Tag Archives: Sheffield

Perfectly Hard and Glamorous / I wanted to talk to the boys, and ask for their help

The story so far. Harry Oldham is attempting to write about his distant past at Park Hill. With a deadline looming, he sets to work writing about his shady past. He recalls his dealings with a bent copper, his violent days with the Geisha Boys, and a friendship with Paolo, an Italian boy, who is caught up in Harry’s nightmare.
(Parts 1-8 are available to read in the menu)

Part 9

I had to thank Tom for getting me back on track. That meeting near the station opened the floodgates, and I needed a bucket to catch everything in. 

I told him about the night I’d met Paolo which was something I’d never told anyone before. Not even Andy and Jack, who had meant more to me than anything. 

“It’s strange that you bottle everything up,” I’d told him.

We’d sat talking for nearly an hour, two strangers, years apart in age, and with nothing in common.

“You came looking for me?”

“Yeah, I followed you because I wanted to know what you were doing in Sheffield and find out about you.”

“I’m here to write the book that will make me popular again.”

“Do you think that people are really interested in your life story?”

“Probably not, but it’s not about me because it’s a work of fiction.”

“I need to go,” he’d said, “but…”

“But what?”

“I wondered whether I could see you again. Just for a chat like…”

“How old are you?”

“Eighteen.”

It had been a long time since someone so young had shown interest in me, and I was flattered. I gave him my number.

“Next time, bring your girlfriend with you.”

I went back to the apartment, opened the laptop, and started writing.

*****


We were on our own with only the city skyline showing that there was life in the city. Headlights darted below and sirens wailed in the dark. Paolo sat on the bench and said nothing. I paced up and down angrily.

“What the fuck was all that about?”

“I thought you’d have guessed by now,” said Paolo in an unmistakable Italian accent, “and I’m sorry.” He sniffed as though he’d been crying.

“What are you sorry for?”

“For kissing you. For everything. It seems that I’ve dragged you into all this.”

“It’s that fucking Frank Smith. I’m not doing anything to help him. I’ll slit his throat.”

“Will you? Really? I don’t think so. Frank has us both in his grips. I’m a puff, and he’ll make out that you are too.”

“What do you mean?”

Paolo looked at me with sorrowful eyes.

“He’ll make you do anything he wants, and he’ll use that photograph to make sure that you do.”

I’d already forgotten about that sneaky photo, and the thought of it made me feel sick.

“What does he want us to do?”

“He’s going to use us. We’re the bait to get rid of people.”

“I still don’t understand.”

“Think about it. We’re the fresh meat that will bring them down.”

“I’m not a fucking queer,” I said.

“That’s not the issue. It doesn’t matter whether you are or not. Frank Smith will make out that you are, and shit sticks.”

“What will I have to do?”

“That’s for you to find out, but I’ve got a good idea.”

I was nervous and out of my depth. That fight in town seemed a long time ago, and I really needed Andy and Jack at my side.

“What has he got on you, Paolo?”

“I’m a bender, that’s what. He caught me with a guy and said he’d make good use of what he saw. He made good that promise.”

“Tell him to fuck off.”

“He’s not a man to be reasoned with. If I don’t do what he says, then he’ll tell my parents and they’ll disown me.”

“But he’s a copper. He can’t do what he’s doing.”

“How are you going to stop him? He’s a nutter, and like he said, plays dirty.”

Paolo wrapped his arms around himself to keep warm. I thought about the walk home to Park Hill and hoped that the guys would be waiting for me.

“I’m sorry for kissing you,” Paolo said.

“Not like you had a choice.”

“Well, I’m sorry because I know you didn’t like it.”

“You don’t know what the fuck I like!” I snapped and immediately regretted it.

“Does that mean that you liked it?”

“Of course, it doesn’t. I just meant that you don’t know anything about me.”

“I’m sorry.”

“If you say sorry once more, I’m going to…”

“Kiss me?”

“No, I’ll smack you in the face.”

“I’m sorry.”

I punched him hard, and blood poured from his nose. He used his hands to stem the flow and tears welled in his eyes.

I was used to hitting people without having regrets, but this time I felt incredibly sorry for what I’d done. He had frightened but beautiful dark eyes that were locked on my face. I let him go, and he shivered in the cold.

I took my tee-shirt off and held it to his nose. He was scared and vulnerable and I’d made his situation worse. He held the shirt to his face, like he was trying to get the smell of it.

“I’m sorry, I shouldn’t have done that. I’m angry, and I took it out on you.”

I could see that he was looking at my bare chest.

“You have a nice body, Harry.”

“Fuck, Paolo. Don’t you ever stop?”

“Tell me something. What did it feel like to kiss a boy?”

I laughed, not because the question was funny, but because I was nervous.

“To be honest, it felt strange. I’ve never done it before. I guess that if I had to, then I’m glad it had to be with you.”

“That’s kind of you.”

I sat beside him and could feel him trembling. Blood stained the front of his shirt, and his curly hair was dishevelled.

“I’ve only kissed girls,” I said, “and I suppose there’s not a lot of difference.”

“You have blood on your face too,” he said. “Have you been fighting?”

“Yeah, we have. The boys that is.”

“Who are the boys?”

“Andy and Jack. They’re my best friends.”

“Were they the boys that got chased away?”

“That’s right. Some help they turned out to be.”

“I don’t have any friends,” he said.

“Fuck, Paolo. How come you don’t have any friends?”

“Because they know I’m queer and think I fancy them, even when I don’t.”

“You’re cold. Where do you live?”

“Hillsborough.”

“How are you going to get home?”

“For a rough boy, you have a caring side.”

“Don’t think that I’m like this all the time.”

“Can I ask you a favour?”

“If you want money for a taxi, then you’re out of luck because I’m broke.”

“It’s not that. I was going to ask you to hold me.”

What the fuck? This wasn’t doing my reputation any good. But he was afraid, and I felt deeply sorry for hitting him. I put my arm across his shoulder, and he rested his head against it.

“I hope that nobody sees me,” I said.

“Things are going to get messy, and we’ll need to stick together. I hope that you’ll be my friend.”

“If you like,” I said. “But tell nobody!”

“I think that you have a feminine side, Harry.”

*****

The Clash / Rock the Casbah / 1982

Paolo had insisted that he walk home, and I watched his slender frame disappear down the hill, convinced that he had no idea where he was going.

I put my blood-stained shirt across my shoulders and walked towards Park Hill, the cold air hitting my bare chest, but I wanted to look hard and threatening. A dog walker stared. “What the fuck are you looking at?” He skulked into the shadows where there were rats, broken glass, and glue-impregnated carrier bags.

I hated myself. 

I had hit a defenceless kid who hadn’t deserved it, but it was the thought of kissing a guy for the first time that alarmed me most. I had meant it when I told Paolo that I was glad it was him, and that was what concerned me most.

