Oh Dear, Fifteen-Year-Old Me (part 7)

I’ve thought about it, and I’ve decided to deviate from the formula for the first half of this post.  On rereading the following chapter, I decided the subject matter was far too unpleasant for me to get any laughs out of without sounding glib. Don’t get me wrong, it’s not any better written than the previous chapters (although Gary’s narration is slightly less obnoxious than Anja’s), but it’s just a little too realistic to be funny. I think it’s best if I summarise it quickly and then move on to the next one.

Anja wakes up the next morning to find a ten-page note from Gary on her pillow.  He tells her about how Jordan used to bully him into doing his homework and tidying his room by threatening to cause him a fatal heart attack.  After Jordan wrecked Gary’s room (going as far as to burn some of the furniture), his mother, Claire, punished him, making him angry.  The following morning, before the rest of the family was awake, Jordan dragged Gary into the kitchen and poured boiling water on his chest, giving him a massive heart attack.  Gary survived, but didn’t tell anybody what Jordan did.

After returning to school, Gary befriended two girls named Topaz and Shell.  They noticed that Gary frequently had bruises, and asked him where they came from.  Gary tried to come up with excuses, but eventually told them about Jordan.  The three of them agreed to pack up Gary’s stuff and go back to Shell’s house, where they would presumably contact the authorities.  Unfortunately, while at Gary’s house, Jordan cornered the three of them on the stairs, and a fight broke out.  Shell and Gary got away unhurt, but Jordan somehow killed Topaz.  Jordan was jailed for his actions, but Gary thinks that he may have paid somebody to blow up the bus and kill him.

Please note that none of this has anything to do with the actual plot.

The next chapter opens with another newspaper quote.

“Jesus wanted Anja Cleary to be one of His angels.

So that we mortals wouldn’t have to put up with her?  How thoughtful!

Just to look at her face makes you wish we lived in a better world, but sadly we don’t.  We need to get our act together if we don’t want any more tragedies like that of Anja.”- 28th October, 200_

Yes.  Poorly-maintained buses are the greatest humanitarian crisis facing the world today.

OK, I admit it.  I was enjoying this “nation’s sweetheart” thing…

Right, everybody make a note of that.  She was enjoying watching everybody weep over her.

…but it was getting out of hand.  The bus company was being sued (not, I hasten to add, by any of our relatives), everyone was getting their light fixtures checked lest they get fried to ashes, and people were using the explosion to back up arguments that had absolutely nothing to do with it.  At this rate, we were the only ones with any hope of working out what was going on.  The police didn’t even seem to think it was weird that no remains had been found, and something that just incinerated five people would seem a bit suspicious to me.

The police in this story are hopelessly incompetent, because the plot says so.

(We never find out who’s suing the bus company.)

Fortunately, I was distracted from the article after reading the first few sentences.  Mark was keen to get some information from me.  “Um…  Listen, Anj.  Did Gary tell you anything about this Jordan guy?  Only we need to find out as much as we can to see if he’s connected to Joe’s dad.  So, anything?”

I looked at Mark.  I didn’t want to betray Gary, so I only gave him the basic details.  “Jordan was his stepbrother.  He was on trial for murder, and Gary would have been the main witness.”  There, that was all Mark needed to know.  He nodded.  “This detective thing is easier than I thought.”

They’re so incompetent, in fact, that Anja and pals feel that they only need to make the faintest attempt at research to declare themselves “detectives.”

It was funny how quickly I felt comfortable with him and Estelle.  Usually when  stayed in other people’s houses I felt on edge, constantly reminding myself that I wasn’t at home.  But that feeling had evaporated about ten minutes after crossing the threshold, around the time I saw the size of their TV.

Yay, priorities!

That was a joke, in case you were wondering.

It wasn’t, Anja, admit it.

The quality of their house didn’t have all that much to do with it.  It was Estelle and Mark’s whole demeanour.  They were easygoing, cheerful and not easy to shock.  Having said that, Estelle had been pretty shocked when we’d all turned up on her doorstep.  If it had just been me she’d have assumed that I was Joe’s new girlfriend, but Gary and Mr Daly had been harder to analyse.  My mind would probably have boggled pretty quickly.

We don’t get to see this scene, of course.  That would be far too interesting.

By now, the entire group were sitting around the room.  Mr Daly was too, though for some reason I never counted him as part of the group.  The others seemed not to, either.  Joe was already a friend of Mark and Estelle, and Gary and I had slotted right in.  Mr Daly had stayed at the edges, never abandoning what he considered to be his right to be considered superior to us frivolous younger people.  Usually when there’s a character like that in a book, you’re encouraged to feel sorry for him, no matter how much of a cantankerous jerk he is.  But I just couldn’t get past the constant stream of insults.

“Yeah, other stories might have things like pathos and subtlety and complex characters, but we’re far too special for that!  Mr Daly was introduced as a verbal punching-bag, and that’s the way he’ll stay!”

“Alright, everyone,” Mark announced, “We’ve got our prime suspect, and although he might not be working alone, I think he’s the source of our problem.  James Foster- that’s Joe’s dad- needs to be tracked down and interrogated.  Chances are he’ll be in Southend.”

James Foster…  For some reason that name seemed very familiar to me.  Still, I had to push that to the back of my mind when Mr Daly started up.

“Are we playing detective now, Mr Freeman?” he sneered, “Why can’t you leave it to the proper authorities?”

…This is only occurring to him now?  They’ve been playing detective for best part of a week!

Mark looked annoyed, and rightly so.  “Because…  Tell him, Estelle.”

Estelle told him.  “We haven’t got any evidence.  If we told this to the police, they wouldn’t be able to do much. 

Except bringing him in for questioning, putting Anja and pals under police protection, and other boring stuff like that.

We, on the other hand, aren’t acting officially, so we can do what we want.”

“And if we catch this James Foster, what then?” Mr Daly sarcastically persisted, “Do we subject him to a citizens arrest, or do we simply tell him why what he did was wrong and let him go?”

I love how Mr Daly valiantly tries to point out the plotholes.  Nobody pays him any attention, but it was worth the effort.

Joe looked up moodily.  “Leave Estelle alone, alright?  She knows what she’s doing.  Which is more than you do.”

“Well, that’s just the kind of attitude I’d expect from someone like you!  You’re so disloyal you can’t even forgive your own father!”

I personally thought this was a bit rich after Mr Daly had been so hostile about the “telling him what he did was wrong and letting him go” issue, but there you go.  Joe held his ground.  He gave Mr Daly a blank look and said, “He tried to kill me.”

Mr Daly opened his mouth to say something else, but something had really annoyed Joe.  He slapped Mr Daly round the face.

Huh.  Not just a verbal punching-bag, then.

(Not that Joe isn’t in the right here, but the Mr Daly bashing is getting seriously out of hand.)

I was so impressed that I could barely take anything in, but I saw Mr Daly’s mistake.  If Joe had hit me, I’d have hit him right back.  But Mr Daly had such an inflated ego, he imagined Joe respected him too much to slap him.  He stood there with his mouth open until Joe had left the room.

Once Joe was gone, though, there was no holding him back.  “Mr and Mrs Freeman, I demand you throw that… that piece of scum out of your house!  Assault, that’s what that’s called!  I could sue!”   

“Legally dead people sue other legally dead people all the time, right?”

As Mark and Estelle were still doing their guppy impressions (I was too), Gary said something.

It’s funny how one sentence can change the whole course of a story. 

SPOILERS- This one doesn’t.

If Gary hadn’t said that one thing, I wouldn’t have got angry, so I wouldn’t have said all those things, so I wouldn’t have worked out something blindingly obvious about Cherry the next day…

SPOILERS- She almost certainly would have.

and thanks to what wouldn’t have happened after I hadn’t worked it out, you’d be looking at a different story.

Tell me more about this other story.  Does it have an actual plot?

But as it was, those three words, clear and true, spilled forth from Gary’s lips.

“You deserved it.”

In a split-second, Mr Daly had grabbed Gary’s arm and started screeching at him. “Do you know what I thought when I first saw you?  I’ll tell you!  I thought, he’s never contributed anything to society!  Stupid, weak, lazy people like you are all the rage nowadays!”

I lost it.  “Weak?!?  Gary’s not weak!

“He’s a woobie!  Get it right!”

Oh, sure, physically maybe he’s a little on the weedy side, but mentally he’s like iron or something!  Listen, he’s been…”

“How dare you?” Mr Daly bellowed. 

I would usually have been a bit scared by a man who was half a foot taller than me screaming in my face, but I was too angry to feel fear.  “I dare very easily, in fact!  Now listen to this.  What Joe just did isn’t even the smallest patch on what’s happened to Gary over the last two years!”  At this, I put my arms around Gary so he couldn’t run off again.   

Very caring behaviour.  After all, who needs personal space and autonomy when you’ve got LURVE?

“He’s been bereaved, threatened, abused, tortured and almost killed.  And before you say anything, he deserved none of it.  It didn’t come from him having no moral fibre or whatever.  Someone too cowardly to hit someone who’d hit back used him as a punchbag.  You know those situations on NSPCC adverts?  Well, I bet none of them could shock Gary, because he’s lived it.  He’s lived through Hell.” 

Yes, I’m sure Gary needed to be restrained in order to hear all that.  So much for not wanting to betray his secrets.

(Note how Gary has no input in this conversation whatsoever.  He might as well just have slept through this bit.)

I looked around.  Everyone was hanging on my every word, even Mr Daly.  “You know, I like to think I’m a fairly strong person, for a stupid, lazy, disillusioned teenager,” I concluded sarcastically, “but if half of what’s happened to Gary happened to me, most of my brain would have to shut down to block out the memories.  If it hadn’t, I’d probably have killed myself.  Gary’s stared those memories in the face every day since they’ve happened.  He’s a strong, brave person, alright?”

So strong and brave that he desperately needs Anja to stand up to Mr Daly for him.

By this time, I was so furious I think I’d have punched Mr Daly’s lights out if he’d disagreed.  But everyone, including him, looked horrified.  Joe had heard my shouts and come back downstairs to see what was going on, and he looked the same.

Estelle’s eyes turned to Gary, full of pity.  “Is this true?”

Gary nodded,  “It all started…”

 ***

Gary woke me up the next morning.  He’d had his arms around me the whole night, and when I woke up he quickly assured me he wasn’t going to “do anything.” 

