Kevin Acott

Poetry, blog, photos, music, art, sketches, stories and other stuff. 

The Boys Are Back In Town. 1976.

2020. St Patrick’s Church.

Of all of them, I loved him the most. He was a decent man underneath it all, underneath all the bravado, underneath the unkind eyes, underneath the fear that walked into every bar a second after he did.

Last time I saw Johnny was the last time I came back here, the last funeral I went to. He was - who’d have guessed it?! - pissed. He still looked pretty good, still looked thin and sharp and hard, still looked like he was just back from Dublin or New York, like he was gracing us culchies with his presence. He was sitting in the back bar on his own, had a pint and a whiskey and a table-full of empty glasses in front of him. I was going to talk to him, but decided against it. He had that look about him, the look that said ‘I’ll argue with you about whatever you’ve got.’ I turned round and walked out. I don’t think he saw me.

Right up until she died, my mum sent me the local paper every week. I remember thinking about Johnny when I saw they’d bulldozed Dino’s and built flats. I surprised myself feeling so sad about the end of a shithole I never even liked. I suppose I was going through a bad time myself then: it was just before I had the baby. His baby.

When I get home after the service, I’m going to listen to our song on Spotify. Just the once, like. Just the once.





Saturday Night Beneath The Plastic Palm Trees

Tottenham. 2020.

Once a suedehead, always a suedehead. The wife says I should grow old gracefully. Fuck that. The world is still full of lies and violence and hate. Now it’s men younger than me fucking it up but we continue fucking it up anyway. Proper music helps you forget all that, move beyond it. And decent clothes make you feel good too, even at my age. Especially at my age. I’m alright growing old disgracefully. And she knows that I know she loves me for it really. ‘Let me make your broken heart like new,’ I said to her the night we met, and I could tell by the way she smiled she got what I meant straightaway. We danced to that song at our wedding. And at our silver wedding.

By the way: I’ve still never been to Balham. Never will now, not with…you know. Ah well. They tell me it’s gone upmarket anyway.

Waterloo Sunset. 1967.

1997. I moved out of that flat. I had to. They got rid of us all, tarted the place up, flogged our old homes off to people from Berkshire and Shanghai and Moscow. I spent a bit of time in the Maudsley after. A lot of time, if I’m honest.

I saw her once, last year. At the station, of course. I knew it was her straight away. Time had lived hard in her and through her and over her; she was lined and bagged and worn now, but she was still beautiful. She was unmistakable, at least to me. She’d lost that sad, young expectation, you could see that - hadn’t we all? - but she still lived her spirit, that head-held-high way of wearing her clothes and her pride that beckoned you towards her, just far enough.

She was waiting under the clock, looking at her watch. I thought that was funny at the time, I remember. I stayed over by the sandwich place, watching her for about twenty minutes. He never came. I knew he wouldn’t. I reckon she knew he wouldn’t too. She gave up eventually and I followed her out into the early evening air, down the bustling steps, across the road, watched her disappear into the Hole In The Wall.

I waited. And waited. A couple of hours later, she came out, arm in arm with some young guy, must have been twenty-five at most. I wanted to punch him and I wanted to shake his hand. I rehearsed in my head, yet again, everything I’ve ever wanted to say to her, took a step towards them, and then stopped. She deserved this: she deserved a few hours back then, a few hours back there, back in our time. I turned around, hoping - knowing - he’d only ever spend this one night with her. I saw a kid then, guitar on his back, looking down at me from the top of the steps, smiling. I smiled back at him and headed up, past him, into the station.