Part 9 (1/2)

'He's not, like, my boyfriend or anything.'

'So? He comes or not?'

'I don't know. I said I might text him.'

Athletic leggy Renate was as light-fingered as she was quick on her feet. She had Sasha's phone in her hand and her thumbs were clicking over the keys. 'I'm writing in Italian,' she said. 'This is better for him than English, yes?'

'Writing what? What are you saying?'

'Only the name of the bar, that's all. He will find you,' rea.s.sured Renate, pressing send.

'I don't know if I want him to find me.' It was one thing to amble around a beautiful park together on a mellow afternoon, but he wouldn't slot easily into the rabble of a Sat.u.r.day night send-off. Everyone would already have drunk themselves silly and she didn't think he was used to that kind of carousing.

Suddenly, however, things were moving very fast. Bruton and the j.a.panese girl were trying to crush the pizza boxes into an overflowing waste bin. Ilse was circling the room with the second vodka bottle, topping up all the plastic cups until the bottle was empty. She clapped her hands and shouted '1-2-3-Go' and at the same moment they all raised and drained their drinks. Then they bundled themselves out of the building and onto the bus. Sasha was squeezed up against Bruton but he didn't make any advances.

She was relieved when they arrived at the bar Renate had nominated and Joe was nowhere to be seen. Inside the place was small and funky, bathed in an orange glow. A tape-deck at the side of the counter was playing The Killers' live alb.u.m. This was a big improvement on the Italian music she'd had to listen to, which veered between woeful laments and chirpy teeny-bop pop. The group had already pooled their remaining euros for a drinks kitty. The girls ordered rose, the boys lager. Outside, most of the chairs and tables were occupied and many of the drinkers were standing. Customers of one bar merged into another, the ambience was friendly and festive; even the sky, which had been overcast for much of the week, was clear and studded with stars.

'Oh my G.o.d,' said Sasha, cradling her pretty pink gla.s.s. 'I can't believe it's my last night. I actually don't want to go home.'

Renate and Ilse were lucky they could go back to Munich whenever they fancied, by hopping on a train. They were talking of travelling up Italy's Mediterranean coast, stopping off at seaside resorts for a spell of snorkelling. Ilse's Italian admirer strongly scented with aftershave, a powder blue jumper draped across his shoulders had joined their table and invited them to visit his family place at Porto Ercole en route. Sasha was envious.

'You could go to Fregene with Antonio, no?' said Ilse.

'I don't think there'd be room in the villa. They're meeting up with their cousins. He wouldn't want to be bothered with me. Anyway, I'd rather be with you guys.'

'Sure,' said Renate in her low drawl. 'You may come also.'

'Really? Do you mean that? I could bunk in with you?'

'Why not?'

For a while she basked in this fantasy. She wouldn't have to return to a lifeless house with no dog in it. She could put off worrying about what she was going to do for the rest of the holidays if she couldn't find a job, as well as the gnawing prospect of her GCSE results. G.o.d, when you looked at it that way, what on earth was she going home for? She hadn't even spent all her money yet. How could her parents possibly begrudge her a couple of days on a beach? The gang from her year who had been allowed to go out to Zante would be well-tanned and well-toned from all their swimming and sunbathing. Sounds fun, she imagined saying to them on the first day of the new term, but my experience was more... sophisticated.

The noise was escalating: the hoots of laughter and clink of gla.s.ses, even the sc.r.a.pe of matches and flare of lighters. The taped music, running in a steady loop, battled the output from other bars. She could hear shouts of 'Bet you can't!' 'Bet I can!' 'Bet you five!' 'Raise you ten!' Harry had gathered an audience of onlookers at the promise of his party trick. The aim was to balance a Peroni bottle on his forehead, flick it upwards so that it somersaulted, and catch its neck between his teeth, whereupon he'd glug the contents. A bottle shot skywards and he missed it, to a general howl of disappointment. Fortunately it was rescued mid-tumble before its contents were lost. This didn't deter Harry from trying again, but Sasha was distracted by a shape looming at her elbow.

'Oh my G.o.d, Joe!'

If he'd arrived an hour earlier, she might have been self-conscious, unsure whether to include him in the party whether he'd be accepted like Ilse's dapper boyfriend or considered an interloper. But now the night was buzzing actually her ears were buzzing his presence would be easily absorbed. She might even give him a proper kiss, right at the end when they all said goodbye, when they parted maybe for ever. Chances were she'd kiss everyone anyway.

'You send me message?' said Joe.

'Yeah, it's my last night and for a lot of other people as well, so...'

'Ti voglio bene,' he said.

'What?' Italian was supposed to be the language of romance, so it didn't make sense to her that the phrase they claimed meant 'I love you' was, if you translated it literally, an unabashed come-on: 'Ti voglio bene I well want you.' She hadn't expected to hear Joe use it.

