- Home
- Niven Govinden
Graffiti My Soul
Graffiti My Soul Read online
Graffiti My Soul
Niven Govinden
Graffiti My Soul
First published in Great Britain in 2006 by
Canongate Books Ltd, 14 High Street,
Edinburgh EH1 1TE
This digital edition first published in 2013 by Canongate Books
Copyright © Niven Govinden, 2006
The moral right of the author has been asserted
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available on
request from the British Library
978 1 84195 888 0 (13-digit ISBN)
eISBN: 978 1 78211 346 1
Typeset by Palimpsest Book Production Ltd,
Falkirk, Stirlingshire
www.canongate.tv
Contents
Part 1
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Part 2
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Part 3
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Part 4
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Part 5
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Chapter 56
Chapter 57
Chapter 58
Chapter 59
Chapter 60
Part 6
Chapter 61
Chapter 62
Chapter 63
Chapter 64
Chapter 65
Chapter 66
Chapter 67
Chapter 68
Chapter 69
Acknowledgements
PART 1
1
My problem is that I can’t see myself before the funeral. Really, nothing. Moon’s the one who’s dead, and I can see her clearly. I thought it was supposed to be the other way round. I’ve seen those TV shows where a boyfriend or girlfriend kicks it. The one that’s left behind bawling alone in their room. How they can’t remember their loved one’s face and all the rest of it. Even though they’ve only been cold for about a day. Then they start dragging the pictures out in desperation, or begin to construct their head out of clay. That ain’t my style. I was never one for marking every moment with a snap. Never needed to. Moon’s got the sort of face that’s hard to forget. She’s not the one I’m worried about. It’s my head that needs moulding.
I know how I looked on the morning of the funeral. Black suit from M&S that isn’t one of the old-fashioned ones. Taken-up hems on the trousers, which Mum had stayed up past midnight to do, after she’d finished her paperwork. Two-button jacket that fitted just right across my shoulders. Made me look older than fifteen. Even in that tight moment when I was certain I was feeling nothing, I knew that I was carrying off that suit. I looked tall, and lean, and sharp. If you had been walking down the street that morning, and saw me in that suit, you would have thought I was on my way to a graduation or something. There’d be no chatting about a kid who’s off to bury the girl he’s just helped to put away.
Moon would have died if she’d seen me in that suit. Bad joke, but I’m too young to be owning this stuff. I should be wearing it when I’m, like, eighteen. I can see it now. A Friday night, me in that suit, her winched out of her jeans and into one of those dresses from Karen Millen that cost too much. We’d go into Kingston, where they’d let us into Oceana without a word. Drinking cocktails and dancing stupid to garage. We could have killed it. Again, bad joke. That’s the only thing I seem to be good at right now, cracking the bad ones. (Not even able to crack one off.) Alone in my bedroom. All dressed up and no Moon to see it.
This is the morning after the funeral. I put the suit on again once Mum has left for work. She takes her time, pretending to forget something in the bathroom so that she can pace past my door three or four times. Listening out for signs of life or death. Before Moon started to change things were easy enough and there was none of this pacing. I know Mum’s thinking about me, fretting over how things have ended up the way they have, but I haven’t got time to worry about her on top of everything else. I just don’t.
I can’t get myself to look how I looked yesterday. Skin paler, bags under the eyes blacker. Jacket doesn’t sit so smart. Pre-pressed trouser seams flap at my bare feet needlessly. Same suit, different look. I don’t understand it. But then I think that maybe it’s because I’m indoors that I don’t feel right.
When I walked to the church yesterday – there was no way I was sharing a car with Moon’s parents and Gwyn – it was the first really bright strong day of spring, and the sun was doing its I’m-back-and-bad dance. I took the back roads so that I could walk past the ropey on the way. The original ropey that’s in the middle of the wood, not the new one by the church that the younger kids use. It had only rained lightly during the night, so the ground was good to firm. If you looked close enough, because you couldn’t catch them from a distance, bare branches were just starting to peep pea-pod green from their tips. Birds were there, but distant, I didn’t pay much attention. It was mainly me on that walk, crunching dead wood underfoot, the sun, and the trees with their woosh woosh woosh. Taking my time, because I knew they’d have to wait for me.
Everything in that moment felt good. The sun was teasing the top of my head and I felt that some kind of thing was finally going to let itself out. That maybe I’d get through this. I didn’t quite manage the sigh, but the feeling that it was coming got me through the day. Even Moon wouldn’t have taken the piss out of the effort I was making. I didn’t let her down. I delivered.
And I don’t use these words lightly. When she was around, we never said these things about each other. Why would we? Why would we even notice them? There’s plenty of time to learn these things later. We’re fifteen. This life’s supposed to be infinite.
