Christmas Day with Will and Marcus

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Chapter 22 à

Chapter 23 à

Who are Will and Marcus?

 

Will is thirty-six but acts like a teenager. Single, child-free and still feeling cool, he reads the right magazines, goes to the right clubs and knows which trainers to wear. He’s also discovered a great way to score with women at single parents’ groups, full of available (and grateful) mothers, all waiting for Mr Nice Guy. That’s where he meets Marcus, the oldest twelve-year-old in the world. Marcus is a bit strange: he listens to Joni Mitchell and Mozart, he looks after his Mum and he’s never even owned a pair of trainers. Perhaps if Will can teach Marcus how to be a kid, Marcus can help Will grow up and they can both start to act their age.

 

This is the story

About a Boy by Nick Hornby

1998

And this is how they celebrate Christmas

Chapter twenty-two

 

Will had been trying not to think about Christmas, but as it got nearer he was beginning to go off the idea of watching a few hundred videos and smoking a few thousand joints. It didn't seem very festive, somehow, and even though festivi­ties invariably entailed The Song somewhere along the line, he didn't want to ignore them completely. lt struck him that how you spent Christmas was a message to the world about where you were in life, some indication of how deep a hole you had managed to burrow for yourself, and therefore spend­ing three days bombed out of your head an your own said things about you that you might not want saying.

So he would spend Christmas in the bosom of a family - not his family, because he didn't have one - but a family. There was one family he wanted to avoid at all costs: no way did he want to spend Christmas eating nut fucking roast, not watching TV, and singing carols with his eyes closed. He had to be careful, though, because if he just let himself drift along he'd be carried right over the weir; he had to start swimming in the opposite direction fast.

Having decided with such unshakable firmness that he would absolutely definitely not be celebrating the 25th of De­cember with Fiona and Marcus, it came as something of a sur­prise to him to find himself accepting an invitation from Mar­cus the following afternoon to do exactly that.

“To you want to spend Christmas round ours?" Marcus asked, even before he had stepped into the flat.

"Ummm," said Will. "That's, ah, very kind of you."

"Good," said Marcus.

"I only said that's very kind of you," said Will.

"But you're coming."

"I don't know."

"Why not?"

"Because -"

'Don't you wart to come?"

"Yes, of course I do, but ... What about your mum?"

"She'll be there too."

"Yes, I'd sort of presumed that. But she wouldn't want me there."

"I've already spoken to her about it. I said I wanted to in­vite a friend, and she said OK."

"So you didn't tell her it was me?"

"No, but I think she guessed."

"How?"

"I haven't got any other friends, have I?"

"Does she know you still come round here?"

"Sort of. She's stopped asking me, so I think she's given up worrying about it."

"And there really isn't anyone else you'd rather ask?"

"No, course not. And if there was, they wouldn't be al­lowed to come to my house for Christmas lunch. They'd be go­ing to their own houses. Except they live in their own houses, so they wouldn't be going anywhere, would they?"

Will was finding the conversation depressing. What Mar­cus was saying, in his artful, skewed way, was that he didn't want Will to be alone on Christmas day.

"I'm not sure what I'm doing yet."

"Where might you be going instead?"

"Nowhere, but..."

Any conversational holes that needed filling were usually filled by Marcus. His concentration was such that any ums and ers and buts he looked on as cues to change the subject entirely. For some reason, though, he suddenly abandoned his usual technique and stared at Will intently.

"What are you staring at?" Will said eventually.

"I wasn't staring. I was waiting for you to answer the ques­tion."

"I answered it. ‘Nowhere,' I said."

"You said ‘Nowhere, but . . .' I was waiting for what came after the ‘but'"

"Well, nothing. I'm not going anywhere for Christmas."

"So you can come to us."

"Yes, but -'

"But what?"

"Stop asking me ‘But what?' all the time."

"Why?"

"Because ... it's not polite."

"Why not?"

"Because ... I clearly have reservations, Marcus. That's why I keep saying ‘but'. I'm obviously not one hundred per­cent convinced that I want to come to your house for Christmas.

"Why not?"

"Are you being funny?"

"No."

