It was about an hour into the party and it took me about a minute to figure out why Gabrielle had left me to join the group by myself. I managed to catch her sigh and the eye roll first; then she wished me luck with following the conversation.
When it came to the conversation itself, I couldn’t quite figure out if I was too stoned, or not stoned enough. However, I was thankful that the painkilling effects were active. The pain that usually accompanied the scar running down the left side of my back was almost unnoticeable.
There were three of them in the group in front of me, all stoned and standing with relaxed postures, discussing consciousness. I couldn’t work out what they were trying to say; something about what it was or whether it could be transferred or shared with someone else. I hadn’t ever given it much thought before this. There was mention of the mind/body discussion and Cartesian dualism, at which point I started feeling as though maybe I didn’t want to be standing here after all. It wasn’t that I didn’t like philosophical discussions; it was more that I never felt I had a proper grip on anything like that. I always felt like there was something missing in what was being said.
When I looked around to see if Gabrielle was anywhere nearby, I caught her glancing at me and flashing a grin. She was eating out of a crisps packet, talking to a couple that I hadn’t seen since secondary school. I knew I’d have to go greet them at some point, even if it was something I didn’t particularly want to do.
Actually, I only came to the party with the hope of seeing four people; Gabrielle, Grain and Amelia, but most of all, Alice.
I heard my name and looked back to see all three of the others looking at me.
“Pardon?”
“I said, what do you think?” Alan asked me. He was plump, dark haired and had one of the most confident grins I’d ever seen on anyone; helped by the years of wearing braces in school. I could still remember a time when Alan refused to smile because he was too self-conscious about his left incisor looking prominent.
“About what?” I asked, realising I’d completely lost track of the conversation.
Alan, James and Gordon glanced at each other. Then Alan raised an eyebrow at me and said, “About what we’ve been discussing!”
“Maybe he’s too stoned to follow,” James commented.
I didn’t bother to contradict this notion because I didn’t really care about the discussion. Yet, somehow, I could not find a way to escape them in a manner with which I was comfortable. They might have noticed I clearly didn’t want to be near them and as stupid as I thought it was, I felt a little guilty about this.
“I just don’t quite get what you’re discussing,” I told them.
“What do you mean?” James asked with that famous look of his; the one that was designed to make you feel stupid when you couldn’t join in with him. It never worked on me.
I considered carrying on with the discussion but the truth was, I had never really felt fully comfortable around any of them, even when we were all in school and I realised all I really wanted to do now was leave them to it. A tiny bit of the Dread kicked in and I felt it in my stomach. I had to think of a way to extricate myself from this without feeling too anxious.
I said, “To be honest, I stopped listening. I started thinking about something else related to what you guys were saying.”
“What’s that?” James asked.
“I was just thinking about whether there are different cultural definitions of ‘consciousness.’ I mean, I figured since you all were looking at it from a Western point of view, maybe there’s a totally different way of looking at it all. Maybe something that’d make more sense to me.”
“Or maybe you just don’t get it,” James said, that look of his getting worse.
Amazingly, that was all it took to make me say more. “That’s possible. But you realise all of you just made a bunch of assumptions while you were talking about it?”
“What do you mean?” Alan asked.
“Well, first of all, the whole thing about transferring your consciousness to someone else’s body. I think that’s sort of impossible unless you rewire someone else’s brain.”
“Why would it be impossible?”
“Well, no one knows what consciousness really is. I mean, no one knows what makes it manifest, but there are things that happen that shut it down so I’m guessing it has a biological basis; that it’s somehow tethered to the brain or something, you know? Like, when people get anaesthetised, their consciousness gets shut down until they wake up again. And I guess since a person is their memories and all of that depends on their experiences and how those experiences wire their brains, then their consciousness must be different to anyone else’s, right? And maybe if you tried to transfer it, or share it, it’d mean having to rewire someone else’s brain too so they could actually experience it the way it’s meant to… or something. Or maybe it just wouldn’t be compatible with another brain. Like it’d cause a total meltdown in that other brain.”
