Polly Tarantella hadn’t always been
the great custodian of Crystal Passion’s legacy nor always the music’s greatest
champion. In fact, I first heard of her when Olivia—one of the few original
band-members I still keep in touch with—e-mailed me a link to a Rock Music
website I’d never have discovered otherwise in which Polly Tarantella lambasted
Crystal Passion with a vehemence that was bizarre given the many years since
the band had broken up. In those days she was known as Sally Tyrant and was a famous
or, perhaps, notorious Rock Music critic, celebrated for her acerbic and scathing
prose and for her withering assaults on everything and anything that triggered
her dissatisfaction.
What amazed me most
of all was that a Rock Music Critic had even heard of Crystal Passion. By then
the band was almost entirely forgotten. If our music was likely to be heard
anywhere it would be on obscure late-night music shows on BBC Radio 6 or X-FM.
It wasn’t old enough to profit from the Prog revival and not contemporary
enough to be considered alt-folk or electro-acoustic art music. But here was
Sally Tyrant laying into those musicians and bands she deemed traitors to the
cause of Rock Culture as she judged it. In her eyes, Crystal Passion
represented the very worst deviation from Rock Music’s sacred mission. The
eponymous lead singer and her band were being too clever by half. The music was
trying to be both pop and art and had failed as both. Crystal Passion belonged
to the same tradition as Sufjan Stevens, the Unthanks and Badly Drawn Boy. The
band was striving towards something ambitious, something epic and something
deep, but succeeded only in being trite, hackneyed and unconvincing. Rock Music
was best represented by bands like the Foo Fighters, Muse and Stiff Little
Fingers who fashioned a no-nonsense style that said all that was needed to be
said without complicating the message with mystical nonsense and fanciful
analogies. The best song was less than three minutes long and expressed in a
few glorious chords, plenty of energy and unfussy lyrics everything it had to
say. The cause of Rock Music was best achieved by dumping the pretentious crap,
cranking up the amp and just getting on with it. And in Sally’s opinion nobody
had ever done this better than the Clash, the Strokes and Metallica.
This article
really hurt and upset me. What had Crystal Passion ever done to deserve such
scorn? What was so offensive about her music? And any criticism of the Crystal
Passion band—on all but the first album—was also criticism of me of course.
And it wasn’t
as if I’d made such a great success of my career since Crystal Passion disbanded
that I could easily rise above it all.
Bizarrely
enough, Sally Tyrant’s tirade led to a short-lived spike in iTunes downloads
and Amazon record sales as her readers tried to find out what was so very bad
about Crystal Passion’s music.
On the other
hand, much as I felt crushed by this attack on the woman who even today remains
the only true love of my life, I partly sympathised with Sally Tyrant’s
sentiments. And in a sense, I almost prefer Sally Tyrant’s earlier ascetic
attitude to Polly Tarantella’s current attitude whereby anyone who criticises Crystal
Passion, however mildly, is immediately beneath contempt. Nothing can now be
said about Crystal Passion that isn’t uncritically positive. And as someone who
likes her House, Techno or Bass unadorned and on point, I understand the thesis
that Crystal Passion had diluted the impact of her music by trying to be so
many different things at the same time.
But Sally
Tyrant’s earlier appraisal also doesn’t make much sense. Even those musicians she
disparaged have released music that’s basic and raw while many of those she celebrates
so highly (in particular the Clash) have recorded songs that were experimental
and even gratuitously complex. And, speaking for what I most believe, the
quality of Crystal Passion’s music is such that someone like me, who wouldn’t
normally listen to Folk Music or Prog Rock or even the Rock Music that both
Sally and Polly claim to be the Zenith of the Evolution of Music, can be so won
over that I could give up everything (literally) just to be with her.
And it wasn’t
just the music, of course.
The next I
heard of Polly Tarantella (as Sally Tyrant not much later re-christened
herself) was when she started writing articles about Crystal Passion (and,
incidentally, Sufjan Stevens and the Unthanks) in which she was as admiring and
eulogising as she’d once been cruel and contemptuous.
So, why the
sudden change of attitude?
