part of a velvet goldmine fic. revised and edited, thankyouverymuch. i'll continue after exams, i think.
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Curt Wild was, by all means, a rock star. He had it all – the wonderfully straggly hair girls with multiple piercings longed to run their fingers through, a constant ‘don’t fuck with me’ expression, and at least five guitars.
He was also very quietly depressed.
Curt had always been this way, as far as he could remember. He tried to live up to his name by dealing with everything as curtly as possible. Would it earn him money? Yes. Come here. Would it find him a place to live? No. Go away. Curt was rather proud of his obviously pragmatic attitude. He decided his main aim in life was to pursue reality till it was at its most lucid form. And then he would kill it.
A long time ago, Curt had a family who never could understand why he felt nothing for the Ministry. While other boys in his neighbourhood busied themselves with baseball teams and prom nights, he had been very different. Curt hadn't been afraid of anyone but his brother, and although the agony was equally bad each time, he knew better than to say anything. Even when they were discovered by their horrified parents, and nobody understood what happened, Curt had kept quiet. He would like to have said he had little recollection of what happened, but the shock treatment hadn't dulled any of it. The only word for the machine, complete with ugly wires, was Death - and his instinct knew that too well.
When he was sixteen, he ran away with ten dollars in his pocket, nicked from his fifth aunt(stick-thin, high heels, habit of picking nose)’s bedroom drawer. It had been a stupid thing to do, as he found out, rather painfully. Still, Curt lived as well as he could. He figured living on the street had its pros, no pun intended. He could go anywhere he wanted, and no one could keep tabs on him. His family never looked for him again.
At seventeen, he formed his first band, smoked his first cigarette, and had his first hangover.
At eighteen, Curt was offered heroin.
Most of his friends spoke of their respective drugs as if they were lovers. Still, the most Curt could say about heroin was that he thought it was funny. It acted as a mobile teleport machine – if he got sick of his life, he would find a vein and plunge the needle in. It was as simple as that. Soon he didn’t even grit his teeth.
The drug took away all inhibition, too. Last time, Curt forgot his chords, and when he stood there, facing an unbelievably large audience, his hands got so sweaty he felt his guitar would slip through his fingers. Now, there seemed to be no noise and no God till Curt allowed his hand to sweep past the strings. Curt knew he was performing in front of angels. He did things he wasn’t aware of; once, a thin, feminine boy approached him and said he’d liked it when Curt pulled his pants down. Curt had blushed like he was on fire.
The more he got used in his foreign world, full of aquamarine landscapes and wandering voices, the more unbearable the
real world seemed. He found himself getting nauseous, his brain cloudy at the worst possible times. Heroin made everything would go away, leaving only a pleasant tingling feeling in his abdomen.
He now stayed in a run-down house, inhibited by at least fifteen others. Half the occupants were secretly junkies; the other half were alcoholics. His kind of people. Unfortunately, the police found him half-dazed, hacking away at his wrist with an old penknife, and sent him straight off to the nearest hospital.
If I had somebody who’d listen I would be fine, you morons!, he tried to say; but he choked on his own bile instead. He made up his mind to be reasonable and explain everything to the doctors, but when he saw the stout old man, his throat closed up.
They put him on methadone immediately. This was all very foolish to Curt. It got rid of the shivering and the unbearable periods of desperation for a needle, any needle, but the instant he stopped trembling and instead closed his eyes, waiting for release, he found none. Every dose sunk him deeper into the world, pushed him into his grave. Soon he wouldn't even be able to dream.
Until Brian came along, that is.
Curt was surprised Brian Slade knew who he was. He'd never heard of him, actually. The man on the phone told him Brian could make him famous. Curt was vaguely offended, but made halfhearted attempts to iron his worn clothes. If this could buy him a good meal, why not? They met up in a notoriously expensive restaurant, with a manager whom Curt tried to like, but couldn’t.
Curt supposed Brian would be arrogant. Brian had been all low voice and smooth lines, possessing a delicate aura which made him automatically untouchable, different from even the grandest people. Amazingly, he had been very concerned and gentle. The gentlest anyone had ever been, in fact. For hours, they sat there, Brian patiently questioning about what Curt's style in music was, what he would like to do; while Curt coughed and fidgeted and answered half-heartedly, made Brian laugh. Without thinking, he signed the golden contract, and everything changed from that day onwards.
It was like somebody had come and pressed the fast-forward button on his life.
They sped around town in Brian’s convertible, literally; exceeding the speed limit several times. They talked for hours on end. It was the same in the airplane. Curt hadn't known how famous Brian was till they landed in London. Hordes of fans enveloped both of them, and for a moment, Curt felt like escaping for a smoke. Till Brian grabbed his arm, and walked them both through customs, and away from the massive crowd.
Britain was colder and darker but Curt found himself happy, for the first time. He hadn’t been on stage for a long time. He wondered if he would be afraid - he didn’t have heroin to block the nervousness out. But when he saw Brian, complete with stage costume and makeup,waiting for him at the microphone, the only sensible thing to do was to fall in eagerly.
Curt thought he remembered Brian from a far-off dream. He wasn’t used to the public eye, though. He hid from fame, and Brian understood, helping to conceal him. One day, he surprised Brian – and himself – by throwing on one of Brian’s waistcoats and winding his way through hordes of reporters, to join Brian in front of their glaring cameras; a pair of glasses balanced carefully on his palm. “Let me raise a toast to the loveliest man in Europe,” he said, meaning it. And when Brian took the glass and drank deeply, smiling; Curt whispered a line he'd heard somewhere, a line as distant and distorted as Brian’s features. Under the spotlight, Brian glowed somewhat supernaturally, and Curt realized Brian belonged to the world he thought he had given up. But when Brian kissed him and he found himself responding more than he ever had to any girl, he knew Brian was very real indeed.
Brian made everything seem like a game he had complete control over. They played with the tabloids, performing outrageous stunts to keep themselves amused; played with hair dye. Curt ended up bleaching himself platinum blond - Brian took up his dare and dyed his blue. They teased each other about it for ages, taking swigs from wine bottles (a guilty pleasure they shared) and wrestled each other into bed.
Brian toyed with Curt’s confusion, to see what it could do for them, and then discarded it. No matter what, Brian always took the pain away. Curt couldn’t be sure if Brian loved him. Brian wouldn’t – or couldn’t – utter that banal three-worded phrase. All the same, his uncertainty was mellowed by the simple communication that was sex. Somewhere between Brian faintly tracing his jawline and their rhythmic breathing, he decided this was much better than anything else. What Curt prevented himself from saying, he wrote into music. They made it into the Top 40 regularly, and other people would misuse them, making careless dedications to companions they would forget in a month’s time.