EIGHT
(IS BROWN)
Fortunately, Dr. Minta didn’t bring up the subject of music again. I could tell that he wanted to, especially at our next session, but I managed to distract him by mentioning that I was missing Kirk, and we spent most of our time talking about that instead.
Kirk had been Dr. Rivard’s patient (or as Kirk oh-so-sensitively liked to call her, “Dr. Retard”), and the details of his case were confidential, so Dr. Minta couldn’t tell me where he’d gone or how he was doing. But he did say that Kirk was a survivor, and that he was smart enough to come back to Pine Hills if things got too much for him, so if I hadn’t heard anything it was probably good news.
Unfortunately, my concern also led Dr. Minta to ask whether I’d been in love with Kirk, which caused me to choke on my licorice jelly bean and cough sticky black particles all over his sofa. But once I recovered I managed to explain that no, he was only a friend. A
younger
friend. Dr. Minta looked dubious at that, but he didn’t press the point. Instead he gave me an extra helping of bland sympathy and the suggestion that I try to make some new friends, which made me feel more desolate than ever.
But no matter how depressing I found my sessions with Dr. Minta, I always looked forward to spending time with Dr. Faraday—and I wasn’t the only one. I saw him at the nurses’ station, nodding sympathy as Marilyn complained about her staffing issues; I saw Sharon talking animatedly to him over coffee; I even saw him with Roberto at one point, although they didn’t seem to be having a conversation so much as a friendly mutual silence. For someone who was only at Pine Hills three afternoons a week, Faraday did a surprisingly good job of appearing omnipresent.
Still, he spent more time with me than anyone else, and I liked it that way. Especially since I still had so many questions about my synesthesia, and he was the only one I knew who could answer them. In our last few sessions, we’d talked about my near-photographic memory, the way certain sights and sounds made me feel as though I were being touched, and how I felt pain as orange while pleasure came in shades of purple and blue. According to Faraday, all those things were quite normal for a synesthete, which was reassuring. But I hadn’t yet dared to ask him about the thing that worried me most—the fear that my sensory abilities had something to do with the way I’d disintegrated Tori. And that if I got angry enough, or scared enough, I might do it again.
“What fascinates me,” Faraday said toward the end of our fifth session, “is that you have so many different forms of synes-thesia at once. Do you sometimes find it overwhelming? When you hear a particularly loud noise, for instance?”
For a moment I was tempted to tell him the truth. Not about killing Tori: I couldn’t bear to have him think of me as a murderer. But the way my senses had overloaded afterward, and how it had landed me here. Faraday had always been so easy to talk to, willing to accept even my most evasive answers without judging me or pressuring me to say more, that I could almost believe he’d understand this as well. I lifted my head, met those inquiring violet eyes with my own . . .
And lost my nerve completely. “Sometimes,” I mumbled, and looked away.
. . .
“Before we go,” said Sharon at the end of our Wednesday Life Goals session, “Cherie has an announcement to make.”
With obvious reluctance, Cherie got to her feet. “Uh, I’m going home tomorrow,” she said. “So I guess this is my last session with you guys.”
Sharon beamed, and led the rest of us in a ragged round of applause. “Does anyone want to say something to Cherie about her achievement?”
An awkward pause followed, while Sanjay muttered something about tracking devices and Roberto studied his thumbs. Finally I said, “Congratulations, Cherie.”
She gave me a wan smile, which broadened unexpectedly into something more genuine. “Hey, Kirk!” she exclaimed, and when I looked around there he was, hanging from the doorframe like Spider-Man and flashing his manic grin.
“Kirk,” said Sharon, “please get down.”
“Oh, come on,” he said, sliding down the frame and bounding over to sling an arm around her shoulders. “Don’t fight it. You know you love me.”
For an instant Sharon’s disapproving expression wavered, but she kept it under control. “You know the rules, Kirk.”
“Yeah, yeah,” he said, releasing her only to spin around and grab Cherie instead. “Hey, Skinny, did I just hear you got the green light? Score!” But she barely had time to blush before he looped his other arm around me, fingers digging into my ribs as he pulled me against his side. “But you’re gonna stick around, right, Ali? ’Cause I came back just for you.”
