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I must say that I was really looking forward to it. For one thing I had quite lost touch with all my old friends from the Grange. When they went on to the Grammar and I went on to St Argent’s, it was almost as if they hadn’t wanted to speak to me any more, although I can’t imagine why that would have been. The only one who remained close to me was the Doveston. But then he was my bestest friend and I was to be his biographer.

One thing about the party did have me baffled and that was how everyone was going to fit into the Doveston’s house. It was, after all, just a bog-standard two up and two down terraced affair, with an outdoor privy and six feet of yard. It was six doors down from my own, on the sunny side of the street.

Still, I was confident that he knew what he was doing. And, of course, he did.

Looking back now, across the wide expanse of years, it seems incredible to me that I did not see what was coming. All the clues were there. The unexpected envelope, delivered to my parents, containing two free tickets for the Black and White Minstrel Show on Friday mght, along with vouchers for a steak dinner at a Piccadilly restaurant. The fact that the Doveston had borrowed the keys to our shed, to ‘store a few crates of beer’. The ‘printer’s error’ on the invitations he was giving out, which had the number of my house down as where the party was to be held.

These were all significant clues, but they somehow slipped by me. At six o’clock on the Friday night my parents went off to the show. They told me not to wait up for them, as they wouldn’t be home before midnight. We bade our farewells and I went up to my room to proceed with getting ready. Five minutes later the front-door bell rang.

I shuffled downstairs to see who was there. It was the Doveston.

He looked pretty dapper. His hair was combed and parted down the middle and he wore a clean Ben Sherman shirt with a button-down collar and slim leather tie. His suit was of the Tonic persuasion, narrow at the shoulders and high at the lapels. His boots were fine substantial things and polished on the toe-caps.

I smiled him hello and he offered me in return a look of unutterable woe.

‘Whatever is the matter?’ I asked.

‘Something terrible has happened. May I come inside?’

‘Please do.’

I led him into our front sitting room and he flung himself down on our ragged settee. ‘It’s awful,’ he said, burying his face in his hands.

‘What is?’

‘My mum and dad. The doctor’s just been round. They’ve come down with Lugwiler’s Itch.’

‘My God!’ I said, for what I believe was the first time that day. ‘Not Lugwiler’s Itch.’

‘Lugwiler’s Itch,’ said the Doveston.

I made the face that says ‘hang about here’. ‘But surely,’ said my mouth, ‘Lugwiler’s Itch is a fictitious affliction out of a Jack Vance book.’

‘Precisely,’ said the Doveston.

‘Oh,’ said I.

‘So the party’s off.’

‘Off? The party can’t be off. I’ve been working on my costume. It’s really trendy and everything.’

‘I was going to dress up as Parnell. But it’s all off now, there’s nothing I can do about it.’

‘What a bummer,’ I said. ‘What a bummer.’

The Doveston nodded sadly. ‘It’s the loss of face that hurts me most. I mean, having a party really gains you a reputation. If you know what I mean.

‘I do,’ I said. ‘Gaining a reputation is everything.’

‘Well, I’ve blown it now. I shall become the butt of bitter jokes. All that kudos that could have been mine is gone for ever. I wish the ground would just open and swallow me up.

‘Surely there must be some way round it,’ I said. ‘Couldn’t you hold the party somewhere else?’

‘If only.’ The Doveston dabbed at his nose. ‘If only I had some trusted friend whose house was available for the evening. I wouldn’t mind that he earned all the kudos and gained the reputation. At least I wouldn’t have let everybody down. Let all those beautiful girls down. The ones who would be putty in the hands of the party-giver.

There followed what is called a pregnant pause.

8

Cigareets and wuskey and wild wild women.

They’ll drive you crazy. They’ll drive you insane.

Trad.

Yes, all right, I know it now.

But what else could I say? It just seemed the perfect solution. Well, it was the perfect solution.

‘The church hall,’ I said to the Doveston. ‘You could hire the church hall.’

If only I had said that. But I didn’t.

‘Hold the party here?’ said the Doveston. ‘In your house?’

‘The perfect solution,’ I said.

‘We ought to ask your parents first.’

‘They’ve gone out and they won’t be back before twelve.’

‘That’s settled then.’ The Doveston rose from the settee, shook me by the hand, marched to the front door, opened it and whistled. Then all at once a number of young men I’d never seen before came bustling into my house carrying crates of brown ale, cardboard boxes full of food and a real record player and records.

In and out and round about they went, like some well-drilled task force. The Doveston introduced me to them as they breezed by.

‘This is Jim Pooley,’ he said. ‘And this is John Omally and this is Archroy and this is Small Dave.’

‘Where?’ I asked.

‘Down here,’ said Small Dave.

‘Oh, hello. They’re not in fancy dress,’ I whispered to the Doveston.

‘Well, nor are you.

This was true. And this was a problem. If the party was going to be held at my house, how was I going to make the big dramatic entrance in my costume?

‘Hadn’t you better get changed?’ the Doveston asked.

‘Yes, I ... But—’

‘Listen,’ the Doveston said. ‘You are the host of this party and I think you should have the chance to make a big dramatic entrance in your costume.’

‘That’s what I was thinking.’

‘Then you go up to your bedroom and get ready, I’ll take care of things down here and when everybody has arrived, I’ll come and get you and you can make a really big dramatic entrance. How’s that?’

‘Wonderful,’ I said. ‘You’re a real pal.’

‘I know.’ The Doveston pushed past me. ‘I want those cartons of cigarettes stacked in the kitchen,’ he told one of his task force. ‘That’s where I will be setting up my shop.’

So I went up to my bedroom.

It didn’t take me too long to get ready and having posed a good few times before the wall mirror, I sat down upon my bed and listened to all the comings and goings beneath.

The sounds of music drifted up to me as platter-waxings of the latest rockin’ teenage combos went round and round on the real record player at forty-five revolutions per minute.

And although I didn’t know it then, I was about to make history. You see, during the 1950s there had never been such a thing as a teenage party. Lads were conscripted into the armed forces on their thirteenth birthday and not set free upon society until they reached twenty. At which time they were considered to be responsible citizens.

My generation, the post-war baby boomers, missed conscription by a year and what with us never having had it so good and everything, we literally invented the teenage party.

And what I didn’t know then was that the party in my house would be the first ever teenage party. The one that would set the standard against which all future teenage parties would be judged.