It’s not
something that Polly’s ever explained to me nor, as far as I know, to anyone
else. Polly is so convinced in the absolute correctness of her opinions at the
time of expressing them that she’ll deny she’s ever changed them. She’d
probably say her earlier remarks were meant ironically or were misunderstood.
(Not that there seems much scope for ambiguity or misunderstanding in a Sally
Tyrant tirade).
Polly’s change
of heart coincides with the period of hospitalisation she doesn’t talk about
much but which apparently took her within a heartbeat of death. I think it
might have been a massive drug overdose that triggered Polly’s health crisis and
the accompanying change of outlook, given that her drug habit also came to a
very sudden and abrupt halt. Polly’s someone who likes to punish herself. She’s
sometimes talked about her S&M sex sessions as some kind of a badge of
honour and I’ve witnessed the perverse pleasure she gets from putting herself
in harm’s way. Perhaps she’s decided that instead of being metaphorically
beaten up by those who don’t like her championship of Rock Music orthodoxy,
she’d rather be attacked for taking the radically opposed view that, after all’s
said and done, the truest and purest manifestation of the Great Rock & Roll
Dream is to be found in the much maligned and heroically unsuccessful Crystal
Passion band. After all, what could be more perverse in the History of Rock
than a band made up of a dozen British women whose music straddles so many
genres of which Rock was but one (and only just), who sold hardly any records
at all, and who spectacularly failed to crack the elusive American Rock Music
market?
And then, of
course, for a woman like Polly who’s drawn to pain and suffering, she must also
have been attracted to the circumstances related to the Crystal Passion band’s demise.
And also of
Crystal Passion herself.
But a worse
situation than the one we’d already found ourselves in seemed highly unlikely
while we were being chauffeured back in small groups by Chevrolet to the
Paradise Hotel with as much equipment as possible resting on our knees or squeezed
into the trunk. It was Judy and Crystal who took the responsibility of
contacting Kai Pharrel and the various insurance companies regarding the
vandalised Camper Van and of arranging alternative forms of travel for the rest
of our tour. In fact, it was much more Judy than Crystal who was active.
Crystal was more depressed and withdrawn than I’d ever seen her before. She clung
to Judy with a limpet-like closeness that I’d never imagined possible before.
I was so sick
of the disaster that was the American Tour that I just couldn’t be bothered any
more. I no longer cared whether we played another gig in America and I openly speculated
with Andrea, Jane and Jacquie whether I could be bothered to stick with the
Crystal Passion band when we returned to England.
“Why not just
call it the Crystal and Judy Band and be done with it,” I said bitterly.
“Don’t be so
hard on Crystal,” said Andrea. “It’s not been an easy ride for her and Judy
just happens to offer her the comfort she needs at the moment.”
“And just what
is that?” I countered. “Unless Crystal’s become a late convert to Tijuana’s
finest or a fan of Heavy Metal, all Judy can offer is love and sex…”
“And what’s so
wrong with that?” countered Jacquie.
It was plain that
the Crystal Passion band’s close proximity with one another during the series
of disasters that was our American tour wasn’t healthy for our inter-tangled
complex and libertine lesbian love life. I was spending more time with only
Jane and Jacquie. Andrea had more or less renounced lesbian sex altogether. And
amongst the others, now the once reliably indiscriminate Crystal was spending
most of her time with Judy, only Tomiko and the Harlot could be trusted to maintain
the sexual licence that had so recently acted as the band’s cohesive glue.
So, it was
pretty well inevitable that the appearance of a couple of young men in our
number during our stay at the Paradise Hotel would exacerbate the growing fractures
in the band.
“There’s a
fucking man in my room!” exclaimed
Bertha as she burst in on Andrea and I while we were resting in our shared
bedroom, slightly stoned from our cut of Judy’s Tijuana stash.
“Not just one
man,” said Philippa who followed behind and was just as disgusted. “There’s two
of them! Where do they come from?”
“Hey!” said
Olivia who was chasing after them with Jenny Alpha. “Don’t be so uptight.”
Just behind Olivia
and Jenny were two sheepish young men with unkempt long hair and well-worn
baggy check shirts and jeans. One had the light-brown skin that in America was
enough to qualify him as Black, while the other had a trace of Catawba Indian
which, as with Elvis Presley, was somehow not enough for him to lose his White ethnic
status.
