Friday, August 16, 2013

A Single Moment of Life

This one took me a while.

My prompt was "a drama" and it was given to me by Rachna Kamal, a woman with the most incredibly degree of empathy of anyone I've ever known. Her choice of profession - social work - fits her to a tee. I was utterly unsurprised to hear that she was planning on going into abuse and trauma therapy. You feel comfortable around her. She has that unnerving, but therapeutic ability to get you to spill your guts, and if you go out with her, you will inevitably end up discussing the darker points of your life, but at the end of the night feel better for it.

Rachna's major interest, in terms of stories, is "family drama". I struggled with that, for a while, because my family doesn't really have a large amount of drama, and when we do, it's not something I'd like to write about and put on the internet. The interpersonal drama in my life tends to come from outside the boundaries of my family. After I spent an embarrassing amount of time thinking about this on the bus to the blind school, I came to the fairly obvious realization that your relationships are your family. Your friends are an extension of your family. So, I decided to go with the drama of a failing friendship. And aliens. Because I'd been wanting to write about aliens.

This harkens back to a very particular, still somewhat recent part of my life, during which, I was taking a class on Buddhism. The story is structured around the Buddhist idea of 3,000 Realms in a Single Moment of Life, something I was thinking about a lot when I found myself part of a friendship that was falling apart. The "world" that each dialog takes place in is numbered, and the prose parts go in the opposite direction. It's cyclical, theoretically, but mostly, it's kind of pretentious. Sorry about that. Now that I've done this, I'll go back to writing fun things.

A Single Moment of Life

1. Hell  

“Please kill me.” 
“You know I’m not going to do that.” 
“I wish you would.” 
“You don’t mean that.” 
“You have no idea how much I do.” 
“Is that why you keep asking?” 
“Yes.” 
“Why?” 
“It’s the only thing I have to look forward to.” 
“Asking a question?” 
“That one day your answer will be yes.” 
“Let’s begin.” 
“Please kill me.” 
“No.” 
“Another day.”

Another day alone, but it was alright.

M sat in the center of the quad and looked up at the sky. It was cloud, overcast, and altogether unfriendly. It was exactly the kind of weather she liked, even when it was pouring. Everything she had with her was soaking wet. Her bag, her books, the clothes on her back, even the camera she had taken great pains to wrap up and hide in her coat was now a wet, defective mess. And yet, she had no particular desire to leave her place in the grass. She liked the feel of constant rain prickling her skin, and had never once gotten sick from being out in the cold. Rain made more sense to her than sunlight - when she thought of the world, she thought of it raining.

She heard footsteps. They were cautious in the muddy rain, but aggressive. They belonged to someone with a purpose.

 M smiled. She wouldn’t be alone today after all.

A towel fell on her head. She sat up, and wrapped herself in it.

“One of these days,” said April, standing above her with an umbrella, “You’re going to die and I’m going to get no thanks from you.”

“Of course,” said M, gathering her soaking things up, “I’ll be dead. I doubt I’ll be thanking anyone by that point.”

She stood up, and joined April under the umbrella. Together, they walked themselves back to their apartment, carefully dodging any large puddles or mud patches along the way. At one point, a car passed, and April wound up almost as drenched as M.

“Your sympathy is noted,” said April, as M proceeded to laugh hysterically at her. Together, they looked like a pair of wet dogs.

“Hey,” said M, handing over her towel, “At least now we match.”

“That’s true,” said April, smirking, “And you know, it could be worse. It’s only water.”

“It’s only water.”

 2. Hunger  

“Water.” 
“You’ve had your water for the day.” 
“My mouth is like sandpaper.” 
“You’ve had your water for the day.” 
“It’s all I can think about.” 
“I’m sorry.” 
“No you’re not.” 
“You’re right, I’m really not.” 
“I can barely stand.” 
“I’ll help you.” 
“Water would help me.” 
“I can’t do that.” 
“Please?” 
“No.”

“No,” said April defiantly, “I can’t do this again. I can’t do another one. I’m just going to flunk, and that’s all there is to it.”

M looked up from the astronomy textbook and gave her a look.

“You said that last time,” she said, “And you got an A.”

“I got an A-” April pointed out, lighting a cigarette as she paced back and forth frantically across the living room. M, having watched her do this hundreds of times before a test, usually from the exact position on the couch she was currently occupying, simply laughed.

