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Authors: Nicola Barker

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Ten thousand people have just turned, en masse, to see a tiny, hired boat, crammed to the
gills
with groovers and Brothers, and on the roof? Three shady figures, one with a mike. In the water around them, a still tinier craft in which a film-maker holds a camera.

It’s Dizzee Rascal, this year’s Mercury Prize Winner! He’s singing his new single.
‘Just a Rascal, Dizzee Rascal…Just a Rascal, Dizzee Rascal.’

He’s making himself a video–using the lights, using the crowds, using the atmosphere…

Wha?!

Can it be
possible?
That this scraggy, opportunistic East-End scrap is planning to steal the initiative–the limelight–from the world’s greatest illusionist?

If I look closer I can make something else out.
Solomon
(no word of a lie). He’s waving from the back. He’s beaming, ear to ear.

‘DIZZEE!’ I find myself screaming, when the song reaches its climax and then cuts out.

‘DIZZEE!’

And as one, the people on that boat turn, look up at the bridge, and they
cheer
.

 

 

So what’s the deal with Rasket? Has he come to push everyone’s faces in it?

This sprig of young cum–this cocky afterthought–this shock of vitality?

And Blaine? What would
he
make of it? Does he notice? Would he
care
? Is he furious? Is he
beyond
all that?

I don’t know. But I’m beaming. And the Rasket starts singing again, and the Brothers start dancing, and the boat takes a couple of reckless swerves, and the sound system is blasting back the nets on all those million pound riverside pads and flats…

First the nearly-Jew, starving?

Then
the raucous
black
kid?

What the hell’s
happening
to this neighbourhood?!

 

 

 

That night I watch the news and Blaine barely figures. The PM’s had heart murmurs. Three soldiers are shot in Iraq. At about eleven I see a short report. They’re saying it was all an anticlimax. They show Blaine, close-up, and it’s a different Blaine from the one I saw on the bridge. It’s a tragic Blaine. He’s choked with emotion. And he’s saying, ‘I just want to thank…’ and then this cry comes out of him. Like the squeal of a baby fox. A bleat. Then they carry him off.

It’s only TV. But I swear to God, in that moment, my heart nearly stops.

Hang on a minute, though…

Listen
. Listen
closely

In the background I hear
Rasket
; the relentless thud of his distinctive bass-line, the jackdaw cackle of his rebellious lyric. It’s
him
. Yet nobody
mentions
Rasket’s coup…

Sure, they want him in their colour supplements, and on their cutting-edge radio shows. But they need to squeeze him out of here. He won’t
fit
here. He
just won’t do
.

But guess what?
Fuck
them.
Yeah
. Fuck the deriders and the egg-throwers and the opinion formers.

Fuck them all
!

Because he
came
, see? And he
sang
, and he
took
.

 

 

Hmmn
. Wonder where he might’ve got
that
idea from.

 

 

So what happened after?

They took Blaine to hospital? They put him on a drip for seven days? They fussed over his electrolyte balance? They waited to see if he’d done himself ‘any permanent damage’? They bid millions for his diaries?

On the BBC radio news, in the morning, they say, ‘Illusionist David Blaine has left his perspex box after forty-four days and nights with apparently no food of any kind.’

Apparently.

 

 

Couldn’t even give him
that
.

 

 

Isn’t it all about
boxes
, huh? He arrived an illusionist but he came out something else. He changed (I
need
to believe it). But the world says you can’t change. You pulled the wool over our eyes
once
, kid, you played tricks on us
before
. You made us feel all confused and stupid, and you could do it again, at
any
moment. We just can’t–we
won’t
–take you from one neat box and put you into another. No way. Uh-
uh
.

 

 

The following morning, a Monday, I return for the last time to the scene of the crime. And when I get to the point on the bridge where I caught my first glint of him–that initial sighting, that seductive perspex glimmer–there’s just this huge
hole
in the sky. Even the crane has gone. And when I get to the far end, where all the cars used to honk their horns at him, I see every driver, turning and staring. I see their heads turn, one after the other. And all they see now are clouds and the tops of trees. And seagulls. But their heads
still
turn, and they look. Car after car after car. And it’s a ballet of I Miss You David.

A Symphony of He’s Gone.

 

 

I got the words wrong. No kidding. The opening words.
Shane
. I said ‘barely as tall as our perimeter fence’ (Remember?), but when I looked–when I
checked
–I saw that it was actually ‘barely topping the backboard of father’s old chuck-wagon’. Which is better,
much
better,
eh
?

 

 

‘I guess that’s all there is to tell…’

Chapter 16. It’s the shortest chapter you could ever imagine. And it ends:

‘He was the man who rode into our little valley out of the heart of our great glowing west and when his work was done rode back whence he had come and he was Shane.’

Observe the total lack of punctuation.

(Jesus H. How’d he ever get away with that stuff?)

Not even a comma after ‘whence he had come’? Or a
dash
?

Man
.

Is Jack Schaefer some fuck-you, balls-out writer or
what
?

About the Author
 

N
ICOLA
B
ARKER

S
previous books include
The Three Button Trick and Other Stories
and the novels
Wide Open
, which won the IMPAC Award, and
Behindlings
, all available in paperback from Ecco.

 

Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author.

 
Also by Nicola Barker
 

Behindlings

The Three Button Trick and Other Stories

Wide Open

 

CLEAR
. Copyright © 2004, 2005 by Nicola Barker. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

Adobe Digital Edition September 2009 ISBN 978-0-06-198607-9

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

About the Publisher
 

Australia

HarperCollins Publishers (Australia) Pty. Ltd.

25 Ryde Road (PO Box 321)

Pymble, NSW 2073, Australia

http://www.harpercollinsebooks.com.au

Canada

HarperCollins Publishers Ltd.

55 Avenue Road, Suite 2900

Toronto, ON, M5R, 3L2, Canada

http://www.harpercollinsebooks.ca

New Zealand

HarperCollinsPublishers (New Zealand) Limited

P.O. Box 1

Auckland, New Zealand

http://www.harpercollins.co.nz

United Kingdom

HarperCollins Publishers Ltd.

77-85 Fulham Palace Road

London, W6 8JB, UK

http://www.harpercollinsebooks.co.uk

United States

HarperCollins Publishers Inc.

10 East 53rd Street

New York, NY 10022

http://www.harpercollinsebooks.com

*
Sorry to interrupt Solomon’s
flow
and everything, but when he uses the word ‘Melanic’ he’s referring to the dark skin pigment, melanin, which is found in far greater proportions in those skins of a darker hue–now let’s dive straight back in again,
eh?

*
I once loaned Solomon a copy of Ian McEwan’s
The Comfort of Strangers
where a couple on holiday get drugged, tied up and tortured by an apparently genial pair of bogus holidaymakers. Solomon called the book, ‘morally void. A pointlessly sadistic exercise in controlled, middle-class degeneracy.’

‘But did you
like
it?’ I asked.

*
The Soviet equivalent of Kentucky Fried.

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