I should have told him that I was disgusted and would never do it again, but I didn’t want to upset him anymore than I already had. If I was honest, I didn’t trust myself not to kiss another guy, and if I was going to, which according to Frank Smith was inevitable, I hoped that it would be like kissing Paolo.

Andy and Jack were sitting on the steps when I turned the corner. They were tired and concerned, also covered in dry blood.

“Where the fuck have you been?”

“Thanks for nothing,” I said, “so much for mates helping one another out.”

“That guy was a bastard,” said Jack, “he’d have beaten the shit out of us.”

”Who were they?” Andy eyed me with suspicion, and flinched, holding his side where there was a tear in his dirty shirt. 

I had to think quickly. “Somebody we’ve upset,” I lied, “they wanted to teach us a lesson, but it’s sorted now. I guess I was the unlucky one.”  

“What did we do to them?”

“Remember those nicked fags? They’re pissed off because they sell cheap fags too, but I told them that they’d all gone.”

“They came on a bit heavy,” said Jack, throwing an empty beer bottle that smashed against the wall. “Shit! There were three of us and only two of them. We should have helped Harry.”

“Fuck! Don’t you think I don’t know that.”

Andy put his arms around me and rested his head on my shoulder. “I’m sorry mate, we let you down, and if we see those bastards again, we’ll kick the shit out of them.” He held me tight, and I brushed my cheek against his unkempt hair.

“Stop acting like a queer,” I told him, and he laughed. He let go, put his arm around my waist, and squeezed. I liked the attention, and the fact that they believed I’d taken one for the team.

“That was a fucking good fight in town.”

“The coppers have been cruising the area,” said Jack, “we’ve been lying low.”

“That cunt won’t mess with us again,” I quipped.

“We look like shit, let’s go up to mine.”

Jack’s parents were away for the weekend, but it turned out that he’d lost his door key, probably on the floor of Crazy Daisy. He knocked loudly and the door was answered by his sister, Louise. “What shit have you been up to now?”

“You should’ve seen the other guy,” Andy joked.

The flat was warm and smelt of fish and chips, the remains of which were on the kitchen table.

“We’re going to get cleaned up,” said Jack.

Louise looked at me. “Look at you. Showing all your body off!” I offered the bloody tee-shirt as way of an explanation. Jack took Andy to the bathroom, but she held me by the arm. “Let me sort you out.”

She ran a hand towel under hot water and rubbed me down. “Cat got your tongue?” I didn’t know what to say as she wiped my face like my mother used to.

“We had a fight in town.”

“If you ask me, you all want locking up.”

Jack shouted from the bathroom. “Are you coming?”

Everybody fancied Louise. She wasn’t bad looking and was one of the few people that I felt awkward around.

“Thank you,” I said. “I think I’m wanted.”

“Before you go. Aren’t you going to ask me out?”

“What?”

“You’re a div Harry.”

“Are you asking me to go out with you?”

“If I waited for you to ask, then we wouldn’t get anywhere.”

“I don’t know. Yes, I suppose. Where do you want to go?”

“You’re too young for the pub, so you can take me to the pictures instead.”

“What do you want to see?”

“I want to see An Officer and a Gentleman.”

“Fuck me,” I said, “Isn’t that a girlie film?”

“Are you bailing on me already?”

“No, it’s fine. I’m not telling Jack and Andy because they’ll take the piss.”

“Get in touch with your feminine side Harry Oldham, you might find that you like it.”

I froze. It was the second time that this had been said to me tonight. It felt like Louise knew about my kiss with Paolo and that two separate worlds were about to crash into each other.

I started to leave but Louise pulled me back again.

“Are you forgetting something?”

“What?”

“A kiss maybe? For making you look handsome again.”

I stuck my tongue in her mouth, and we kissed for a few minutes. It was sloppy and tasted of vinegar. I thought I’d better put my arms around her, and she wrapped her own arms around my naked back. I could feel her sharp fingernails making circles against my flesh.

I tried to compare it to the kiss I’d had with Paolo, and hoped that it would be better, but I was mindful that this had also been forced upon me. I imagined what people would say when they discovered that I was going out with her. The lads on Park Hill would be envious, and that gave me satisfaction, but at the same time I felt uneasy.

The boys were sitting on Jack’s bed when I entered the bedroom. It wasn’t a place I’d seen very often, and I was intrigued. 

It looked like any other teenage boys’ room, with posters of Kevin Keegan, Steve Coppell, and Trevor Francis, posted alongside one of Michelle Pfeiffer, and a topless blonde with big tits, who’d been torn out of The Sun. 

It was untidy, with Jack’s clothes strewn across the floor, and his bed was still unmade from the previous night. Football trophies sat on top of a cheap dressing table, and I noticed his dirty football kit piled on a chair in the corner.

They were listening to Radio Hallam and were singing along to Rock the Casbah that had become a favourite. They looked almost presentable, whereas I was still stripped to the waist and feeling conspicuous. Jack didn’t object when I grabbed one of his soiled Adidas tops and put it on. It was far too small, and smelt of him, but I didn’t care.

Andy reached under the bed and pulled out several cans of Long Life beer that Jack kept stashed. We opened them believing that warm beer was the best thing in the world.

“I got that guy in the head,” Andy boasted. “He’ll be feeling that punch for a while.”

“We need to lie low,” Jack chipped in, “the coppers know it was us.”

“They can’t get us here,” I said.

“You said those guys sold cigarettes?” Andy had returned to the subject of my eventful night.

“Yeah, they were pissed off, but like I said, I told them that they’d all gone.”

“I know where we can get some more,” Andy continued.

“Where?”

“There’s a shop near the market that sells loads of ciggies, and I reckon we could rob some from there.”

“I told them that we wouldn’t be selling any more.”

Jack slurped from his can. “How do you suggest we get them?”

“I’ve been thinking about it,” Andy contemplated, “and I reckon that if three of us went in there when it was quiet, then we could take them.”

“But they’re going to see us.”

“Of course they’re going to see us,” said Andy, “but there’s only a woman working behind the counter, and she isn’t going to stop three lads, is she?”

You’re talking about holding it up?”

“Why not? All we need to do is cover our faces so that nobody recognises us, steal the fags, and disappear into the market where it’s crowded.”

“Fuck me!” I cried. “This is a whole new ball game.”

“I’m not sure,” said Jack. “What happens if we get caught?”

“We’re only sixteen and will get away with it,” Andy reassured us, “but who says we’re going to get caught?”

“I don’t know. Stealing a cigarette machine is one thing, but holding up a woman in a shop is something else.”

“Are you getting chicken, Harry?”

“No,” I said defiantly, “but what if she gets hurt?”

“Nobody’s going to get hurt. We’ll walk in, tell her not to be stupid, and steal the fags.”

“Like they do in films?” asked Jack.