“Have you ever considered becoming a Buddhist?” she asked.

April looked at her like she had three heads.

“Why the fuck would I become a Buddhist?”

“Because,” said M, preparing herself for a lecture, “There is a Buddhist belief in ten distinct worlds of human experience, from Hell all the way up to Buddhahood, or enlightenment.”

“Ok,” said April, taking a drag, “So, I’m guess, what with me about to flunk astronomy and everything, that at the moment, I’m in Hell. That’s great. Thank you Buddhism.”

“But that’s not it,” M continued, “Buddhists who subscribe to this system believe in the infinite potentiality of experience. For every world you occupy, you have the potential to occupy every other world at that exact second. You can literally experience 3,000 worlds in a single moment of life. So, even though you might be in Hell, you’re also a Buddha. The capacity is always there.”

“So, I’ve just achieved enlightenment?”

“You just haven’t noticed yet because you’re distracted by the Hell.”

April took another drag, pondering this.

“If I achieved enlightenment,” she said, after a moment, “wouldn’t I already know what was on this test?”

“The test wouldn’t matter to you,” said M, “You’d be above it.”

April thought for another moment, and then grabbed the pillow from the side of the couch and threw it at M.

“Fuck that.” she said, and fell back onto the couch with her, “I think I’d make a shit Buddhist.”

“You probably would. But it did get you to calm down.”

“That was the nicotine,” said April, “Definitely the nicotine.”

“Right.”

April leaned over and rested her head on M’s shoulder. They sat in silence, half considering the basic concepts of Mahayana Buddhism while the other half contemplated their chances of passing the astronomy exam.

“You always become a lecture.” said April, finishing her cigarette. “Does that bother you?”

“No,” said April, “No, it’s cool. It’s just...you know so much about such random things. Why is that?”

“I don’t know,” M answered, quietly. She was thinking of other things. “I think I’m just interested in people. I like trying to figure out how they think. Should I stop?”

“Fuck that,” said April, “It makes you interesting. I’d be a bad friend if I asked you to stop.”

3. Animality  

“Stop!” 
“Shouting won’t do anything.” 
“Fuck you!” 
“What did I say?” 
“Stop! Oh god, please!” 
“I’m afraid I can’t.” 
“AGHH!” 
“Ow, my god. Biting me won’t help.” 
“No?” 
“....neither will scratching my face.” 
“I’M GOING TO SCREAM!” 
“Ow, ugh....sedative!” 
“NO!” 
“Sedative.” 
“No...I...why...” 
“That’s better.”

“That’s better,” said M, adjusting the picture on their TV. The gruesome scene became easier to see, if a bit more disturbing, with a small addition of brightness.

“Fuck.” April said, riveted, “He’s totally going to drop that toaster in the bathtub.”

As if prompted by the suggestion, a moment later the man on screen dropped the toaster into the bathtub. The result was a horrifying death by electrocution.

“Shit.”

“You know,” said M, “Most people would scream at this point.”

“Why the fuck would I scream?”

“Technically, it’s supposed to be scary.”

“That doesn’t mean I have to scream,” said April, indignantly.

“True.” M thought a moment. She reached down beneath the couch and opened a beer - as if somehow, that would help her.

“You know,” she said, after a moment, “horror movies are always so underrated.” “Well, everyone thinks they’re torture porn.”

“Exactly,” said M, “Like the entire genre is the Saw franchise. Usually I can’t get anyone to watch them with me.”

“I know what you mean,” April agreed, “But to be fair, a lot of modern horror movies are shit. You wouldn’t see something like The Shining in theaters today, it would have to be, like, Hostel 2.0.”

“And be targeted solely towards 12-year-old boys.”

“Exactly, like women can’t be into horror.”

M turned back to the film. The protagonist was scouring the derelict, abandoned attic for clues as to what was happening. The scene was almost silent, but the suspense was deafening.

“Anyone can be into horror,” said M, quietly, “You just have to be into mystery.”

“That’s true,” said April, “But I think, in particular, you need to be into mysteries with difficult answers.”

“Or no answers at all.”

“Exactly. Horror is about mysteries that can’t be neatly wrapped up. There either isn’t an answer, isn’t a conventional answer, or the answer is disturbing as fuck.”

“You’re left uneasy, but intrigued.”

