Looking for Alex

Looking for Alex by Marian Dillon Page A

Book: Looking for Alex by Marian Dillon Read Free Book Online
Authors: Marian Dillon
Tags: Fiction, Contemporary Women
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grubby, thread-pulled cushion. I try to swallow and find that my tongue is stuck like sandpaper to the roof of my mouth, which makes me long for ice-cold water; this nudges a vague memory of someone saying, ‘Here, you’ll be needing this.’ Fitz. I turn my head towards the side of the bed, see a pint glass of water and sit up to drink it down in one go. Tepid, not ice-cold, but bliss. I slump back in the sleeping bag and close my eyes, waiting for the banging in my skull to subside and letting all yesterday’s events filter through my mind.
    Things come back to me in a jumble of images: Alex squealing excitedly at the bus station; Fitz peering up from his stack of albums; the fantastic garden glimpsed through a ramshackle wooden door; Pete, smiling lazily at me, his arm around Alex. And then the bizarre tea party in this room, where I’d felt like Alice in Wonderland, huge and misplaced. After that there’d been helping Fitz make some food before Alex and Pete came down.
    I peeled and chopped vegetables for him to scoop into a big pan, to be made into curry. As he cooked so he talked, in his London-Irish lilt. And as he talked he seemed to warm to me, open up a bit. I found out he was the eldest of six children and that his proper name was John Fitzallen. He was born in Waterford but his family came to England when he was five. They live in a crowded flat in a tower block in Bethnal Green and on turning sixteen he was turned out.
    ‘Not literally, not quite, but it’s what was expected. The place was bursting at the seams and there were too many arguments.’ He’d got a job in a hotel kitchen and a room that went with it. Two years later he was one of a few staff laid off. ‘I was on the streets,’ he said. ‘Didn’t have enough money for a deposit on a room and couldn’t claim dole ‘cos I didn’t have an address. The old benefit trap. Spent a few weeks sleeping rough, the odd night in a hostel. It wasn’t nice.’
    I liked the effortless way he moved between cooker, cupboard and table, watched him sprinkle spices out of recycled jam-jars, judging it all by eye. Sometimes, thinking about something I’d asked, he’d stand still, one hand rubbing the back of his neck as he searched for what he wanted to say.
    ‘Couldn’t you have gone back home?’
    ‘Nah. My space had been filled — there were no beds left. I didn’t ever tell them. I just…well, I just didn’t. I was lucky though — someone told me about this place, took me along to meet Pete and I’ve been here ever since. It’s okay, a good squat. Pete keeps a tight rein on it, won’t let just anyone doss here.’
    ‘But what do you do for money? I mean, how do you buy food?’
    ‘I’ve got some work now, hotel down the road, twenty hours a week, more if I want.’
    ‘And Pete? Does he work?’
    Fitz looked round from stirring the curry. ‘You don’t ask questions like that.’
    There was no time to say any more, because right then Pete and Alex came down. Alex was wrapped in a vintage, print dressing gown, the sort you could buy cheap in Oxfam. With her wild hair and dark lips she looked vampish, like a silent-movie star. Someone produced a bottle of Hirondelle and I gulped the first glass down quickly; Pete gave me more. A second bottle was drunk with the curry, which tasted fantastic and exotic; up to then my experience of Indian food had been a Beef Vesta, which was like one of my mother’s stews with sultanas and too much pepper.
    After eating we went into the room at the front and sat round on cushions and beanbags. Fitz brought down his stereo and some albums, and when that was all set up he rolled a joint and passed it round. I took a couple of drags and Alex giggled, threw one comradely arm round my shoulders. At first I felt nothing. Second time round I had some more, and slowly my head began to unravel; thoughts lost their shape, all crowded somewhere just out of reach. I felt blissfully connected to Alex and the others yet

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