“If you like, but with loads of fags to sell, we’re going to make lots of money, and Harry’s weird friends can get fucked.”

I looked at Jack but didn’t say anything else.

“That’s agreed then,” said Andy. “Leave everything to me and we’ll sort something for next week.”

“Make sure it’s not Wednesday,” Jack said, “because I have football in the afternoon.”

When the beer had gone, Jack nicked a bottle of sherry from the sideboard, and passed the bottle around. It had been an eventful night, and we were brave and pleasantly drunk by the time we were ready to leave.

On the way out, Louise appeared from her bedroom and gave me a scheming look. I said goodnight to her, but Andy had noticed something, and outside issued a word of warning.

“Never mess with a mate’s sister.”

*****

On Wednesday I went to the newsagents in the precinct to buy a can of Coke and nicked a Mars Bar at the same time. On the way out, I was stopped by a man who I thought worked in the shop. I clenched my fist ready to hit him, but he held up an apologetic arm anticipating what I was going to do.

“Harry Oldham?” he asked.

“Who’s asking?”

“I’d like a little chat.”

The man didn’t live around here because he was too well-dressed for Park Hill. He took me by the arm and led me to a wall near the flower beds.

“I understand that you’re working for us.”

“What?”

“Don’t bullshit me, Harry.”

“I don’t know what you’re on about.” 

“Of course, you do.”

He sat me down and held out two envelopes, one in each hand.

“Envelope number one,” and he held it up for me to see. “This contains the details of your first job. Tomorrow as it happens. The address is in there, and you’ll need to be there for nine.”

“Fuck off!”

“Envelope number two,” and he put it inside his coat pocket. “This contains a photograph that will interest a lot of people around here. Do you want to know what the photograph is?”

I already knew what it was.

“If you don’t turn up tomorrow night, then this will be seen by everyone that knows you, and they’ll know that you’re a fucking faggot.”

The man gave me the first envelope and began to walk away. I stared at it not wanting to know what might be inside.

“Oh, by the way,” he said stopping, “there’s also fifty quid in there, money up front as they say.”

“Fifty quid?”

“And don’t even think about pocketing it and not turning up because that photo will still appear, and you’ll also end up at the bottom of the canal. Do you understand?”

I nodded.

I thought about the next day when I was going to rob a newsagent with Andy and Jack whilst also joining a world that looked dark and sinister. I wanted to talk to the boys, and ask for their help, but I knew that I couldn’t, and would never be able to. I didn’t sleep at all that night.

*****

Perfectly Hard and Glamorous / The only way is to play dirty

The story so far. Harry Oldham is an author who has been encouraged to return to Sheffield and write about his past. A chance meeting with a stranger called Tom brings back memories of Paolo, ‘one of the most beautiful boys I’ve ever known.’ The other Geisha Boys, Andy and Jack, take a backseat as Harry recalls the first time he met him.
(Parts 1-7 are available to read in the menu)

Part 8

It was the night we became Geisha Boys. The night we ran through the streets of Sheffield, laughing, covered in someone else’s blood.

We ran towards our block and didn’t see the two guys getting out of the car. Andy and Jack ran ahead, while I was spitting blood, and out of breath. 

I was grabbed from behind. I shouted to the lads, and they stopped dead in their tracks. They were my brothers, and they would help me. Except that they couldn’t. One of the guys waved a stick at them, a thick one, and warned them off.

“Keep on running you little turds. Because if you don’t, I’ll break your fucking heads.”

The boys hesitated but were powerless to help. They edged away, watching me, and disappeared up the stairs.

“Fuck! Don’t fucking leave me!”

The other guy held me tight. There was the faint aroma of Brut and petunia on him. The man with the cosh waited until Andy and Jack had disappeared and turned to me.

“Let’s get in the car.”

I was bundled into the back of a dark Vauxhall Chevette where there was somebody else. I tried the door handle to escape but it was locked and so thumped the back of  the driver’s seat in frustration.

The two guys got in front. The guy with the cosh was driving. The other one, who smelt of Brut and petunia, wore a flat cap and donkey jacket and looked straight ahead.

“Good evening, Harry,” he said. “The luck we’re having tonight. Who’d have thought it? A brawl in a bar. The aggressors running towards Park Hill. We thought, it couldn’t be?”

The car moved off and the guy beside me was quiet. I caught glimpses of his black curly hair as we passed under streetlights, the orange aura highlighting his dark features. 

“Harry, meet Paolo. He’s a fucking eyetie.”

We drove a short distance and pulled up on a road that looked over the city centre.

Frank Smith got out and opened the rear passenger door. “Out you get.” The lad called Paolo slid out and stretched. “You too Harry.”

He led us through a gap in a stone wall and sat us on a bench while he remained standing and looking like a council workman. The other one leant on the wall and lit a cigarette.

“Look at that view,” said Frank. “A big city with lots of people. Good ones and bad ones. We’re the good guys, but there are more bad guys than we’d like. Which side are you two on?”

Neither of us answered.

“A long time ago this city was run by bad guys. Did you know they called it Little Chicago? It was full of gangsters who thought nothing about kicking the shit out of each other. Then there were the knives and the guns. These were gang wars, the Mooneys and the Garvins, and the police couldn’t control them.

“But somebody sorted it out. Percy Sillitoe was his name. If he’d failed, then life for every respectable citizen would have been hell, but he succeeded and ended up running MI5. Clever bloke. Did you know that I read history boys?”

It was a school lesson forced upon us. We looked at each other in bewilderment and didn’t know what to say.

“Oh yes, I like history. Did you know that it gets twisted? Sanitised. Let’s look at Percy Sillitoe. Hard, focused and determined. That’s what we read today, but he was a scheming bastard, who fought fire with fire.

“I like to think I’m a bit like him. If you did everything by the book, then we’d get nowhere. In years to come, everything will be touchy feely, and I hope I’m not around because justice will side with the villains. Fucking chaos.

“Some people think I’m a bent copper. That hurts. All I want to do is suss out the shit, and the only way is to play dirty. I always get what I want.”

Frank turned to us.

“It’s a bit like the gang wars. The only way to deal with today’s bad guys is to eliminate them.  One by one. Are you with me?”

“What are you on about?” Paolo had spoken for the first time. His English was excellent but there was an unmistakable accent. 

“I need your help. Both of you. Paolo, fucking eyetie, with your boyish looks. Harry, the bad boy with a big flaw running right through him. Do you know what that flaw is, Harry?”

“No,” I replied.

“It’s going to slap you in the face soon.” 

Paolo looked at me, a fellow victim in this charade and his eyes showed fear. I didn’t know what to do. If he had looked closely, he would have seen that I was more terrified than he was.

“Kiss each other.”

What the fuck did Frank just say?