“Kirk,” said a cool soprano voice, as Dr. Rivard appeared in the doorway. “I’d like you to come with me, please.”
“She can’t get enough of me,” he stage-whispered. “See you later, my lusty wenches.” Cherie squealed as he pinched her, and I slapped his hand away before he could do the same to me—but he only winked as he sauntered off.
“Back again,” muttered Cherie as we left the therapy room, her eyes following Kirk’s bouncing figure down the corridor. “Seriously, this is the third time just since I came. It’s like he
enjoys
it here.”
I’d never seen Kirk quite this manic before. He acted like a happy drunk, but there was a wild, almost desperate look in his eyes. I wondered what he’d done, or threatened to do, before they brought him in. “His life outside must be pretty horrible if that’s the case,” I said.
Cherie gave me a scornful look. “Right, and my life’s all rainbows and ponies? Like that has anything to do with it. Once I’m out of here, I’m
never
coming back.” She quickened her stride and broke away from me, heading for the TV room.
I watched her go, shame creeping over me as I realized that tonight would be Cherie’s last night at Pine Hills, and that even after four weeks as her roommate, I still didn’t know much about her. True, we’d only had one therapy group in common, and even in our free time we lived by different schedules—she liked to stay up late and sleep in as long as the nurses would let her, while I often went to bed early just because I couldn’t think of anything better to do. But I could have at least tried to get to know her. And I hadn’t.
I hadn’t really tried with Kirk, either. We’d bantered back and forth, and for a while he’d been the closest thing to a friend I had in this place. But we’d never talked about anything important. Maybe Dr. Minta was right—I was too reserved and cautious, too fearful of letting others in. Just because I’d had a few bad experiences with people didn’t mean that it always had to be that way, and maybe I just needed to find the courage to open up to someone. To let them know me as I really was, the way I’d always longed to be known.
It wouldn’t be easy. But I knew where I wanted to start.
. . .
“I’ve been wondering,” I said to Faraday the following morning, trying to keep my voice light even though every muscle in my body was screaming at me not to do this. “Have you ever heard of someone’s synesthesia changing? Like . . . getting a lot stronger, all of a sudden?”
Faraday propped his long legs up on the library table, one ankle crossed over the other. The sunlight slanting through the windows behind him chased gold across his broad shoulders and kindled odd, glittering lights in his hair. “Well,” he said, “some drugs have been known to temporarily cause synesthesia, or make synesthetic experiences more intense. Is that the sort of thing you mean?”
“Not really,” I said. “I mean that if a synesthete had some kind of, uh, stressful experience, could it affect them in that way? Or even give them new kinds of synesthesia they’d never had before?”
Faraday looked thoughtful. “I’ve heard of people losing synesthesia due to depression, or even with age. But to suddenly develop new sensory modalities . . . I’d have to look into it.” He gave me a sidelong look. “What kinds of synesthesia are we talking about? Theoretically.”
Theoretically
was good; I liked that. It made it easier to pretend I wasn’t really talking about myself. “Like . . . seeing colors that aren’t on the regular spectrum. Or knowing a piece of fruit’s rotten inside, when nobody else can see anything wrong with it. Or . . .” I braced myself, and took the plunge—“being able to taste when somebody’s lying.”
His brows rocketed up. “Really?”
“Sort of,” I said, heat blooming in my face. “I don’t mean like mind reading or anything. You might be able to tell that someone isn’t telling the truth, but not what they were lying about. Or why.” And it had to be a deliberate deception, not just a joke or a mistake. But I’d said enough already.
Faraday frowned, and anxiety flickered inside me. But when he spoke, his voice was mild. “I can’t say I’ve heard of anyone who could do those things before,” he said, “but there is a certain logic to it. We know, for instance, that some birds and insects perceive a far greater range of colors than we do, including the ultraviolet spectrum. That kind of vision might make it possible to perceive slight differences in hue that others miss. And it’s also been demonstrated that when a person lies they give out subtle bodily cues, and their heart rate and blood pressure are affected. So, if someone happened to have unusually well-developed vision and a high degree of sensory overlap . . .” He ran a finger beneath his lower lip, looking thoughtful. “Then yes, perhaps they would be able to sense those kinds of things.”