“Right,” April took another sip of beer, “And that, not juvenile torture porn, is what makes horror so interesting.”

“You know,” said M, “not many people get that. I try to explain it to them, and they have no idea what the fuck I’m talking about.”

 April smirked.

“This is clearly why we’re friends.”

“What, because of horror?”

“Yes,” said April, “Horror. Not because we like each other or anything.”

“No, of course not.”

They sat in near silence for a moment, their attention theoretically on the movie, but more realistically on each other.

“I’m really glad I met you.” said M, after a moment.

April looked at her.

“Me too.”

They smiled, then, as if realizing how transparently sentimental they were being, turned back to the film. The protagonist was running now, resigned to her fate, but for some reason, still desperate to defy it.

“So, do we think she’s going to live through the movie?” asked M, after a moment.

“Nah,” she said, grinning, “personally, I hope she fucking rots.”

4. Anger  

“I hope she fucking rots!” 
“Do you?” 
“Ugh, fuck...yes. I hope she dies.” 
“Do you really?” 
“She ruined my life.” 
“I thought you wanted to die.” 
“I didn’t until she came along.” 
“Really?” 
“I want something to tear her apart.” 
“Like this?” 
“AHHH, fuck. Yes. Just like this.” 
“Wasn’t she your friend?” 
“I hate her.” 
“Completely?” 
“So completely.” 
“I see.” 
“Fuck her. Fuck everything. I hate it all.”

“Fuck her. Fuck everything! I hate it all,” April narrated, passing the bottle of wine to M, “and I was like, ‘you know what the best way to fuck with her would be? Fuck me.’ It was only supposed to be a joke.”

M took a large swig. It was their second bottle, and April was already kind of drunk.

“Shit,” said M, gulping down the merlot, “What did you do?”

“We had sex.”

M nearly spat her wine out.

“With your cousin?”

“Just once,” said April, wistfully, “And it was the best either of us had ever had. We weren’t expecting it, Monte was just trying to get back at his mom, but about halfway through we realized ‘Oh shit, I’ve wanted to do this my whole life.’ and, well...”

M took another swig and handed it back to April.

“Jesus fuck,” she said, baffled.

“And that,” said April, chugging nearly half the bottle, “is my darkest secret. If you hadn’t already earned the best friend card, you’ve definitely got it now.”

“I’m honored,” said M, still reeling from the revelation, “Does your family know?”

“Of course not,” said April, “Once we realized it was real, we swore each other to secrecy. As far as I know, it’s him, me, and now, you. That’s it.”

“That’s a pretty small club.”

“We’ve got T-shirts, though.”

“Do we?”

“Oh yeah, “April grinned, “They’re sexy.”

With a flourish, handed the bottle back to M.

“Now,” she said, “What have you got?”

M tensed.

“Nothing.”

“Oh, come on,” said April, giggling, “Everyone’s got some sort of terrible secret, it’s normal.”

“I don’t have one,” M liked, unconvincingly, “I really don’t.”

“Then you, my friend, are extremely abnormal.”

5. Humanity  

“You’re extremely abnormal.” 
“No shit.” 
“Yet, you look no different.” 
“Except for my eyes.” 
“What do you think you are?” 
“I told you, I don’t know.” 
“Without the facts?” 
“...I don’t know.” 
“Do you feel human?” 
“Sometimes.” 
“What is human?” 
“I don’t know.” 
“Here, have some water.” 
“What?” 
“You’re pale. Have some water.” 
“...thank you.”

“Thank you.” said the little girl outside M’s living room window the first time the dog dropped the wet, slobbering ball into her hand. It was difficult to hear through the glass and the sound of the bonfire, but she sounded fairly excited to be receiving it - like it was a Christmas present, rather than a sopping, germ-ridden nightmare. She took it in her hand and gleefully threw it across the yard for the dog to chase after, to which the dog returned it and patiently awaited a repeat performance. But, while the dog was perfectly happy to do it over and over again, the girl had lost interest, the excitement of being handed a plastic ball having apparently dissipated.

And yet, the dog was still thrilled. All it would take for that dog to achieve complete and total happiness was for that girl to throw the ball across the yard. It would rush frantically for it, then return, patiently awaiting its next fix of euphoria - a perfect temporary happiness.

