Tag Archive for 'lewis'

Excerpt from ‘Things Change’

Arch comeback on the cards?
Last night, Daniel Newman and his bandmates were spotted in Astraia, mingling with the cream of English celebrity. This is the first time all five members of the band have been seen together since the infamous split two years ago. A club-goer is quoted as saying, “They seemed to be getting on well, you know? They’re mates. Yeah, I’d say they’ll be back.”

Sorcha fumbled slightly with her cigarette lighter. She brushed her hair out of her eyes and looked at her cousin.

“Lewis, be a darling and give me a hand, would you?”

“I shouldn’t because, you know, smoking’s bad for you and, well, you’re not supposed to be in here,” said Lewis but he lit her cigarette for her anyway.

Sorcha shrugged and looked around. They were in the men’s room of the most exclusive nightclub in London; black marble and blue lights and the throb of bass that made the mirrors shake. Sorcha was perched on the edge of a basin, a cigarette in one hand and her compact mirror in the other.

“Fuck, most of the glitter’s worn off,” she said before she took a drag and offered the cigarette to Lewis.

He shook his head, frowning. “No, thanks. Why do you wear that stuff anyway? It just gets everywhere.”

“That’s the point,” said Sorcha with a grin and she reached for her cocktail glass, having forgotten that she had finished it about half an hour previously. “Fuck.” She looked at Lewis. “But, hey, you didn’t mind the glitter on Daniel, did you?”

Lewis looked pained. “I can’t believe you did that to him. He looked like a fucking Christmas tree. And poor Gabriel!”

“Gabriel’s the angel on top!” Sorcha started to laugh hysterically.

“You think Gabriel’s hot?”

“Oh, bloody hell, Lewis, you are no lover of man if you cannot see how hot he is. God, I definitely need more booze if I’m telling you this sort of thing. Oh, and mascara.” As she started to reapply her eye makeup, tongue sticking out slightly, she asked, “Are you having a good time, Lewis, darling?”

“Surprisingly good, actually, seeing as I never liked nightclubs when I was an undergraduate.”

“Aha, but you never liked boys either! Things change.”

“I think I need another drink at this stage,” said Lewis. “Brian has a bottle of champagne that I have to get back to.”

“Good luck with that,” murmured Sorcha, flicking her hair over her shoulder. “I definitely saw some blonde chick wrapped around him and she was showing great interest in that bottle of champagne.”

“The bastard!” cried Lewis jokingly. “And I thought I was the only one.”

“God, you are quite gay, aren’t you?”

“Very bloody funny. Come on, are you done? Let’s go.”

Sorcha slipped off the basin and readjusted her top. “I look like such a slut,” she said cheerfully.

“In comparison to the girls out there?” asked Lewis. “You look like a fucking nun.”

It was true, incidentally. The nightclub was full of anorexic C-list celebrities, schmoozing and shimmering their night away. It was like a galaxy of minor stars, connected through a haze of cigarette smoke. The band had the VIP section to themselves, fortunately, only venturing out to the dancefloor when Oakey insisted that the music was of sufficient quality.

Lewis opened the door for Sorcha and she giggled as a celebrity (lesser than Arch) did a double take.

“Is this the men’s…?” he started to ask.

“Oh, you’re in the right place, love,” said Sorcha before she took Lewis’ arm. “Shall we, darling?”

They made their way back to where Brian was sprawled out on a couch, chatting to Jan (the blonde chick was nowhere to be seen). Gabriel and Daniel looked breathless, having made another foray onto the dancefloor.

“We were accosted by women!” whined Daniel, sliding onto Lewis’ lap. “Hold me.”

“You up for another dance, Barnes?” asked Sorcha. “I’ll keep the daytime soap girls away from you, I promise!”

Gabriel grinned and nodded and ran his hand through his hair. Sorcha noted with satisfaction that he was still shedding glitter, like a falling halo.

“I assume you can dance?” she shouted over the sound of the music as she led him onto the dancefloor.

“I’m a drummer!” he shouted back as if that explained everything.

When they started dancing, of course, it all became clear; the rhythm owned Gabriel or Gabriel owned the rhythm; either way the man could dance.

Later, they picked their way along the London streets. Sorcha was wearing Gabriel’s jacket and insisting that she could walk, despite her crippling boots. Daniel and Lewis kept stopping to kiss until Jan told them that they had to walk on either side of her or else they’d never get back to the hotel.

The following morning, Lewis sat at the breakfast table in the suite, head in hands, as Liz read out the headlines in the Sun. His hangover rather hindered his comprehension of the situation but it seemed that Arch were back in the news; comeback kids, reunited.

Excerpt from ‘Together, Arriving Separately’

A cold bookshop was not where Lewis intended to have the sort of revelation that changed everything. His hand was throbbing and the bandages were unravelling and his coffee mug was halfway to his mouth when he looked at that boy, Daniel Something, for whom the shop had been opened late.

Lewis blinked because it seemed like the least one could do whilst having a revelation.

Daniel Something was sitting, sprawled in an armchair in the Classics section. His face was half-hidden behind glasses and a copy of Edna Keyes’ latest translation of Virgil. He shifted slightly and the hem of his t-shirt rose up, just a little, so that Lewis could see the hard angle of his hipbone. Daniel Something was smiling very slightly and was possibly not even aware of it. He glanced, by chance, in Lewis’ direction.

Lewis dropped his mug because it seemed like the least one could do whilst understanding a revelation.

>>

Daniel was surprised when he fell in love in broad daylight.