That doesn’t make it any less creepy, Gary.  Wait til somebody’s awake before trying to cuddle them, alright?

I knew that.  And I also knew that his feelings for me had changed.  He’d liked me a lot, as Mark had suspected, from the start, but Gary later told me that my big hissy fit at Mr Daly was the moment when he realised he loved me.

“It was when she physically restrained me and blabbed things to our friends that I’d told her in confidence that I realised she was the one for me!”

I can’t pinpoint a moment when I realised I loved him back, but I did.

“Listen, Anja,” he whispered; “I want to show you something in town.  The others won’t be up for a while yet.”

My brain made my legs move before they had any idea of what was going on.  That’s about normal for me in the morning.  I somehow managed to trip over Joe without waking him, and got to the bathroom to change. 

Please note that a few days ago, all it took to wake Joe up was Gary crying faintly.  But today he can sleep through Anja tripping over him.  Maybe Gary slipped him some sleeping pills so he could have a bit of privacy.

The cold outside hit me right in the face.  That, mixed with the damp of the rain the previous night, made me surprised not to be breathing in ice.  The darkness didn’t help either.  It was 5am, an hour I’d never seen before.  I didn’t like it.  It was eerily lit up by the dark yellow glow of the lamps, the sky getting gradually brighter as the minutes went by.  I always feel a bit scared walking outside in the dark, and had to keep reminding myself that I was not alone.  I wasn’t even accompanied by another girl, which could have been almost as dangerous as being alone, depending on who the girl was.

Oh, whereas Gary makes an excellent bodyguard!

I’d never been alone with an attractive boy before, let alone one who liked me.

The streets were freakishly silent.  Even at midnight there would have the noise from a few wild parties, but now even the most eager partygoers had mostly got bored and wandered off.  The world seemed to have shut down and left Gary and me behind.  Here and now, in the silent hour, two worried teenagers, believed by the nation to be dead, reigned supreme.

I decided I should probably stop to take in my surroundings before I crashed into something.  After I did, I gave a start.

“Gary!  Why the hell are we going into a cemetery?”

“Because WE BELONG DEAD, Anja!  Let us surrender to the quiet dignity of the grave!”

He gave me a surprised look, but even then those icy blue eyes flashed with depths I wasn’t sure I wanted to delve into.

See?

“I need to show you something.”  I was too tired to argue.

Outside the cemetery itself, there were endless rows of light grey gravestones, each adorned with flowers and other plants, apparently well cared-for. 

Gary walked towards a far corner of the plot.  As he seemed to stop, I spotted a plant I liked a lot more than all the roses and lilies.

“Now that person had taste,” I whispered, pointing at the tiny cactus, “It’s not a Venus flytrap, but it’s better than a pansy.”

Yeah- bloody grieving relatives, putting unimaginative flowers on their loved ones’ graves.

Gary smiled strangely.  “It’s funny,” he said.

“What?”

“That’s exactly what I wanted to show you.  Read the epitaph.”

I did as I was told, recognising the name almost before I read it properly.

Topaz Geraldine Seaman

Beloved sister, daughter and friend

Born 30th October 198_

Died 25th September 200_

“May you fly on the wings of angels forever.”

Gary looked casually at my shocked face.  “I knew you’d be impressed by the cactus,” he explained, “Topaz always had to stand out from the crowd, and after she died her mum wanted everyone to remember exactly what kind of a person her daughter had been.  Whenever anyone went on about, say, what a hardworking girl Topaz had been, Mrs Seaman would remind them that she was always getting detentions for missed homework.”

That’s a very realistic way for somebody to act after their daughter’s been murdered.

“Hmm.  Nice.”

“It was, kind of.  Mrs Seaman wanted everyone to remember Topaz’s personality, warts and all.  She said that if people didn’t have bad points, you wouldn’t notice their good points as easily.”

I nodded.  It wasn’t exactly dawn, but the sky had gone from ink-soaked black-blue to the colour they always paint the sea in kid’s books.  “I understand.  What you’re saying is, Topaz’s mum did the exact opposite to her memory that the media are doing to mine?”

 “Precisely.  They’re saying you’re an angel, but they’re not saying how interesting and optimistic you are. They’re also not saying how you never get up before ten, how you sneeze your head off when you go within a million miles of an air-freshener, how you…”

I’m pretty sure Gary could have delivered this compliment without dragging Anja to a graveyard.

(“Interesting and optimistic.”  I guess that’s one way of putting it.)

“That’s enough of that, bright-eyes,” I laughed.  Gary grinned cheekily, and I did the same back.  He bent down to look at another gravestone next to a bunch of tulips.  “Oh no,” he groaned, “Take a look at this.”

“This” turns out to be creepy and Oedipal, much like Anja and Gary’s entire relationship.  Find out in the next chapter!

Oh Dear, Fifteen-Year-Old Me (part 6)

Welcome to part six of “Memory Lives On”! This chapter is short, but undeniably squicky.

Gary whispered, “I’ll tell you later,” as he unlocked the door.

“And I’ll take up a whole chapter doing it, despite the fact that it has absolutely nothing to do with the plot!”

Mr Daly came in, looking from me to Gary in shock. “Well,” he huffed, “I honestly didn’t think it of you, young miss. I’m not even going to ask what you two were doing in there, but I shouldn’t think Mr and Mrs Freeman would be happy using their bathroom if they knew.”

I hate the way people assume that all teenagers are nymphomaniacs, almost as much as I hate the way they assume we’re all anorexic or on drugs. Just for the record, at this point in my life I was a virgin who was sort of hoping she’d stop being one soon. So that’s why I finally snapped at Mr Daly, for adding insult to injury.

Hang on- you “finally” snapped at Mr Daly? Does “I have a name, you know” not count?

“Well, I know for a fact they don’t like using it after you,” I snapped, pushing past him, “And neither do the rest of us. Why not try cleaning the plughole occasionally, creep?”

I’m not sure what I thought Anja had found in the plughole, but feel free to marvel at fifteen-year-old me’s idea of a scathing comeback.

I could tell Mr Daly was gearing up for another big explosion, but I shot downstairs before it could happen. At the foot of the stairs, Gary caught up with me and put his arm round my neck. “I like the way you don’t let him get to you,” he whispered, “You’re really spirited.”

Yes, Anja should be congratulated on sniping pointlessly at Mr Daly. It is a rare and wonderful display of character, and certainly not what she and everyone else in this story has been doing constantly since the first page.

(Also- “put his arm round my neck”? Is Gary secretly a serial killer?)

“Thanks,” I whispered, before going into the living room to join the others. The looked at me questioningly, which was a shame because I wasn’t planning on giving them any answers. “By the way,” I announced, “If Mr Daly hints that me and Gary were up to something in the bathroom, ignore him. He’s just got a dirty imagination.”

“Looks like you missed an opportunity, eh Gaz?” Mark laughed. Gary smiled, looking embarrassed.

Please note that the last time Mark saw Gary, he was running away in terror after catching Mark and co talking about his traumatic past behind his back. Sensitive guy, that Mark.

For once, Estelle didn’t tell him off for making crude jokes. Instead, she gave me a knowing look. I hate it when people do that. Especially when they’re right.

There was an awkward silence. Everyone, even Mark, who had a huge black hole where his tact should have been…

No arguments here!

…seemed to have picked up the fact that asking about Jordan would probably give Gary a nervous breakdown. It was Joe who eventually managed to take the conversation somewhere else (I thought dumping it in the Sahara desert would have been better, but there you go).

“You know,” he smirked, “I never got anywhere with Cherry, either.”

The rest of this chapter will mainly be disturbing speculation about the sex lives of a bunch of teenagers. Delightful.

This seemed to shock Mark, for some reason. “Huh? You told us all that stuff about the New Year’s party last…”

“I know.” Joe’s eyes shot down in what I think might conceivably have been embarrassment. “That wasn’t true. Truth is, I don’t think she even knew I felt that way about her.”

Estelle cackled. “Yeah right, Joe. She’s a smart girl, you know. She can practically read my thoughts, and you know how unpredictable I am.” Mark opened his mouth, clearly about to argue with the word ‘unpredictable’, but Estelle picked up an éclair off the table and jammed it in.

Because that’s what people do. Shove eclairs in their husband’s against their will. That and stab the air.

She turned to me, realising what I was about to ask. “Cherry is a singer at a sort of concert hall place my mother and Joe’s Aunt Jean used to run together.

Elsewhere, Blaze is described as a “nightclub.” I don’t know if I ever had a clear idea of what it was like, as a place. Of course, back then I didn’t have a clear idea of what nightclubs were like in general, so there’s that.

Since my mum moved to the US it’s only Jean running it now. Actually, I met Mark there. He sang there too.”

Mark swallowed the éclair. “I’m the next Elvis, me,” he grinned, “And Cherry is like… I dunno. Think of the best singer you know, add to the second best singer, and times by ten. She’s even better than that.

Brilliant description there. Also, for being such a prodigy, Cherry’s singing skills don’t feature in the story at all.

I haven’t got a clue why she’s still working at Blaze. She should have had a contract from some record company when she was six. I guess being a single mother got in the way.”

SPOILERS- Cherry is Anja’s cousin Svetlana. And the reason for the nickname is unbelievably stupid.

At this point, Mr. Daly came in, looking like he had a score to settle with everyone in the room. “Blaze,” he seethed contemptuously, “I think I can tell what kind of a place it was.”

…The sort of place that had an embarrassing name?

Like the rest of us, Estelle had put up with Mr Daly for the past week or so with good humour and politeness…

BWAAA HA HA HAAA. Oh my, that’s a good one.

…but I could tell she wouldn’t let someone scorn Blaze without a fight.

Insult it, yes. Criticise it, fine.  But scorn it? Never.

That place seemed really important to her. Probably because her mum owned it, probably also because it was where she met the man of her dreams (and considering I mean Mark she has very strange dreams). Either way, Mr Daly was about to get a taste of his own medicine.

“Just what is your problem?” Estelle hissed, “Ever since you turned up you haven’t smiled once!

“Anyone would think you didn’t enjoy being trapped in a stranger’s house and separated from everybody you’d ever known and loved!”

I know your surroundings are unfamiliar and all that, but look at Anja and Gary! They haven’t been complaining 24-7, have they?”

