish Sea blew some sand in my mouth.
But I didn't fancy Big Ruby, so kissing her wasn't the real thing. It was a bit like learning how to score a goal in a football match on your big brother's Subbuteo set on the living-room floor, instead of scoring a real goal for Man United in the FA Cup Final at Wembley. My first real kiss had been with Sharon Burgess at the Westy Disco. I had persuaded my DJ dad to put on a slow song at just the right moment, after I had got Sharon up on the dance floor to do the Bump with me. As my father carefully faded the music into Donny Osmond, Sharon stayed up on the dance floor with me to slow dance to âPuppy Love'. My bad heart fluttered a little as she put her arms around me and we danced. I ran my fingers through her hair, so I did.
As Sharon closed her eyes and held me tight around the waist that first time, I hoped that she was thinking of me and not Donny. But these days, after the disturbing revelations of the jumble sale, my greatest fear was that it was actually my big brother she longed to embrace on the dance floor of the Westy Disco.
Chapter 17
Musical Distractions
B-A-Y,
B-A-Y,
B-A-Y-C-I-T-Y,
With a R-O-L-L-E-R-S â
Bay City Rollers are the best!
O
ur day had come, so it had. We were a gaggle of excited teenagers in high-waisted parallels assembled at our neighbourhood bus stop at the top of the Shankill. Together we were waiting for a black taxi to take us down the Road into the much-abused city centre, so as to see the Bay City Rollers concert in the Ulster Hall. Bedecked in tartan from the berets on our heads to the Doc Martens on our toes, we were chanting Rollers' classics non-stop. It was unreal, like a dream come true.
In the excitement of getting all our tartan regalia in place, we had missed the bus into town and the next one wasn't due for ages â if it wasn't hijacked in the meantime. As the only pacifist paperboy in West Belfast, I had certain moral difficulties with using an illegal black taxi instead of the bus, because the taxi money would go to the paramilitaries â but this was an emergency. I justified my actions on this occasion with the thought that once the taxi driver had taken out a percentage for petrol and cigarettes from my 10p fare, there probably wouldn't be enough left to buy a whole bomb. I had waited for this day for months, and nothing, not even being a blessed peacemaker, was going to stop me from getting to the Ulster Hall in time to see the Scottish superstars perform their greatest hits right there in front of me.
I have to admit that I had rushed my paper round that day. I had been careless with too many gates and had leapt over a number of fences and hedges that were not approved for jumping. Even the fear of disciplinary procedures from Oul' Mac could not hold me back on this occasion. Every second was vital, and so I had to cut corners. I had intentionally skipped the final crucial stage of fully pushing the newspapers into expectant homes. Half the houses on the street had newspapers hanging out of their letterboxes. The semi-posted
Belfast Telegraphs
looked all droopy and forlorn, like Petra's tail when she ran away up the street after you kicked her for trying to have sex with your leg like a boy dog.
All the gang was there. My big brother was the leader of the pack, in black parallels and with only a subtle hint of tartan in the lining of his black Harrington jacket. He was a fan, but he was determined not to express too much adoration of the Rollers, in case it made him sound homo â and he was careful not to overdo it with the tartan accessories. If any of us got too enthusiastic, he would command us to âWise a bap!' and we would dutifully obey.
If my big brother was the godfather of the gang, then Heather Mateer was the godmother. Heather was the most mature: she was sixteen, with breasts, and leaving school soon. She had feathered hair, done at His n' Hers beside the Shankill graveyard, and she was wearing a long tweed coat over her white parallels with a tartan stripe up the side. (The same ones that had ripped at Corrymeela and which her ma had sewn back together again.) Heather was wearing the tweed coat just in case she got overexcited, because she knew if her parallels split again and we saw her knickers once more, we would laugh our heads off and she would be scundered in front of the whole of the Ulster Hall. She was also sporting five tartan scarves tied together which she had wrapped around her neck and flung over her shoulder: she looked like a tartan girl Doctor Who.
Heather had a bad Belfast habit of starting every sentence with the word âlike' for no apparent reason.
âLike, when's this bloody black taxi comin'?' she asked.
âLike, I hope my ma sewed these parallels tight enough,' she fretted.
âLike, I can't wait to see that lovely Les McKeown in the flesh!' she drooled.
Most of us talked this way at times, but Heather did it in every sentence. I noticed that fewer people at BRA began their sentences with âlike', so to fit in there, I had successfully tried to reduce my usage of the word. Like, I didn't want to sound as if I came from up the Shankill or anything.