I wasn’t even sure if I’d gone off on a tangent somewhere. Part of me wished that Grain was there. He had a habit of being quiet and thinking through concepts and ideas before he tried articulating them in a manner which was much easier to understand.
“Anyway, all I heard from any of you is that you’re talking about things which just involve having to assume a lot about the mechanisms involved in what makes anyone conscious. And, I don’t know… I just don’t get it. Because I don’t even know what makes someone conscious, let alone ideas about what you can do with that.”
Alan, James and Gordon were looking at me, clearly a little annoyed at what I’d said. I wasn’t sure what to do in this situation and the Dread started creeping in again.
“Well… I guess he has a point,” Gordon said quietly.
“We know we’re conscious,” James said, but this time his voice was slightly less sure.
“I’m not disputing that,” I said. “I’m just talking about the whole transferring and sharing thing. We know we’re conscious, but what does that even mean? What makes us conscious? What makes us look at ourselves and know we’re looking at ourselves?” I asked.
No one said anything.
Then I saw her.
I noticed straight away that she had heavy eye make up on and dark, dark lipstick. The best way I could have described the colour was some sort of midnight red, when really it was probably just a shade with a name with which I was unfamiliar. She told me she wore her make up like that as a sort of defence against people; a mask, I suppose. I never told her I loved the look of dark lipstick on a woman, especially on someone like her, who had porcelain skin.
I hadn’t seen Alice for about five years or so. She was holding a bottle of beer, barely suppressing a smile while looking at me, leaned up against the wall just a few feet away. I had no idea when she had arrived. I smiled lightly because it was all I could think of to do. Alice smiled back and seeing that made me smile inside, and that inside smile was uncommon.
I suddenly thought about the last time I’d seen her, in her small flat, lying on the floor after having smoked a joint and staring at both the light bulbs in her living room ceiling, imagining they were both opposite poles with lines of attraction drawn between them. Somewhere in between listening to her voice talking about her upcoming modelling jobs, I somehow managed to replace the light bulbs with an image of me and one of her, with lines in between but never touching. Later, the image became her stretching her hand out to me.
When she’d asked me what I was thinking about that night, I’d just closed my eyes and told her nothing. She was just a friend then; she was just a friend now. Even being in her flat that night was a first time event which had only occurred because she was leaving town soon after.
The way Alice and I had got to know each other was unusual, to say the least. We were at the same school together and one year we’d had one major shared experience which I suppose imprinted a bond in us, though my mind spent ages downplaying it. The intermittent muscle pain in my back had a specific cause; when Alice and I were around thirteen, she was almost hit by a car. I saw it coming and reacted immediately without thinking. I pushed her out of the way and got hit instead. The car sent me flying into a pile of left out rubbish from a construction site. The things had overflowed from a skip onto the ground and I found myself getting hurled into a pile of metal, glass and hard brick. The pain was horrible. Thankfully I passed out.
Alice came to see me in the hospital often. I never let it be known how much I was hurting or how bad it was. It had fucked up my back, but more than that, it had affected my neurological system. My spinal cord had been a little bruised and some of the surrounding nerves were also affected. The scar tissue was unpleasant to look at; lots of deep ones and a few scars which stretched easily half a foot or so. My back was a criss-cross of pain.
It wasn’t as bad now but I still didn’t like to see it. I had never allowed anyone to look at me topless, except for my mother and sister. Not even Alice, from whom I hid the truth about the pain. I think sometimes Grain and Amelia suspected something was physically wrong, but they never asked or said anything. Gabrielle had figured it out early, though, and I only knew because she let it slip once when she was drunk. She never mentioned it after that because she was following my lead in keeping silent.
Alice had felt so guilty about her carelessness that I couldn’t really deal with making things awkward by showing her how much it had really affected me. Somehow, that ended up extending to being silent about it to everyone else I knew.