”Fucking kiss each other!” He stormed over and grabbed the backs of our heads. He forced them together until our noses almost touched, but we resisted, and Frank used his strength. Our faces brushed one another. Paolo’s skin was smooth with no sign of facial hair.

“Kiss goddammit!” Frank shouted. “Paolo, bender! You’ll enjoy it. Kiss the scabby shit.”

And Paolo did. A quick peck on the lips before forcing his tongue into my mouth. I couldn’t back away. He wrapped his tongue around mine and I had no choice but to do the same.

There was a flash of bright light, and I realised that the other copper had taken a photograph.

Frank released his grip. “That’s enough,” he  laughed. “I knew you’d both enjoy it. Didn’t I say so Brian? He looked over to his colleague who acted as if nothing had happened . “You see Harry, your eyetie friend likes snogging lads, and I dare say that he finds you attractive. Isn’t that right Paolo?”

The Italian boy was mortified. 

 “A match made in heaven. Now that you’re better acquainted, I’m sure you’ll both help me.”

“I don’t understand,” said Paolo.

“Percy Sillitoe succeeded because he played both gangs against one another. A word in one ear, a word in the other. He didn’t do a thing. It was a set up. And when one gang thought they’d won. he went after them next and destroyed them too.

“These are the eighties, and there are perverts in this city, but as always, there is more than one player. Player One is getting pissed off with Player Two, and so Player One says to me, ‘get rid of these bastards!’ I say that it will cost them, but we work together, and Player Two disappears. Then I come down heavy on Player One, and he disappears too. Get it?”

I was angry. “What the fuck has it got to do with us? We aren’t doing anything for you?”

Frank stared me out.

“I think you’ll both help me.”

“Get fucked!”

“Do you really want your parents to see a photo that shows you going at it with another guy? Better still, what happens if it gets into the hands of your low-life friends? You won’t be able to show your face on Park Hill again.”

The guy called Brian laughed.

“And what will your eyetie parents think when they see that their beloved Catholic boy is really a depraved bender?”

I exchanged nervous glances with Paolo.

“I won’t offer you a lift home because you’ve both got a lot to talk about. Somebody will be in touch.”

The two coppers walked back to the car, but Frank shouted something before driving off. It sounded like, “If they’d have let me, I’d have caught the Yorkshire Ripper years ago.”

Perfectly Hard and Glamorous/I waited for him to come back out/But he never did


Part 5

A few years ago, I watched Yann Demange’s ’71,’ set on the streets of Belfast during the height of the troubles. I would have been five years old, and recall watching TV news about bombs and soldiers. The stories were gloomy but Northern Ireland had been a world away and nothing to do with me. They left their mark, and even now Belfast is the last place I’d consider visiting.

There is a scene in a pub at the Divis Flats, a republican stronghold at the bottom of Falls Road. It reminded me of The Parkway on Long Henry Row. I found out afterwards that it was filmed at Park Hill, used as a double for the demolished block.

It came back to me when I walked into the convenience store.

There were two murals to the left of the entrance. The first depicted a red crown on a grey background. The second reminded me of those yellow bollards that you find at the end of an alleyway. I hadn’t seen them before, but I knew this had been The Parkway with its dreary concrete frontage. It looked completely different, the small windows replaced with shiny metal and gleaming glass, and the interior showed no evidence that this had once been a rough pub. There was trendy alcohol on sale, a dessert bar, American sweets, Costa, as well as general groceries. I speculated what Terry Watson might have thought had he still been around.

I bought skimmed milk, a sourdough bloomer with kalamon olives, and balsamic vinegar.

“I told you to buy milk, normal milk in a bottle, and only a Fletcher’s thick loaf will do. Your dad likes it for his packing up. And only Sarson’s vinegar for his chips.”

That would have been my mum screaming at me.

At least I’d bought them on a credit card, or an app on my phone, because once upon a time I would have nicked them and pocketed the money she’d given me.

I walked back to the apartment and thought of Terry Watson.

In my mind’s eye, he was still hiding around the corner, waiting for me to turn towards the lift. He’d jump out, grab me by the throat, and pin me against the wall, his eyes raging, and his breath stinking of beer.

Terry was in his thirties, and I was sixteen.

“I’ll kill you,” he threatened. “I want my fifty quid back, and if I don’t, the three of you will end up at the bottom of the canal in little pieces.” He’d waited for a reaction. I was shitting myself. “And I mean reyt little pieces.”

He’d meant it. Terry Watson would have killed every one of the Geisha Boys, including his own son.

Andy’s dad was a villain and never worked. He plied his trade in The Parkway, along with his cronies, and earned a living buying and selling knocked off gear, supplementing it with dole money, and spending most of it across the bar.

It was a bad idea, but fifty quid in the kitchen cupboard was too much of a temptation. We needed new clothes, and Colvin’s was difficult to nick from. Andy pocketed the cash, we skipped the last days of school, and spent it on new jeans and tee-shirts.

It turned out that Terry owed somebody else that fifty quid, and those threats had been filtered down to us.

He got his fifty quid back. I gave it him, but at this moment I won’t say how I got it.

***

There was a misconception that Andy was stupid because school had told him so. His parents had given him nothing, but he made up for this genetic deficiency, and was quite clever. He was far cleverer than Jack and me, and if you got him in the right mood, he was academically brilliant. But those occasions were rare.

I remember watching Sale of the Century and Andy would come up with all the correct answers. He was lazy, that’s all there was to it.

That snotty nosed little boy taught me how to distract shopkeepers so that he could nick sweets. And then it was record sleeves, because shops used to keep vinyl behind the counter, and we would stick them on our bedroom walls for decoration. Then it was clothes, and people wondered where we got our money from.

My mum and dad worried about him, an only child, physically abused by his father, but initially they didn’t like him. As we got older, their opinion changed, charmed by his friendly politeness at the kitchen table where he spent most teatimes at ours.

“You always make fantastic meals Mrs Oldham.”

When she turned thirty, Andy presented her with a marvellous bouquet of flowers stolen from City Road Cemetery.

And when dad hurt his hand on a grinder, and spent weeks off work, Andy nicked a copy of The Sun from the rack outside the newsagents and took it to him every day.

But there was another side to Andy, and I recall seeing it when dad paid for everyone to see Raiders of the Lost Ark at the Gaumont cinema.

We sat in the front seats, and halfway through Andy went to the toilet. He never came back, but when the lights came up, we found him sitting a few rows behind with his arm draped across Donna Wainwright’s shoulder. She was four years older and seemed incredibly old to us. He had a smirk on his face and the biggest love bite. We took the piss out of Donna, not him, telling her that she was the child catcher from Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.

“There are children here somewhere. I can smell them. Come along, kiddie-winkies! Here we are children, get your lollipops, lollipops, come along my little ones.”

Andy grew more handsome, able to chat up any girl, and the older they were, the more it pleased him.