Well, to be fair, Gary’s been too busy shaking and looking pitiful, so he’s probably not the best example.

Mr Daly looked like he was going to explode, and he did.

Cool!

Well, verbally.

Aww.

Smile? How can I smile? I have been trapped in a house with some very disagreeable people, not least yourself, madam!

And, just for the course of those three brief sentences, Mr Daly becomes the sanest person in the story.

You complain about my bad mood, when there are things going on in your house that would frankly mortify me if they happened in mine! That young man over there”-he pointed at Joe-“is reprehensible in every sense of the word!

…How many senses are there?

And the other two are hardly little angels! Anja and Gary may be cheerful, but I know why, and it isn’t for the ears of the faint-hearted!

“Smug drunk sociopaths, I tell you! We have to do something!”

(Gary? Cheerful? What planet are you living on?)

And I don’t imagine your husband,” he said this as though Estelle should be scared of Mark, “would be pleased, either!”

Mr Daly, her husband sings along to other people’s funerals. I think he’s a lost cause.

By some miracle, Estelle managed to keep her temper. “I can think of a few things a teenage boy and girl might get up to,” she smiled, looking straight at me and Gary, “and I think I could keep my lunch down if you told me. So, what terrible, sinful things has the nation’s golden girl been up to with He Who Barely Ever Speaks?”

Mr Daly was put off a bit there. Estelle had effectively told him that even if he had conclusive evidence that me and Gary had been having it off, she for one wouldn’t mind.

Estelle Freeman: unofficial foster parent of the year.

That would make his shocking revelation that we’d been alone in the bathroom together with the door locked look a bit pathetic. So Mr Daly decided not to tell Estelle what he’d seen. “Well, pardon me if I worry when an underage girl is being defiled by a shady character.

Yep, there’s no-one shadier than seventeen-year-old boys who spend all their time trembling and weeping!

(Once again, Gary is based on Elijah Wood’s character in The Faculty. Try to square that with “a shady character,” if you can.)

That’s right!” he snapped, turning to see the look of shock on my face that wasn’t there, “Underage!

Heh. OK, I’m still kind of proud of that bit.

The age of consent in this country is 16, and if my memory serves me right, you’re much younger than that! Quite frankly, you should have more respect for yourself, young lady, because you should know how girls like you end up!”

And here we see Mr Daly firmly shake off that “sanest character in the story” title. Now he’s going full straw-Daily-Mail-reader.

I rolled my eyes, knowing I wasn’t as good at keeping my temper as Estelle was. “One, I don’t think five months counts as ‘much.’ Two, having sex before the age of consent may be illegal, but it doesn’t automatically make the girl a future prostitute. Three, it might have escaped your dirty mind that a teenage boy or girl who are alone together don’t always end up doing that! I mean, for all you know one of us might be gay! Or maybe we don’t fancy each other! Maybe, just maybe, just a slight possibility, not all teenagers instantly get off with the first attractive person they see! Bit of a strange concept, but it might be true!”

SPOILERS- This passionate speech will be more than a little undermined when Anja jumps into bed with Gary five or six chapters from now.

I was shouting now. Mr Daly sneered at me. “Typical of your immature generation to scream when you know you’re wrong! I saw with my very eyes you two locked in what appeared to be a very passionate embrace!”

“Passionate embrace? Gary was depressed, you moron! I had my arm round his shoulders, that’s all!”

I have to admit, that is a pretty big mistake to make. Something tells me that Mr Daly fell asleep during Sex Education.

Mark saw that this looked dangerous, so he stepped right in.

True. In nature, fights between the Smug Drunk Sociopath and the Straw Daily Mail Reader are swift but bloody.

“Hey, whoa, put the claws away, Anj.” (He never did learn how my name was pronounced.) “Mr Daly, I think maybe what these two were up to in the bathroom was a bit more innocent than you thought. But come on, Anja, you can hardly blame him for jumping to conclusions. I mean, I know a crush when I see one and Gary clearly has one the size of…”

“Mark, whatever you were going to say, don’t,” Estelle interrupted.

Mark is secretly twelve years old. This probably explains why he was happy to marry a woman who shoves eclairs in his mouth and tries to stab oxygen.

“Well, he does. And don’t look all surprised, Gary. It’s in your peepers every time you look at her. Not that I blame you, Anja’s a bit of a babe. I mean, obviously I can only comment in a sort of detached way, me being married and all, but still.”

Anja is fifteen. And Mark won’t be the last older man in this story to express his attraction to her. Ewww…

(The sad thing is, this is how fifteen-year-old me thought all men behaved. Double ewww…)

“For shame, Mr Freeman!” Mr Daly gasped, “She’s half your age!”

And Mr Daly makes a valiant attempt to regain his former title!

“You, my friend, can’t add up,” Mark countered, “Fifteen times two makes thirty, not twenty-seven. And I’m just saying she’s nice-looking, that’s all. I’m not saying I fancy her. Not least because Estelle would kill me if I did.”

“Damn right I would,” Estelle replied, “And if you’re going to talk about Anja’s looks you could at least have the decency not to do it while she’s in the room. Her face is going as red as her hair.”

And Estelle moves to challenge him! It’s an exciting match, ladies and gentlemen!

It was. For some reason I always do that when men say I’m attractive, especially when they’re Mark’s age.

As well you should! Maybe you should try backing away and calling the cops as well.

The previous year, when I’d been to visit Svetlana in Southend, someone called James who I think was her boss’ son or something had kept flirting with me and I was still bright red an hour later.

SPOILERS- James turns out to be Joe’s dad. And the reference to “the previous year” indicates that Anja was fourteen at the time. Triple ewww…

Like I said before, I’m not really all that pretty. Well, maybe on a good day. But definitely not compared to Estelle!

All the same, I couldn’t help looking over to Gary and wondering if he thought differently.

And that’s a wrap! Join us again next time, when we find out more and more details about Gary’s tragic past. I know you’re all looking forward to it!

Oh Dear, Fifteen-Year-Old Me (part 5)

Welcome to part five, in which we’re introduced to the biggest red herring in the story. But first, have some callous disregard for other people’s grief!

“That’s your dad, your uncle and two of your brothers,” Estelle called. She was working her way through a box of éclairs while keeping a list of the members of Joe’s family that had called her to share the grief. “Our suspect list is getting pretty long.”

You’ve heard of “fiddling while Rome burns,” right? Well, I’m pretty sure that “eating a box of éclairs while your friends sob over their dead son and your dead husband” is similar.

Joe smiled again. I didn’t know if it was possible for him to do a halfway normal smile or if he was a snake in a previous life. “You know what? I think if someone fancied you they’d call in person. So cross off anyone who just got someone to give you their love or whatever.”

“That’s why your mum isn’t on this list,” Estelle replied, “Well, one of the reasons, anyway.

The other reason is that that would make the story far too interesting.

So, we need to look at other motives. I know your dad never liked you, that was obvious, but your brothers?”

“Well, I got the impression they thought I was betraying the family when I went to live with Aunt Jean. They didn’t have enough imagination to work out what was going on.”

We will not get this impression when we actually meet Joe’s brothers.

Estelle nodded. “Well, I guess not all your family can be like you and Jean. If they didn’t have that much imagination, though, they probably wouldn’t have had the imagination to do that thing with the lights. Robbie’s out anyway, I think he’s a little too young to know how to do anything like that, but I’m guessing Vick didn’t know either.   Not to mention that thing where Anja was kept in at school, if that was part of the plan to get her on the bus and not just a funny coincidence.”

“What about Jack, though?”

“Joe, I know Jack and he’s basically a nice person.

And that’s enough of an alibi for them!

(I’m serious. The idea of Jack being the murderer will not be brought up again. Estelle says he’s a nice person, and that’s enough to completely exonerate him.)

He wouldn’t kill his own twin. Besides, he got engaged last month.

Which has nothing to do with anything. Joe’s dad is married, and that didn’t stop him trying to kill Estelle’s husband!

(Oh yeah, SPOILERS- It was Joe’s dad. There will occasionally be half-hearted attempts to convince you it wasn’t, but basically, we know it was Joe’s dad for most of the story.)

Your uncle, what about him?”

Joe thought for a second. “I don’t think he had anything against me.”

Joe’s uncle will not be appearing in the story, but I expect he’s glad to have these two sentences of characterisation.

I had no idea what was going on, and Joe and Estelle didn’t look like they were planning on telling me. “What was with your dad, Joe?”

They suddenly remembered that I was actually in the room. Being incredibly cool, self-controlled people they didn’t jump or anything, but Joe shifted in the chair. Weird, I was sitting in his chair’s identical twin and I couldn’t get into that position. He must have had bones made of rubber.

What position? What do the chairs look like? How does Anja know that Joe and Estelle are incredibly cool and self-controlled? Details, fifteen-year-old me, details!

Having recovered, Joe looked serious for once. “He couldn’t stand me. I’ve got no idea why, but the way he acted you’d think my mother had died giving birth to me or something, which she didn’t. I mean, all of the boys in our family felt like second best, because my parents made it really obvious that my sister Leah was their favourite… That’s an understatement, because the way they acted you’d think the Pope was offering to canonise her…”

We will see no evidence of this when we actually meet Joe’s family. Are you noticing a pattern here?

Estelle could tell that Joe was rambling, so she interrupted, “Anyway, Joe’s dad always treated Leah like a saint, the other brothers like normal human beings and Joe like dirt, right Joe?”

Joe nodded. “I could always tell he didn’t love me, because I had my mum to compare him to. Still, she also thought that the sun shone out of Leah’s…”

“Joe!”

Joe put on a joke-scared face at Estelle’s anger. “Please don’t kill me!” he whimpered. Estelle picked up a kitchen knife and stabbed at the air just as Mark came in.

Who does that?!?

He scurried out of her way and landed on the sofa.

“Shame on you, Estelle!” he laughed, “What did that oxygen do to you? One minute it’s just floating around, helping to breathe, you heartless cow, the next…”

Estelle put the knife down and giggled. “Mark, if you don’t shut up, you’re going the same way as the air.”

Mark sniggered again. “So, what’s going on, gorgeous?”

“We were just filling Anja in on a bit of background. There’s so much we haven’t told her and the others.”