“Hey guys,”
said the young man with the paler skin.
“This is Matt,”
said Olivia. “He and Joe belong to a local Rock Group. Both come from here in
Rock Hill. Matt plays guitar and Joe plays drums.”
“Yeah,” said
Joe. “We saw you guys at the Penitence. You were cool. You really rocked it…”
“And then we
bought your records after the gig,” said Matt. “We could only afford the vinyl.
But it was fucking amazing! Even better than the gig. That Crystal Passion is
one fuck of a singer. And she wrote
the songs and all.”
“We were
fucking blown away so we asked Skull where you guys were staying and he told us
it was at the Paradise,” continued Joe.
“So we came
here to pay our respects…” said Matt.
“…And Jenny and
I have been looking after them ever since,” continued Olivia.
“Fuck! They’re
cute,” said Tomiko who poked her head in through the door.
“Gimme that
ass!” echoed the Harlot whose head poked in from the other side.
“They’re both
fucking men!” said Bertha in disgust
and despair.
It was inevitable
of course that those in the Crystal Passion band whose sexual identity wasn’t
solely lesbian should be tempted by male flesh. There was no denying that Matt
and Joe were the kind of young men who’d be attractive to those in the band with
no absolute preference. They were slim. They were young. They were refreshingly
open-minded in a nation we now understood wasn’t naturally either liberal or
tolerant. And they were a relatively rare phenomenon in a world where the
greater proportion of the Crystal Passion fan base, at least in the UK, was
feminist and female. Neither Matt nor Joes were female but neither did they seem
bothered about the gender of the musicians in the band. They didn’t only listen
to Grunge groups like Pearl Jam, Nirvana and the Pixies, but also to female musicians
as varied as Joni Mitchell, Bikini Kill and P J Harvey. In fact, if it wasn’t
for the complicating presence of Jane and Jacquie and (at a distance) Crystal,
I might have been tempted myself.
Neither Crystal
nor Judy were likely to agree with Bertha and Philippa that the presence of men
in our company was to be avoided at all costs. Judy because her sexual
preferences leaned more towards men than women and Crystal because she would
never deign to take account of such trivial distinctions. So, while at the
Paradise Hotel, our already substantial numbers were further swollen. And, by
virtue of their gender alone, Matt and Joe could only be divisive in a band
increasingly held together more by circumstance than choice.
And this, among
other things, clearly upset Crystal.
“It’s the end,
isn’t it Pebbles?” Crystal confided to me as we sat together in the Paradise
Hotel’s scruffy garden near a scrawny chicken who was pecking at the bare
sun-baked soil. “The band won’t survive the tour. The album we’ve already
recorded will be our last.”
“Don’t be
silly,” I said reassuringly, but in truth somewhat startled that Crystal should
so echo my thoughts.
“Oh America!”
Crystal pleaded. “What have I done to deserve this?”
“Don’t
despair,” I said. “We’ll be OK. The Camper Van being vandalised is something
we’ll survive. We’ll get over it. It’ll all work out. After the gig on Friday, everything
will be absolutely fine. Three days after that we’ll forget all about it.”
“I hope so,
Pebbles,” said Crystal. “I hope so.”
“It’s bloody hot here,” I said, glancing up at
the sun beating down on us. “Do you want me to get you something to drink from
the bar?”
“Don’t worry
about that, Pebbles,” said Crystal picking up a can of soda from between her
feet that she must have already purchased from the hotel vending machine. “This
might taste vinegary and it’s probably got every chemical additive you can
imagine, not to mention carbon monoxide and sugar, but it’s enough for me now.”
She rubbed the can over her forehead and let the moisture drip down her nose.
“What I’ve got to do and have to do right away is call my mother…”
“Marianne. You
think she’ll be contactable?”
Crystal regarded
the clock looming above the hotel reception desk. “My mother and I agreed to be
near the phone about this time every day if we ever needed to get in touch. And
I definitely want to talk with my mother now.”
“Let’s get into
the foyer then and out of the sun.”
