Memoirs of a Teenage Amnesiac(17)
When I finally got to physics the lights were off because the class was in the midst of watching a DVD: an introduction to subatomic particles and string theory. I handed Dr. Pillar my note, and he smiled and pointed me to a desk.
I took off my sunglasses and watched the movie. It was actually very relaxing. The narrator had one of those silky PBS type voices, and there was quite a bit of New Age and Philip Glass-y music to accompany the images, which were a combination of talking-head interviews featuring very nerdy adults in lab coats and short-sleeved polyester dress shirts, and computer simulations of stars and planets, forming and breaking apart and forming again. It was sort of beautiful. All those stars and planets, they reminded me of something…
Of being in an air-conditioned planetarium.
The air was stale like a library, but also sweaty like the sea…
Me in a flimsy white tank top.
With goose bumps on my arm.
Seventies rock.
A boy with sweaty hands.
This feeling…
Like anything might happen.
I wondered if this might be an actual memory, and if it was an actual memory, was it mine? Or was it something from a book I might have read or a movie I might have seen? Even when my brain had been perfectly functional, I had done that. Taken stories from books and sort of conflated them with actual events. Not lying exactly, though some might call it that. More like borrowing. It is hard to explain just what I mean unless you’re the type of person who does it, too.
I turned my attention back to the program. One of the physicists in the program was saying something about how when scientists first started studying the universe, it was like being in a room in the dark. But now with the new theories, they realized it wasn’t a room, but a house. Not any old house either, but a mansion with an infinite number of rooms to stumble through. I was imagining these scientists groping around in this darkened mansion. I don’t know why but I pictured the scientists as a group of drunken women, like they’d just come from a frat party. “Oh hey,” one would say to the other, “does anyone remember how in the hell we got in here in the first place?” They were still trying to get out when I fell asleep for the second time that morning.
Luckily, I woke up on my own this time, which was good. I didn’t want to be known as “that chick who’s always falling asleep in class.” (There’s always one; you know who you are.)
The doctors had said that head traumas can cause exhaustion for “a while.”
“How long is a while?” I asked.
“Ballpark?”
“Ballpark.”
They nodded and whispered to each other. “Indefinitely” was their very helpful reply.
“Miss Porter.” Dr. Pillar stopped me on the way out. He had a perfectly round face and was bald with a woolly strip of jet black hair above his ears and neck, like a pair of headphones that had slipped off his head. “Your papa. He calls to say that your math and science skills are hunky-dory, yes?” He had a strange, stilted way of forming sentences and an equally strange accent that I couldn’t quite place, but had a hint of Dracula in it.
“You are one year ahead in math and science, so this is very good, yes? But I prepare for you a dossier with chemistry and mathematics necessary for mastery of physics.” He handed me a large heavy envelope, crammed with papers.
In other words, a review. I thanked him. It was nice to know that the school was not peopled entirely with Mrs. Tarkingtons.
“It is interesting, this. Why you have lost some things and not others…” He studied me, much like you would expect a lab technician to watch an ape. “Maybe it is because you place different things in different areas of brain? We know nothing about brain, yes?”
It had certainly seemed that this was the case.
“And four years, is it? This is very odd. Maybe it is puberty onset that alters the place in which you are storing long-term memories? So you have everything before puberty, but nothing after?”
I wasn’t sure what he was trying to say, but I really did not want to discuss puberty with Dr. Pillar.
“Perhaps a traumatic event from your youth that you have been very much longing to repress?”
“Um…perhaps.”
“Forgive me. I like to make theories for what cannot be readily explained. It is my nature. Do you have any theories about your memory loss, Miss Porter?”
“I lost a coin toss and I fell down the stairs. Bad luck and clumsiness?”
“Or, perhaps, randomness and gravity. In this respect, you are walking physics experiment, yes?”
That was certainly one way to put it.
Fifth period was lunch, and Ace was waiting for me outside physics to lead me to our place in the cafeteria.
“You didn’t say you were coming today!” He hugged me and lifted my backpack from my shoulder.
“It’s fine, Ace. I can carry it myself.”
“I want to,” he insisted.
We sat with a group of about twenty kids at a long benchlike table. It was a mix of boys and girls, and I recognized some of them from my classes and a few others from elementary school. Our table was, by far, the noisiest one in the place. You could tell that the kids I ate with considered themselves to be the celebrities of the school. It was like they were putting on a show of having lunch as opposed to actually eating it.
A curly-haired blonde named Brianna introduced herself and then said, “I just want you to know how brave I think you are. What happened to you is so, so tragic. Isn’t she so brave?”