Estelle, they’ve been in your house for the best part of a week! What have you been doing for all this time that you didn’t have time to explain this stuff?

“Catch me telling that Mr Daly anything,” Mark sniffed, “Miserable old get. Gary seems alright, though.”

Oh, right. Sniping pointlessly at Mr Daly.

“Yes,” Estelle murmured, giving Mark a look, “For one thing, he’s quiet.”

I couldn’t help thinking back to the previous night. Gary hadn’t been quiet then. Neither had Joe been very slimy. They’d both dropped the most prominent aspects of their personalities, and I’d been the only one who’d heard. It was as if I’d slipped into a parallel universe or something, where those two actually acted like normal people. I mean, my eyelids had been glued together. Anything could have happened.

“They’d both dropped the most prominent aspects of their personalities.” I don’t know if this is Anja being confused by people having more than one personality trait, or fifteen-year-old me quietly admitting that Gary and Joe aren’t very well-characterised.

Joe seemed to be having the same thoughts. “He was being really strange last night. Said everything that had happened was his fault. Said he’d wrecked our lives.”

I didn’t see any reason to keep quiet after that. I mean, it had been only me that Gary had talked about, not any of the others.

Eh?

“Oh yeah! I think I heard part of that.” Joe looked annoyed that he wasn’t the centre of attention anymore. Feeling weirdly pleased, I carried on.

Nobody gets more attention than the Sue! Nobody!”

“I think he’s got an inferiority complex or something. Someone must have put ideas into his head, Joe. Remember he went on about someone called Jordan?”

By “went on about him,” she means “mentioned him exactly once.”

Joe thought for a minute. “He said, ‘Jordan was right! I shouldn’t exist!’ You’d have to really hate someone to tell them something like that.” The expression on Joe’s face showed that he knew what it was like to be really hated.

Estelle didn’t know what it was like, but by the looks of it she could guess.

How do you know Estelle doesn’t know what it’s like? You’ve known her for less than a week!

“That poor child,” she murmured in shock, pretty much echoing my thoughts.

“He’s not a child,” Mark commented, trying to change then atmosphere a bit, “He’s only a couple of years younger than you.”

Mark’s plan didn’t work. “This is no time to be pedantic, Mark,” Estelle snapped…

But that’s his only character trait!

“I can’t think of anything worse to be told. Imagine telling someone they shouldn’t exist… If someone had told me that, I’d have killed myself if I’d believed them.” She was getting angry. “What gave this Jordan person the right to say who should or shouldn’t exist? What could Gary have done that was so damn terrible that he shouldn’t…”

I didn’t know why Estelle stopped talking until I saw where she was looking. Her eyes were fixed on the doorway, as if she’d seen something tragic happen through it.

Gary stared back for a second, looking as if he’d just stepped into his worst nightmare. Then he turned and sprinted up the stairs.

We all knew someone had to follow him, and I was the one he liked.

I’d like to point out that, at this stage of the story, Gary and Anja have never actually had a conversation.

By the time I’d got upstairs, Gary had locked himself in the bathroom. I knocked on the door, knowing this wasn’t going to be easy. “Gary!”

He replied in a voice that told me he’d been crying. “Go away. Please.”

“Gary, I’m sorry I was talking about you behind your back. It’s just that you haven’t talked to us much. We guessed you wouldn’t tell us straight out about this Jordan person, so we were trying to work it out ourselves. I’m sorry.”

“We could have just asked you, I suppose, but where’s the fun in that?”

There was a long silence before Gary said, “I can’t tell you. You’ll hate me.”

“Why?”

“It was something terrible. Seriously. I don’t mean stupid stuff like shoplifting or whatever. Something really, really bad happened and it was my fault.”

That shocked me. It would have shocked me even if Joe had said it, but Gary had seemed like an inoffensive sort of person. I’d only known him for a week and that side of his personality had hit me in the face. I couldn’t imagine him doing anything terrible.

Once again- this is the first proper conversation they’ve ever had. Anja has no way of knowing whether or not Gary’s likely to have done anything terrible.

Though actually, he hadn’t said he’d done it…

“Gary? Did you mean that you didn’t mean for it to happen, or what? You can tell me.” He clearly didn’t think he could, so I leant against the door and tried something else. “Whatever it is, it sounds like you regret it. I’m not going to be angry at you for something you regret. It can just be between you and me, OK?”

SPOILERS- This is a complete lie.

There was another pause. “Look, Gary, if you don’t tell me we might not be able to work out who tried to do us in, and why. That means he could kill other people while we’re trying to work it out. Don’t you want us to get to the bottom of this?”

This worked. I heard a scraping sound as Gary undid the lock. The door opened a little to let me in, the closed as he locked it again. He fixed me with his sapphire eyes, looking more fragile than ever. “The others don’t have to know, right?” Gary pleaded.

“Not if you don’t want them to,” I said, sitting down against the radiator with him, “Now, tell me about this Jordan guy.”

SPOILERS- Again, complete lie.

He inhaled in preparation. “OK. It all started about four years ago, when my mum had a heart attack and died. She’d always had this thing wrong with her heart, so it wasn’t really a shock, but I still missed her. I don’t know when my dad started getting new girlfriends, but whenever I met them they always seemed to like me. I’d inherited my mum’s heart condition, so I was always a bit delicate, and I guess women often like people they can feel protective of.” He looked up at me to see if I agreed with this. “Yeah, we do,” I replied, thinking, You in particular, Gary.

And so begin the weird, Oedipal overtones that will come to define Anja and Gary’s relationship!

“Anyway, my dad met a widow named Claire. She was similar to his other girlfriends, a bit… you know, ditzy, but really sweet natured. I knew they were getting serious when they introduced me to her two kids, Jordan and Helen. Helen was eight when I met her, and because she’d heard I was unhealthy she acted really nervous around me, like I was going to explode. She talked to me occasionally, though, because she thought ignoring me would make her a bad person. Jordan, on the other hand,” Gary’s voice began to quaver, “was older than me, went out of his way to ignore me, and I got the impression that he was a bad person. And I was right.”

We don’t find out how Gary got this impression. Maybe Jordan spent a lot of time twirling his moustache and laughing evilly.

He was looking down at the thick indigo carpet, which I thought was a bit unhygienic in a room with a toilet in.

I think the bath’s more of an issue than the toilet, myself.

I put my arm around his shoulders. “So, this is the person who told you that you shouldn’t exist?”

Gary nodded.   “He didn’t at first, though. He looked right through me, like I didn’t exist. Jordan just seemed to want to break up my dad and Claire.

Again, we never find out how Jordan tried to break up Gary’s dad and Claire. Or maybe he didn’t actually try anything, and instead just glowered at them and thought evil thoughts.

Dad was the first man Claire had gone out with since her husband had died five years before, so they thought he just wasn’t used to his mum seeing someone. I think maybe he thought she was betraying his dad’s memory or something.” Gary closed his eyes. “Things didn’t get really bad until the wedding.”

“I’m guessing your dad and Claire, right?”

No, it was Gary and Helen’s wedding. Of course it was Gary’s dad and Claire, Anja, you pillock.

“Yep. I was fifteen, and Helen had just turned nine, but there weren’t any people of her age at the service, so she hung around with me. She kept asking me all these questions about my life, and I didn’t want to tell her that everyone in the whole school hated my guts and thought I was a freak.

“Because, you see, I was the king of the woobies, and fate had decreed that no aspect of my life was allowed to be less than hellish.”

I can’t remember what I said, but I know I made something up. Probably the same thing I told my dad and Claire, so they wouldn’t worry about me. She was more interested in my drawings than my school life, anyway, so it didn’t matter. Anyway, Jordan was chatting up one of my cousins, I think, but when he saw me talking to Helen he came up and punched me in the stomach.” Gary looked right at me, for the first time since he’d started talking. “You know I was picked on at school, Anja, but everyone knew I had a heart condition, so nobody ever beat me up or anything, because they thought that would have killed me. They just made it clear that I didn’t belong. Jordan was the first person who hit me on purpose. He told me not to contaminate his sister.

“Everyone knows that being an over-the-top woobie is catching! No sister of mine is going to be someone’s unrealistically tragic love interest!”

So Helen went, ‘Sorry, Gary. Jordan’s just being stupid. I’ve got to talk to you now, even if I didn’t want to, ‘cause you’re my brother too now, and Jordan wouldn’t like it if I ignored him…’” Gary went quiet, so I decided to prompt him. “What did Jordan do then?”

“He said that he wouldn’t be seen dead with someone like me in his family. Then he hit me again and walked off. But that wasn’t as bad as…”

I didn’t find out what it wasn’t as bad as, at least not then. There was an impatient knocking on the door, and Mr Daly’s testy voice echoed across the bathroom. “Will whoever’s in there please get out! I need to use this room.”

And so the chapter ends. Next time, there’s more Mr Daly bashing, and plenty of squicky speculation about Anja’s love life. See you then!

Oh Dear, Fifteen-Year-Old Me (part four)

Welcome to part four of “Memory Lives On,” in which fifteen-year-old me tries to slip in a touch of poignancy. It works about as well as you might expect.

Watching my own memorial service was pretty much the strangest experience of my life up to that point. Even now, when I’ve had more strange experiences than I can shake a stick at, it’s still in the top five.

After writing this sentence, fifteen-year-old me then made coming up with “more strange experiences than (Anja) can shake a stick at” top priority. This explains a lot about the rest of the story.

First of all, they showed the road outside my school being knee deep in flowers and the like. They were playing Everybody Hurts at such a pitch that everybody in the room really did hurt, around the eardrum area.

Like the Pearl Jam thing earlier, R.E.M. reference is there solely to have an R.E.M. reference. At least my taste in music wasn’t bad.

(Also, “flowers and the like”? I can’t think of anything that’s like flowers except, you know, flowers.)

There was a huge photo of me in the middle, probably the only one they could find where I forgot to do my “Calculating woman of mystery” smile and grinned cutely instead. It said Anja Cleary, 198_-200_: Rest in peace all over it, which at least covered up the hideous T-shirt I was wearing in the photo. I’ve really got to learn that yellow isn’t my colour.

Bloody parents, giving the media a picture of their presumed-dead daughter in an unflattering outfit. Fashion should be the top priority for grieving family members.