“You’re right,
Pebbles,” said Crystal. “That’s exactly what I must do. I really need to talk to Mum.”
The way Polly
Tarantella describes the conversation that followed between Crystal and
Marianne it’s as if we were all in the same room. But of course we weren’t.
Crystal was standing in the hotel phone booth with a cardboard phone credit
card while I was hovering around within earshot but not part of the
conversation. And at the other end of the telephone in San Francisco—almost as
far away across the American continent as we were across the Atlantic Ocean
from England—was Marianne and, somewhere in the background, was her new
boyfriend, John Dimple, whose relationship with her mother Crystal was
evidently eager to encourage.
“John’s good
for you, Mum,” said Crystal. “From what you’ve told me about him, he’s exactly
the kind of man you need in your life right now.”
Obviously I
couldn’t hear Marianne’s reply but I could see Crystal nod her head and
interject with the occasional “Yes” and “No”.
“Of course you must
live together if that’s what you want, Mum,” said Crystal. “He’s a lot better
than your last boyfriend. Not that he was bad exactly, but John is a better
proposition altogether. That’s what you need at the moment.”
There was a
muffled response from the other end of the line, presumably still about John.
I never met John
Dimple, whatever impression you get from Polly Tarantella’s account, not then
and not since. Perhaps he arrived too soon in Marianne’s life to feature in the
following weeks and months. But Polly’s interviewed him and in her biography of
Crystal Passion he poses as a real authority on Crystal Passion even though they’d
never actually met. Nevertheless, given that he and Marianne maintained a
relationship for more than a decade and a friendship that’s lasted to the
present day I have to credit John with a lot more knowledge and understanding
of Crystal’s mother than I ever had.
But it’s still
not the same as knowing Crystal.
Perhaps it’s
because of John, who sounds like a nice kind of guy, that Polly has given
Marianne a prominent role in Crystal’s life that seems much greater now than it
did when I knew Crystal and played in her band. It’s true that Crystal had a
close healthy relationship with her mother. It was rather better than my
relationship with my mother who still resents me for not being heterosexual and
for not settling down as a suburban wife with two children and a husband with a
job in the City. And better also than Polly’s relationship with her mother
which must have been strained beyond breaking point every time Polly was
admitted into rehab or when she appeared on her parents’ door smashed, wasted
or wrecked.
But there are many
women who have good relationships with their mothers. My sister Andrea has a
much better relationship with our mother than I do, that’s for sure. And I
don’t think Jane and Jacquie ever had a falling out with their parents despite
the strain of their relationship with me. So, I don’t think significant
conclusions can be drawn about Crystal’s genius and musical direction from the mere
fact that Marianne’s hippy mother and she were close. It wasn’t that which determined
her future life, however much Polly Tarantella emphasises the parallels between
events in Marianne’s life before Crystal was born and events in Crystal’s life when
she became a professional musician.
These few
precious moments with Crystal that Polly makes such a big deal of are even more
precious now than they seemed at the time. For most of the time between our two
gigs at the Penitence Club, Crystal was nowhere to be found.
And neither was
Judy.
I admit that I
greatly resented Judy’s pernicious influence on Crystal and her subsequent
absence from my side. However, even at my most jealous at the time I wouldn’t
have drawn the kind of conclusions that Polly suggests, such as, for instance,
that Judy orchestrated the bust at the King’s Cavalry Motel. The fact that
matters would have been much worse had Judy been taken to the Sheriff’s Office
along with the rest of us and they’d found a quarter weight of dope in her
possession doesn’t imply that Judy’s good fortune in not being busted is part
of some grand scheme. My guess is that the bust came more from the motel
staff’s malevolent suspicious nature. Crystal Passion was the object of hostile
media attention and they didn’t much sympathise with our lifestyles. Although I
don’t agree with Polly, I can see that a villain gives her story a sense of intrigue.
And what better villain could there be than someone as close to Crystal’s bosom
as Judy Dildo?
It wasn’t only me
who noticed that Crystal and Judy were absent from the Paradise Hotel and their
shared bedroom. And everyone assumed that wherever they were, they were together.
But doing what, I don’t know.