So now I’m walking down the street in the suit again. T-shirt instead of a shirt, the first hat I can find, and trainers. It’s not quite as yesterday, but it’s the best I can manage. Not that it matters particularly; it’s a loose experiment. The light’s no good down our road. Too many semis on top of each other. It’s no wonder I can’t get over anything in an environment like this. This place is no Mecca for healing. No comfort to be had in pebble-dashing and crazy paving.
As I turn the corner into Elm Drive, then left into Oakdene, and then into Broadhurst, where the wood lies at its very bottom, I drop the shuffling, and my steps become firmer and faster. By the time I’ve passed Jason’s house – number 32 – I’m breaking into a run. The sun is nowhere near coming out. Everything is flat and grey
. Trees look beyond growth. I can’t help seeing death in everything. I’m not special in this suit. I look like an idiot who’s very much under eighteen, and unsure of himself. A little boy who needs someone to hold his hand. How was it that everyone took me seriously yesterday – looking like this?
Broadhurst is used as a rat-run during rush hour. If you drive all the way down the hill you can cut past the one-way into town, but at this time of the morning it can be deathly quiet. Another bad joke, and an inaccurate one. Everything about Moon’s going has taught me that there’s nothing quiet about death. Kicking and screaming to the last. Pressing against my ears until all other sounds are shut out. Singularly louder than anything I’ve ever heard.
There’s a car coming now, can’t quite make out what, and it slows on my side. Someone with a blocked nose shouting from the window as I carry on running towards the wood. Maybe I was careering into the road, it has been known to happen. I’m moving forward, that’s all I know.
‘Hey! Hey! Where are you going? Hey!’
52, 54, 56, 58, 60, 62, 64, 66, 68, 70. The road ends at 284. Sun now decides to make an entrance. Coming out from the clouds in full effect, blinding from the right. It’s handy. I don’t make eye contact with the car. Instead keep running, keep focusing on the numbers. You hear about all kinds of nutters these days, accosting kids.
‘Come back! I just want to know where you’re going!’
The car isn’t leaving. I should have brought my bike. They wouldn’t have seen me for dust then.
‘I don’t want an argument,’ calls the blocked nose again, loud enough so all of Broadhurst can hear how odd they are.
I think about heading back to Jason’s house. He smoked his way back to reality after his sister was in a hit and run. Twenty blunts a day at the worst point. Once the front door opens and he comes staggering out, I wouldn’t be bothered then. But the wood appears as the street dips into the hill, and the whoosh whoosh hits the back of my ears. A final incentive. I pick up a gear, and break into an all-out sprint. I’m the fastest at school. 100, 200 or 400m, take your pick. There’s not one fucker who can touch me. Lynford Paki they call me when I’m on one. 132, 136, 144. I reckon I’m at touchdown in about thirty seconds. Ain’t no one going to be bothering me then.
‘Veerapen! Veerapen, stop! Stop, will you?’
It’s not the name that registers, but the voice. Mum. It’s enough to make me stop dead in my tracks. Maybe I am losing it, if I can’t even recognise when my own mum is speaking to me. I turn at last and realise. She’s in her silver Astra and nurse’s uniform. Breaking the rules and wearing her hair down because she got the curls straightened for the funeral and is making the most of it. Fucking roving district nurses. Always on the snoop. She gives me the Florence Nightingale face. Arms are back on the wheel in a flash, fresh from brushing away tears. She thinks that I didn’t see them.
‘I thought you were sleeping,’ she calls, because although I’ve stopped running, I won’t go near the car.
‘I heard you crying,’ she says, when that doesn’t get a response. As if blabbing about my crying to the whole street is going to get me to open up. Aren’t nurses supposed to keep things confidential, like priests?
‘I’m going for a walk,’ I say, ‘to the rope … to the wood.’ Still hopping left to right because I don’t want to stop moving – if I do, you can probably tell that I’m shaking.
It’s freaking me out to see her so upset, and trying to hide it so badly. Maybe it’s easier to see once you’re out of the house. My head still feels muddled but the fresh air definitely seems to be doing something. That I’m even noticing it is a start.
‘Why don’t you come back with me, eh? I bet you haven’t had any breakfast.’
‘Not hungry,’ I say.
We both look at our watches and see it’s close to midday anyway.
‘OK,’ she says slowly, taking a breath, the way I’ve seen her do on difficult home visits, when some old codger refuses to have his bag changed. ‘Why are you wearing your suit, sweetheart? You’ll get it filthy if you walk through the wood again.’
There had been no mention of my muddied hems yesterday, when I’d arrived at the church, an hour later than I should’ve. I think she was just relieved that I’d showed up.
‘Got no other clothes. You can’t be bothered to do any washing. Too busy larging it with your new boyfriend.’
She pretends to ignore that, even though I can see her eyebrows arching back and forth. It’s the first time I’ve opened my mouth on that particular subject so harshly. I’m usually much more easy going. Moon being buried six feet deep has given everyone some extra time.