In reply he handed her his phone so she could read the text on the screen. She flushed deeply in embarra.s.sment. 'I didn't send this.'

'No?'

'No.' She pointed at Renate. 'She was messing around. She sent it.'

Renate was no longer coherent. She wore a sleepy grin and her head swayed from side to side.

'It was a mistake,' Sasha apologised, trying to salvage dignity. 'Don't take any notice. It's good that you came though.'

He put his phone back into his pocket, as if undecided what to believe. There were no free chairs so Sasha rose to stand beside him. Another Peroni bottle rocketed through the air. Joe ducked. Sasha reached up and miraculously it sailed into her hand. There was a stuttering round of applause.

Harry, who had so far notched up one success, three failures, came barrelling over and stumbled en route into Joe. 'You again,' he muttered and made a grab for the bottle.

'Hey,' said Sasha, needled. 'Finders keepers.' She pa.s.sed it to Joe who probably had some catching up to do.

'That's my beer,' said Harry.

'Not any more.' He scowled and tottered a little, looking more intimidating than perhaps he had intended.

'Go away,' said Joe. 'Leave her.'

'Then give it to me.'

'No.' Defiantly, Joe drank it down.

Harry lunged towards him. 'Bully!' shouted Sasha.

Joe side-stepped with a swift neat grace, but something in Harry's behaviour had agitated him. 'You kill my family,' he said, his eyes glittering. 'But you cannot hurt me.'

'What the f.u.c.k are you talking about? I haven't killed anyone!' In his indignation Harry was shouting and at the word 'killed' heads turned. The audience who'd been laughing at his tricks were ma.s.sing around the three of them, curious, over-stimulated and, in some cases, spoiling for a fight. Sasha just had time to appreciate the irony of the playlist 'I Predict A Riot' was starting up as Harry raged, 'You f.u.c.king apologise, man. Who the h.e.l.l d'you think you are?'

Renate, from her seat at the table, growled, 'He's from Afghanistan.'

'He's not Italian? Is that right?' Harry lit up. 'Well, you know what, my family had losses too, because of that b.l.o.o.d.y pile of s.h.i.+t you call a country! Why d'you have to mess up our lives? Why can't you smoke your own dope, mind your own f.u.c.king business? What you doing over here anyhow? You belong back in the caves, man, or in the gutter at the very f.u.c.king least.'

Somebody was trying to pull at Harry's sleeve, to calm him down, but the interruption goaded him further and his fist shot out and cracked against Joe's collarbone. Joe, sober, was quick to retaliate, but this wasn't a wise decision. The news that he was an asylum seeker had circulated rapidly. He had no protection, he was alone.

A number of youths began to exchange blows. It was a hot night, they'd all had too much to drink. The scene took on the appearance of an athletic but undisciplined ballet. Some of the bystanders were applauding and enjoying the spectacle; others drifted away. Ilse and her boyfriend hauled Renate from her chair and scooted with her to safety on the far side of the piazza.

It took Sasha a few moments to register that Joe, the target for this sudden release of aggression, was on the ground and the blows were not playful. She was outraged that tempers were so out of control; she had to put a stop to them. She launched herself to the ground, covering Joe's body with her own. She didn't believe that any of these boys, who normally acted like civilised human beings, would hit a girl. But that was before the boot collided with her face.

The stars were still visible when she closed her eyes, imprinted on her eyelids. She was still conscious, her thought processes hyperactive. She was aware of voices cursing, receding, the focus of the fight realigning. It continued though; in fact it spread, rippling outwards to the surrounding bars, involving more eager partic.i.p.ants. She thought she heard a police siren. The students had been warned against tangling with the police. They were advised to carry their papers at all times and keep them safe. Any theft should be reported and a denuncia at the police station famously took hours to complete.

Sasha's doc.u.ments were in her suitcase. She did not want to be arrested on her final night; that would be so gruesome. Her school friend, Jordana, had been done for shoplifting once and although she'd been brittle and defiant, like 'Yeah, so what?' she'd basically come across as a frightened kid. You blew everything if you got caught, you might as well wet yourself in public. The frightening thing was that, actually, Sasha was wet: wet on her hair and down her front and on her legs and she didn't even know if it was blood or tears or wine or wee. Every bit of her hurt. Her head felt as if it had been crushed by a giant nutcracker. She was terrified her limbs were paralysed. And the police sirens were coming closer.

Somebody had an arm around her and was trying to raise her. Someone else said she shouldn't be moved, but the person with the arm ignored them and got her to sit. She hoped it was Joe, but it was Bruton. 'Can you walk?' he said. ''Cos you'd better get out of here fast.'

'What about Joe? Is he okay?'