I think I am going to invite the boy next door to the party.
He hasn’t been here long but the people who were there before pretty much set up a brothel in there and – I don’t judge – but it was getting to be such an issue that we were thinking of moving, so it feels a bit like fate that he’s turned up.
He did put a strange note through our door once and we pinned it to our fridge for a bit. I didn’t, Jess did. I did laugh though, I can’t lie. I mean, I literally can’t lie. Apart from this phase I went through when I was about sixteen whenever I was drunk. We used to go out in Slough and Slough is quite, well, you can imagine, it’s a bit of a. Well. I don’t want to be rude. But it’s a bit of a shit hole. And all these women – these really huge, fat ladies, would go out to the local club – it’s called the Sound Exchange – exchanging Sound for Screaming Women and Groping Men and White Awful Noise – and it had carpets, we used to dance on carpets, what kind of a nightclub has carpets? But. Anyway, they’d all be in the club, in the toilets, adjusting their outfits from Jane Norman – which is the worst name for a designer I have ever heard – and worrying about what they looked like, and I’d just pipe up from nowhere, a sense of panic I suppose – and be like, you look gorgeous, you’re so thin, you’ve had nine kids? Well you could have fooled me. And I feel bad about it, I do, but I was drunk and when you’re drunk it’s different rules.