From the age of twelve or thirteen, girls claimed him. He spent dark nights pressed against cold concrete as they kissed and explored him. He was a magnet to every slutty teenage girl across Park Hill, and if they couldn’t have him, then they turned to Jack and me, and we’d find our own dark corner.

Andy was never serious about girls. They all thought he loved them, but the next evening it would be a different one in another part of the complex. And then they’d become jealous, and the girls would fight each other, scream, pull hair, and scratch eyes out.

There were times when boyfriends and big brothers came looking for him.

“You’ve been shagging my bird.”

“You’ve been shagging my little sister.”

“I’ll fucking have you!”

It added to the fun because three against one was easy competition and they’d end up covered in blood in a damp walkway.

And it was never about sex. It was about collecting trophies and trying to look good to each other. We were young boys and didn’t understand the other sex. Everything we did to them we’d seen on TV. Except that Andy was better at it.

And I know when he lost his virginity. He was fourteen.  

Mandy Brown lived with her bloke on the top floor of our block. She was in her thirties with peroxide blonde hair, mini skirt, and low cut top that showed off big tits. We joked as she tottered along to The Link in high heels and leopard skin fur.

Late one night, we were dossing on the steps when she returned home. She’d been entertaining married men at the pub and was drunk.

“Get out of my fucking way.” None of us moved.

“Go fuck yourself slag.”

Instead of pushing past, she slumped between us and lit a cigarette. She offered the pack and Jack took three out and pocketed the rest.

“Life’s a fucking bore,” she said. “Old blokes with beer bellies. Old blokes with shrivelled up willies. Old blokes who want to fuck me in exchange for a Babycham.”

“I thought you had a bloke already.”

She ran a hand through her hair and revealed black roots. “He’s a cunt. Sleeps all day. Works all night.”

“Get a new fella,” I told her.

She screwed her eyes up and stared at me. “Fucking clever bastard. Grow up and you’ll be God’s gift to fuck all.” I blushed and she relented. “If there are three bad boys, then you’re probably the best of the bad.”

Andy stretched his foot out and touched Mandy on the ankle. It was meant to be discreet, but I noticed.

She spoke again. “I think you want to be loved by your bad boy mates, but your conscience gets in the way.” She looked to the foggy sky and blew a cloud of smoke.  “Get rid of that and anything’s possible.”

“If you wanted to shag any of us, who’d you choose?” It was a question that Jack always asked.

“You’re boys. Fucking schoolboys.”

Mandy rubbed her skinny ankle against Andy’s outstretched leg and stole a sideways glance. He looked at me and said nothing.

“But if we were older, who’d be the one you’d shag?”

“If I were to fuck any of you then I’d go to prison. But if I had to choose.”

She looked long and hard at each of us.

She stared at Jack. “Too pretty. Too small. Massive cock. No fucking idea how to use it.”

Then it was me. “Dark horse. Weird looking. Big cock. Not sure where he wants to put it.”

Andy was last. She slapped him on the leg. “Dangerous. Good-looking. Nice cock.”

That was it.

“And so, if I had to choose, I’d say go and wank each other off until you’re older.” She laughed. Jack and I looked at each other and pretended not to be disappointed.

Mandy looped one arm through Andy’s, the other through mine, and we climbed upstairs.

“These steps will kill me by the time I’m thirty,” she joked.

“In your dreams love,” said Andy.

Jack walked ahead of us and when he reached his landing turned and smiled before disappearing. “Fucking loves himself,” she murmured.

It was my landing next, and I left Andy to walk her to the next floor. “Fucking strange,” she muttered.

I stopped and listened as they scrambled upstairs. They were talking but I couldn’t make out what they were saying. The conversation faded and I pictured Andy giving her a peck on the cheek, as he was prone to do, before heading home and turning on the TV.

I decided to follow them. I crept upstairs, peering around each turn, until I reached the next level. I looked along Andy’s landing, but he was nowhere to be seen.

I repeated the process, ticking off each floor until I could go no further. Mandy’s flat was at the far end, and I could see her fumbling for keys in her handbag. Andy was behind, steadying her by the hips, like a boy might help his mum. She found them, turned towards Andy, and giggled. And then she kissed him on the forehead. Once they’d gone inside, I waited for him to come back out. But he never did.

I was jealous, but I wasn’t exactly sure what I was jealous about. The green-eyed monster was something I became familiar with. When I got jealous, it manifested itself into anger, and when I got angry, I was inconsolable.

I sat on the floor and stared at the empty sidewalk. I thought of Mandy’s parting words. “Fucking strange.” And I thought how wrong it all was.

Despite every terrible thing the three of us had ever done – fighting, stealing – this was much worse. I swore that I would tell somebody, and Mandy would be in trouble, and Andy would be sorry. But I realised that if I did that, I would lose both Andy and Jack.

Then I thought that things like this shouldn’t matter, and I’d do something equally as bad.

Each hour I sat there was consumed with inner fury, and when I realised that I couldn’t do anything about it, I punched the wall and broke my hand.

Perfectly Hard and Glamorous/Tell me about Jack

Park Hill/Deprivation, whose environment is bleak, dreary and hostile/The Times/1980

Part 4

“Tell me about Jack.”

I hadn’t said anything. Instead, I’d saved my thoughts for the train journey back to Sheffield, absorbed myself in 80s music, and drifted in and out of sleep.

I’d met Meghan, my literary agent, in a pub off Wardour Street. She’d looked tired. The book business was taking its toll and she was desperate for a bestseller. I wasn’t sure that I’d be the one to deliver it.

“I don’t know where it’s leading,” she’d said. “And I never took you as being a chav bad boy.”

I’d laughed. The word ‘chav’ hadn’t been invented then and it had made me think of Jeremy Kyle.

“There’s a lot you don’t know about me.”

Meghan frowned. “I worry that once people realise it’s about you that some of your charm will disappear.”

“I know that people don’t want to know that I grew up in a council flat. But I did, and they might not like me afterwards.”

She’d folded her arms on the table. “If that’s the sacrifice then it means we have a bestseller on our hands.”

***

Park Hill had changed beyond recognition. It was the same buildings that I once knew, the same framework, the same concrete, but it had a new soul.

Despite my initial reservations I was feeling slightly homesick. Not for London, but the apartment in Sheffield where you couldn’t hang a coat because the bare concrete couldn’t be disturbed.

I thought of the high up neon sign that said, ‘I love you… will u marry me.’

And on that train home I remembered when we’d dangled Jack over that same walkway. He was the only one brave enough to be suspended hundreds of feet above ground and paint ‘Geisha Boys’ in big letters.

We’d hung on, threatening to drop him at any moment, but he’d added his mark on the drab concrete.

But it was wasted. At ground level you could hardly see it and the lettering made no sense. And then a council worker came along and removed Jack’s efforts. It gave somebody else the chance to write, ‘I love u… will u marry me.”