It was true, of course: Marcus was never deliberately funny. One look at Marcus's face was enough to convince Will that the boy was merely curious, and that his curiosity showed no signs of abating. The conversation had already been extended way beyond Will's comfort point, and now he was beginning to worry that he would eventually be forced to articulate the cruellest of truths: that Marcus's mother was, like her son, a lunatic, that even disregarding the sanity aspect of things they were both a pair of losers anyway, that he couldn't imag­ine a gloomier Christmas, that he would much, much rather revert to his original plan for oblivion and the entire output of the Marx Brothers than pull wishbones with either of them, that any sane person would feel the same way. If the kid couldn't take a hint, what option did he have? Unless ...

"I'm sorry, Marcus, I was being rude. I'd love to spend Christmas with you."

That was the other option. It wasn't his chosen option, but it was the other option.

As it turned out, it wasn't just the three of them, which helped him no end when he showed up. He was expecting one of Fiona's logic-free lectures, but all he got was a look; she clearly didn't want to resume hostilities in front of her other guests. There was Marcus's dad, Clive, and his girlfriend, Lindsey, and his girlfriend's mum, six of them altogether, all squashed round the fold-out dining table in the flat. Will didn't know that the world was like this. As the product of a 1960s' second marriage he was labouring under the misap­prehension that when families broke up some of the con­stituent parts stopped speaking to each other, but the set-up here was different: Fiona and her ex seemed to look back on their relationship as the thing that had brought them together in the first place, rather than something that had gone horri­bly wrong and driven them apart. It was as if sharing a home and a bed and having a child together was like staying in ad­jacent rooms in the same hotel, or being in the same class at school - a happy coincidence that had given them the opportunity for an occasional friendship.

This couldn't happen all the time, Will thought, otherwise SPAT (Single Parents – Alone Together) would have been full of happy but estranged couples, all introducing their exes and their nexts and their kids from here, there and everywhere; but it hadn't been like that at all - it had been full of justified and righteous anger, and a very great deal of unhappiness. From what he had seen that evening he didn't think too many SPAT families would be re­convening for a game of Twister and a sing-song round the tree today.

But even if it didn't happen very often, it was happening here, today, which at first Will found rather sickening. if people couldn't live together, he reckoned, they should at least have the decency to loathe each other. But actually, as the day wore on and he had a little more to drink, Will could dimly see that to strive for pleasantness and harmony once a year wasn't an entirely contemptible ambition. A roomful of people trying to get on made Marcus happy, for a start, and even Will was not cynical enough to wish Marcus anything but happiness on Christmas day. On New Year's Eve he would make a resolution to recover some of his previous scepticism, but until then he would do as the Romans do and smile at people even if he disapproved of them. Smiling at people didn't mean that you had to be friends with them forever, surely? Much later in the day, when common sense prevailed and everyone started squabbling, he learnt that smiling at people didn't even mean that you had to be friends for a day, but for a few hours he was happy to believe in an inverted universe.

He had bought presents for Fiona and Marcus. He gave Marcus a vinyl copy of Nevermind, because they didn't own a CD player, and a Kurt Cobain T-shirt, so he could keep in with Ellie; he gave Fiona a pretty groovy and pretty expensive plain glass vase, because she'd complained after the hospital business that she didn't know what to do with the flowers. Marcus gave him a crossword-solvers book to help him with Countdown, and Fiona gave him The Single Parent's Hand­book as a joke.

"What's the joke?" Lindsey asked him.

"Nothing," said Will quickly and, he could see as soon as he'd said it, feebly.

"Will pretended to have a kid so's he could join this sin­gle parents' group," said Marcus.

"Oh," said Lindsey. The strangers in the room, Lindsey and her mum and Clive, looked at him with some interest, but he declined to elucidate. He just smiled at them, as if it were something anyone would do in the circumstances. He wouldn't like to have to explain what those circumstances were, however.

The present-giving part of the day didn't take that long, and with one exception it was the usual stuff alarmingly so, given the complicated web of relationships in the room. Penis­shaped chocolate was all very well, Will thought (actually he didn't think that at all, but never mind - he was trying to live and let live), but was penis-shaped chocolate an appropriate gift for your boyfriend's currently boyfriendless and celibate ex-lover? He really didn't know, but it seemed a little taste­less, somehow - surely the whole subject of penises was best left alone on occasions like this? - and anyway Fiona had never struck Will as a penis-shaped-chocolate kind of woman, but she laughed anyway.