For a while after I left hospital and went back to school, Alice would often be near me and speak to me as much as she could. She was one of the more popular kids at school and it meant that I got attention from other kids I didn’t want to know. She did notice that eventually and made an effort to make sure I got space from them.
The problem was, along with the physical pain, it seemed as though the accident had left a bit of psychological trauma. This would seem obvious in hindsight, but at the time, I wasn’t really aware of that particular consequence. I found myself withdrawing from her and everyone else until one day I apparently had some sort of breakdown. At least that’s what people called it. To me, it was simply me moving away from the world a little and quite honestly, I don’t have much of a memory of that period of my life.
Sometimes I wonder if the breakdown was inevitable. I never associated what happened with the word ‘trauma,’ and I often found myself wondering whether I would’ve lost sense of who I was if I’d never had that association presented to me. That thing about self-fulfilling prophecies and all.
I was jerked back to the present by the sound of Gordon’s voice. He was shaking his head and saying, “Fuck this. I don’t know what you’re on about. I’m getting another drink.”
The others suddenly agreed and walked away, leaving Alice alone with me and letting me breathe in relief from finally being free of them. She quickly turned her head and moved out of the way so they wouldn’t see her face. I watched them go without much interest, though now I was wondering why they’d suddenly decided to stop the discussion.
“Maybe you got too deep for them,” Alice said in her low voice, as if she’d known what I was thinking.
I looked at her. “You think so? I wasn’t even sure what I was trying to say. I think I might have smoked too much weed.”
“I have no idea, Arun, but it’s nice to see you haven’t locked up your brain.”
“I don’t think I could, even if I wanted to.”
She smiled and came up close to me. Then suddenly she put her arms around me and squeezed. It was a real hug and it made me feel a twinge of pain in my upper back but I ignored that because I was more in awe of how warm and firm her hug felt. I was usually awkward with hugs so I settled for putting my arms around her and lightly pressing before letting go after a few seconds, which felt a little more perfunctory. She held on for a bit more and let go finally, smiling as she faced me properly.
“It’s so good to see you.” I could hear the emotion in her voice.
“Likewise.”
“Five years.”
“Yeah. And things are going pretty well for you.”
She rolled her eyes. “I’m already over it.”
“Yeah?”
“I just want to go back to uni. Isn’t that weird? I thought it was what I wanted, you know, modelling and all. Now, I’m just sick of it.”
“At least you did it. You went for it and tried it out. Got something out of it.”
“Yeah. I suppose.”
She’d been discovered through an agency and somehow managed to shoot to prominence within a few months in the more specialist model scene involving pin up idols, burlesque and Goth-themed magazines. Alice had always had model looks for as long as I could remember, even though I didn’t really notice until I was around eighteen or so. That was nearer the time we were going to be leaving school for university and the reality of all that time apart was becoming more tangible.
Her hair seemed even more voluminous now. It was dark and straight. Her eyes were smouldering and light grey. She had a long neck and a curvy body. In fact, it seemed now she had gained weight since I’d last seen a picture of her on a poster; though it was probable that the poster had been a manipulated image. She was about my height too, and I wasn’t very tall at all. I used to wonder if that would work against her, but obviously not.
It’d been five years and she looked even more beautiful than ever.
“What you thinking about?” She asked suddenly.
“Hmm? Oh. Nothing.”
“I see that hasn’t changed either.”
“What?”
She smiled and shook her head at me. “Nothing.” The tone of voice was almost mocking.
It felt familiar. I never had quite figured out why she bothered to call me every six months or so for a talk, despite the fact we were only close initially after the accident. Even then, I’d drifted away from her afterwards. She just took my number one day and started using it. She never expected me to reciprocate, though I did try when I remembered now and then. Occasionally I even got lucky enough to speak to her for a lengthy amount of time, given how busy she was.