The voiceover somehow managed to shout over the music. “The nation grieves over the death of Anja Cleary, killed in a freak accident at a tragically young age. Today, Anja’s memorial service took place, and her friends and family expressed their sadness.”

Actually, I’d better tell the truth. It was put together pretty well. In fact, I’ll be doubly honest. If it had been anyone else on the entire planet, I think I might have cried. I don’t usually cry at stuff on the TV, so that’s saying a lot.

Behold the awkward attempt to make Anja look as though she has actual human emotions. It was worth a try.

But as it was, it was about me, and crying over my clearly non-dead self would have been a bit stupid.

Well, that’s enough of that!

Other people were. My parents for a start. Because of this, I didn’t hear all of what they said, but some of it was “Why Anja? She hadn’t done anything!”

She was a smug drunk sociopath, Mr and Mrs Cleary. It’s really all for the best.

It’s Mark that’s done something, the git, I thought. Mind you, it would be against my principles to resent someone just for marrying a woman that a psycho fancied.

“Principles,” she says. That’s a good one.

But he was being a pain in the neck at that point. The music was loud enough, without him singing along. If only he’d known all the words, and hadn’t given up and stalked off halfway through the second verse, I’d have been spared a few other horrors.

This is Anja’s primary concern upon watching footage of her parents grieving over her alleged death. Oh, and apparently their grief counts among the “horrors” that Anja wants to be spared from. You really are better off without her, Mr and Mrs C. Remember the good times, eh?

I don’t think my friend Trixie has ever cried before in her life. She’s usually a front runner for the Miss Cheerful trophy, and when she’s upset (an annual event, pretty much) she tends to spout all the swearwords under the sun rather than spoil her eyeshadow. But I think I’d have cried if she or one of my other friends had died. That didn’t make it any less strange.

I don’t think Anja gives Trixie a second thought throughout the rest of the story.

They didn’t interview her. Instead, they skipped right across to Lydia.

But enough about the people Anja allegedly cares about- let’s give her somebody she can really sneer at!

I think I’ve already mentioned that Lydia thought I was a geek. But there she was, doing her Hypocritical Cow thing for the cameras; her excitement at being on TV barely concealed. “Anja, you can’t hear this but you were really loved by everyone. You’ve been loyal and kind to us, and I’ll never forget you. You’ll always be with me.”

We will learn nothing about Lydia for the remainder of the story, since her only purpose is to be a shallow popular girl for Anja to look down her nose at, so we have no way of knowing whether or not her professed grief is sincere. Maybe she really was shocked at Anja’s supposed death. Maybe it really did force her to re-evaluate their relationship. We’ll never know, because Anja’s certainly not going to tell us.

How do you know that, super-blob? For all you know I’ve been reincarnated as a porcupine. I know it’s heartless and cynical to say…

…but why break the habit of a lifetime?

…but that’s what I always think when they say stuff like that about dead people. Also, if I turn up anywhere near Lydia when I eventually do die, I’ll be supremely put out.

Supremely put out.”  Put out in the manner of Diana Ross, no less.

Fortunately, Lydia’s face was soon replaced by that of my cousin Svetlana. If I was going to make a list of how much I liked each of my relatives, Svetlana would be top. I think at the time of my “death” she thought of me as a bit of an annoying little kid…

Svetlana is now my favourite character.

…but since she was fairly mature and fulfilled for an eighteen-year-old I’ll let her off. She had a two-year-old son, Ben, but she’d found a job in a nightclub that paid better than jobs in nightclubs usually do, so she didn’t have many financial problems. I think in a previous life Svetlana must have been one of those mountain people with really tough lives, because she gave off an air of being tough and determined enough to cope with anything. I was a bit put out to see that my supposed death was listed under “anything.”

“Come on, Svetlana, I tuned in to see tears! Where are the tears?”

“It was really shocking,” she was saying, “I mean, you don’t expect that kind of thing to happen to your cousin, do you? Anja was, like, really spirited and energetic, and I guess you don’t really expect that kind of person to just die on you. You expect it to happen to little quiet people who you don’t notice much.”

Geez, don’t sound too emotional, Svetlana. Anyone would think that you were pleased to be rid of your smug, drunk, sociopathic cousin.

Just then, three really strange things happened.

Strange Thing number one- there was something not quite right in Svetlana’s face. She’d decided on a look for the memorial service. She was trying hard to be someone bravely coping with the loss of a young cousin, in order to hide something. But what was she hiding?

The fact that she’d had “Ding Dong, The Witch Is Dead” stuck in her head since the vicar started speaking.

She didn’t have anything to do with what had happened on the bus, did she?

Now that would have been a good twist. But no, she doesn’t.

The screen changed before I could work out what Svetlana was hiding. But then we got propelled straight onto Strange Thing number two. To be honest, this wasn’t as strange or as significant as numbers one and three. But it was a first for the TV coverage of the bus “accident” that they actually remembered I wasn’t the only person who’d died a tragic death.

“How dare they take a break from stroking my ego?”

I was jolted out of my suspicions about Svetlana by the voiceover saying “Gary Wolf, aged seventeen, was killed in the same accident as Anja.” Gary’s immense blue eyes grew even wider at this. If his lids had been any further apart, his eyeballs might have dropped out.

I mentioned that Gary was based on Elijah Wood, right?

“Shell!” he gasped as he slammed his sketchpad shut.

An auburn-haired girl who looked a bit like a giraffe in a padded bra was speaking angrily. The subtitle read Michelle Glass, Gary’s friend. “I don’t think Gary should take second place just because there was someone younger and cuter than him on the bus. I mean, Anja Cleary sounds like a lovely person, and of course it’s a tragedy that she died…

Even complaints about the ego-stroking turn into more ego-stroking! It’s like a black hole of self-congratulation!

(Also, “a giraffe in a padded bra”? Classy, Anja.)

…but the only difference between her and Gary was that he was two years older. Gary was an unsung hero.

We will later find out that Gary did absolutely nothing heroic in the entire time he knew Michelle.

He was the sweetest guy I’ve ever met in my life, and I’m not just saying that because he’s dead…”

I stopped listening.

“Pah! This isn’t about me!”

Michelle, like Svetlana, was hiding something, and I had enough time to work out that it was the same thing.

They didn’t want anyone to know that they were in mortal dread. Gary had seen it too, and, what’s more, he knew why Michelle was feeling it.

I now know that he was feeling it for the same reason.

We never find out exactly how Anja knows any of this. Psychic powers?

I’d never shared a room with two boys before, but then I’d never made a habit of sleeping on a mattress on the floor before. Mark and Estelle only had one spare bed, and Mr Daly had claimed it because of some bizarre health problem, which I’m 99% certain he made up.

Anja’s a doctor now!

When Estelle told him that she thought this too, he replied, “How dare you, Mrs Freeman! I’m aware that you are a great deal younger than me, but that’s no excuse to treat me like a second-class citizen.”

“OK, I’m sorry,” Estelle defended, “But I think Anja’s got more right to the spare room. Teenage girls need a lot more privacy than… than…” I could tell that she was trying to find a polite way of referring to Mr Daly, but apparently he couldn’t.

“Than fifty-year-old has-beens?” Mr Daly looked as if he was about to explode, which would have been more interesting to watch than him in the usual state. Estelle regarded him with her eyes, which are cool in every sense of the word.

“Estelle regarded him with her eyes.” As opposed to regarding him with her nostrils.

Oh, and it’s worth noting that Mr Daly is apparently only fifty, because the rest of the story insists on treating him as though he’s about two hundred.

“No, Mr Daly. Unlike some people I could mention, I don’t like to pick petty fights.”

Very mature, Estelle.

Neither of them looked as though they were going to back down, so I cut in and said that I didn’t mind sleeping on the floor. I did this partly to stop the argument, but mostly to save Joe and Gary from sharing a room with Mr Daly. Creepy though Joe was, he didn’t deserve anything as horrible as that.

Very noble, Anja.

And anyway, I could always get changed in the bathroom.

The night after the memorial service, I was sort of hovering between sleep and consciousness when I heard something. At first I just thought one of the boys must be asthmatic or something, but then I realised it was a bit too loud and squeaky for… Oh man, someone was crying.

It’s about bloody time. 

And despite the fact that my eyes couldn’t be bothered to open, it didn’t take long for me to work out that it was Gary.

I knew that I should comfort Gary or something…

“Or something.”

but considering that I couldn’t even wrench my eyelids apart it was probably a good thing that Joe got there first. It was hard to believe it was him talking. All the slime had gone from his voice, and he started talking to Gary like he was five. “Hey… Don’t cry.”

“I’m not crying,” sniffed Gary (in the face of all the evidence), “I’m just worried about Anja.”

“I’m pretty sure she’s a demon from hell! Please don’t let her consume my soul!”

Huh? Wasn’t Anja my name?

Nope. Your name is Mary Sue.

At least Gary could be bothered to pronounce it right, unlike Mark. But why would he be crying over me?

“I saw her memorial service earlier today,” he continued, “Her family looked as if they wanted to die. Anja just looked horrified. I thought, I’ve done that to her. Joe, I’ve wrecked her life!”

“Horrified.” Right. I could really see the horror in her comments about coming back as a porcupine.

“Sh,” Joe consoled. Then he realised what Gary had actually said. “Why you?”

Gary wasn’t listening. “Jordan was right! I shouldn’t exist!”

“Who’s Jordan?”

Gary remembered that Joe was still in the room, and replied, “Someone who was right, that’s all. I shouldn’t be here, I just wreck lives like I did Anja’s…”

“Gary, I don’t know who this Jordan person is, but if he told you all that, he was wrong, alright? You’re… you’re an OK person.

“I’m not sure what I’m basing this on, since this is our first actual conversation, but trust me!”

The bus disaster wasn’t your fault. It was the fault of whoever made those lights explode. And also indirectly Mark and my Great-Aunt Jean, I guess. And I don’t know about my aunt, but Mark isn’t crying about wrecking people’s lives, is he?”

“No… He’s a bit creepy in general, isn’t he?”

Gary sniffed. “That’s because all he did was marry Estelle. He didn’t do anything really bad.”

Even though my eyes were still welded together, I could see Joe’s slimy grin in my head. “I dunno. Some people would say that stealing such a stunning girl from the other 3 billion men on the planet was a crime against humanity.”

“Stunning girl.” Because that’s how teenage boys talk about women they fancy.