I don’t believe
Crystal was taking drugs, unless she was a lot better at hiding the evidence
than anyone else I’ve ever known. In any case, drug-taking wasn’t in her
character. It wasn’t that she disapproved of drugs. It was more that she
couldn’t see the point. The real world was already weird enough. So what were
Crystal and Judy doing together that they didn’t share with the rest of the
band?
Sex is one
thing, of course. Crystal’s sexual passion is something difficult to describe
to someone who’s never experienced it. And Judy Dildo—who was probably more
heterosexual than almost anyone else in the band except my sister Andrea—was overcome
by Crystal’s sexual charisma. That must have made emotional matters between
them even more significant. And I don’t think it’s just idle speculation that
Judy and Crystal shared their moments of intimacy apart from the band in the
company of men. Judy enjoyed being fucked by men. And Crystal did too. And I
suspect they enjoyed sharing their bodies with men equally as much as each other.
I also think
that Judy was eager to expose Crystal to the kind of music she enjoyed so much.
The fact that Rock Music, more than almost any other kind of genre, chiefly appeals
to men (and most especially adolescent men in awe of the most common and basest
male fantasies) meant that Judy Dildo would have to drag Crystal away from
other women: especially those of a feminist disposition that Judy so often
professed to despise.
So in those hours
Judy and Crystal spent together I visualise the two women writhing together in the
midst of a tangle of naked men whose huge erect penises were either inserted
into all or some of their orifices and spurting semen all over them. And into
this stew of masculine fucking, sucking and spunking, I envisage a soundtrack
of heavy metal guitar, energetic but unimaginative drum beats, and singing that
sounds like either a cat being strangled or a man barking through a mouthful of
gravel.
The sooner
Crystal got bored with all that shit the better!
But even though
by Friday we’d all got used to the idea of hardly not seeing much of either of them,
it was a surprise for us all to be packing up our equipment for our gig at the
Penitence and there still to be no
sign of Crystal or Judy.
“Where the fuck
is she?” wondered Jenny Alpha as she loaded Crystal’s acoustic guitar into the
back of the non-descript removal van we’d hired for the day. “Still fucking
Judy at a fucking opium den?”
“She will be here when the gig begins, won’t
she?” pleaded Thelma. “It’s not gonna be much of a Crystal Passion band without
Crystal.”
“And what about
Judy?” remarked the Harlot. “Who’ll do all that rock strutting stuff if she’s
not here?”
“Matt can help
out,” said Olivia, whose arm was around his waist. “He plays a mean guitar.”
“I fucking hope
we won’t have to resort to that!”
Philippa sniffed.
“Crystal’s never let us down before,” I said with
the confidence and authority that came from being one of the band’s original
members. In fact, after Crystal herself, probably the original member.
But my optimism
was misplaced. Even after the equipment was set up on stage, Crystal still
hadn’t arrived. We had to rehearse with Tomiko on the sound desk with Skull
lurking in the shadows clutching a can of Bud and snorting a line of Coke. Philippa,
Thelma and the Harlot stood in for Crystal’s role either by playing acoustic
guitar, as only Philippa was able, or by singing her lyrics, as Thelma and the
Harlot could both do (though their voices had none of Crystal’s porcelain beauty).
And as Olivia proposed, Matt stood in for Judy: easily able to mimic her Rock Star
strut and Axe-Man flourish, and surprisingly good (given the rushed
circumstances) at learning and playing her riffs.
But when the
real Judy Dildo turned up with barely half an hour left before we were due on
stage and to witness Matt subbing for her, she was instantly dismissive.
“What the fuck
is this shit?” she said. “Gimme my guitar and I’ll show you how it should be
done.”
“And Crystal
can take responsibility for the acoustic guitar and vocals too?” Philippa
pleaded.
Judy seemed genuinely
alarmed. “Isn’t Crystal here?”
“Fuck no,” said
Thelma. “We thought she was with you.”
“She was but…”
began Judy. “Well, fuck it, she’s not with me now.”
“So where is
she, Judy?” I challenged.
“She ain’t here
is all, is she?” said Judy defiantly. And then rather more conciliatorily and
with evident distress in her voice, she asked: “You’re absolutely sure
Crystal’s not here? You’re not shitting me?”
