Read Solitaire, Part 2 of 3 Online
Authors: Alice Oseman
“I’m doing this for your own good.” He inserts the DVD. “I believe that your psychological development has substantially suffered due to lack of Disney charm.”
I don’t bother asking what he’s talking about. He clambers on to the bed next to me and props himself up on the headboard with a pillow. The Disney logo appears on screen. Already I can feel my eyes bleeding.
“Have you ever even watched a Disney film?” he asks.
“Er, yeah.”
“Why do you hate Disney?”
“I don’t hate Disney.”
“Then why don’t you want to watch
Beauty and the Beast
?”
I turn my head. He’s not watching the film, even though it’s started. “I don’t like films that are fake,” I say. “Where the characters and the story are really … perfect. Things don’t happen like that in real life.”
He smiles, but it’s a sad smile. “Isn’t that the point of films?”
I wonder why I’m here. I wonder why he’s here. The pathetic dubstep beat downstairs is the only thing I can hear. There are some cartoons on the screen, but really they’re just moving shapes. He starts talking to me.
“Did you know,” he says, “that, in the original story, Belle has two sisters? But in this film she’s an only child. I wonder why. It’s not that fun being an only child.”
“Are you an only child?”
“Yep.”
This is mildly interesting. “I’ve got two brothers,” I say.
“Are they like you?”
“No. They’re really not.”
The Beauty is being courted by a heavily-muscled man. He is not attractive, but I sympathise with his dislike of literature.
“She really likes to read,” I say, shaking my head at the girl in blue. “That’s got to be unhealthy.”
“Don’t you do English lit A level?”
“Yes, because I can bullshit my way through it, but I don’t approve of it. I hate books.”
“I probably should have done English. I would have been good at it.”
“Why didn’t you?”
He looks at me and smiles. “I think it’s better to just read and not study books.”
The Beauty has sacrificed her freedom to save her father. It’s very sentimental. And now she’s crying about it.
“Tell me something interesting about you,” says Michael.
I think for a moment. “Did you know that I was born on the day that Kurt Cobain supposedly killed himself?”
“Actually, yes. He was only twenty-seven, the poor guy. Twenty-seven. Maybe we’ll die when we’re twenty-seven.”
“There’s nothing romantic about death. I hate it when people use Kurt Cobain’s suicide as an excuse to worship him for being such a tormented soul.”
Michael pauses and stares at me, before saying, “Yeah. I guess so.”
Beauty has gone on a hunger strike. That is until the cutlery and crockery of the house put on a singing and dancing performance for her. Now she’s being chased by wolves. I am struggling to keep up with the plotline.
“Tell me something interesting about you,” I say.
“Erm,” he says, “I’m, like, ridiculously unintelligent?”
I frown at him. This is obviously untrue.
He reads my mind. “Seriously. I haven’t got above a C grade in any subject since Year 8.”
“What? Why?”
“I just …”
It seems almost impossible for someone like Michael to be unintelligent. People like Michael – crazy people who get stuff done – they’re always smart. Always.
“When it comes to the exams … I generally don’t write what they want me to write. I’m not very good at, er, sorting out all the stuff in my head. Like, I take biology A level and I completely understand what polypeptide synthesis is, but I can’t write it down. I’m not dyslexic or anything. I just don’t know what the examiners want to hear. I don’t know whether I just forget things, or maybe I don’t know how I’m supposed to explain it. I just
don’t know
. And it’s fucking
horrible
.”
Throughout this, he makes swirly gestures with his hands. I imagine all of the pieces of information flying around in strands inside his brain, unable to form themselves into comprehensible words. It seems to make sense. He’s crazy. Maybe not in a bad way. But he’s definitely crazy.
“It’s so unfair,” he continues. “School literally doesn’t care about you unless you’re good at writing stuff down or you’re good at memorising or you can solve bloody maths equations. What about the other important things in life? Like being a decent human being?”
“I hate school,” I say.
“You hate everything.”
“It’s funny because it’s true.”
He turns to me again. We look at each other. On screen, a petal falls from the rose which I’m pretty sure is symbolic of something.
“Your eyes are different colours,” I say.
“Did I not tell you that I’m a magical anime girl?”