“Not seriously, though. All Mark did was marry a woman he loved. And she agreed, so it wasn’t as if it was really stealing, was it? If someone else liked Estelle…”

“Not just someone,” Joe corrected, “I’d say every guy she’s ever met fancied her.”

“You’re not taking me seriously.”

“That’s because you’re being dim. Look, you haven’t wrecked Anja’s life, OK? She’s been in a better mood than anyone else for the past few days. Well, except possibly Mark. She told Estelle yesterday that this is the first exciting thing that’s ever happened to her.

This should really make Joe and Gary wonder a bit about her. But no, Gary proceeds to fall in love with her anyway. Glutton for punishment, that Gary.

So stop worrying and go to sleep!”

Gary took Joe’s advice, and I copied him.

And so should we all. Next time, we’ll learn a thing or two about Gary’s tragic backstory, and Joe’s murderous family.

Oh Dear, Fifteen-Year-Old Me (part 3)

The next chapter is uncomfortably autobiographical. And yes, before anybody says so, it would be fair to call Anja a Mary Sue, albeit a pretty lazy one. A more interesting Mary Sue would have gone around solving the mystery with her secret detective powers instead of just sitting there like a lemon.

I never told any of the others that I thought that, especially not Mr Daly. If I’d told Mark, Estelle, Gary or Joe they’d have probably thought I was just suffering from concussion or something. But Mr Daly would have launched into another stupid speech about how ignorant and irresponsible the youth of today are, getting excited when they should be miserable about never seeing their family and friends again.

Yes… “Stupid speech.”

(Seriously, this could all have been solved by establishing that Anja’s parents didn’t like her much and were secretly relieved to be rid of her. Yeah, it would have been a bit Roald Dahl, but it would have been better than this.)

But before I give you a live example of one of these pathetic rants (as well as a bit of conversation from Mark, Estelle, etc), let me explain why I thought it.

My life is a lot better than a lot of other people’s lives. I’m sure there’s people who’d want to kill me for complaining, so I’ll just say that my life has been pretty good. But the thing is, right up to the bus disaster it was boring. I had quite a few friends at school, but all they seemed to want to do was whinge about their boyfriends (I whinged because I didn’t have one). We mostly seemed settled into talking about what a disgusting blob our form tutor was (hey, there’s a thought- I hope he didn’t turn up on one of those dumb memorial programmes. That would be unbearable).

She gets more sympathetic by the second, doesn’t she?

And, in my humble opinion, the boys in our area weren’t much better. Pustule-covered maggots, every last one of them. I always felt a bit separate from everyone, even my friends and relatives, as if I was the narrator and they were the actors. In school, everyone was talking about plans for the future, but I had a sneaking feeling that greatness was about to be thrust upon me.

Said every serial killer ever.

The trouble is, I’d had that feeling since I was about six, so it was beginning to wear a bit thin. It was beginning to be overtaken by a nasty suspicion that I’d end up an unfulfilled old spinster, doing whatever unfulfilled old spinsters get up to. OK, both thoughts were a little unrealistic, but they seemed very real to me. And one of them came true, remember? That’s why I thought it was cool.

Young-me really needed to learn how paragraphs worked. And “unfulfilled old spinster”? Are we living in the 1950s?

(This story ends with two women getting married to the loves of their lives in their teens or very early twenties, with little or no mention of any career plans. So maybe we are.)

But the most I thought would happen was us forming a group and suing the bus company, getting much media attention and people admiring our bravery and falling in love with us.

What bravery? And who falls in love with somebody just because they’ve sued a bus company?

And I don’t know why Anja is talking like a doge. Especially since the doge meme wouldn’t exist until ten or eleven years after I wrote this.

I didn’t imagine in my wildest dreams that we’d be involved in a murder plot. Well, actually I did imagine that sort of thing, but not realistically.

“I didn’t imagine it, except that I did.”

“You’re a perfect example of the nation’s youth! The dregs always float to the top in this backward society, getting what they don’t deserve! In my day, that never happened! You had to work for even the most basic things, let me tell you! Your aunt sounds like a respectable woman, and if she is she should have disinherited you a long time ago! You’re nothing but a wastrel!”

This was all directed at Joe, who hadn’t moved from his slouching position on the sofa since Mr Daly started.   While Gary, sitting nearby, was trembling so much that you’d think it was him getting yelled at, Joe seemed indifferent to the shouts. At some point during the rant, a knowing smirk had settled on his face.

Good to see Anja’s not the only unbearably smug one. And Mr Daly is a Daily-Mail-reader-strawman, in case you couldn’t tell.

Joe kept his gaze on Mr Daly until he’d shut up, then swivelled his brown eyes towards me. “Anja,” he said in a patronising-sounding way, “do you know what ‘narcissistic’ means?”

“Um…”

Mr Daly took my hesitation as a no. “Well, I should have guessed she wouldn’t know! She’s the same as you, always taking and never putting anything back! You’re…”

I gave him a venomous look. “I think it means ‘vain’, Joe,” I interrupted. Mr Daly was going to snap something, but then he realised I was right. He ended up in a sulk.

I’m not sure what “always taking and never putting anything back” has to do with not knowing the definition of words. I think I was just playing Daily Mail mad-libs at this point.

Joe’s smile widened. “So what’s vain about wanting to watch the news?”

“Because the news is about yourself!” Mr Daly replied, getting worked up again, “You only want to watch the television tributes to you!”

I could see why Mr Daly got so annoyed at Joe. I didn’t like it, but I could see why.

SPOILERS- Considering that Anja later develops a grudge against Joe completely at random, you’d think she’d be more understanding.

Joe had a whole aura of laziness, and his smirk suggested that everyone else was just about to walk into traps he’d set. Most annoyingly of all (to someone like Mr Daly, at least) Joe managed to make fun of people while being really, really polite to them, so he couldn’t be criticised for being rude and uncouth like other “young people” as Mr Daly put it.

We will see none of this politeness in the story.

There was something about Joe that made me feel uncomfortable, probably because I’m a girl. I didn’t like the looks he was giving me one bit.

And this plot point will go absolutely nowhere. That was a worthwhile paragraph, wasn’t it?

“They’ve barely mentioned me,” Joe laughed, “They’re too hung up on their golden girl.” I already knew he meant me, but he gave me a look that would have spelled it out to any idiot.

Mark had known Joe for ages, so he wasn’t really bothered by the slippery factor. “Got that right,” he sniggered, “You’re a celebrity, Anj. We’ve been fed so much information about you, we’ll probably know you inside out by the time this is over. Mind you, you’re more interesting than some celebs I could mention.”

“It’s probably not all true, though,” Estelle countered, not noticing her hoop earrings catching on her hair, “If any girl was as sugary-sweet as they’ve made Anja out to be, they’d probably have been out healing the sick all day.”

“Tell you what, we’ll test it,” Mark replied, “Anja, what’s your favourite flower?”

“Venus fly traps, I guess.”

Because Anja is QUIRKY and UNIQUE, got it?

“Really? Only they said in the paper it was tulips. Looks like you’re right, love.” Mark gave Estelle an amorous look as he said this. Within an hour of my meeting Estelle, Mark had told me he had absolutely no idea why she agreed to marry him, but he wasn’t complaining. As well as inheriting the mysterious look, glittering eyes and midnight black hair that had helped to make her mother a film star (I don’t know about the acting talent), Estelle had a brilliant personality, a really sharp brain and, to be honest, tonnes of money. Mark said he would have been over the moon even if she only had 10p in the bank, because he’d always thought girls like her were way out of his league. I think Mark really underestimated how likeable he was. But that’s not important.

It’s probably a bad idea to describe a character as having a “brilliant personality” in their first appearance. Even if you’ve worked out exactly how you’re going to show it, some of your readers might disagree with you about what having a “brilliant personality” actually entails. It’s risky even at the best of times.

And, of course, if you have no idea how to show it, and said character completely disappears from the narrative about halfway through because you can’t think of anything to do with her, then you’re really in trouble.

“Why did they say my favourite flower?” I asked. Estelle gave me a worried look, but I could see she was going to tell me. “Well, you see honey, they were describing your memorial service.” She could see that this was a morbid thought, but I think we’d all inwardly decided that morbid thoughts were going to be a big feature of my life now that I was meant to be dead.

Not for the first time, Joe gave me a creepy smile. “Looks like you’ll have to change your name now. You can’t have a name that’s written on a monument.” I couldn’t help imagining what my gravestone would look like. For a moment, I had a terrible desire to go and look. Then I realised what a stupid idea this would be. Not to mention the fact that I’d already been feeling strange enough recently.

Yes, Anja’s been feeling strange. Anja is clearly the person who’s suffering most in this situation.

“There’s a thought,” Mark said quickly, to distract from his friend’s bad taste, “You can use my surname if you want, but Anja isn’t exactly a common name, is it?”

I thought for a bit. “Well, I could spell it A-N-Y-A. It wouldn’t change the way you pronounce it. Or I could just drop the J and leave it like that. Um, that would. Oh, I know, I could use my middle name.”

“Didn’t think of that. So, what is it?” Estelle asked.

“Maureen.”

And this is clearly the most pressing issue at hand- which fake names to use.

In the flurry that followed (Joe grinning mockingly, Mr Daly looking sniffy, Mark pretending to be sick and Estelle giving him daggers with her cool eyes) Gary, who’d been mainly silent and doodling in his pad so far, looked up and smiled. “That’s a great name,” he whispered, “It really suits you.” He paused. “I just can’t see why anyone would want to hurt someone like you. Not unless they were jealous.”

“Well…” I ran through a list of people who hated me. There weren’t many. OK, Lydia and her dumb mates always made a point of calling me a geek, but they did that to a lot of people. My Geography teacher thought I was wasting oxygen by continuing to breathe, but again, he… Wait a minute, why had Gary said something as random as that?

Because expressing love for you and weeping are his only two character traits, Anja. Weren’t you paying attention?

And, yes. Jealousy is the only reason anyone could have to dislike Anja.  The girl’s a saint.

“There’s a point. Good on ya, short arse,” said Mark, “It sounds creepy, but we should go through the reasons why someone would want to kill us.”

Pfft, why do something as boring as that? We’ve got fake names to sort out!