As the pile of discarded wrapping paper grew bigger, it struck Will that just about any present given in these circum­stances could be deemed inappropriate or darkly meaningful. Fiona gave Lindsey some silk underwear, as if to say, "Hey, it doesn't matter to me what you two get up to at nights," and she gave Clive a new book called The Secret History, as if to say something rather different. Clive gave Fiona a Nick Drake cassette, and though Clive did not know about the hos­pital business, as far as Will was aware, there still seemed to be something weird about him forcing a possibly suicidal de­pressive's music on a possibly suicidal depressive.

Clive's presents for Marcus were in themselves uncontro­versial, computer games and sweatshirts and a baseball cap and the Mr. Blobby record and so on, but what made them seem pointed was their contrast with the joyless little pile that Fiona had given Marcus earlier in the day: a sweater that wouldn't do him any favours at school (it was baggy and hairy and arty), a couple of books and some piano music - a gentle and very dull maternal reminder, it transpired, that Marcus had given up on his lessons some time ago. Marcus showed him this miserable haul with a pride and enthusiasm that al­most broke Will's heart ... "And a really nice sweater, and these books look really interesting, and this music because one day when I ... when I get a bit more time I'm going to really give it a go …" Will had never properly given Marcus credit for being a good kid - up until now he'd only noticed his eccentric, troublesome side, probably because there hadn't been much else to notice. But he was good, Will could see that now. Not good as in obedient and uncomplaining; it was more of a mindset kind of good, where you looked at something like a pile of crap presents and recognized that they were given with love and chosen with care, and that was - enough. It wasn't even that he was choosing to see the glass as half-full, either :Marcus's glass was full to overflowing, and he would have been amazed and mystified if anyone had attempted to tell him there were kids who would have hurled the hairy sweater and the sheet music back in the parental face and demanded a Nintendo.

Will knew he would never be good in that way. He would never look at a hairy sweater and work out why it was pre­cisely right for him, and why he should wear it at all hours of the day and night. He would look at it and conclude that the person who bought it for him was a pillock. He did that all the time: he'd look at some twenty-five-year-old guy on roller skates, sashaying his way down Upper Street with his wrap­around shades on, and he'd think one of three things: 1) What a prat; or 2) Who the fuck do you think you are?; or 3) How old are you? Fourteen?

Everyone in England was like that, he reckoned. Nobody looked at a roller-skating bloke with wraparound shades on and thought, Hey, he looks cool, or, Wow, that looks like a fun way of getting some exercise. They just thought: wanker. But Marcus wouldn't. Marcus would either fail to notice the guy at all, or he would stand there with his mouth open, lost in ad­miration and wonder. This wasn't simply a function of being a child, because, as Marcus knew to his cost, all his classmates belonged to the what-a-prat school of thought; it was simply a function of being Marcus, son of Fiona. In twenty years' time he'd be singing with his eyes closed and swallowing bottles of pills, probably, but at least he was gracious about his Christ­mas presents. It wasn't much of a compensation for the long years ahead.

 

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Chapter twenty-three

 

It was good having a mum and dad who didn't decide things together, Marcus thought; that way you got the best of both worlds at Christmas. You got things like sweaters and sheet music, which you had to have, but then you got things like computer games and fun stuff as well. And if his mum and dad had still been together, what would Christmas have been like now, with just the three of them? Pretty boring, probably. This way it was more like a party, what with Will and Lindsey and, well, he wasn't really bothered about Lind­sey's mum, if he was honest, but she helped to fill the room up.

After presents they had lunch, which was a big ring doughnut-type thing made of pastry rather than doughnut, with a lovely cream and mushroom sauce in the hole in the middle, and then they had Christmas pudding with five­pence pieces hidden in it (Marcus had two in his portion), and then they pulled crackers and put the hats on, except Will wouldn't wear his for very long. He said it made his head itch.

After they'd watched the queen on TV (nobody wanted to, apart from Lindsey's mum, but whatever old people wanted they got, in Marcus's experience), Clive rolled a joint, and there was a bit of a row. Lindsey was angry with Clive because of her mum, who had no idea what he was doing until people started shouting about it, and Fiona was angry with Clive be­cause of Marcus, who had seen him roll a joint about one thousand million times before.

"He's seen me do it hundreds of times before," said Clive. It was the wrong thing to say, as it turned out, so Marcus was glad he hadn't said it.

"I wish you hadn't told me," said Fiona. "I really didn't want to know."

"What, you thought I'd given up dope the day we sepa­rated? Why would I do that?"