I love you… will u marry me

***

Andy was the handsome one. He was the boy that all the girls liked and had anyone he wanted. Next was Jack. Cute and adorable Jack. The lad with the six-pack and infectious smile. And then it was me. Harry with the black spiky hair, not as handsome but taller than the others.

Jack was shorter but had the confidence and personality to make up for it. His six-pack arrived by the time he was a young teenager, and that was because he liked sport, especially football. He played for the school team and was picked for Sheffield Boys, but we told him it wasn’t right. He had a trial with Rotherham United and we got him drunk the night before. We didn’t want Jack to leave us.

He also had a big sister, Louise. She hung around with girls her own age and was distinctive for the long leather coat that nearly touched her ankles. All the boys coveted her.

But something changed. As we grew older, became perfectly hard and glamorous, I got the girls. The prettiest, the sexiest, and the oldest. Andy and Jack would get jealous, and that suited me fine. But things were never what they seemed.

***

The Scottish Queen/Park Hill/Modern Mooch

We were fourteen and notorious. Branded for drinking, smoking, fighting, stealing, and mindless vandalism. That standing followed us to comprehensive school, a 95 bus ride to Manor Top, and a long walk to Ashleigh School.

It was a shock to be there. Next to Ashleigh was Hurlfield where most of our schoolmates ended up. We were shunted into a different environment to straighten us out, but we ended up as adversaries to our former classmates.

But a bigger school meant bigger boys and they soon found us. Or rather they found Jack first.

We always went home together but one afternoon Jack had football practice. By the time he’d showered and was walking across Ashleigh field we were already home and smoking fags outside the Scottish Queen.

Jack looked dreadful when he came back. His trousers were ripped, his shirt hung open because the buttons had been torn off, and his face was bloody. But Jack still smiled.

The three lads had been hanging around the cricket nets and Jack was an easy target for them.

“They tried to nick my footy gear,” he told us.

They’d grabbed him, pushed him to the ground, and kicked him. But Jack was having none of it. He got up, kicked the first lad in the knee, thrust a foot into the second lad’s bollocks, and on the third he landed a punch that broke a nose.

The incident went unreported to the school, but the word in the corridors was that payback was heading Jack’s way.

We had to be the first to act.

Monday evening was youth club. On this day we never went home after school and always went to Manor Top chippy, where we stuffed ourselves with cod and chips,  as well as cans of Top Deck shandy. We’d go to the newsagents and steal porno magazines which we read behind the fire station, and then leave them where little kids might find them.

That Monday night, we went back to school for seven. We diverted into nearby woods and found sticks that we hid alongside our school bags behind the boiler room.

We played table football, shot pool, and danced to music in the darkened assembly hall. It was about flirting with girls, lots of them, beautiful and ugly, and then scrawling our names and conquests on the toilet wall.

Andy loves Jayne, Jack loves Julie. Harry loves Kay.

It was also about having teachers watch us all the time because we might start a fight or vandalise the toilets.

That night, the arrogance and restlessness amongst us was nervous tension. We’d noticed the three spotty boys following us from room to room, staring, smirking, and whispering between themselves.

Saggy, Tommo, and Hesso, lived on the flats at Gleadless Valley, and were bullies who everybody avoided.

We plotted and schemed, blew kisses, and stuck two fingers up at them. They glared at us, but only Saggy and Tommo looked like they might be a problem because Hesso was supporting his smashed knee with a crutch.

When they weren’t looking, we left and crept into the shadows outside.

Everybody left at nine and headed towards the main road.

Saggy and Tommo came out first, and instead of following the crowd, turned towards the dark field and the flats beyond. Hesso was next, struggling with the crutch, and trying to catch up. The night was black and dangerous, but with safety in numbers, they trekked into it.

We picked up our sticks and followed.

We crept across the muddy grass, weapons in hand, and got nearer our prey. That’s when it happened.

Andy gave the nod, and we raised our sticks. The second nod was the signal for us to run as fast as we could.

Jack was fastest and hit Hesso across the back of the head. Hesso screamed and collapsed in a heap, and Jack followed up with a blow across his already destroyed knee.

Saggy and Tommo turned but they were too late.

Andy landed a crushing blow on Saggy’s temple, and he slumped forward. I aimed at Tommo’s chest and knew straightaway that I’d broken his ribs. They lay on the ground moaning, but we hadn’t finished and delivered blow after blow until they begged us to stop.

It was then that the clouds parted, and the moon cast an eery glow over the incident.

Andy stamped on Hesso’s crutch until it snapped, and Jack got his dick out and pissed all over Saggy. I collected the discarded sticks, fascinated that Jack had such a big one.

“Never mess with Park Hill lads.”

“I’ll piss on all of you.”

“All for one and one for all!”

It never crossed our minds that we could have killed somebody.

The three of us didn’t go to school the following day because there might have been too many questions. Angry teachers, enraged parents, and battered boys. There was even a chance that the police might have been waiting.

We walked into town and lounged outside Castle Market, cadging cigarettes from bus drivers, and stole a big bottle of Woodpecker Cider from the Co-op.

In the event, nothing happened at all.

Saggy, Tommo and Hesso had a code of honour. They were like us. And their standing would have suffered had it been known that they’d been humiliated by three fourteen year old schoolboys. 

But we had an enemy, and retribution would come much later.

When they weren’t looking, we left and crept into the shadows outside

Perfectly Hard and Glamorous/We were inseparable

Part 3

It was the first time I met Andy.

I‘d wandered along the balcony and climbed the concrete steps that smelt of piss and disinfectant. It was a big climb and when I reached the new world it looked the same. A sweeping row of front doors and a long balcony.

There was a small kid in tiny red wellingtons riding a kiddie’s tricycle. He cycled furiously towards me and stopped. His nose was snotty, and he kept wiping it with the sleeve of his blue anorak.

“What are you doing here?”

“I’m looking for my dad,”

“My dad will beat your dad up.”

“He will not. My dad killed your dad.”

“He did not. My dad hit your dad with a big stick and now he is champion of the world.” 

In later years, I realised that Andy’s dad would have easily beaten my dad up, and he would have been the one to have done any killing.

“I’m going,” I told him.

“You’re a scaredy cat.”  

I ran back down the steps. “Fuck you,” I called.

We saw each other often. Usually at a distance. We would look at each other as our mother’s dragged us in opposite directions. He would dawdle and his mother would clout him across the head.

“She’s a bad woman,” my mother once said to me.

“Fuck her,” I replied, and she slapped me harder.

Our paths crossed again when we were five years old. It was our first day at school, and we were scared. We decided, encouraged one another, that we didn’t want to go, and so we both cried with the hope that they would let us go back home. But they didn’t.

From that moment we were inseparable. We sat next to one another and were a hellish combination.

