These were the rules: Yes she
could have a party but for no more than 20 people, they had to stay in the
kitchen and the conservatory, use the downstairs cloakroom and definitely no
smoking indoors. We would go to the pub, but we would come back. It had to end
at midnight.
It’s only a small Halloween
party, I told myself, a chance for the teenager to catch up with her old school
friends, socialise with some of the new, and drag in a couple of complete strangers
off the street. The perfect party combo.
Add in some beer, copious amounts of vodka and a generous dose of who
knows what else, and there you have it - 30 teenagers in the kitchen, in
various stages of fancy dress, undress and total inebriation. Of course they
weren’t all in the kitchen - just go straight to your room mum, she
said, don’t look at the stair carpet and
don’t worry about the lad passed out on the landing or the two puking up in the
bathroom.....
So how were these teenagers planning
on getting home? On the train? Good what time is the last train? Half an hour
ago. Apparently she had told them all they could stay the night. Where
exactly??
The lights went on and the damage
assessed. Why do they drink so much? Why
don’t they know when to stop? Why can’t they pick up a bottle when they break
it? Why can’t they take their shoes off when they come in from the rain and
head upstairs? Why were they even going upstairs? Why was I making such a fuss?
Because I was genuinely concerned
– not just about the state of my bathroom and my kitchen but about
the welfare of these teenagers. I had visions of police, paramedics, parents, professional carpet cleaners.....
So was I mad to let her have a
party? Definitely according to my other half, what was I even thinking of?
Discussing anything on our regular skype sessions is extremely difficult – conversations
generally run along the lines of I can’t hear you, you’re frozen, you’re
pixellated, what was that you said? I said she’s asked to have a small party on
Halloween. I think his reply must have been lost somewhere in cyber space.
Those who did stay the night (and
it was very many) seemed more than happy to clear up in the morning and they all
assured me they’d had a great time. If
great referred to the amount of vomit produced, I could understand it, but is
it really such fun throwing up all night?
24 hours later and the house was
more or less back to normal. The worries
and dramas of the previous evening had evaporated - the lost i-phone had been found, the 16 year old set off by
herself on the 3 mile walk home at 1.00 am had safely returned, and the passed
out had revived.
Nobody died, the teenager cheerfully
pointed out. There was no permanent damage apart from a broken candle holder
which I didn’t even like, the stair carpet was already looking better after
only one attempt with the Vax, and ever since we’d moved in we’d been saying the
hallway walls needed freshening up with a new coat of paint. In fact, both the
bathrooms and the kitchen are now a lot cleaner than they’ve ever been so she’s
probably done me a favour really....
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