When it came to applying to university, I said to Dad – ‘The thing is, Dad, I care, but I don’t really really care,’ and Dad was like – ‘What does that even mean?’ And I said that I just didn’t think – I thought it would probably be quite pointless. Anyway, we actually ended up taking it quite seriously. Dad got really into it. He’d been, Mum hadn’t, and nor had his sister – so he was all ‘First woman in the family to go to university, that’ll be quite something’. So we make lists and more lists, and we go to open days and do ratings and it’s quite fun and Dad eventually decides we’ll go London School of Economics, we’ll go Manchester, we’ll go Bristol and then for back-up we’ll go Essex and we’ll go Southampton. And I’m all – okay – and I – we – spent ages filling in forms – and a few had me up for interviews, and Dad came with me for them too.
The rejections came in one by one. One after the other. Tipping through the box.
Essex took me. The rest… didn’t.
And Dad – Dad just said – ‘Well, good to have tried, isn’t it?’ And Essex? Essex.
I scratched his car the night I got the last rejection, from Bristol, three weeks – three weeks that must have been – ago. I went out in the middle of the night with a hair grip and scratched ‘cunt’ in big letters.
He was really funny the next day. ‘Who did this? Who did this?’ And Abe, coming to walk me to school, stood with my dad and talked about who could have done it… ‘Who could have done it, sir?’ He sometimes calls my dad ‘sir’. Abe does. And both of them discussed in loud voices who could have written ‘cunt’ on my dad’s car… I’ve never met Abe’s parents – I don’t know why