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The sky was gradually
darkening through the grey pall of the steady rain that had been
falling all day: sunset, somewhere behind the clouds, but the sun
was nowhere in sight and the clouds were settling into a reflective
brown blur as the city below switched on its lights to guide itself
through the long winter night. At ground level the steady swish
of car tyres spinning over rain-black bitumen was accompanied by
pale headlights, their light skived by thin streaks of rain. The
red glow of traffic lights seemed like signal flares in the dusk-dimmed
world and cars flocked to them as if beckoned.
One car in particular,
an old, slightly grimy van, left the stream of traffic to veer down
a side-street, where it parked not too far from a bar with a stage,
and only a little further from a dim street-light. The side-door
of the van slid open with a metallic rasp, and Mal got out. Eric,
the hood of his jumper pulled low over his head, got out of the
driver's seat while Steve got out of the front passenger seat.
"Man"
complained Mal. "We're always hauling gear in the rain! What
is it with this band?"
"It's all very
Shakespearean" muttered Eric.
"Huh?"
"Never mind."
Steve stood still
in the half-light, hands on hips as if daring the rain to fall on
him (which it duly did). "What's wrong with you two?"
he said. "You should be totally pumped about this gig!"
"I just hope
we make it without Chas, that's all" replied Eric.
"Dude, we don't
need that arsehole!" Steve put his hand on Eric's shoulder
in solidarity. "Listen, I know I haven't been so hot in rehearsals.
But you know me, I always save myself for the stage! We're gonna
blow 'em away, you'll see."
"Um, can you
guys come and give me a hand here?" shouted Mal from the back
of the van, where he'd started unloading the gear, trying to avoid
putting any of it in the puddles.
"Shit, sorry
man!" They both rushed over to help him. "Get the door,
Steve" said Eric, and Steve went 'round to the front of the
bar to let the staff know they'd arrived. A moment later he opened
the unmarked side-door of the building for Mal and Eric. He propped
the door open and stepped back into the rain towards the van; Eric
passed him, lugging the bass drum (covered against the weather)
into the bar. On the way through the door he noticed a poster for
the gig stuck there matter-of-factly on the inside of the door:
he noted happily that, below the attention-grabbing announcement
of the headline act, the TerrorFractals were listed with reasonable
prominence. He was also pleased to observe that, unlike their previous
gig at this venue, they had not been promoted as "the Pterodactyls".
Eric, Steve and
Mal began all the formalities of setting up and beginning the sound-check.
It was still some time before they were due to actually start playing,
and there was no-one really there yet other than a few people dressed
for a party who'd strayed in for a drink. Mal was standing on the
stage tuning his bass, listening with satisfaction to the way the
notes reverberated into the quiet bar. Suddenly, out of the blue
he heard a piercing whistle: everyone in the bar looked towards
the door to see who was there: it was Rona.
"Jesus, haven't
you slack bastards started yet?" she laughed. Eric and Steve
politely ignored her and went back to setting up. (After all, though
she'd been something of a champion for the band they didn't really
know her all that well.) Mal looked up, then stuck his tongue out
at her playfully and grinned. She came up to the foot of the stage.
Phuong was with her, and followed quietly, wryly amused by Rona's
boisterousness as always. "When do you guys start?" asked
Rona.
"About thirty
minutes" replied Mal. "Forty, maybe."
Phuong tapped her
on the shoulder. "Come on, Rona" she said. "Let's
get a drink, and make ourselves comfortable."
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