“Seriously, why though?”
“My blue eye conceals the power of my past life, and I use it to summon my guardian angels to assist me in my struggle against the forces of darkness.”
“Are you drunk?”
“I’m a poet.”
“Well, control yourself, Lord Tennyson.”
He grins. “
The stream will cease to flow
.” He’s quoting a poem obviously, but one I’ve never heard. “
The wind will cease to blow, the clouds will cease to fleet, the heart will cease to beat; for all things must die
.”
I chuck a pillow at him. He leans over to avoid it, but my aim is spectacular.
“All right, all right,” he laughs. “It’s not as romantic as it looks. Someone threw a rock at my eye when I was two, so, basically, I’m pretty much half-blind. It’s actually very annoying.”
On screen, they’re dancing. It’s a little odd. An old woman is singing. I find myself singing along – apparently, I’ve heard this song before. Michael joins me. We sing alternate lines.
And then we are silent for a long time, watching the colours on the screen. I don’t know how long the silence lasts, but at some point I hear Michael sniff and I see him move his hand up to his face. When I look round, I see that he’s crying, actually crying. I am momentarily confused. I study the screen. The Beast has just died. And Beauty is holding him, crying herself, and oh, wait, a tear falls on to his fur, and then all kinds of trippy magic happens and yep, there you go, he has miraculously returned from the dead. Oh and he’s become handsome as well. Isn’t that fantastic. This is the kind of crap that I hate. Unrealistic. Sentimental. Crap.
But Michael is crying. I don’t really know what to do. He’s got one hand on his face, and his eyes and nose are scrunched up. It’s like he’s trying to hold the tears inside.
I decide to pat his other hand, which is resting on the bed. I hope this comes across as comforting, not sarcastic. I think it turns out okay because he grabs my hand in return and squeezes it with extreme force.
The film ends shortly after that. He turns it off with the remote and we sit in silence looking at the black screen.
“I knew your brother,” Michael says, after a very long time.
“Charlie?”
“From Truham …”
I turn my head, not really finding anything to say.
Michael continues. “I never spoke to him. He always seemed kind of quiet, but everyone loved him, which is pretty rare at an all-boys’ school. He was different.”
It’s then that I decide to tell him. I don’t know why this happens. But I get this urge. My brain gives up. I can’t hold on to it.
I tell him about Charlie.
Everything.
About when he started collecting things, and about when he stopped eating, and about when he started hurting himself.
To be honest, it’s not even that big a deal any more. He’s been to hospital. He’s better now. And he’s got Nick. I mean, he’s still recovering, but he’s fine. It’s fine.
I don’t know when I fall asleep, but I do. Not fully asleep. I stop being able to tell whether I’m awake or whether I’m dreaming. It’s probably weird to fall asleep in this sort of situation, but I’m starting to not really care about stuff like that any more. What surprises me the most is how suddenly it happens. Normally, it takes forever. Normally, when I’m trying to sleep, I do all these silly things like I roll over and imagine that I’m sleeping next to someone and I reach out and caress their hair. Or I clasp my hands together and after a little while I start thinking it’s somebody else’s hand I’m holding, not my own. I swear to God there’s something wrong with me. I really do.
But this time I feel myself roll slightly over so I’m resting on his chest, under his arm. He smells vaguely of bonfires. At some point, I think someone opens the door and sees us lying there half-asleep together. Whoever it is looks at us for a moment before quietly shutting the door again. The shouting downstairs begins to ease even though the music is still pumping. I half listen for any demonic creatures outside the window, but it’s a silent night. Nothing traps me. It’s nice. I feel the air in the room and it’s like there is none.
My phone rings.
01.39am
Home
Calling
“Hello?”
“Tori, are you coming home yet?”
“Oliver? Why aren’t you in bed?”
“I was watching
Doctor Who
.”
“You didn’t watch the Weeping Angels episode, did you?”
“…”
“Ollie? Are you all right? Why did you call me?”
“…”
“Oliver? Are you there?”
“Something’s wrong with Charlie.”
My face must then do something very unusual because Michael gives me this look. This funny, terrified look.
“What … has happened?”
