had to be found, transport there and back had to be arranged, and parents had to be avoided when you got home. After the first blissful occasion in Oslo I had therefore got drunk only twice. The second time threatened to go awry. Jan Vidarâs sister Liv had just got engaged to Stig, a soldier she had met in Kjevik, where her and Jan Vidarâs father worked. She wanted to get married young, have children, and be a housewife, a rather unusual dream for a girl of her age, so even though she was only a year older than us, she lived in quite a different world. One Saturday evening the two of them invited us to a little gathering with some oftheir friends. Since we didnât have any other plans, we accepted and a few days later were sitting on a sofa in a house somewhere drinking homemade wine and watching TV. It was meant to be a cozy evening at home, there were candles on the table and lasagne was served, and it probably would have been cozy had it not been for the wine, of which there was an immense quantity. I drank, and I became as euphoric as the first time, but on this occasion I had a blackout and remembered nothing between the fifth glass and the moment I woke up in a dark cellar wearing jogging bottoms and a sweatshirt I had never seen before and lying on top of a duvet covered with towels, my own clothes next to me bundled up and spattered with vomit. I could make out a washing machine by the wall, a basket of dirty laundry beside it, a chest freezer by the other wall with some waterproof trousers and jackets on the lid. There was also a pile of crab pots, a landing net, a fishing rod, and a shelf full of tools and junk. I took in these surroundings so new to me in one sweep of the eye, then woke up rested and with a clear head. A door a few strides from my head was ajar, I opened it and walked into the kitchen where Stig and Liv were sitting, hands interlaced and glowing with happiness.
âHi,â I said.
âWell, if it isnât Garfield,â Stig said. âHow are you?â
âFine,â I said. âWhat happened actually?â
âDonât you remember?â
I shook my head.
âNothing?â
He laughed. At that moment Jan Vidar came in from the living room.
âHi,â he said.
âHi,â I said.
He smiled.
âHi, Garfield,â he said.
âWhatâs with this Garfield?â I asked.
âDonât you remember?â
âNo. I canât remember a thing. But I see that I must have thrown up.â
âWe were watching TV. A Garfield cartoon. Then you got up and beat your chest and shouted âIâm Garfield.â Then you sat down again and chuckled.Then you did it again. âIâm Garfield! Iâm Garfield!â Then you threw up. In the living room. On the carpet. And then you were out like a light. Bang. Thud. Sound asleep. In a pool of vomit. And it was absolutely impossible to communicate with you.â
âOh, shit,â I said. âIâm sorry.â
âDonât worry about it,â Stig said. âThe carpetâs washable. Now we have to get you two home.â
It was only then that fear gripped me.
âWhatâs the time?â I asked.
âAlmost one.â
âNo later? Oh, well, thatâs okay. I said I would be at home by one. Iâll just be a few minutes late.â
Stig didnât drink, and we followed him down to the car, got in, Jan Vidar in the front, me in the back.
âDo you really not remember anything?â Jan Vidar asked me as we drove off.
âNo, I donât, nothing at all.â
That made me proud. The whole story, what I had said and what I had done, even the vomiting, made me feel proud. It was close to the person I wanted to be. But when Stig stopped the car by the mailboxes and I walked up the dark driveway clad in someone elseâs clothes, with my own in a bag hanging from my wrist, I was scared.
Please let them be in bed. Please let them
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