The kitchen door opened and slammed shut. A disheveled and tired looking April dropped about a hundred pounds worth of baggage on the floor before collapsing onto the couch beside M.

“So,” she said, “Has the kid managed to fall into the fire yet?”

“Nope,” M grabbed a beer from the six pack at her feet and handed it to April, “So far she’s just sat there with a dog. How was Christmas?”

“Awful,” said April, bitterly, “As always. Mom bitched about my weight, Dad got really drunk, my sister announced that she’d had a spiritual revelation and was joining a commune in New Mexico and my Aunt Rita reminded us all that there’s a very good chance she might be dead next year. It was a magical evening.”

“Was Monte there?”

“No.” April lit a cigarette, “He wisely decided to go to his roommate’s for Christmas. Lucky bastard.”

“Probably for the best.” said M. “Yeah, you’re probably right. The amount of bullshit going down at the dinner, who knows how we might have decided to blow off steam.”

“No pun intended?”

“Of course not,” April grinned, “How was it at your house?”

“It was good,” said M, “It was nice to see everyone again. I hadn’t been home in a while. My grandmother still refuses to call me anything other than “Emilia” but apart from that, nothing particularly upsetting happened. It was mostly my parents talking about light.”

“At least they weren’t talking about cults.”

“Fair enough.”

They returned their attention to the picture window. The dog was gone, and the little girl was gleefully tearing shiny paper off a cardboard box. A few moments and a significant amount of excited screeching later and the box was eventually revealed to contain a large, stuffed pony with a colorful mane and glittering tail. The little girl was so ecstatic she nearly threw the toy into the fire.

“Someone just made that kid’s life.” said April. “Who knew a stuffed pony was so significant?”

“Oh,” April suddenly moved off the couch towards her luggage on the floor, “I almost forgot. I got you something.” She dug through her bag and eventually unearthed a thin package wrapped in blue, snowflake patterned wrapping. She handed it to M.

“Happy, uh, whatever,” she said, sitting herself back down, “You can pick the holiday, it doesn’t really matter.”

M stared down at it, taking a moment to examine the impressive wrapping job. There were only a few things it could be, and yet, as she carefully removed the wrapping paper, she was shocked to find the album she had been looking for for months beneath the packaging.

“Oh my god,” she said, speechless, “How did you find this?”

“There’s this CD in my town runned by these two guys who I’m pretty sure killed someone a few years back. One of them is really into obscure 90’s industrial. He knew exactly where to find it.”

“Oh my god,” said M, again, “Thank you so much. I can’t believe you found this. I had just sort of assumed I’d be doomed to listening to awful rips of it on YouTube.”

“Merry Christmas,” said April, smiling. M didn’t know what to say. She’d never been so thrilled by a gift in her life. The excitement of it almost made her forget her own present.

“I don’t know if this will top that,” she said, hastily pulling the poorly-wrapped gift from under the couch, “But, um, Merry Christmas. Or Happy New Year. Whatever.”

April accepted the gift and immediately tore the wrapping to pieces. Beneath it was a clear, plastic box containing a detailed statue of an outrageously dressed man.

“It’s the Goblin King,” said M, a bit nervous, “From Labyrinth?”

“Um, obviously,” said April, “he’s only all over my room. Holy shit, M, this must have cost a fucking fortune.”

“My cousin collects film memorabilia,” she explained, “he had two of these, for some reason.”

“Holy shit,” said April, again, ripping the packaging apart and putting the statue on display on the coffee table.

“God,” she sighed, “It’s so tacky and ridiculous, but so sexy.”

“I’m glad you like it.”

“I fucking love it,” said April, staring at it, “this is so much better than anything my parents gave me.”

“I’m glad I got the right movie,” said M. She had never been particularly interested in the movie, or particularly attracted to it’s bizarre star, but she knew the mere mention of it excited April.

“Put on your album,” said April, staring happily at the statue. M hesitated.

“It’s industrial,” she pointed out, “It’s not exactly Christmas music.”

“Fuck Christmas music,” said April, “It’s New Years Eve. Put it on. If I hate it, I have the Goblin King.”

In an instant, M had the CD in her laptop. The first song began and she had to restrain herself from shrieking as joyously as the girl next door. The album was hard to find, but brilliant - a masterpiece of ambient and aggressive sound tragically lost to the ether of obscurity. She had wanted it for years, and had never imagined she’d actually have it in her hands.