“…”
“What’s happened, Oliver? What’s Charlie done? Where is he?”
“I can’t get in the kitchen. Charlie shut the door and I can’t open it. I can hear him.”
“…”
“When are you coming home, Tori?”
“I’m coming home right now.”
I hang up.
Michael is awake. I am cross-legged in the middle of the bed. He is cross-legged opposite me.
“Shit,” I say. “Shit shit shit shit shit shit fucking fuck.”
Michael doesn’t even ask. He just says, “I’ll take you home.”
We’re running. Out the door and down the stairs and through the people. Some still partying, some piled on the floor, some making out, some crying. I’m almost at the front door when Becky catches me. She is fucked.
“I’m
fucked
.” She grabs my arm really tight.
“I’m going now, Becky.”
“You’re so
cute
, Tori. I miss you. I love you so much. You are so
beautiful
and cute.”
“Becky—”
She flops on to my shoulder, knees buckling. “Don’t be sad. Promise me, Tori. Promise me. Promise you won’t be sad any more.”
“I promise. I have to—”
“I ha-hate Jack. He is such a … such … such a … bitch. I deserve a … someone like Ben. He is so
beautiful
. Like you. You hate everything, but you’re still beautiful. You’re like … you’re a ghost. I love you so much … so much. Don’t be … don’t … sad any more.”
I don’t really want to leave her because she is beyond pissed, but I need to get home. Michael actually pushes me forward, and we abandon Becky, whose legs look too spindly now, her make-up too thick, her hair too backcombed.
Michael is running and so am I. He gets on his bike. It’s a real bicycle. Do people even ride these any more?
“Get on the back,” he says.
“You are joking,” I say.
“It’s that or walk.”
I get on the back.
And, with that, Sherlock Holmes and Wednesday Addams fly into the night. He’s cycling so fast that the houses we pass blur into grey and brown wavy lines and I’m clinging on to his waist so tight that my fingers have lost all feeling. I realise that I’m happy even though I shouldn’t be, and the conflicting emotion only makes the moment more insane, more radiant, more immeasurable. The air tears at my face and makes my eyes water and I lose track of where we are, even though I know this town inside out, and all I can think of is that this might have been what that boy who flew away with ET felt like. Like I could die right now and it wouldn’t matter.
We’re at my house within fifteen minutes. Michael doesn’t come inside. He has manners, I’ll give him that. He sits up on the bike as I look back at him.
“I hope he’s all right,” he says.
I nod.
He nods. And cycles away. I unlock the door and enter my house.
OLIVER TROTS SLEEPILY
down the stairs.
Thomas the Tank Engine
pyjamas. Teddy in his arm. I’m glad that he’s never understood what’s wrong with Charlie.
“You all right, Oliver?”
“Mmmyeah.”
“You gonna go to bed?”
“What about Charlie?”
“He’ll be fine. Leave it all to me.”
Oliver nods and ambles back up the stairs, rubbing his eyes. I rush towards the kitchen door, which is closed.
I feel sick. I’m not even fully awake.
“Charlie.” I knock on the door.
Total silence. I attempt to get in, but he’s blocked it with something.
“Open the door, Charles. I’m not joking. I’ll break the door.”
“No, you won’t.” His voice is dead. Empty. But I’m relieved, because he’s alive.
I turn the handle down and push with my whole body.
“Don’t come in!” He sounds panicked, which makes me panicked because Charlie is never panicked and that is what makes him Charlie. “Don’t come in here! Please!” There’s a clattering of things being frantically moved around.
I keep heaving my body on to the door and whatever is blocking it begins to move away. I make a gap large enough for me to slip inside, and I do.
“No, go away! Leave me alone!”
I look at him.
“Get out!”
He’s been crying. His eyes are dark red and purple and the darkness of the room drowns him in a haze. There’s a plate of lasagne on the kitchen table, cold, untouched. All of our food has been removed from the cupboards and the fridge and the freezer and set out in order of size and colour in various piles around the room. There are a couple of bloodstained tissues in his hands.
He’s not
better.
“I’m sorry,” he croaks, slumped in the chair, head rolled backwards, eyes vacant. “I’m sorry. I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to. I’m sorry.”