Our flats were on consecutive floors, sharing the same view, and outside school we’d congregate at the bottom of the lifts. We rode bikes, became little soldiers, and played football because we were Sheffield Wednesday fans.

We were hard little bastards. Anybody who crossed us ended up dealing with the other too. We gained a reputation for being unruly and played up to it. We misbehaved in class and found that punishment enhanced our status further.

I recall that Andy once threw a tin of bright yellow powder paint over Paula Smith because she called him a bummer. It was funny but she cried, and Mr Newsome grabbed Andy by the hair and paraded him in front of the class. He bent him over and walloped him across the arse with such ferocity that he couldn’t sit down for hours.

The class looked on in admiration at this defiant small boy who smiled and became ‘cock’ of the school.

I was incredibly jealous and wanted the same adoration.

My turn came one rainy afternoon. We were being taught by Mr Ellerby, a pipe-smoking guy who everybody liked. He called me to his desk. I stood waiting and watched my classmates play with Colour Factor. I saw Andy pocketing long red bricks that he would later toss off his balcony.

Mr Ellerby had been writing school reports. In his scrawly handwriting he had carefully put comments against each of us.

Andy. Disruptive. More effort required.’ ‘Harry. Not very boyish. More effort required.’

It was the first sign that I could explode. And I did. I swept everything off his desk until there was a pile of papers and pens on the floor. All except a half filled coffee mug that I picked up and threw at the nearest person who happened to be a boy called Ivan. It hit him in the face and cut his eye.

Mr Ellerby dragged me outside.

“What the hell are you doing lad?”

I couldn’t catch my breath and realised it was the point of no return. But it was my moment of glory.

I suspect that teachers would have gladly queued up to punish me. But it was nice Mr Ellerby who proved he could be equally nasty and smacked me ten times with a battered old plimsoll. My arse smarted and I’d never experienced such pain before. I tried not to cry, and when I looked up, I saw Andy smiling and then he winked at me. My standing had been cemented.

When the school report reached my parents, it read differently.

Harry. Behavioural problems. More effort required.’

I also found out that I’d misread Mr Ellerby’s illegible notes. I’d forgotten that there was an effeminate boy in our class called Barry Green.

‘Barry. Not very boyish. More effort required.’

Years later I had an email from somebody called Amanda Green who had read one of my articles online.

“You may not remember me, but we once went to school together. I was called Barry in those days.”

There was another consequence to that day.

Sitting at the back of the classroom was a boy called Jack Dempsey. He was small, sporty, and well liked. He’d nervously watched my retribution and made his mind up.

Jack was waiting outside the school gate and tagged along as we walked home to Park Hill. We entered the lift and pressed the button to go up. He exited on the landing beneath mine. I was next. Andy was the last one out.

That was when I thought that Jack was okay.

Perfectly Hard and Glamorous/It has already happened/The story is real

Park Hill. I Love You/Will You Marry Me/The Guardian

Part 2

Tonight, I walked up the old-cobbled street from Sheffield Station. It passed over the railway line and was probably once lined with slum terrace houses. They vanished long before I was born. In my lifetime, this lost street has always fallen under the shadow of Park Hill.

It was dark and raining and the new streetlights made the wet stones sparkle. I saw three lads balancing on the old white railings at the top. They watched me approach. I slipped a hand in my pocket and felt for the tactical torch.

“Wrap the strap around your wrist, grab the torch like a dagger, and hit them on the side of the head with the jagged edge, remembering to twist it at the same time.”

I remembered these words from the man who gave it to me in London. It was after I’d been robbed of my phone in Bethnal Green. That was four years ago, still handy with my fists, but no match for the knife that stuck in my arm.

Park Hill might have become trendy, but some things never changed.

The lads said nothing, and I knew that silence could be dangerous. Three minds, three trains of thought, three different outcomes. I knew from experience.

I considered the time forty years ago when I’d sat in the same spot with Andy and Jack. Teenagers. Geisha Boys. Hard boys from the flats.

The lad had walked up this same street. We recognised him from Hyde Park, and he was walking into our territory. We stared him out, but this lad turned out to be more stupid than brave.

“What’s tha looking at bum boys?” he’d said.

We didn’t reply.

Andy was the first. He’d punched him in the face, blood splattering down the lad’s parka coat. Jack had kicked him in the stomach, and the lad fell to the floor. I reached for a half house brick and smashed it down on the back of his head.

There it was. Three minds, three trains of thought, three different outcomes.

All these years later, I thought that karma came around.

These three lads were different. One was White, one was Black, the other was Asian. Teenagers.

I recalled the words of the man who gave me the tactical torch.

“Be warned. You might end up killing somebody!”

“Have you got a smoke?” I think I took them by surprise.

The White lad produced a cigarette from nowhere and the Black lad gave me a cheap purple lighter. I lit it and took a drag.

“Thanks guys. I appreciate it.”

The Asian lad nodded. The White lad looked at the floor. “It’s ok bro’,” said the Black lad.

I smoked the cigarette as I walked towards the apartments. I didn’t look back until I reached the communal door. The three lads were still there, deep in conversation, and no threat to me.  

What if that Hyde Park lad had done the same? Might things have been different? He had been called Brian and two years after we beat him up, he fell from the tenth floor of Hyde Park flats.

I have been back in Sheffield a month now and have yet to start writing my fourth novel. But tonight, I thought about these three young lads, and they reminded me of the Geisha Boys. And I thought about all the memories that have resurfaced these past weeks, and I accepted that Megan, my agent, might be right.

I sat down at my laptop and wrote the following words: –

“I was making a coffee at the time, staring out of the window, looking at a world that used to be marvellously different.”

*****

I was born in the sixties, and I didn’t know anything about Park Hill. It was years later, when writing an article for The Guardian, that I learned about the place I grew up.

It was allegedly based on Le Corbusier’s Unité d’Habitation In Marseilles but this was too bizarre for us to understand.

I was born in 1966, the last time England won the World Cup, and Sheffield Wednesday lost a cup final to Everton. Park Hill was home. It was the only place I knew. We lived in the sky and looked down at the rest of the world. And for all I can remember, my first five years were spent within four walls and on a balcony as wide as a street. My earliest memory is the milk cart, as big as a car, that delivered every morning.

Park Hill/Building.Co.Uk

My family were called Oldham. It was an unusual surname, but my dad liked it because every Christian name went well with it. He was Peter Oldham, my mum was Pat Oldham, I was called Harry Oldham, and my younger brother became Adam Oldham. And there were lots of cousins across Sheffield.

Mum and dad moved to Park Hill in 1962 when it was still new. They were rehoused after their old back-to-back house at Netherthorpe was bulldozed. He was a cutlery worker, she was a wages clerk, and they were relatively poor.

But Park Hill promised clean and modern surroundings in which to raise a decent family. That dream eventually died, and the respectability of the Oldham family was often placed in doubt by Harry Oldham… me.