“Thank you so much,” she said, for what felt like the thousandth time.

“Thank you,” April replied, “Happy New Year.”

“Happy New Year.”

Outside, the fire was almost gone, and most of the neighbors had gone inside. The little girl’s pony lay on a picnic table by the embers, forgotten by it’s new owner.

“So much for the excitement of a pony.”

“Kids,” said April, rolling her eyes, “Oh my god.”

6. Heaven  

“Oh my god.” 
“Hello.” 
“You came to see me?” 
“Yes.” 
“It’s so good to see you.” 
“Really?” 
“I missed you.” 
“You did?” 
“No one else will speak to me.” 
“Plenty of people speak to you.” 
“Not like you did.” 
“Like I used to.” 
“How did it get so bad?” 
“I don’t know. I think it just happens.” 
“I miss you.” 
“I miss you too. But I’m not really here.” 
“What?”

“What?” April nearly spit out the wine.

“I might not be human.” M repeated.

April took a large gulp, and laughed nervously.

“You’re fucking with me,” she said, “You’re drunk.”

“I never get drunk,” said M, “I’ve tried. It’s something human I’ve never been able to accomplish.”

They were silent. The mood on the couch was frustratingly tense, and M’s heart sank as she realized she had probably just made a terrible mistake. She had never told anyone this, and had felt April deserved to know, but it was a gamble. Most people picked up on her peculiar nature without even having to be told. April was rare in that, not only had she noticed there was something odd about M, but she liked it, and just thought it made her more interesting. She was the closest friend she’d ever had, and M was desperate not to lose her.

She sighed, prepared for the worst. April stared at her, clearly working through something.

“Is that why you have two different colored eyes?” she said, finally.

“What?”

“I’ve always wondered about that,” she continued, “Because plenty of people have un-matching eyes, you know? It’s a legit condition. But there’s something different about yours.”

“No one’s ever asked me that before,” said M, “In baby pictures, both my eyes are brown. My parents never told me when they changed, or why. They actually haven’t told me that much about my childhood at all. And there’s a lot I don’t remember.”

“So, are you, like, an alien?”

“I don’t know,” said M, “Sometimes I feel so human, and I’m sure I can’t be. And then other times, things affect me in a way they shouldn’t, like how I can’t get drunk. I went to the dentist with my cousin once, when I was a kid, and I could see the x-ray. Everyone thought I was crazy, but I swear, I could see it. It was like a stage light.”

“Have you seen, like, an actual doctor?” April suggested.

“My parents never took me to one,” said M, “Ever. They can’t even remember the name of the hospital I was supposedly born in. I’ve never even seen my birth certificate. To be honest, I’m terrified of doctors. If I see one, I have no idea what they’ll find.”

“But wouldn’t it finally answer the question of who you are? I feel like it would take away a hell of a lot of inner turmoil.”

“You have no idea how badly I want to be human,” M insisted, “I try so hard to connect with people, to feel like I understand them, but this weird...I don’t know, otherness that I have always gets in the way. I’ve never been able to keep a friendship going. If I find out for sure I’m not human, there will be no point in even trying anymore. Relationships define life here, if I can’t form them, there will be no point in living.”

M turned, and met April’s uneasy gaze.

“I know this is bizarre, and it probably sounds kind of crazy,” she said, “But, as weird as it is, I really don’t want this to change us. Will it?”

April stared at M’s uncoordinated eyes. She had thought of them as eccentric. They were distinctive, they were one of the many things that made M who she was. Now they were a little unsettling.

“No.” she said, defiantly, “It won’t.”

M smiled.

“Good.” she said, “I was hoping it wouldn’t.”

They broke eye contact. April handed the wine over to M who, despite having just admitted that she was incapable of being drunk, drank a fairly impressive amount of it before handing it back.

“So,” said M, with a burp, “Fucking your cousin was the best sex you’ve ever had?”

April rolled her eyes.

“Shit, don’t give me that again.”

8. Realization
  
“Don’t give me that again.” 
“What happened?” 
“I saw things.” 
“It was only a sedative.” 
“It makes me see things.” 
“Are they nice things?” 
“They’re exactly what I want.” 
“Then I’ll give you more.” 
“No. I don’t want to see things that aren’t real.” 
“Why not?” 
“I want to feel every bit of torture.” 
“Why?” 
“Because it’s real.”