‘It’s going to rain in a minute. Let me give you a lift home.’
‘I’m walking,’ I repeat, ‘to the wood.’
‘Sweetheart,’ she says again, holding her hand out, fluttering her fingers like I’m a little bird that might swoop for some bread. She’s spent so much time with pensioners, she’s pretty much taken to speaking with me as she does them; cajoling one minute, brisk and no-nonsense the next. It makes you wonder whether she means any of it, if she’s simply on autopilot.
‘I just don’t think it’s a good idea for you to go running off on your own at the moment …’
But I’m off before she has the chance to say anything else.
The wood smells better than it did yesterday. Damp, soft. Good enough to bury myself. Even as I slow the run into a walk, I can still hear Mum shouting after me.
‘Veerapen, I’m not nagging, love. I’m worried about you! Come back! At least take my hat off. What are you doing wearing my hat?’
2
There’s no point in people asking me a barrel-load of questions at the moment, not when I’m barely capable of remembering my own name. I’m upset.
But until a month ago I was the captain of the school Challenge team. Mum calls me the brainiac when she remembers. Usually when she’s cooking dinner with some quiz TV on in the background, and I’m getting all the answers right.
Challenge is a lame version of University Challenge that the council set up. It’s designed for kids, meaning that they’re obliged to drop in the odd question about Fiddy Cent in between posers about the lunar landscape and the name of a combustible metal that appears on the Periodic Table as Mg.
American high schools have these quiz decathlons that are way more glamorous. They have their own unique branding and their special dedicated coaches and some big-time prizes. You can actually go to a better university just by winning one of those things.
In our lame-ass equivalent no one is impressed by intellectual triumph over adversity. You can come from a less modest background and wipe the floor with one of the better schools; you can whip their ass and be applauded, but under no circumstances can you let it go to your head. That would be way too American for anyone.
I won’t lie and say that I don’t like it, because I do. I’m into it. But I won’t show any more enthusiasm than that. No one wants to listen to a bunch of geeks congratulating each other. It’s unattractive. And I’m not a science geek, or any other kind of geek. Just clever. Can’t do anything about it. And Challenge gets you out of school one afternoon every three weeks, as the team gets to bus it into various Surrey shit-holes to take part in the regional heats. Combined with the odd days I have to take off for my running events, I’m virtually a part-timer at that place.
So I can understand why it’s my brain that goes first. It’s obvious. This is what I mean when I say that I can’t see myself. Moon’s death has turned me into some kind of spastic overnight. Maybe I should start calling myself Dr Mental or something. Or whatever is the Anglo Indian Yid flid equivalent.
I’m a mess. Take music, for example. Not that I’m particularly interested in music right now, but nonetheless … Maybe a month ago, if you’d have brought up Jay Z and tried comparing the Black Album with Dangermouse’s Grey Album, I probably would have taken you out. Offered a commentary of such length you co
uld’ve transcribed it into an essay and published the fucker. (I’m not showing off here, I just know a lot about hip hop. Everyone knows it, like they know about the running, Moon, and everything else.) On mornings like this, ask about Jay Z, and I’ll say Jay who? I couldn’t give a shit about this rhyme or that. All I want is my Moony Suzuki back.
3
I’m walking to the furthest edge of the wood. A hop and a skip and you’re on the bypass. Every car that drives past feels like it’s going to mow you down. Each whoosh like a mini-hurricane. My flares flap like bunting. I find myself heading to our spot. Dr Mental autopilot again. Jason is already there, burning some stuff, and bashing the shit out of his phone. Doesn’t mention the hat. Neither of us says anything.
4
We’re in Tesco with Mum after school. This is at the start of the year, when things made a bit more sense.
No one goes shopping with his or her mum after school anymore, not unless they’re sad or God Squad. We’re tagging along, because Tesco means a lift into town, and the buses round here are wack. Moon wants to get the new NERD album, and I need some trainer laces. Not that it really matters what’s on our shopping list. An hour or two in the mall is better than a kick in the teeth on a Monday afternoon. Way better.
The downside is that we have to help Mum push the trolley around Tesco, but that only takes half an hour, so no biggie. She’s not one of those clingy women you see out with their kids. Mum likes me to help out, pull my weight. If we’re lucky, we can just about scoot around the aisles without anyone from school seeing us. Mum’s cool and everything, but I don’t want people thinking I’m from one of those ‘multi-cultural’ families that has a hundred relatives and needs to do everything together. Just the thought of that kind of set-up is excruciating.
We end up riding the lifts, pissing about like a couple of ten-year-olds. They’re see-through and small, like coffins, running at two miles an hour, but still manage to get us excited. Mum looks disappointed when we meet her outside Tesco empty-handed. She likes her routine, and keeps Wednesdays for the supermarket run, but pushed it forward because we were making such a big deal of hitting the mall to get our stuff.