“We wouldn’t
fuck about when it comes to something like that,” said Jane. “Where the fuck is
Crystal?”
“Erm…” said
Judy hesitantly. “Fuck! She’s not here? Fuck! Shit!”
And with these
oaths Judy Dildo strode off towards the Penitence Club’s exit. And then with a
theatrical gesture that was probably unintentional she slammed the door behind
her and was gone.
“Fuck me!” said
Jacquie, who’d never much liked Judy. “What’s got into her?”
“I think
there’s a good chance we won’t see Judy playing her guitar tonight after all,”
Olivia remarked. “It looks like you’ve got the gig,” she said to Matt who was
at least as startled and bemused as the rest of us at Judy’s outburst. “You’ve
just passed the audition. You’ve got all the votes.”
“Well, at least
we don’t also need a fucking drummer,” declared Jane.
“But there’s
still no sign of Crystal,” moaned Philippa.
“Fuck!” Thelma
exclaimed. “Am I gonna have to be Crystal for the night?”
“You and me
both, sweetheart!” said the Harlot with a slightly deranged laugh.
“I’m sure
Crystal and Judy will turn up in time for the gig,” I said.
“Well, we’ve
just got to assume they won’t,” said Olivia. “We’ll have to expect the worst
and prepare for it.”
“So tonight it’s
gonna be Matt Dildo and Thelma & Philippa Crystal,” remarked the Harlot.
And so it was
to be.
I’d never
before performed on stage in front of an audience without Crystal Passion and
it goes without saying that the Crystal Passion band without its titular leader
wasn’t the same at all. Of course, as far as the audience of check- and
tee-shirted young men with a cigarette in one hand and a bottle of beer in the
other, the only differences to what they expected was that the guitarist was a
man and that there was absolutely no nudity. None of us had the heart or
inclination to strip off, not even the Harlot. And certainly neither Thelma nor
Philippa who were more anxious about having to sing the lead vocals on songs
they knew well but whose lyrics they didn’t understand any more than did the
rest of us. It just wasn’t the same to hear Thelma intone: “The son comes home
with nothing to show. The father gives him a fortune of snow. The worst is
loved the most. And the best is left to last.” What seemed so profound voiced
by Crystal sounded banal and faintly bizarre coming from Thelma and Philippa.
At least we
were spared a refrain from the audience of “Take ’em off!” or “Show us your
tits!” And this was mostly because of Matt being on stage and his obvious love
for the rock riff. It just didn’t make sense for an audience of men who valued
their heterosexuality to demand that Matt should rip off his clothes and
display what was actually quite a handsome asset (not that I ever did more than
glance at it while he was fucking Olivia on her bed). And given that this was
primarily a Rock audience who’d come to see a Rock Band, Matt’s frequent
quotations from the great rock riffs of history (such as ‘Purple Haze’, ‘Come
As You Are’ and ‘Sunshine of Your Love’) managed to satisfy those who might
otherwise have been clamouring for the sight of a lot more female flesh.
During every
moment and every second of the gig I was expecting, hoping, almost praying for
Crystal Passion or even Judy Dildo to appear at the side of the stage with a
smile and the reassurance that everything was alright and that their earlier non-appearance
had been nothing more than a hiccough. But no such luck. We powered through our
gig, playing a set that was pretty much identical to our previous one at the club
except that we were more content to let Matt indulge himself in his Rock Guitar
dreams of glory than we’d ever have allowed Judy. And that was because it was a
relief for us all, including Philippa and Thelma, to just fade into the
background gloom and stay out of sight.
We gave no
encore although there were many in the audience calling for more and Matt was ready
and eager to jump back onto the stage.
“I’m just not
in the fucking mood!” said Jacquie.
“Keep your
sonic dildo strapped away, sweetie,” Jane dismissively advised Matt. “None of
us are going back there however much the fuckers shout out for us.”
“Forget about
it, lover boy,” said Olivia, forcefully grabbing Matt’s crotch. “We can make
sweet music elsewhere.”
“Still no sign
of Crystal or Judy,” remarked Andrea.
“They’re
probably in a fucking twelve man orgy somewhere,” remarked Jacquie snidely.