“Because it’s real!” April shouted into the phone, “Wasn’t that what we’d said? Or was that just me? Are you fucking kidding me? You know what, fine, go off and do whatever it is you need to do. Fuck it. I don’t care. Just don’t plan on speaking to me, or fucking me, ever again!”

April pounded at the “End Call” button with more force than was probably necessary and lobbed her phone at the Labyrinth poster across the room.

“Sorry, Jareth.” she said, bitterly, as if the man on the poster were real. M raised an eyebrow from her place on April’s bed.

“That didn’t sound good.”

“Fucking asshole,” April muttered, furiously lighting a cigarette, “he’s like ‘I’m getting back together with my ex’ which is bad enough considering he told me he loved me last weekend, but then on top of it he’s all ‘but we can still fool around in the meantime’ like I’m still going to want to fuck him even though he just dumped me for the possibility of being with the chick he dumped last year. What the fuck?”

“If it helps,” said M, “if he does get back together with her, I have a feeling that relationship isn’t going to end well.”

“Motherfucker!” April flopped onto the bed next to M, eyes fixed on the Labyrinth poster she’d thrown her phone at.

“Why can’t there be more men like him?”

“The Goblin King?”

“Yes,” said April, with anguish, “god, he’s like, perfect.”

“Ok, first of all,” M began, “I’m pretty sure the guy that plays him is in his sixties now. Secondly, If I remember the movie correctly, doesn’t he kidnap what's-her-name’s brother, trap her in a mostly rigged Labyrinth, and then drug her with a peach?”

“Well yeah,” April admitted, “But he re-orders time for her. And, have you seen his pants?”

“Yes.” said M, remembering them as an image she consistently wished she hadn’t seen. “But, again, he’s as old as my grandmother now.”

“I’m not talking about the actor, I’m talking about the character.”

“The character that isn’t real?”

“The character that should be.”

“Really?” M was skeptical, “If he was, I really don’t think it would result in a particularly healthy, or functional relationship.”

“Thanks for that, M,” said April, suddenly terse.

“What? It’s true.” said M, confused, “You always seem to be attracted to these guys that come with some sort of toxic obstacle, like a girlfriend, or a drug habit, or a passing resemblance to a villainous goblin king. It’s like the Monte thing.”

“Monte!” said April, suddenly, “I wonder what he’s doing tonight?”

“April, no.” said M, firmly, “You two broke it off, remember? You’re cousins.”

“But I love him,” said April, matter-of-factually as she began a desperate search for her phone.

“No you don’t,” said M, “You’re in love with the idea of being in a taboo relationship. You’re attracted to the obstacle.”

April stopped searching. She glared at M with the same intensity she’d had on the phone.

“Excuse me?”

“It’s like every other time you end up back in a bad relationship,” said M, slightly anxious from April’s glare, “And then, when it ends badly and the guy turns out to be a dick, you hate him with every bit of passion you’ve got in you. You and Monte decided what you had was unhealthy and you broke it off, why don’t you keep it that way so you don’t have to hate him? Shouldn’t good, real relationships be simple?”

 April just stared.

“Fuck you.”

“What?”

“Fuck you.”

“I’m sorry?” M was baffled.

“You heard me,” said April, “Fuck you. You have no idea what the fuck this feels like.”

“Then talk to me,” said M, “What are you feeling?”

“No, I don’t want to talk about this.”

“Well you can’t just sit around and stew.”

“Why not?”

“Because if you do it’ll just keep eating at you,” said M, “I’m sorry if I said the wrong thing, but I keep watching this happen, and I don’t want it to destroy you.”

April was silent and still, and yet somehow still managed to give off the impression that at any second she would burst. The negativity radiating off of her was practically visible.

“Get out.” she said.

“What?”

“Get the fuck out of here,” April repeated, “I don’t want to talk about this, you won't understand.”

“Then make me understand.”

“You can’t!” April spat, “You’re probably physically incapable. You only want to understand because you find it interesting, not because you actually give a shit. You just want to feel more fucking human.”

“April, I -”

“No, I can’t do this, if you won’t leave, I will.”

Before M could stop her, April stormed out of the room. M stood alone, anxious, and for the first time since she’d met April, afraid.

“What just happened?”