"Marcus was younger then. He was always in bed before you started rolling up."

"I never smoke any, Mum. Dad won't let me."

"Oh, well that's all right then. As long as you're not smok­ing any, I have no objection to your father indulging his drug habit in front of you."

"Ha, ha," said Marcus. Everyone in the room looked at him, and then they continued the argument.

"I'd hardly describe the occasional spliff as a drug habit, would you?"

"Well, obviously I would, because I just have."

"Can we talk about this another time?" Lindsey asked. Her mother hadn't said anything so far, but she certainly seemed interested in what was going on.

"Why? Because your mother is here?" Marcus had never seen Fiona get cross with Lindsey before, but she was getting cross with her now. "Unfortunately I can never have a con­versation with Marcus's father without your mother being pre­sent, for reasons I have yet to fathom. So you'll just have to bloody well put up with it."

"Look, I'll put the dope away, OK? Then we'll all calm down and watch International Velvet and forget about it." "International Velvet isn't on," said Marcus. "It's Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom."

"That wasn't the point I was making, Marcus."

Marcus didn't say anything, but inwardly he disagreed: it hadn't been the only point, but it had certainly been one of them.

"I know he takes drugs," said Lindsey's mum suddenly. "I'm not daft."

"I don't ... take drugs," said Clive.

"Well, what do you call it then?" said Lindsey's mum.

"It's not drug-taking. It's ... just normal. Drug-taking is something different."

"Do you think he takes them on his own?" Fiona said to Lindsey's mum. "Do you think your daughter just sits there watching him?"

"What do you mean?"

"She doesn't mean anything, Mum. I think Clive's idea is an excellent one. Let's put it all away and play charades or something."

"I didn't say anything about charades. I suggested watch­ing International Velvet."

"It's not International -" Marcus began.

"Shut up, Marcus," said everybody, and then they all laughed.

The row changed the atmosphere, though. Clive and Fiona agreed to have a proper conversation about the dope thing some other time, Fiona and Lindsey snapped at each other a couple of times, and even Will seemed different, al­though none of it had had anything to do with him. Marcus reckoned Will had been having a good time up until then, but afterwards he seemed apart from it all, whereas before he'd been one of the family. It was almost like he was laughing at them for rowing, for reasons Marcus couldn't understand. And then, after they'd had supper (there were cold meats for the meat-eaters, and Marcus had some, just to see the look on his mum's face), Suzie came round with her little girl and it was their turn to laugh at Will.

Marcus didn't know that Will hadn't seen Suzie since his mum had told her about Ned and SPAT and all that. Nobody had said anything, but that didn't mean much - Marcus had always presumed that after he had gone to school or to bed adults did all sorts of things they didn't tell him about, but now he was beginning to suspect this wasn't true, and that the adults he knew didn't have any sort of a secret life at all. It was obvious when Suzie walked into the room that this was an awkward moment, especially for Will: he stood up, and then he sat down, and then he stood up again, and then he went red, and then he said he ought to be going, and then Fiona told him not to be pathetic, so he sat down again. The only spare chair was in Will's comer, so Suzie had to sit next to him.

"Have you had a nice day, Suzie?" Fiona asked her.

"OK, yeah. We're just on the way home from Grandma's."

"And how's Grandma?" asked Will. Suzie turned to look at him, opened her mouth to reply, but changed her mind and ignored him completely. It was one of the most exciting things Marcus had ever seen in real life, and easily the most excit­ing thing he had ever seen in his own living room. (His mum and the sick on the Dead Duck Day didn't count. That wasn't exciting. It was just horrible.) Suzie was snubbing, he reck­oned. He'd heard a lot about snubbing, but he had never watched anyone do it. It was great, if a bit frightening.

Will stood up and sat down again. If he really wanted to leave, Marcus thought, nobody could stop him. Or rather, they could stop him - if everyone in the room grabbed him and sat on him, he wouldn't get very far. (Marcus smiled to himself at the thought of Lindsey's mum sitting on Will's head.) But they wouldn't stop him. So why didn't he just stand up, stay stood up and start walking? Why did he keep on bob­bing up and down? Maybe there was something about snub­bing that Marcus didn't know. Maybe there were snubbing rules, and you just had to sit there and be snubbed, even if you didn't feel like it.

Megan wriggled out of her mother's lap and went over to the Christmas tree.

