‘So
what?’ I hissed back, tucking a stray strand of hair behind her ear.
‘Stop
it!’ said Jane.
‘Lovers’
tiff?’ I said with a suggestive raise of the eyebrow. ‘Followed by make-up sex?’
Jane
growled. The woman behind the desk
handed me two brown paper bags. ‘Your friendship cookies,’ she said, with an
approving smile and over-emphasis on the word friendship.
‘Oh
for heaven’s sake,’ said Jane in the lift. ‘What the fuck was that about?
Friendship cookies? And why aren’t you wearing your wedding ring?’
‘I
never do,’ I said simply. ‘It doesn’t fit. Anyhow. Even if I did they’d just think we were
married lesbians. Get over it. And the
friendship cookies are…cute.’
‘Probably,’
said Jane sourly. ‘We appear to have
been upgraded.’
‘Yippee,’
said I, bouncing on the vast bed. Jane
rolled her eyes. ‘This just gets worse
and worse.’
Let’s
backtrack. I, as you know, am broke,
actually beyond broke but let’s not go there.
Hence I am Jane’s charity case.
Along with supporting various bona fide good causes, she undertakes to
cheer my life up by sending me the occasional aid parcel of Jo Malone candles
or taking me to gigs. This time it was
the Stones Roses in Manchester – and very amusing it was too.
Being
Manchester and being summer it was pissing it down. ‘Haven’t you got any other
clothes?’ said Jane, eyeing my small weekend bag (given to me by, yup, Jane).
‘I’ve
got clean underwear and my toothbrush,’ I said. ‘What else do I need?’ I pride myself on
travelling light.
‘Er,
you do know this gig is in a field, right?’
Well...sort of... |
Oops. I’d kinda assumed it would be in a
stadium. For pity’s sake, the last time
I went to a gig in Manchester it was in the student union. I didn’t know
Manchester even had fields. I was
wearing a t-shirt and jeans and sort of heeled boots and a skinny jacket
(y’know, standard rock chick stuff).
Jane had sensible trainers, a hoodie and a mac. ‘Oh, for God's sake. You’ll have to get a poncho,’ she said
crossly.
‘Oh
no. No ponchos.’ I have photographic evidence of the last time
I wore a poncho and it isn’t pretty.
Jane gave me ‘the look’ and bought a poncho.
‘I’m not wearing it,’ I said.
Then
the hail started falling. Scrub that, it didn’t fall – it sort of flung itself
at us. We ran for the bar.
(Okay,
random thoughts about outdoor gigs. Why
don’t you cover the bar area? In fact,
why don’t you provide ANY sort of shelter for people who are foolish enough to
wear normal clothes for your concerts?
And why don’t you sell the following things inside the perimeter fence:
ponchos (or, preferably, something more aesthetic than a large piece of
plastic); wellington boots; warm clothing; socks; furry hats, gloves?)
What sensible people wore... |
‘Right,' said Jane, firmly. 'I’ll have four gins and slim-line tonics, please. What kind of gin do you have?’
The
girl stared sideways at Jane as if waiting for her to crack into a gin. I mean,
grin.
‘Well?’
‘Umm,
we don’t have gin.’
‘Vodka?’
‘Er,
shall I tell you what we do have?’
It
was pretty simple to see: lager, cider, Coke, some kind of alcopop and bottles
of exceedingly dodgy looking wine.
‘Oh
just bloody great,’ said Jane as the hail lashed her back and she struggled
with an umbrella and her purse. ‘Four bottles of red wine then.’ At which point two young guys, with cute open
faces like puppies, snuggled up under the brolly and made her laugh. Well, it
was pretty funny, four of us all desperately trying to keep out of the now
horizontal lashing rain-cum-flying missiles.
‘Will
you put the fucking poncho on now, for the love of God,’ said Jane. I knew when I
was beat. But, riddle me this, how do
you wrangle four bottles of wine, an umbrella, Jane’s capacious rucksack, my
tiny shoulder bag, two adoring twenty-somethings AND a poncho when the ground
is fast becoming a mud pool? Which was
when Jane started laughing…hard. ‘Only
you…’ she said, nearly snorting her wine. ‘Only you could get your head in the
wrong bloody hole. Take the bloody thing off and start again – and you
(prodding a boy-child) hold this.’
And
so it went on really. We watched the Wailers,
we watched some guy I’d never heard of, we watched Liam Gallagher, we watched
The Stone Roses. We drank wine that made
me wince at every sip. We got adored a ridiculous amount. I tell ya, all you women who say you never
meet blokes – go to a Stone Roses gig (or something similar). Seriously. It was about 80 percent men (admittedly all
pissed out of their skulls and admittedly not all terribly attractive and
admittedly all probably married with wives skipping around in joy at having
off-loaded them for the day) but they were very male and they sure weren’t backwards in coming
forwards, if you get my drift. But not
remotely in a predatory way – it was just very very funny. And my ego blew a huge kiss to the guy who
just gently touched my arm and said softly, ‘I have to tell you, you are absolutely
gorgeous’ and then vanished into the crowd.
‘See,’
I said to Jane. ‘They don’t think we’re lesbians. Not here.’
‘They’re
too pissed to care,’ she said as some bloke unzipped himself and peed right in
front of us. I had to concede she had a point – we could probably have been
full-on snogging and they’d still have tried their luck.
Back
at the hotel, having dropped off our last orphans, a pair of lads from Runcorn
(‘it’s the arsehole of the arsehole of the arsehole of Britain’ one of them
said mournfully in the cab), we finally got to bed.
‘Right,’
said Jane. ‘You stay right over there,’ pointing to the far left-hand corner of
the vast bed. ‘And I’ll stay right over here.’
‘Look…
relax,’ I said. ‘I never move a muscle
when I sleep and anyhow, I’m not going to jump you in the middle of the night. Much as I love you.’
‘You
never know,’ she said. ‘You might think I was someone else.’
I
just sighed and switched off the light.
And slept…like any sensible lesbian.
Oh, what was the gig like? Yeah, alright... :-)
7 comments:
Thanks for making me smile during a tough day/week/month!!!!
Liz x
He he he. I shared a bed with a good (female) friend a few weeks ago and wondered just what the porter thought as he took the cases up. Who cares though.
Did I ever tell you about when I saw The Doors, and that The Who were the warm up act and sort of broke the stage? Think you know I was at Woodstock?
Gosh, that was almost a lifetime ago. No way I would endure hail in a field now.
You are a brave woman, Jane.
Sounds fabulous - wish I had a friend that would drag me away from reality every now and then.
I recall Ponchos too - I had this huge black one with a white frings, it looked more like a Victorian table covering (you know how they loved to hide the legs of everything in case it was erotic - even the legs of tables). Robyn wears one and manages to look very chic though!
@Liz - sorry to hear you're having a tough time - glad I raised a smile.
@EM - exactly!
@Frances - huh? You broke the stage? You hellraiser! Yup, I knew you were a Woodstock chick...my SIL too. :)
@ Zoe - yup, she's a diamond. Can imagine Robyn looks way chic in her poncho... and I quite like the sound of yours too. :)
I want to stay at a hotel with Friendship Cookies.
Jane sounds fab. Let's take her dancing with us, ok?
:)
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