8. Realization  

“What just happened?” 
“We’ve called in a few more experts.” 
“Did you?” 
“Yes.” 
“It won’t help.” 
“We’re getting closer to results.” 
“Are you?” 
“Yes.” 
“Then why are you calling in backup?” 
“Second opinions.” 
“You don’t have any results.” 
“Yes, we do.” 
“You’re just going to keep testing me and testing me.” 
“We’re going to reach a conclusion.” 
“I’m going to be in more and more pain.” 
“We’ll figure this out.” 
“And you will never know what I am.”

“You will never know what I am?” April repeated, mockingly, “Are you seriously pulling that, M?”

M sat in a somewhat unattractive heap on the floor of her bedroom. The floor was cold, and for the first time, she wished she had taken April’s carpeted room upstairs. Or, at the very least, invested in a rug. Anything to make the situation warmer.

“Please calm down,” she said, quietly.

“And that!“ April shouted, “You know nothing pisses me off more than being told to calm down.”

“I’m sorry.”

 “Stop saying sorry!”

“But then, what do I -”

“I don’t know!”

April ran her fingers through her hair, “just...say anything else.”

“I apologize, April,” said M, seriously, “Profusely.”

April paced back and forth. She alternated between taking short, irritated drags from her cigarette and biting at her already short fingernails.

“I just can’t believe you did something like that.” she said, quietly.

“It didn’t work though,” M pointed out, “Did it?”

“Yeah, thank god you’re probably a fucking alien.”

“April -”

“M.” April sighed, “Just...when something’s wrong, when you’re feeling, you know, like this, tell me. Talk to me.”

“I can’t.”

“Why not?”

“I don’t want to lose you.”

“What the fuck?” April took a particularly long, desperate drag, “Where the fuck do you think I’m going?”

“I don’t know,” said M, “I’ve had a lot of friends decide they can’t deal with me. It’s a huge burden to have to deal with someone who doesn’t even know what they are. Sometimes I feel like I just wasn’t meant to be here..”

“Don’t say that!”

“I’m sorry -”

“And don’t say sorry! Fuck, M.”

“I just...” M sighed, “I wish I could make this have never happened.”

“Well, you can’t.” said April, bitterly.

“I know.”

“So what do we do?” April lit another cigarette. She was burning through them.

“How many more of those are you going to have?” asked M.

“Are you really going to tell me what to do after this?”

“How many?”

April reached into her back pocket and pulled out an entirely new pack. She unwrapped it and flashed its complete contents at M.

“Just a few more today.”

9. Bodhisattva  

 “Just a few more today.” 
“I overheard your conversation.” 
“Which one?” 
“The one with your supervisor.” 
“I don’t know what -” 
“You don’t have results.” 
“As I said -” 
“You’re going to lose your job.” 
“I’m not the only one on this project.” 
“And so will they.” 
“So, I’ll keep trying. I’m a professional.” 
“And as a professional, you know its useless.” 
“Nothing is useless.” 
“This is. It’s alright. I’ll take care of it.” 
“I can’t let you -” 
“Just leave it there. Tell them I took it.” 
“But -” 
“It’s alright.”

“It’s alright,” said M, nodding to give April her approval to enter the room, “But no, I haven’t seen it.”

April glanced around M’s room. She seemed annoyed at having to be there.

“Are you sure?” she demanded.

M sighed.

They were coexisting. She couldn’t really call it anything else. They rarely spoke outside of basic questions, and rarely spent time together outside their rooms. Somehow, the shift seemed natural. And yet, their lingering, mostly ignored tension was starting to gnaw at them.

“I’m sure.”

April stood in her doorway, scanning the bedroom. There was a pause. M watched her.

“If you did take it,” said April, after a moment, “You should really just tell me.”

“Why would I take your vodka?”

“It wouldn’t be the first time.”

Much as she didn’t want to admit it, April had a point. On a particularly bad night, M had stolen a good portion of April’s vodka. Predictably, it hadn’t even done anything. And yet, despite her obvious guilt, M still felt slighted by the question. Yes, she had done it before, but this time she legitimately hadn’t. April should trust her.

She stared her down.

“I did not take your vodka.”

April looked away.

“Fine,” she said, “whatever. Just stop looking at me like that.”

“Like what?”

“Like that.”

“The way I always do?”