“That’s the most ridiculous thing I’ve ever heard!” You can probably guess who said that. Mark replied, in an irritatingly reasonable tone, “No it’s not. We’ve got to work out if someone’s plotting against us, haven’t we? You never know, more innocent- or not so innocent- lives could be at stake. I mean, we survived alright, but others might not be so lucky.” Mr Daly seemed grudgingly satisfied with this explanation, so Mark continued. “Let’s take me for a start.”

“As usual,” Estelle teased.

“True, I’m brilliant. So brilliant I can only think of one reason for people wanting to kill me. Go on,” he grinned at Gary and Mr Daly, as Estelle rolled her eyes, “Guess.”

I answered instead. “Because they were in love with Estelle?”

“Precisely.”

“Mark, I’m not the only reason for people to want to kill you!” Estelle laughed, pushing Mark gently, “I can think of others. Your jokes for a start.”

Did I mention that fifteen-year-old me had no idea where to put the comic relief?

“It’s true. I can’t think of anything else I’ve got going for me enough for people to want to bump me off to get it. My jokes aren’t really that bad.” Estelle gave him a look that told me she didn’t agree. “Look, scandalously untrue comments about my sense of humour aside,” Mark continued, “It’s pretty obvious why someone would want to kill Joe, too.”

I was pleased that someone was finally bringing this up. “Yeah. Who’s next in line for your aunt’s cash, Joe?”

Joe looked pensive, then turned his gaze right back to me. Oh man, I hope he doesn’t think I fancy him, I thought, glad when he finally started speaking.

Because, again, that’s clearly the thing you should be worried about right now!

And, again, this whole “Joe might fancy Anja” plotline goes absolutely nowhere. Because it’s stupid.

“I’m not sure,” Joe said, “My aunt told me most of it was going to me, but she didn’t say what would happen if anything happened to me. And before you say anything, yes, a lot of my family liked Estelle, but I’m not sure which ones liked her enough to want to kill her husband. Maybe all of them.”

“Maybe all of them.”

“Joe, that’s not true and you know it!” Estelle blushed. She was lying. I could tell that she knew pretty much all the men (and probably some of the women) she knew had a mad crush on her, but didn’t want to admit it in case she sounded conceited. That was the main difference between her personality and Mark’s. Mark honestly didn’t have a clue why Estelle found him attractive.

I’m glad Estelle’s so pleased to hear that Joe’s family is made up entirely of murderers.

“We’ll come back to that later,” said Mark, clearly a bit worried. I don’t think he’d realised before that being married to someone like Estelle meant that a lot of people wanted you to split up- or worse. He grabbed a cookery book from off the table, and wrote in the inside front cover.

Me- Estelle

Joe- cash

Keith-

Anja Maureen Cleary (heh heh heh)-

Gary-

“OK, Mr Daly,” Mark said to a man who clearly didn’t like being referred to as Keith, “Can you think of any reason that someone would want to kill you?” Mark’s grin subliminally added “Apart from the obvious.”

“No I can’t,” snapped the man who knew he was being insulted by a grin, “And if you’re going to ask the girl I’m afraid I shall have to leave.”

“I have a name, you know,” I snarled, but instead everyone listened to Joe, who was asking Mr Daly where he’d go if he left.

…His house?

Mr Daly gave him the look of pure hatred that people reserve for people who point out that they’ve just made an idle threat.

But… His house

I decided to start talking, if only to stop them killing each other.

“I can’t think of anyone who hated me enough to kill me. There were some people who thought I was a pain in the butt, sure, but I thought the same of them and I didn’t blow up any buses.”

Estelle grabbed the pencil from Mark, and wrote Prob. innocent bystanders next to my name and Mr Daly’s. Mark took it back and added Research into pain-in-the-butt theory with a mischievous grin.

It is a theory worth researching, I’ll give him that.

“What did you just write, young man?” Mr Daly asked, but Mark had turned hastily towards Gary. “How about you, oh silent one?”

As Mr Daly muttered on about knowing when he wasn’t wanted and suspecting Mark to be ageist, Gary said something quietly. “You what?” Mark asked, and I think there was possibly someone in a coma in New Zealand who didn’t hear him. Gary spoke quickly and didn’t look any of us in the eye. “Nothing important. Just something dumb at school. Sorry I bothered you.” We could tell by the tone of his voice that it would be a really, really bad idea to ask him any more questions.

So they don’t bother. Hey, who needs to follow up promising leads when you can bicker with Mr Daly?

Gary looked about as stable as a 50-year-old atom bomb that nobody had bothered to deconstruct, and even a complete moron (i.e.-Mr Daly) could pick up on his fear. We needed to be careful with him, I realised, or we wouldn’t like the results.

I think we were all relieved when Estelle closed the book and suggested we order a pizza. But ten eyes were fixed on Gary to see if he did anything. I knew the thoughts in our heads were, for once, as one.

What do you know, Gary Wolf? Why are you so scared?

But they didn’t bother to ask out loud. Asking out loud is for losers.

As it turned out, when I found out what it was I could understand why Gary didn’t want to tell. In his position, I would have wanted to take a secret like that to the grave. In his position, I’d probably have blocked out the memory in the first place.

In his position, I wouldn’t have been able to live with the thoughts.

And so, at the end of the chapter, we come to Gary’s second personality trait. Next time, Gary weeps a lot, Anja completely ignores her family’s suffering, and Mr Daly is bullied for no reason. See you then!

Oh Dear, Fifteen-Year-Old Me (part 2)

The first chapter (after the prologue) is called “Terminal.” Because it involves death, and also a bus. Ah, wordplay.

I wrote that introductory bit a couple of days after the big event. Back then, I suspected it would all get blown out of proportion and lead to disaster, but now I don’t suspect that. I know that that’s what happened, and I also know that more people need to know about it so everyone can finally find out what happened. Also so I can make some money. As you’ll see at the end, I’m going through some financial troubles at the moment.

SPOILERS- There is absolutely no reason for “everyone (to) finally find out what happened” after the story’s end, any more than there was any reason to keep it secret in the first place. There’s not much reason for anything in this story.

Also, nothing gets blown out of proportion. If anything, I think most of the characters could show a little more emotion over the attempted murder of four people.

I didn’t know how we all ended up on the same bus, but I was sure it was going to become clearer after a while (I was right, as usual. Well done Anja).

Great- she’s not just a drunk sociopath, but a smug drunk sociopath. Nice going, past-me.

The way I ended up on it was pretty weird, though, and even then I didn’t think for a minute it was a coincidence. I was in a German lesson, with my eyes on the clock, willing it to be three-thirty so I could go home, when one of the office staff came in, saying that Mrs Eastoe, the head, wanted to see me in her office. This was a massive surprise for me and everyone else in the class, because the article somehow managed to get one thing right about me. I am hardworking, and a right little goody-two-shoes as well. I think I should point out, though, that this is more out of fear than respect for the rules. If I thought I had half a chance of getting away with it, I’d run amok.

I’ve no doubt you would, Miss Smug Drunk Sociopath.

But as it is I’m a wimp, so it was anyone’s guess why Mrs Eastoe wanted to see me. All the way to her office my mind kept coming up with horrible possibilities. Maybe one of my family had died. Maybe someone had committed some evil crime and blamed it on me. Maybe there were extraterrestrials in Mrs Eastoe’s office, demanding to eat whoever’s names she picked out of a hat…

This is the first instance in a pattern of past-me not having any idea where to put the comic relief.

Anja is kept waiting for an hour and a half, then told that Mrs Eastoe doesn’t want to see her after all:

She apologised for keeping me waiting this long, told me that the office must have made a mistake and checked that I’d be able to get home alright, which I could. I take the bus home and my parents don’t usually get back until about six. My little brother would probably be round his friend’s house, so he wouldn’t be worried either. If I’d disappeared completely that evening (which I did) nobody would have missed me until six-thirty.

Anja’s parents and brother will not be appearing in this story, because they spend the entire length of it thinking she’s dead! And they still haven’t been told she’s alive by the end, even though by then the villain is dead and she has no excuse for keeping the secret anymore! This renders the whole story unbelievably creepy, in case you couldn’t tell!

So anyway, at five o’clock I was waiting at the bus stop on my own. If the bus hadn’t come along only five minutes late (not the usual ten or fifteen) the dark and the silence would probably have severely creeped me out. It didn’t help that there were only four other people on the bus, all men. Well, technically Gary and Joe were boys, I guess, being as they were only a couple of years older than me, but my point was that I was the only female of the species on the bus. At least they didn’t seem to be in a gang or anything. That would probably be the dictionary definition of “creepy”, especially since it was October and already quite dark outside.

Alright, this paragraph can stay- it’s a fairly realistic reaction for a fifteen-year-old girl to have. It could do with being a bit longer, to build up the atmosphere a bit, but I didn’t care about that at the time.  I wanted to get on with making fun of the other characters.

Anyway, let me give you a mental image of this bus. At the front is whoever it was doing the driving, who would eventually turn out to be “the only survivor of the tragic accident” (or rather, the only one the papers knew about), because s/he was at the front. The seats near the front are pretty much unsittable on, due to some disgusting stains which I’m really hoping were food. Actually, I’m guessing that whoever wanted us dead got on the bus before us and made sure the seats were in this condition, forcing us all to sit near the back, so it probably was food. Anyway, that’s not important.

The whole plot hinges on the fact that none of them thought to stand. And I have no idea how the villain managed to ruin all those seats without anybody noticing.

Sitting on the first non-disgusting seat is Keith Daly, described in the papers as “a real character with many stories to tell, but underneath it all quite a lonely man.” This, as you may know, is obituary speak for “an insufferable old git who winges all the time, and can’t see why no woman in her right mind would be seen dead within a million miles of him.” Spending a few days in the same house as him was hell on earth. I think he must have had a real thing against anything modern, especially (as I later found out to my cost) women exercising their rights. Judging by the glowering gazes Estelle kept throwing him, I’d say she agreed with me.

This chapter was originally written in present-tense, which is one of the reasons it’s worded so strangely. And go ahead, fifteen-year-old-me, tell the readers which characters they should hate. They’ll never figure it out of their own.

(SPOILERS- Mr Daly’s dislike of Anja actually has very little to do with “women exercising their rights.)