Heather Mateer's best friend, Lynn McQuiston with the buck teeth, was there too. Lynn was the biggest Bay City Rollers fan in the world. She had all their singles, and her bedroom wall was covered with so many Rollers posters that you couldn't even see the woodchip. Lynn was obsessed with the lead singer, Les McKeown. âI just love Les, so I do,' she kept repeating as she gazed at a card with a picture of her idol which she had got free from a bubble-gum pack. Lynn knew his birthday and his height and the colour of his eyes and his favourite animal and everything. She wanted us to go straight to the stage door at the back of the Ulster Hall, where, she dreamed, she would meet Les and their relationship would begin: they would get married, and she would go on tour with him if he didn't want to come and live in the Shankill because of the Troubles and all. At least Lynn had thought things through.
Titch McCracken was there at the bus stop too, of course. He was wearing an old pair of white parallels almost up to his knees which he had clearly grown out of â even though he hadn't grown very much at all. I thought they looked disturbingly tight around the region of his jimmy joe. âLike, them trousers must be cuttin' the willy off ye, wee lad!' said Heather Mateer sympathetically. Heather had a beautiful way with words.
Titch's mother must have put the said trousers in the wash with his purple jumper, because they were also slightly pink. âWhat are ye doing in pink parallels, ya wee fruit?' my big brother felt compelled to ask.
Titch also had a tartan scarf attached to his wrist, but as he had tied it round his smoking hand, he kept getting ash on his tartan, leading me to fear that his scarf would meet the same sad fate as his cindered paperbag in the telephone box. He was sharing drags of his cigarettes with Philip Ferris, who didn't deserve to be there at all, in my view. He had made no effort whatsoever: there was not so much as a splash of tartan on the brown duffle coat he was wearing. Even I knew a duffle coat was not appropriate attire for a rock concert! Philip was more interested in playing five-a-side football with the Boys' Brigade than anything remotely musical.
âLike, could you not have borrowed a tartan scarf for the night?' inquired Heather Mateer.
âBay City ballicks!' Philip grunted in response.
Irene Maxwell was there too, smothered in every tartan accessory she had ever seen in
Jackie
. This included a denim and tartan Donny Osmond style beret, purple parallels with tartan stripes and tartan waistband and tartan pocket flaps and tartan turn-ups, as well as tartan scarves attached to most of her limbs. Irene was also wearing an Eric Faulkner T-shirt and a host of badges proclaiming âI love Eric'. Her brazen infidelity to David Cassidy that day was shocking.
âI wonder if Big Jaunty will be there the night?' she asked, irritatingly.
âHe liked the Bay City Rollers before he moved to Bangor and he was lovely, so he was, and he looked like David Cassidy, so he did,' she gushed.
I had to tune her out or she would potentially spoil the whole evening.
The presence of Sharon Burgess, however, ensured that the evening could not be spoiled. She wore a brown tank top over a brown blouse with a big round brown collar, and brown parallels with a tartan stripe down the side. Sharon was a vision in brown. Of all the girls, her parallels went closest to her ankles, which only went to prove that she was the nicest girl there. She had got her mother to flick her brown hair like Farrah Fawcett-Majors especially for the occasion. She was lovely with her brown eyes, and she was my angel. She let me hold her hand at the bus stop without so much as a âwise up, wee lad!' My big brother was paying no attention to her thus far, and it seemed to me that Sharon was most interested in Eric Faulkner anyway.
As for me, I was wearing my best green parallels from John Frazer's, with Macaulay tartan stripes fresh from Princes Street in Edinburgh, professionally sewn down the sides on my mother's sewing machine. I was also wearing my best brown-and-cream striped tank top and my Harrington jacket. I splashed some extra Brut all over it to mask any residual whiff of boke from my traumatic trip to get my teeth out and tomato sauce from the Geordie Best sausages at the jumble sale.
At last the black taxi arrived at the bus stop, and we all crammed inside. The smell of Brut aftershave and Charlie perfume was overwhelming. (Charlie was like Brut for girls, except they didn't need to splash it all over.) The black-taxi driver was an Elvis fan with UVF tattoos and a beer belly. His glasses had a brown tint that went ever darker as the evening sun came out.
âAnd where are yousens goin'?' he asked.
âWe're goin' to see the Bay City Rollers at the Ulster Hall, and I just love Les, so I do,' answered Lynn McQuiston, oblivious to the intended irony of the question.