I suppose in some ways she didn’t want to lose touch and had realised the best way to maintain it would be in a relatively impersonal way, like phone or email. I was glad she’d done that.
“Come on, time to get a drink for you.” She took hold of my arm and pulled me with her toward the kitchen.
A couple of hours later I was watching them all interact. More people had turned up, which meant that Gabrielle kept close to me. If it was her way of keeping an eye on me, she wasn’t very subtle about it. Sometimes I still wondered if it had been a good idea to mention the Dread to her but at least it was more comfortable to have her there and not have to face dealing with most of the others.
Enough people had turned up that everyone felt obligated to mingle and talk to people they hadn’t seen for a while in some cases. It also meant that Alice had soon attracted attention from a myriad of different people, mostly the men, who one by one re-acquainted themselves with her. She seemed to be taking it in her stride from what I could see and not for the first time, I wondered if it was something that happened to her often.
Despite my initial misgivings about coming, I was actually enjoying myself. Seeing some people had filled me with some kind of emotional warmth.
After all that, though, I ended up staring at the way the light hit Alice’s creamy skin on the shoulder. She was wearing a string strap tank top that just about showed off her midriff. It meant I could see some of her back too. I had always liked the curve of it. In the dim light, there was a shadow going across her back which accentuated the contours of her flesh.
She seemed to be taking the attention politely from a group of men that included James and Gordon. I could tell she probably wanted to be left alone but Alice had always been quite polite about things like that. I made the assumption that this was something she was used to; it didn’t once occur to me to go and rescue her from them. After a little more talking to different people, it was around midnight that I decided it was getting too rowdy for me and I told Gabrielle I was leaving.
She took me to the hallway and then next to her front door, shutting the door to the party room behind her so the sound was dimmed.
“Why are you going already?” She asked. I heard the concern in her voice.
“I’m tired. And… it’s midnight.”
“I tried to tell Jean not to invite so many people, but you know what she’s like,” Gabrielle said, correctly guessing yet another reason why I felt I wanted to leave.
“It’s your cousin’s party, Gab. She can invite as many people as she likes.”
“Hey, it was supposed to be my party too. Well, sort of.”
“You didn’t invite that many people.”
“Hence the ‘sort of.'” She narrowed her eyes at me. Then she asked, “You sure you have to go?”
I nodded.
“Well. Hmm.” There was something she wasn’t saying. I raised my eyebrows in a question. She did the same in reply, almost mockingly, and then relaxed her face and shook her head. “It’s nothing.”
“You sure?”
“Yeah.”
“Okay. Well, I’ll speak to you soon, okay?”
“Hey, did you at least say goodbye to her?” She asked.
“Hmm?”
“Alice. Did you say goodbye to her?”
“Well, no. She’s pretty busy with all the guys around her. I didn’t want to disturb her. Besides, it probably would’ve taken ages.”
Gabrielle narrowed her eyes at me and closed her mouth in a thin line for a moment.
“What’s with the disapproving look?” I asked, suddenly nervous at seeing it. I thought I’d said or done something wrong without knowing it.
“She’d love it if you disturbed her right now.”
I shrugged. “If you say so… but she still looks busy. And I want to leave.”
Gabrielle turned to look back at the party room and then looked at me with a resolute expression. “Go wait outside.”
“What?”
“Wait. Outside. Please. Simple enough to understand, no?”
“… Okay, fine. I’ll be outside.”
“Good boy.”
Outside was balmy. It was a few weeks into summer and already the temperatures were reaching the heights that most people couldn’t tolerate. I didn’t mind at all, but even I had my limits. I suspected by August, I would be tired of the weather even if I preferred it to the cold. I waited for a few minutes before I started thinking about leaving, whether or not Gabrielle was coming back and just around the time I was thinking of calling her on her phone instead, Alice appeared at the door. She turned to look at someone inside I couldn’t see and then waved briefly before shutting the door behind her as she stepped out into the warm night.