Disconnected. Sherry Ashworth
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I thought, I just can’t be arsed to move. Not that I’d ever say that to you.
We had dinner that evening at the breakfast bar in the kitchen. We just small-talked – well, you did, going on about the bank statement and redecorating the porch and hallway, and whingeing about your paperwork. I refused dessert. You said you wished you had my willpower. Then you said, “Are you going up to your room to work now?” It was a challenge.
“I might,” I said.
Two pugilists, eyeing each other from their respective corners.
“And there’s your oboe.”
I hated my oboe just then. She had pulled it over to her side.
“Because, Catherine, I know it’s hard sometimes to get motivated but the secret of academic success is persistence and determination. It’s always the student who keeps going who gets there in the end. I’m only telling you this for your own good. Really, it’s nothing to me whether you work or not.”
I was silent.
“Well?” she asked.
I took refuge in ambiguity. I got up, said nothing, and went up to my room.
It was a relief to be alone. I love you, but sometimes there’s too much of you. Once in my room, I threw myself on the bed, wondering what was wrong with me that night. I worked out I wasn’t pre-menstrual, but I didn’t believe in that crap anyway. Girls I knew just said they were pre-menstrual so they could have an excuse for having a go at people, or a big cry and all their mates would cuddle them. I didn’t feel like crying but just like things were out of joint. Worse, as if nothing mattered any more. The idea of not doing any work was so appealing. Like, what was the point?
But automatically I opened my schoolbag and took out my History text books and file, the document question he’d given us and an A4 pad of paper, and got myself organised. For a moment or two I actually felt like working. I like the look of a piece of blank paper. But as soon as I wrote my name, that same lethargy descended. It was such an effort to write. I tried to read the documents but they made no sense. I glanced at the first question – Explain briefly the following references: (a) ‘patrons and nominees’ (b) ‘the absurd admiration of the triumph of physical strength in France’.
I felt paralysed by the weight of the words. A sensible voice in my head (yours?) said, come on, now! It’s only a short question. You can do it. Another voice said, what has this got to do with you, or with anything for that matter? It’s all a silly game, taking exams, getting qualifications. It doesn’t matter, any of it.
Only, if it doesn’t matter, what does? That was what scared me. So I tried again. I began a sentence of my own on the paper in response, but then was distracted by the reflection of me in my dressing-table mirror.
Girl at work. Or girl not at work. My brown hair was dishevelled since I’d taken out my hair bobble. The expression on my face was blank. I automatically asked the mirror the question I always did – am I good-looking? This time the reply came back – what does it matter? In reality I suppose my face changes depending on my mood. When I smile I look quite pretty – my eyes are large, which helps. But at other times my face is heavy and formless.
So I got up to put some music on to help me start work. You have this rule, I know, that I’m only allowed classical music to work to – you read somewhere it aids concentration. Today I decided to go against you because I wanted to listen to a tape Greg, a boy in my Economics group, had lent me – The Smiths. From the Eighties. But they weren’t like what I thought of as Eighties at all, but camp and suicidal all at once. They were good. I lay on my bed and listened and thought, I could get into this. A shame I didn’t like Greg that much, at least not in that way.
Then I decided to give myself a manicure. It can be quite therapeutic, doing things with your nails, or plucking your eyebrows, self-grooming. And I needed to get myself looking good for Brad’s party on Saturday. I was half-listening for you because I didn’t want to be discovered not working. But who was I kidding? I felt as guilty as hell. The more I put off working, the more I felt squeezed by some sort of invisible pressure. I couldn’t breathe. But I couldn’t work either. I thought about rejigging my work schedule and doing double tomorrow. That seemed like a good idea. Or I could wake at six in the morning and work then.
I heard you shouting up at me.
“Catherine? Are you busy?”
“Yes,” I replied. “Very.”
“OK,” you said.
I got my headphones out of my cupboard and put them on and carried on listening to The Smiths.
You know most of this, but I’ll tell you again.
Lucy texted me to say she was outside in her parents’ car, and if I was ready, they’d give me a lift to Brad’s party. She could have rung on the doorbell but Lucy would text in preference to talking sometimes. I shouted goodbye to my parents and confirmed I’d be back by one. A wonderful moment as I left the house, closed the front door, heard the lock click into place – cool, dark air, and the promise of a night in which something might actually happen. But only a moment. As I climbed into Lucy’s parents’ car the radio was babbling and Lucy’s mother was babbling and Lucy herself kept up a whispered monologue about Brad whose party it was and who would be there and was her fringe OK? And her lipstick? And what about her nails? The polish came free with a magazine. And so on. I knew she went on like that because she was nervous. She’d only ever almost had a boyfriend, and that bothered her. For Lucy, going to a party was like buying a lottery ticket; this time, it might just be her. If her nails were right and her hair was right.
Brad’s house was quite near us – about ten minutes away. It was an ordinary-looking semi-detached house, with a multi-coloured pane of glass in the front door. Lucy linked with me as we walked up the curved front path and rang the doorbell. A friend of Brad’s opened the door to us and I watched Lucy straining to see who else was there.
Everyone was in a large room that extended from the front of the house to the back garden. Against the windows at the back was a large table with newspaper over it and cans of beer, bottles of Bud Light, and some Bacardi Breezers. There was also a huge mixing bowl full of crisps. The music was pretty loud – some repetitive dance music. But when I looked around the room I also saw a badly-painted portrait of Brad and his family with silly grins plastered on their faces and his mum looking impossibly young and pretty, and framed photos of some old people and a baby. And there was a sideboard full of glasses, that heavy crystal cut glass, and decanters, and some pottery figures of shepherds and shepherdesses and little child-like animals with large eyes. And for some bizarre reason someone had thrown a blanket over the TV and video.
Lucy was still linked to me and I felt her grip tighten.
“Oh, God,” she said. “I don’t know anyone here. Brad said there would be more people from our Business Studies set but there aren’t. Oh, Cathy, just look at THAT! Isn’t he gorgeous? Shall we have a drink? Shall we go and see what there is? Or shall we find the loo first? I’d like to check my hair. You look gorgeous, by the way.”