Ten minutes and dozens of choruses of âWe love you, Rollers' later we were down the Shankill Road and in the town. Once we had emerged from the black taxi, my big brother expressed his disgust that we boys had been joining in the chants of âWe love you, Rollers'. He gave us a brief lecture, explaining that boys should refrain from singing along with anything that referred to loving the Rollers, because boys shouldn't sing about loving other boys, or everyone would think we were âf**kin' fruits'. And so henceforth, we clapped or stamped our feet aggressively along to any mantras that used the word âlove' in appreciation of our heroes, and we contented ourselves with shouting âYo!' manfully every so often instead of joining in with the singing.
As we arrived in Bedford Street, we were greeted by the queue outside the Ulster Hall â a seething mass of tartan and parallels, singing:
Woody, Eric, Alan, Leslie and Derek â
We love you, Rollers
Rollers, we love you!
I had never seen such a large crowd on a Belfast street without the presence of petrol bombs. I was so enthralled that I joined in with the singing immediately â until my big brother kicked me in the shins and I remembered the Love Rule. The atmosphere was amazing.
We were about to join the end of the longest queue I had ever seen, when Lynn McQuiston reminded us of her plans to begin a relationship with Les McKeown at the stage door.
âLike, I don't even know where the stage door is,' said Heather.
âWise a bap!' said my big brother.
âBallicks!' said Philip Ferris, of course.
It was at this moment that my experience of the School of Music came in handy in a most unexpected way. I had played my violin in the back row of the second violins in the School of Music Orchestra concert in the Ulster Hall the previous year. It was such a big occasion that even Patrick Walsh had played in the orchestra that day, despite the fact that he generally said the Ulster Hall was just for Protestants. On the day itself, I had in fact nearly fallen off the stage, when I dropped my chin rest and one leg of my chair teetered perilously over the edge of the podium towards an audience that was heavy with gold jewelry and whispered âings'. Anyway, as a performing artiste, I had entered the Ulster Hall that day by the aforementioned stage door. So I knew exactly where the stage door was. It was in the next street at the back of the hall itself.
âFollow me!' I said triumphantly, much to my big brother's disgust. For once, I was the leader, and he would have to follow.
I led the gang down a side street of shops that were boarded up from the latest car bomb. In less than a minute there we were, standing at the stage door at the rear of the Ulster Hall. Amazingly, there was hardly anyone else there apart from a few other tartan-clad girls sobbing and screaming, and a couple of RUC men who were clearly more used to policing angry rioters than hysterical teenagers.
âThey're already inside, so yousens may as well go back round and get into the queue, kids,' said one of the RUC men with a moustache when he saw us.
I turned around immediately to obediently return to our place in the queue.
âHoul' yer horses!' said my big brother. âThey're not here yet!' I was shocked at this remark. It had never occurred to me that the RUC would tell lies.
âLike, the peelers wouldn't still be here if the Rollers was already inside!' said Heather, excitedly.
âOh my God, my Les is gonna be right here any minute nigh!' shrieked Lynn.
âBallicks,' said Philip.
No sooner had he yet again demonstrated just how limited his vocabulary was than a long black limousine with the windows blacked out like a police car pulled up in front of us. What happened next was like a dream. It seemed to happen in slow motion, like the Six Million Dollar Man running. Right before our very eyes, five young men dressed in parallels and tartan emerged from the limousine in quick succession. Alan and Derek, the two brothers, got out first and escaped through the stage door before we had fully grasped the reality of what was happening in front of us. Eric Faulkner was next.
âEric!!' screamed Irene Maxwell, as she ran forward and grabbed his jacket. It was like a sick woman touching Jesus in a story in Sunday school. Eric turned briefly and smiled at her. His face was mirrored in the T-shirt Irene was wearing. She fainted. As Titch McCracken and Sharon Burgess knelt down to see if she was all right, and before we had a chance to take all of this in, the real, live Les McKeown from off
Top of the Pops
was suddenly running straight past us.
âI loooove you Les!' screamed Lynn McQuiston repeatedly, the tears streaming down her face onto her buck teeth, as she reached out and grabbed at a tuft of hair on the back of his head. Les just looked scared and kept running.
While the girls in our gang had known instinctively how to approach this situation â by screaming and attempting to touch their idols, the boys didn't know what to do. We didn't want to scream or touch our heroes, but we did want to make some more masculine kind of connection with them. So we did what came most naturally to us â we kicked them.