After years of midnight fumbles and blanket hazes of smoke and desperation, he sat across from Lewis Knightley in a little English tea-shop, saw him as a dark gold blur against the pale sky and the summer roses waving in through the window, perfectly absorbed in a harmless academic conversation with someone else – it wasn’t even as though they were alone - and felt like a blind man shot with poetry. It was beautiful, of course, but there was no turning back, and the powers that be would not let him refuse it.

Danny’s first thought was god, he’s too young.

His second thought, which occurred only long after he returned home, was that he couldn’t possibly be, because Daniel wasn’t too old.

In the teahouse, Daniel watched Lewis, felt his long legs brush awkwardly against Daniel’s knees under the table, and surprised himself with the roses and sunshine and the heady rush of so this is what it’s like. Because, after all, it always happened in the most unexpected ways, and whatever Daniel had expected, it hadn’t been romance.

Excerpt from ‘Knight’s Move’

Lewis knows he has a hangover before he fully wakes up; it feels as though every cell in his body is dry and shrivelled and screaming for water. There don’t seem to be any embarrassing associated memories although he vaguely recalls a blonde in the toilets of one of the clubs they went to. That could just be wishful thinking although the scent of cheap aftershave and the coarse scratch of stubble linger in his imagination.

He buries his face in his pillow and the buzzing in his ears begins. With a groan, he screws his eyes shut and attempts to ignore the noise which is morphing into a strangely familiar tune.

Lewis opens one eye because dead composers tend not to infiltrate his hangovers (or, at least, they haven’t till now) and then he realises that his phone is ringing on his pillow: Mozart’s 40th Symphony in all its polyphonic, vibrating glory.

Blearily and rather bitterly, he reaches for it.

“’Lo?”

“Lewis! It’s Sorcha!”

“Sorcha…” repeats Lewis slowly and the word tastes furry in his mouth before he realises that that is probably residue of vodka.

“Your cousin, you gobshite! Didn’t you get my fax?”

“I know you’re m’cousin,” protests Lewis. He’s wincing slightly and rubs his head. Sorcha sounds impossibly cheerful for this time of… early afternoon, as it turns out. Lewis struggles upright and feels as though he has left half of his poor, dried-out brain on the bed. He lurches over to the fax machine and, sure enough, there is a fax waiting for him.

“When did you send it, Sorcha?” he mumbles, peering at the jumbled letters that slowly form into words and sentences before his tired eyes.

“Last night! Hurry up, would you? I’m downstairs! I don’t think your doorbell is working. I’ve been leaning on it for at least a minute.”

Lewis groans. “Why does everyone keep doing that to me?”

He goes over to the window and steps out onto the little balcony. “Look out below,” he mutters and there’s Sorcha, looking up and grinning. She’s carrying a cardboard tray with two coffees and Lewis could kiss her except that there are three storeys between them and, even if there weren’t, they’re just a touch too closely related for comfort.

“You’re not going to pee on me from up there, are you?” Sorcha shouts up to him and there are the fucking wolf whistles again. He thinks they’re coming from the same girls as yesterday but finds he doesn’t care what they think.

“Sorcha!” cries Lewis, managing to look both amused and embarrassed. “Here, let yourself in.” He throws the keys down to her and she catches them in one hand.

“You should take up cricket!” he says.

“You should get dressed!” she shoots back.

Lewis blushes and runs his fingers through his hair as he stumbles back inside. He sits on his bed and finally reads Sorcha’s fax.

Lewis baby,

I hear you’re in de big shmoke! I live over near Connolly these days. I intend to venture over to the south side tomorrow and I demand visiting rights and possibly your company in battling the bloody tourists on Grafton Street. Of course, you’re a bloody tourist now, aren’t you? I’ll take it easy on you so.

I’ll call over at 2, assuming you’ve survived the terrifying experience of drinking with Eoin.

Love,

Sorcha.

“Eoin. Shit.” Lewis needs to sit down and then he realises that he is sitting down. “Where the fuck is Eoin?”

He gets up and goes into the bathroom. The tiles are cold and he wonders if there are nerves connecting the soles of his feet with his head. As soon as his toes connect with the floor, his hangover intensifies with a brain-freezing jolt, complete with a swell of nausea, and that’s before he catches sight of himself in the mirror.

“Urble.”

The hair on the right side of his head is tufted up and he looks a little like a startled chicken. His eyes are horribly bloodshot and he really needs to shave. Sorcha isn’t renowned for her patience but he thinks that personal grooming is a necessity today.

Shaving takes quite some time and care because his fingers are trembling. Even still, he nicks his chin when he hears Sorcha letting herself into the flat and he swears profusely.

“Is that a customary Oxford welcome?” she calls through the door.

“Sorry, Sorcha! Just jumping into the shower! Won’t be a minute!”

“Lewis! This entire place smells like a distillery. God knows what you smell like! Take your time, for all our sakes!” Sorcha is laughing at least. It’s good to know that someone finds this funny. “I’ll just work my way through your personal effects and steal the valuables in the meantime. Just let me pass this coffee into you, yeah?”

Lewis grins to himself and opens the door just a fraction. Sorcha’s slender hand appears, bearing a large cup of coffee.

“Still black and no sugar, right?”

“Perfect,” he says gratefully as he closes the door. Leaning against it, he takes a long draft. “Oh, sweet nectar of life,” he sighs.

He steps into the shower and closes his eyes, happy just to stand still and let the hot water flow over his body. His poor dehydrated cells finally start to forgive him and he rolls his neck appreciatively. Lewis is entirely unaware of time passing; it’s as though his mind stops for as long as the water is running. He quite enjoys the temporary anaesthesia and the nothingness of it all. His world has shrunk right down to the space between the shower curtain and the frosted window and the steaming water washes away all manner of sins.

“Lewis? Have you fallen down the plughole?”

Sorcha. Of course, she’s still here.