April glared at the floor. Somehow, the fact that she couldn’t look M in the eyes made it all the worse.

“Fuck this,” she said, “I don’t want to do this right now.”

“Do what?”

“This.” April looked like she about ready to get violent. M could feel their tension like a tangible force - another moment like this, and it would strangle them both.

“I’ll go check my room again.” said April, suddenly.

“Fine.”

They turned away from each other, April towards the hallway, and M towards her desk. In another time, they probably would have glanced back, and wondered about each other. Now they knew everything there was to know about the other, and there was nothing either of them could do about it.

An anguished, frustrated scream came from upstairs. M heard something break, and tumble downwards. She turned, and at the foot of the stairs outside her door lay the remains of the Goblin King. At an earlier time, she would have been upset. But now, she understood.

She put her headphones back in, and found the playlist with the album April had given her last Christmas. She hadn’t listened to it in months. She tried to tell herself she could, that in fact, she had every right to.

 “But,” she said, sighing as she switched playlists, “I can’t.”

10. Buddha  

“But, I can’t -” 
“You should use that word less.” 
“Should I just -” 
“Everything is alright.” 
“But, we’ll never know.” 
“You’re not meant to.” 
“...you’ll never know.” 
“I’m not meant to either.” 
“Don’t you want to?” 
“I don’t want anything anymore. I don’t need it.” 
“Should I say something?” 
“Like what?” 
“A prayer?” 
“If you’d like.” 
“I don’t know.” 
“Then just let me go.” 
“I’m going to inject you.” 
“Thank you.” 
“Thank you.” 
“Tell April...” 
“What?” 
“Tell April, I’m glad I met her.”

“I’m glad I met her,” said M, moments away from hyperventilating, “Am I?”

She could swear the walls were closing in on her. The room was smaller than her closet, and the restrictive handcuffs weren’t helping. She had been worrying about this moment since the beginning. And yet, there had been a significant amount of time in which she had honestly been convinced it would never come.

But of course, here it was.

Coming downstairs and not finding April hadn’t been too much of a shock. April rarely left her room these days. She hadn’t noticed anything was going on until she checked her phone.  

Not surprised you didn’t answer my last text. Being fucking polite is only human. If you survive, don’t try to contact me again.

M had spent about three minutes contemplating the meaning of the text before it became abundantly clear.

There was a knock on the front door, and within minutes, she was escorted from the apartment and thrown into the back of a van. Inside, everything was confiscated. If April had anything she wanted to say to her, she would never be able to.

And now she was here. Alone.

Things had gone so wrong. A part of her had known it would, but another, more emotionally charged part had so badly hoped it wouldn’t. There was a time when April could understand her better than anyone else. They had needed each other - they weren’t just friends, they were dependents. Every element of their daily lives had included the other one, and for the longest time, that’s how they were comfortable living.

For the longest time, M had actually felt human.

How it gotten so bad? How had they reached this point? Weren’t friends supposed to last forever? Isn’t that what they taught you in movies? If you formed a connection with someone, it meant you were connected, didn’t it? It couldn’t just go bad, like rotting fruit, there was something special about it. Wasn’t there? Or was it just, as everything else was, a matter of potentiality?

Because, of course, every fruit has the potential to go rotten. By that logic, she reasoned, every friendship had the potential to fall apart. No matter how profound your relationship might seem, for even moment you’re in Heaven, there’s the potential for Hell.

She wondered where April was now - what she was doing and thinking. Their relationship had become toxic, and had ultimately led to where she was now, but for some completely inexplicable reason, M still wanted to see her. Somewhere in the irrational part of her that had honestly believed she would have a best friend forever, she was still clinging to the idea that they could work it out. There had to be a way, she just needed to talk to her.

The door opened and several doctors entered. They took turns looking her over, paying specific attention to her eyes. They discussed tests and funding and the ways in which this project would inevitably change the future of scientific thought. M barely listened. With every word, her future was more solidly confirmed.

She would never see April again. Her life as she had recently known it, was over. They would never speak, and never patch things up. Every relationship has the potential to be the greatest of human experience, and theirs had always had the potential to go to Hell. She understood that now.

But, did that make her human?

She sighed, and realized she no longer cared. Despite whatever the doctors were about to do to her, there was a good chance she would never know. She was, inevitably, right back where she started.

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