I hated my name. Harry was the name for an old man. When I was growing up there was nobody called Harry. But life goes full circle and at last, at the age of 56, I have a fashionable name and happy to be Harry.

Before lockdown, I was invited to see a play at the Crucible Theatre called Standing at the Sky’s Edge. I visited Sheffield with my partner, Scott, who had never been before. The account began in 1961 and told the story of three families over sixty years living in Park Hill.  Scott loved it, but I came away feeling sad because it aroused memories of a life I thought was behind me. It might have been written about my family, my friends, and me.

I went back to London and wrote a third novel, and when that flopped, I realised that I wasn’t clever enough to be a crime writer.

Now I am back here. At Park Hill. I am writing another novel, one where I will not have to do any research and spend weeks scripting the storyline. The plot is already in my head. It has already happened. The story is real.

Yet, as I write, I realise that it is not so much a novel but is a collection of reminiscences.

Park Hill/Wikimedia Commons

Perfectly Hard and Glamorous/When I look back on my life

Three Sheffield lads living on Park Hill. Andy, Jack, and Harry. They are typical working class lads. Three dysfunctional families struggling to survive. Three lads that grew up together and on the brink of adulthood.

Part 1

There is a song by the Pet Shop Boys. It starts like this, “When I look back on my life, it’s always with a sense of shame, I’ve always been the one to blame.” I heard it on the radio the other day, and I knew all the lyrics. I was making a coffee at the time, staring out of the window, looking at a world that used to be marvellously different.

It was the same city, bathed in sunshine, and brighter than the one I remembered. The skyline had changed. Now there were swish tower blocks, lots of cranes, and flatness where industry once thrived.

I look at this landscape every day, and each time I feel sadness, and remember something from the eighties.

The three of us were sat on a wall at Duke Street, smoking fags, and passing a can of Kestrel lager back and forth. An old man struggled along the other side of the road, relying on his walking stick. Suddenly, he fell forward, the stick flying into the road and almost getting run over by a passing bus. For a second or two, he was motionless, then made feeble attempts to lift himself off the ground.

We sat and watched with childish amusement. And then, with compassion or guilt, we crossed the road to help him. Andy and Jack grabbed an arm each and lifted him upright while I retrieved his battered old stick. “Up you get, Grandad.”

The old man composed himself and eyed us guardedly.

“Don’t try it on with me lads. I took a bullet in the leg, and I’m ready to shoot some bastard for it.”

“Calm down Grandad,” said Jack, “We’re only trying to help.”

The old man pointed his stick at us. “Aye, that might be son. But I must be on my guard around here.”

“Fancy a swig of lager?” Andy gave him the can and the old man took a mouthful before stuffing it in his coat pocket.

“You lot with the Mooneys?”

“Never heard of them,” I said. “Who the fuck are the Mooneys?”

The old man stared at us and rested both hands on the walking stick. Then he looked up and down the street and seemed satisfied that we weren’t a menace. Slowly he made towards the wall and sat down.

“If you’re not with the Mooneys, then who are you with? You’re not with the Park lads because I’ve never seen you before.”

“We’re the Geisha Boys,” Jack said proudly. “That’s what our mates call us.”

It was true. The lads on the flats had called us ‘Geisha Boys’ because we’d once been in a fight with some posh boy at Crazy Daisy in town. We were sixteen and had slipped past the bouncer and drank as much lager as we could steal off people’s tables. A lad, wearing a dazzling white tee-shirt with ‘Geisha’ across the front, had clocked us and offered us all out. Jack chucked a pint of lager at him, and the lad had responded by smashing a pint glass and threatening us with it. We piled in, throwing wild punches, and kicking him, until he was a bloody mess on the floor. It had happened so quickly that by the time we ran up the stairs and into the street the bouncer hadn’t realised something was amiss. Afterwards, we were famous on Park Hill, known as Geisha Boys, which we liked because we thought it made us sound tough.

Pet Shop Boys/It’s A Sin/1987

The old man shook his head. “Never heard of you. Do you know Sam Garvin?” It was our turn to shake our heads. “He’ll have all three of you if you’re not careful.”

“Nobody fucks with the Geisha boys,” I said. “Tell him we’ll take him on anytime.”

“See that over there?” The old man pointed towards the flats. “That’s the alleyway where Spud Murphy shot me from. Got it in the leg. Sam showed him that nobody messed with the Park Brigade. He cut him with a knife, and he’ll do the same to you.”

There was no alleyway, only the block of shops beneath the flats. Jack caught our attention and circled his finger around his ear, and we knew that the old man was cuckoo.

 “I’ve got a gun in my pocket,” said the old man. But he pulled out the can of Kestrel and had another swig.

And that was how we had left it that summer day in 1982. The old man had limped up Duke Street and disappeared into the New Inn. Only afterwards, did I realise that Andy had lifted his wallet.

Now I am back where it began.

There is a lot of concrete, and I can’t remember this much. It’s been thirty years, and London has been the place I’ve lived the longest.

“I’ve found the most fabulous place for you to live,” said Megan. “Near the city centre, near the station, and the apartments are retro modern.”

I knew straight away, as only a Sheffielder would, that she was talking about Park Hill.

When we lived here, it was on its knees. Not quite. But eventually it would be. The people moved out and it stood empty for years. For better or worse, it’s listed status allowed it to survive.

It was February when she called me at my Kensington flat.

“How are you?” asked Megan.

“Not good, but thanks for asking.”

She hesitated and seemed to choose her words carefully.

“Have you seen him?”

“No, and I don’t want to.”

Megan was referring to Scott, my lover of ten years, now my ex-lover.

Good looking Scott. The best thing that happened to me. Reliable Scott. I was lucky to have him.

But there turned out to be another side to him.

Cheating Scott. The one I discovered had been sleeping around for years, and that was the end of it all.

“I hate to bring this up but writing magazine articles isn’t the way forward. Remember you have a book deal.”

Megan was right. I had to write novels. The first couple flew off the shelves, the third bombed, and Megan, as my agent, had been the one to pick up the pieces with the publisher.

“You need to score with the next one. Write about your time growing up, your family, the people you met, your adventures. But for Christ’s sake, make it good.”

And that is the reason why I came back, and it’s all very different, but the past remembers me.

Last night the ghosts crawled out of the walls and interrupted my sleep. Embedded into Park Hill are the memories of my parents, hard-working servants of the city, sent into early submission. And my younger brother, Adam, who’s still around, but living somewhere in Scotland.

And my best mates – Andy and Jack – came too.

Everybody came last night, exactly as they used to be, and it was only me who had changed. And when I woke, I realised I’d changed a lot.

With its brutalist design, there is no other sight on the Sheffield skyline that holds people’s gazes as much as Park Hill flats.