Sean Bronson

Already Human

I remember Audrey’s blue jeans hanging really low off her waist. So low, in fact, the streetlight casts a shadow on her naked pelvic bone. That was right before her body just shut off, and she passed out right on the sidewalk. It happened in a matter of seconds, but the first sign that showed me something was about to happen was when her head tilted back. The fur scarf hanging over her pullover falls and her with it, her head knocking against the pavement. Not being in a right state of mind myself, I don’t even try to catch her. I’m so out of it, her falling loops around in my head a couple of times before the logical side of my brain finally catches, and I realize I gotta do something. So I get on my knees, and for a brief few minutes I have the clarity to check her pulse which is faint but there beating steadily like the stars shining in the middle of the forest without any light pollution to drown out the sky. As I’m feeling around her skull for any cuts, my hands must’ve caught against her quartz, dreamcatcher necklace because clattering is heard, and I see beads rolling off the curb.

We had been waiting in line to see a special art exhibit featuring a live musical performance when the drug hit us like a semi-truck. In the car, parked about a mile away in an open lot, we had pulled out these funky-smelling, dried up roots of a plant and were studying them in the palm of my hand. I had gotten them from a strange-looking dude in the city square one night. It was a part of town where all the cool, grungy people hung out, selling their respective wares of tie-dye shirts, home-made jewelry and, of course, drugs. The particular guy I had gotten the roots from was a very thin, old, white guy who called himself, “The Shaman.” He wore a light blue hoodie and a Scottish-skirt-looking thing for pants. He was mumbling something about gold coming down like rain, and I wasn’t sure if he was trying to give me directions on how to take the thing or if he was zoning out on his own supply. At the end of our meeting, “The Shaman,” waved his hand all around me like he was blessing me or cursing me. I couldn’t tell the difference. He was muttering seemingly made up gibberish with such a mix of aggression and sensitivity that I seriously had second thoughts about doing them as I walked away from the crowd.

I didn’t tell all this to Audrey as we sat in the car. The art exhibit was her idea. I was and am still not an art guy. Drugs were my art you could say. It just made everything more colorful and interesting. Anyway, she wasn’t wholly new to taking stuff, but she was looking at the thing and was seriously having doubts. But I was taking a long time, deciding whether to take them or not. In the end, with music bumping inside the car, I just popped them inside my mouth without warning, and that was how this whole crazy thing began.

We finally both began to “sober” up just as the line to get into the art exhibit started to move. The exhibit was inside of a multi-level parking structure and the now-moving line was wrapped around the building. I thought for a moment maybe we should ditch the thing since we were still in no condition to be looking at framed paintings on a wall. That was my thinking as I slapped Audrey on the cheeks to bring her back into waking consciousness. Her eyes rolled back into place, and her breathing became sudden as if the lungs were in full operation again. With her arm around my shoulder, I was helping her walk down the sidewalk, past the people in line when she mumbled where we were going.

“Home,” I said.

Audrey garbled some kind of response. She was conscious now but still high—as was I. But I could make out that she wanted to go in with the moving line.

“No,” I said.

We got into a little heated argument out in front of the multi-level parking structure with all the people in line staring at us. Thinking back on it now, we must’ve looked like possessed ghouls, muttering incoherent words like grunts somehow getting our words across to one another. A big-bellied guy with a white goatee came over to us then and asked if we were okay. He gave us some cold Gatorade in an unnaturally blue color which I had to pour into Audrey’s mouth like I was pouring coolant into the lips of a radiator.

He sat us down on the curb as the line continued to move. I swore I could’ve heard him say to someone behind in line to go inside without him and that he would meet them inside. Things started to get hazy after that. Time started to fast forward, or maybe, skip forward, at least in my memory. All of a sudden, we were walking down the ramp of the parking structure with parking attendants waving blinking, red batons, waving us to go down. I don’t even know what happened to the big-bellied guy with the goatee. The next thing I remember is reaching the bottom floor where it’s completely flat and a bunch of people are continuing to file in from the ramp. The lights are hot and bright at first. Then, it’s dark save for the blinking red batons which appear as if they’re floating in the black air. A single, distorted guitar string is strummed. Then, whole chords ring through a crowd as bluish-white spotlights shine down on the band playing on stage. I’m still holding Audrey by the waist while she has hers around my shoulder. She’s able to stand on her feet now, but she’s still a little wobbly. Then, wet things start falling on our heads. For some reason, I just accept this fact without even considering that we were in an enclosed space, so rain should’ve been impossible. But I just accepted it—as did Audrey.

The band continued playing, the lead singer’s voice raspy like it was an organic, human, distorted guitar. I don’t know what I mean by this, but that was what I was thinking at the time. We cover our heads with our hands to shade us from the rain, but it’s obvious it isn’t helping because we are getting drenched. Puddles are starting to form under our feet. Drums are being pounced on on stage. A guitar riff flies fitfully through the sky as the singer repeats the chorus. Clouds smolder in the sky.

The songs stops. Music stops. But the rain comes down in a torrential rainfall. The water which was slapping against our drenched shoes is now up to our necks, and on the surface of the water is a wooden ship. Someone’s thrown overboard. Time skips forward again, and I’m standing in front of a cashier at a coffee shop who’s staring with this dumbfounded look in her eyes.

“What size, sir?”

“Tall,” I say.

I don’t remember paying for the coffee, much less actually getting the coffee. I know my memory of that time is completely messed up because, after that, I recall looking up at a framed painting on a matcha-green wall. So, I must be mis-remembering or re-ordering the chronological chain of events. However, in my brain, it’s placed here for some reason. All the planets are spaced together around an invisible sphere. I don’t know about constellations and stuff, but I do know Saturn isn’t bigger than the sun which is how it’s depicted in the painting. The piece after that is of a woman reading a book at the beach, laying on a chair, under the shade of an umbrella. She is nude on top. After that, I remember looking at a black and white photograph of black people in suits and dresses entering into a church.

The last thing I remember, and I swear, I felt like this was really happening. I heard thunder. Lots of it, and I realized it was really bombs exploding. They felt really near. I didn’t look back to see what it was. It was that close. People were running past us. I was still holding up Audrey by the waist who still couldn’t walk properly and kept stumbling. The people running past us I began to make out because they were so different from each other: a small, dark, Asian girl; a beautiful blonde white woman; and a lanky soldier in a World War Two officer’s uniform. At the end of the dusty yellow road, some guy was waving people through a doorway. But the doorway was crooked as if my head was tilted to the side, and the man had a long white beard and a long flowing robe like a wizard.

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