I sat rigid, afraid to move in case the whole scene vanished and I woke up in Red Ward.
A certain logic to it
, he’d said, and
yes, perhaps
. And he’d meant it.
“Alison?” Faraday reached across the table, fingers hovering over mine. “What is it?”
“You,” I said hoarsely. “You . . . you don’t think I’m crazy. You don’t think I’m making this up.”
“Does that surprise you?”
“Of course it does!” Where the anger came from I didn’t know, but it was better than tears. “You’re a psychologist—”
“Neuropsychologist.”
“—and I’m a patient in a mental hospital. You’re supposed to think I’m crazy. You’re even supposed to be worried that I’m dangerous. How do you think I ended up here—that I just got off at the wrong bus stop? I
killed
someone.”
An enormous silence crashed down between us. I sat immobile, appalled at my own self-betrayal. But Faraday didn’t jump to his feet and shout for help, or even look alarmed. He just regarded me steadily for a moment, and then he said, “How?”
Surprise blanked my senses. “What?”
“How did you do it? The killing, I mean.”
“Wh—why are you asking me this?”
His eyes met mine, serene as a trusting child’s. “Because, to be quite honest, I’m finding it difficult to imagine you hurting anyone. So you’re going to have to explain to me how it happened.”
I couldn’t look at him any longer. I got up and walked to the window. The clouds outside were the color of bone, the birch trees delicate as nerve fibers. I leaned against the glass and closed my eyes.
“I couldn’t stand to be around her,” I said hollowly. “Nearly everybody I knew thought she was perfect, but right from the beginning I sensed there was something wrong about her. . . .”
“You don’t tell anyone about this,” Tori hissed at me. “Get it? I swear, if you even say one word, I’ll make you sorry.”
It was the night of our high school’s Spring Cabaret—our last chance to raise money for the big year-end trip to Toronto. The stage band, drama club, and choir had been practicing for weeks, and everyone had pitched in to help—from the art students who’d spent hours decorating the gym, to the mysterious technical wizard who had fixed our aging sound equipment and set it up with professional skill last night.
I was especially glad for that last one, because it made my job easier. Mr. Adams, the music director, had asked me to play audience during the dress rehearsal and help make sure every microphone and every speaker sounded right. I’d taken that task so seriously that I’d drawn up a whole chart for our sound technician Dave—how the main mike had to be at four when Tori was introducing the numbers and eight when Lara sang her solo because her voice was so much softer, that kind of thing. And I’d made especially sure that the microphones for the jazz choir worked, because the medley they were singing was one I’d arranged myself.
The gym was filling up, the backstage crowded with nervous performers, and the Cabaret was about to start when Dave came running up to Mr. Adams in a panic. He’d taken a last-minute trip to the washroom, only to find when he came back that somebody had taken his sound board and cut all the cords for the microphones too.
I didn’t even wait to be asked. I sprinted upstairs to the music department and flung open the door of the equipment room—only to find Tori crouching on the floor, surrounded by smashed-in speakers and tangled wires. Her upswept hair had tumbled out of its pins, the hem of her angel-white dress was gray with dust, and she clutched the two halves of a broken microphone as though she’d just pulled it apart.
I was so shocked that for a few seconds I couldn’t even hear the Noise. All I could do was stare, unable to comprehend why Tori would do such a thing. Not just because she’d been on the committee that put the Cabaret together in the first place, but because Lara Mackey’s solo was the opening act, and Lara had been Tori’s best friend since seventh grade. Sure, they’d had a bit of a quarrel when Tori started dating Brendan, but—
She didn’t give me time to finish the thought. “Don’t tell anyone,” she snapped. Then she flung the ruined microphone aside and stormed out.
I knew what would happen next. Tori would brush off her gown, fix her hair and glide backstage, ready for her role as emcee. I’d be left to report to Mr. Adams that we had no sound equipment. The Cabaret would go on, because it was too late to cancel, but when Lara came out for her solo, the jazz band would play right over her. She’d be humiliated, and once again, Tori Beaugrand would be the star of the show.