"There might be a present for you under there, Megan," said Fiona.

"Oooh, Megan, presents," said Suzie. Fiona went over to the tree, picked up one of the last two or three parcels and gave it to her. Megan stood there clutching it and looked around the room.

"She's wondering who to give it to," said Suzie. "She's had as much fun giving them out as opening them today."

"How sweet," said Lindsey's mum. Everyone watched and waited while Megan made her decision; it was almost as if the little girl had understood the snubbing business and wanted to make mischief, because she toddled over to Will and thrust the present at him.

Will didn't move. "Well, take it from her then, you fool," said Suzie.

"It's not my bloody present," said Will. Good for you, Mar­cus thought. Do some snubbing of your own. The only trouble was that as things stood Will was snubbing Megan, not Suzie, and Marcus didn't think you should snub anyone under the age of three. What was the point? Megan didn't seem to mind, though, because she continued to hold the present out to him until he reached for it.

"Now what?" said Will crossly.

"Open it with her," said Suzie. She was more patient this time; Will's anger seemed to have calmed her down a little. If she wanted a row with Will, she clearly didn't want it here, in front of all these people.

Will and Megan tore off the paper to reveal some sort of plastic toy that played tunes. Megan looked at it and waved it at Will.

"What now?" said Will.

"Play with her," said Suzie. "God, spot the childless per­son here."

"Tell you what," said Will. "You play with her." He tossed Suzie the toy. "As I'm so bloody clueless."

"Maybe you could learn to be less clueless," said Suzie.

"What for?"

"I would have thought that in your line of work it might be handy to know how to play with kids."

"What's your line of work?" Lindsey asked politely, as if this were a normal conversation among a normal group of people.

"He doesn't do anything," Marcus said. "His dad wrote Santa's Super Sleigh and he earns a million pounds a minute."

"He pretends he has a child so he can join single-parent groups and chat up single mothers," said Suzie.

"Yeah, but he doesn't get paid for that," said Marcus. Will stood up again, but this time he didn't sit down. "Thanks for the lunch and everything," he said. "I'm off."

"Suzie has a right to express her anger, Will," said Fiona.

"Yes, and she's expressed it, and now I have a right to go home." He started to weave his way through the presents and glasses and people towards the door.

"He's my friend," Marcus said suddenly. "I invited him. I should be able to tell him when he goes home."

"I'm not sure that's how the whole hospitality thing works," said Will.

"But I don't want him to go yet," said Marcus. "It's not fair. How come Lindsey's mum's still here, and no one invited her, and the one person I invited is leaving because everyone's being horrible to him?"

"First of all," said Fiona, "I invited Lindsey's mum, and it's my house too. And we haven't been horrible to Will. Suzie's angry with Will, as she has every right to be, and she's telling him so."

Marcus felt as though he were in a play. He was standing up, and Will was standing up, and then Fiona stood up; but Lindsey and her mum and Clive were sitting on the sofa watching, in a line, with their mouths open.

"All he did was make up a kid for a couple of weeks. God. That's nothing. So what? Who cares? Kids at school do worse than that every day."

"The point is, Marcus, that Will left school a long time ago. He should have grown out of making people up by now."

"Yeah, but he's behaved better since, hasn't he?"

"May I go yet?" said Will, but nobody took any notice.

"Why? What's he done?" asked Suzie.

"He never wanted me round his flat every day. I just went. And he bought me those shoes, and at least he listens when I say I'm having a hard time at school. You just tell me to get used to it. And he knew who Kirk O'Bane was."

"Kurt Cobain," said Will.

"And it's not like you lot never do anything wrong ever, is it?" said Marcus. "I mean…" He had to be careful here. He knew he couldn't say too much, or even anything at all, about the hospital stuff. "I mean, how come I got to know Will in the first place?"

"Because you threw a bloody great baguette at a duck's head and killed it, basically," said Will.

Marcus couldn't believe Will was bringing that up now. It was supposed to be all about how everyone else did things wrong, not about how he had killed the duck. But then Suzie and Fiona started laughing, and Marcus could see that Will knew what he was doing.

"Is that true, Marcus?" said his father.

"There was something wrong with it," said Marcus. "I think it was going to die anyway."

Suzie and Fiona laughed even harder. The audience on the sofa looked appalled. Will sat down again.

 

And if you want to read the rest of it, you find it in Nick Hornby, About a Boy

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