“Judy’s always liked cock and rock and now she’s tempted Crystal over to the
fucking dark side.”
“It’s not like
Crystal,” I pleaded in her defence.
“But it’s
fucking just like Judy,” snarled Jane. “I fucking hate that bitch.”
“Yeah,” said
Jacquie, expressing for the first time what has since become the orthodox
account of events according to Polly Tarantella. “Ever since Judy joined the
band, it’s been headed towards disaster. And ever since we arrived in
America—the land of fucking racist metal heads—Judy’s led us all down the slope
towards destruction. Fuck it! She’s the bitch who got us to play naked in
Detroit. And she’s the bitch who’s turned Crystal Passion into some kind of
all-girl Rock Band.”
These weren’t
the last words said about Judy as it became increasingly apparent that Crystal
hadn’t been hiding in the toilets or sitting despondently in the dressing room
or waiting outside the Penitence with some perfectly understandable excuse as
to why she hadn’t made it to the gig. There was still no sign of her anywhere.
We were in a
very sombre mood as we hoisted our equipment along to our van, which hadn’t
been vandalised this time even though the same group of Christian protestors had
been protesting at exactly the same spot on the street as before. My guess is
that nobody thought it worth the effort of vandalising a battered old van with
the smudged-out name of Wayne Sentry & Sons barely legible under all the
grime and rust.
“Was that the worst gig we’ve ever done?”
Jane wondered.
Matt was
visibly hurt by Jane’s dismissal so Olivia stood up for him. “We just weren’t
able to play as well as we would’ve back in the UK. Events haven’t been kind to
us. But we did a fuck of a lot better tonight than anyone would’ve predicted
given that we’ve lost our lead singer, our song-writer and both our
guitarists.”
“I thought you guys were awesome,” said Joe
loyal as ever to his best friend and probably envious that it hadn’t been Jane
who’d failed to turn up for the gig.
“Well,
whatever,” said Tomiko who was visibly bored with the discussion and held a
spliff between her thumb and forefinger. “Anyone wanna share some blow?”
When we got
back to the hotel, I helped Bertha and Jenny unload the band’s equipment from
the van not so much because I needed the exercise but because I wanted to put
some distance between me and Jane and Jacquie. Much as I loved them, I wasn’t
able then (and I’ve been no better since) to handle the sisters when they got
angry. And, besides, I was angry too. And like Jane and Jacquie I also blamed
Judy Dildo for the fact that Crystal hadn’t turned up for her own concert.
What the fuck
could be more important than that?
When I entered
the foyer of the Paradise Hotel, with Jenny Alpha loaded down with Tomiko’s
sound deck and Bertha sharing the burden of my keyboards and tangled cables, there
was a palpably weird subdued atmosphere. Although everyone was gathered around
the reception desk and sitting on the polyvinyl chairs, nobody was talking. Not
even Matt and Joe.
Shit! Had our
rooms been burgled? Had there been another bust? Had some bad news come back
from the UK?
“What’s going
on?” I asked not sure who I was actually addressing.
And then I
noticed for the first time that there was a strange man in the centre of the foyer
and that he was dressed in the almost casual official uniform of the South
Carolina police with the archetypal broad-brimmed hat.
“I’m afraid
I’ve got bad news for you, ma’am,” he said.
“It’s about
Crystal, isn’t it?” I said, suddenly letting forth the flood of tears that I’d
been holding back all evening. “Something’s happened to Crystal. There’s been
an accident. She’s in the hospital.”
“I’m sorry to
be the one to have to tell you this, ma’am,” said the police officer. “But it’s
worse than that.”
And indeed it
was.
Crystal Passion
was dead.
And not just
dead. Violated. Savagely abused. And then discarded.
And
discovered—not many hours after her last breath—alongside the banks of the
Catawba River: a broken doll bruised and bloody and pierced by knife-wounds, her
nose crushed and her clothes nowhere to be found.
But most of
all: dead.
It was hard for
me to take in a single detail, but what was becoming increasingly apparent to
me as I wailed and wept was that I would never speak to, laugh with or play
with Crystal Passion again.
In fact, I
would never see Crystal Passion alive ever again.