That pale, enigmatic-looking person staring out of the window and drawing in a sketchpad a few seats back is Gary Wolf, although Gary Bushbaby would be more appropriate. The first thing I noticed about him was that his eyes were big, but none of the rest of him was. Gary was described in the papers as “a bright and talented child who triumphed in the face of adversity,” which, judging by what he told me later, probably means “someone who had no friends because everyone was jealous of him, was called a nerd and a geek by pretty much all the kids in school and a few of the teachers, and all in all had a fairly hellish time.” This isn’t to say that I thought Gary was a nerd and a geek. Even at the start he seemed quite nice, even if he was annoyingly shy. I could see he wasn’t one of those smart people who shove their knowledge in your face and act all superior (I think I can be one of those occasionally).

At least she’s self-aware.

And let’s just get this out of the way now- Gary is essentially Elijah Wood’s character from The Faculty, alright? In fact, every male love interest I came up with around this time was Elijah Wood’s character from The Faculty. It was a film that had a big impact on me.

(A few years before that, most of my male love interests were essentially Adam Rickitt. So it could have been worse.)

Anyway, on to the other two, sitting together at the back, talking loudly and getting damning looks from Mr Daly. Joe Foster, as I’ve said, was about Gary’s age, and the newspapers didn’t mention him a lot. All they called him was “a promising young man” and “a Jack-the-lad type who always had time for his friends.” Mostly because he never had to do a real job. Joe lived with his great aunt, who was loaded with a capital L.

Yeah, I can see where you’re going with this. Someone else who wanted the great-aunt’s money must have been involved in the “accident.” To be honest, you’re right. Well done. But there was still a big mystery over why that person would want to wipe out a whole bus just to get rid of Joe. They could have just shoved him off a cliff and made it look like an accident. Or made a heavy statue collapse on him.

Foreshadowing! Clumsy, clumsy foreshadowing!

Anyway, we’ll get to what happened in a second, so be patient. There’s still two more people to get through, although the papers really couldn’t think of anything to say about Mark, a friend who Joe was staying with. This is mainly because shouty, enthusiastic, boisterous and slightly superficial people don’t look good in obituaries. The papers couldn’t just translate Mark’s personality into obituary speak.

…We’ve just had the papers describe Joe as “a Jack-the-lad type who always had time for his friends.” Right there. In the previous paragraph.

In order to make him sound like A Tragic Loss To the World, they would have had to lie. This is kind of weird, because I think that the world would be a poorer place if there wasn’t anyone like Mark hanging around making stupid comments and never taking anything seriously. But all they could say about Mark was that he was the son-in-law of Victoria Jewel. You might not have heard of her (I hadn’t), but apparently she was in quite a few films in the 70s. Estelle’s her daughter, and I’m not sure how much she told her mum about what happened. Victoria lived in America, anyway, so she hadn’t got much chance of hearing about it from someone else.

Because e-mail doesn’t exist. Despite the fact that this story was written in 2002.

You know about the last person on the bus. Anja Cleary (i.e.- me) has been described as a lot of things since she supposedly died, but one of the most ridiculous is “beautiful.” No way am I beautiful. I’d say I was pretty, but that would be it. Well, sort of pretty. On a good day. In the right light. If you ignore my nose.

The naive young heroine never sees herself as beautiful, of course. To improve her self-esteem, she has to learn to see herself through the adoring love interest’s eyes.

Look, the point is that Joe suddenly stopped talking to Mark when we reached the first stop. A car stopped a few metres behind the bus, and someone got out. No one would have noticed him crouching conspicuously behind the bus if Joe hadn’t been looking right at him. He proceeded to save everyone’s life by screaming at us to get out now, and sliding through an open window (kind of dangerous since the bus had started to move again).

Just how big are the windows on this bus?

Mark and Joe pull the others out with them, and…

The light fixtures, which had been right above us, all exploded in unison. Then there was another explosion, from the engine or something, probably, and the back half of the bus collapsed in flames.

And at no point, in the two years after this horrific accident, did anybody bother to check for bodies. They just assumed that everybody dissolved into atoms, and held the funerals anyway. Oh, and apparently the bus driver didn’t hear Joe shouting for everybody to escape through the window, even though it seems to have happened quite a few seconds before the explosion. At the very least, wouldn’t be have looked around after the lights burst and seen that none of his passengers were there?

I can’t tell you for sure what was going through the minds of Joe, Gary, Mr Daly and Mark. But I can tell you what was going through mine.

Just before the terror and relief kicked in, I thought, This is so cool!

She’s just kidding about the terror and relief.

Also, note that, at this point, Anja doesn’t know that the bus driver survived. Classy girl, that Anja.

Oh Dear, Fifteen-Year-Old Me (part one)

(This series of posts originally appeared, in a slightly different form, on my Deviantart journal.  I’m putting them here so they’ll be easier to get to.)

Hiya. I’ve decided to make fun of a story I wrote when I was fifteen. We’ll see how that works out.

My reasons for doing this are threefold: First, I think it’s always good to remind yourself of how much you’ve learned, and how much you’ve still got to learn.  Second, it’s also good to remind yourself that just because somebody has written a terrible story, it doesn’t automatically mean that they’re a terrible person. Even if somebody has written a terrible story with awful moral implications, it might just mean that they weren’t paying attention to how they might come across to other people. I know I didn’t.

Third, I just thought it might be funny.  So there’s that.

So let us begin. The following story was initially called “Memory Lives On,” but was later renamed “Memory” after I realised that “Memory Lives On” didn’t make much sense. Still, I thought it was pretty clever at the time. It was supposed to be a title with a double-meaning, since it was about a group of people who’d inadvertently faked their own deaths.  “See, the newspapers are always going on about how their memory will live on forever, but little do the papers know that their memory living on will help them solve the mystery of their attempted murder! Oh, I’m so wise.” In the end, though, the main characters’ memories don’t have all that much to do with how the plot is resolved. The villain more-or-less self-destructs while the heroes spend their time wangsting about their problems. This was before I learned how plots actually worked, of course.

Anyway, enough preamble- here’s “Memory Lives On”:

“Anja Cleary is a tragic loss to her family, to her friends, and to us. The fact that a loyal, caring, intelligent, hardworking teenager could die such a tragic death is a sign of the carelessness of our times. The world needs to use the memory of this smiling blonde beauty to ensure that this kind of hideous accident never happens again. Anja’s parents and brother can now only be comforted by the thought that they now have an angel in Heaven looking down on them. Rest in peace, Anja.”- 25th October 200_

I’m not sure where I got the name “Anja Cleary” from. Or why I felt it was so important that I didn’t say which year the story took place.

The story started off as a Mickey-take about how tabloids cynically shovel on the treacle when talking about major tragedies. It’s a bit unfocused, because at the time I didn’t actually know much about tabloids and their inner workings. If I was to write it now, I’d probably emphasise the falseness of it, or bring in a few more elements about their focusing on the pretty, middle-class, white victims over everybody else. Either way, though, the whole tabloid-satire theme is quickly shoved to the side in favour of a really dull murder mystery and an even duller romance subplot. Priorities!

What a load of rubbish. I can’t believe someone would actually print that in a newspaper. It’s so saccharine it makes my teeth ache, plus it’s all wrong.

In the words of Pearl Jam, I’m still alive, but the person who wrote the article can be excused for not knowing that. The whole country thinks I’m dead. Only five other people know I’m not, and some of them are meant to be dead themselves. But Mark and Estelle’s house couldn’t be called Heaven without anyone laughing. It’s pretty cool, as houses go, but they aren’t the neatest people in the world. Mind you, I don’t think they were expecting four guests, so I’ll let them off the hook.

That’s three or four subject changes in the space of one paragraph. My English teachers must have been so proud.

The Pearl Jam reference is there purely for the sake of having a Pearl Jam reference. I did this a lot.

While we’re on the subject, people don’t become angels after they die, even really good people. Angels are completely separate beings. I learnt that in RE. I think the difference is that they don’t have free will. And besides, Satan apparently started out as an angel, so being one isn’t a guarantee of good behaviour.

This has nothing to do with anything. See what I mean about the lack of focus?

There, that’s the first and last time anything I’ve learnt in school will be applicable to real life.

Frankly, I think “applicable to real life” is stretching it a bit even there.

Although the chances of my ever seeing the inside of a school again are fairly small. So there are advantages to everyone thinking you’re dead.

One of the disadvantages is being made out to be sweet and innocent in the papers.

Is “never getting to see your loved ones again” another one?

(Seriously, that barely comes up in the story. I didn’t mean to make my main character come across as a sociopath.)

I could hardly be less sweet and innocent if I tried. Gary’s sweet and innocent, I think. I haven’t known him that long. But I’m pretty certain he’s more sweet and innocent than me.

I also didn’t mean to make her sound drunk.

Incidentally, Gary is the love interest. His two character traits are a) expressing love for Anja, and b) weeping over his tragic past. I’ll leave it to you to decide which of these is more irritating.

In fact, I told Mark earlier today that Gary might as well have had his picture plastered all over the newspapers instead of mine.

“Yeah, but you’re the obvious choice, aren’t you?” he said, “You’re the youngest and the only girl. You’re A Young Life Cut Tragically Short, see?”

“And Gary isn’t? He’s not much older than me.”

“Well… Oh, I know. You’re cuter than Gary.” As you probably know, once you get to the age of fifteen it’s very annoying to be called “cute,” but I let Mark go on. “I mean, you’re textbook cute. Gary looks cute, but he looks weird as well, so they can’t make him their Tragic Accident poster kid. Weirdness and cuteness mixed would bother the public,” he said knowledgeably.

OK, I still quite like the phrase “Tragic Accident poster kid.” But I’m not sure how often men refer to each other as “cute.”

I don’t really think Gary looks all that weird, but maybe he looks different from all his photos. I know I do. Three days before the crash, I dyed my hair strawberry-red, and there weren’t any photos taken of me between then and now. So all the photos of me give the impression that I’m blonde.

This is a bit of a handwave on my part. Apparently, dyeing your hair a different colour means that absolutely nobody will recognise you, even if they’ve known you for years.

One more thing. There was another mistake in the article.

The reason we’re in hiding is that what happened wasn’t an accident. The only accidental thing was that we all survived.

SPOILERS- There’s actually no good reason for them to be in hiding. They could easily just tell the authorities that they’re alive, go home, and let the police handle it. But then there’d be no story, and we can’t have that.