7. Three Months Later (NOVEMBER 2011)

Normal People / 正常人

1Connell doesn’t know anyone at the party. The person who invited him isn’t the same person who answered the door and, with an indifferent shrug, let him inside. He still hasn’t seen the person who invited him, a person called Gareth, whos in his Critical Theory seminar. Connell knew going to a party on his own would be a bad idea, but on the phone Lorraine said it would be a good idea. I wont know anyone, he told her. And she said patiently: You wont get to know anyone if you dont go out and meet people. Now hes here, standing on his own in a crowded room not knowing whether to take his jacket off. It feels practically scandalous to be lingering here in solitude. He feels as if everyone around him is disturbed by his presence, and trying not to stare.

2Finally, just as he decides to leave, Gareth comes in. Connell’s intense relief at seeing Gareth triggers another wave of self-loathing, since he doesn’t even know Gareth very well or particularly like him. Gareth puts his hand out and desperately, bizarrely, Connell finds himself shaking it. Its a low moment in his adult life. People are watching them shake hands, Connell is certain of this. Good to see you, man, says Gareth. Good to see you. I like the backpack, very nineties. Connell is wearing a completely plain navy backpack with no features to distinguish it from any of the other numerous backpacks at the party.

3Uh, he says. Yeah, thanks.

4Gareth is one of these popular people whos involved in college societies.

5He went to one of the big private schools in Dublin and people are always greeting him on campus, like: Hey, Gareth! Gareth, hey! Theyll greet him from all the way across Front Square, just to get him to wave hello. Connell has seen it. People used to like me, he feels like saying as a joke. I used to be on my school football team. No one would laugh at that joke here.

6Can I get you a drink? says Gareth.

7Connell has a six-pack of cider with him, but hes reluctant to do anything that would draw attention to his backpack, in case Gareth might feel prompted to comment on it further. Cheers, he says. Gareth navigates over to the table at the side of the room and returns with a bottle of Corona. This okay? says Gareth. Connell looks at him for a second, wondering if the question is ironic or genuinely servile. Unable to decide, Connell says: Yeah, itll do, thanks.

8People in college are like this, unpleasantly smug one minute and then abasing themselves to show off their good manners the next. He sips the beer while Gareth watches him. Without any apparent sarcasm Gareth grins and says: Enjoy.

9This is what its like in Dublin. All Connell’s classmates have identical accents and carry the same size MacBook under their arms. In seminars they express their opinions passionately and conduct impromptu debates. Unable to form such straightforward views or express them with any force, Connell initially felt a sense of crushing inferiority to his fellow students, as if he had upgraded himself accidentally to an intellectual level far above his own, where he had to strain to make sense of the most basic premises. He did gradually start to wonder why all their classroom discussions were so abstract and lacking in textual detail, and eventually he realised that most people were not actually doing the reading. They were coming into college every day to have heated debates about books they had not read. He understands now that his classmates are not like him. Its easy for them to have opinions, and to express them with confidence. They dont worry about appearing ignorant or conceited. They are not stupid people, but theyre not so much smarter than him either. They just move through the world in a different way, and hell probably never really understand them, and he knows they will never understand him, or even try.

10He only has a few classes every week anyway, so he fills the rest of the time by reading. In the evenings he stays late in the library, reading assigned texts, novels, works of literary criticism. Not having friends to eat with, he reads over lunch. At the weekends when theres football on, he checks the team news and then goes back to reading instead of watching the build-up.

11One night the library started closing just as he reached the passage in Emma when it seems like Mr Knightley is going to marry Harriet, and he had to close the book and walk home in a state of strange emotional agitation. Hes amused at himself, getting wrapped up in the drama of novels like that. It feels intellectually unserious to concern himself with fictional people marrying one another. But there it is: literature moves him. One of his professors calls itthe pleasure of being touched by great art’. In those words it almost sounds sexual. And in a way, the feeling provoked in Connell when Mr Knightley kisses Emmas hand is not completely asexual, though its relation to sexuality is indirect. It suggests to Connell that the same imagination he uses as a reader is necessary to understand real people also, and to be intimate with them.

12Youre not from Dublin, are you? says Gareth.

13No. Sligo.

14Oh yeah? My girlfriends from Sligo.

15Connell isn’t sure what Gareth expects him to say to this.

16Oh, he replies weakly. Well, there you go.

17People in Dublin often mention the west of Ireland in this strange tone of voice, as if its a foreign country, but one they consider themselves very knowledgeable about. In the Workmans the other night, Connell told a girl he was from Sligo and she made a funny face and said: Yeah, you look like it.

18Increasingly it seems as if Connell is actually drawn towards this supercilious type of person. Sometimes on a night out, among a crowd of smiling women in tight dresses and perfectly applied lipstick, his flatmate Niall will point out one person and say: I bet you think shes attractive. And it will always be some flat-chested girl wearing ugly shoes and disdainfully smoking a cigarette. And Connell has to admit, yes, he does find her attractive, and he may even try to talk to her, and he will go home feeling even worse than before.

19Awkwardly he looks around the room and says: You live here, do you?

20Yeah, says Gareth. Not bad for campus accommodation, is it?

21No, yeah. Its really nice actually.

22Whereabouts are you living yourself?

23Connell tells him. Its a flat near college, just off Brunswick Place. He and Niall have one box room between them, with two single beds pushed up against opposite walls. They share a kitchen with two Portuguese students who are never home. The flat has some problems with damp and often gets so cold at night that Connell can see his own breath in the dark, but Niall is a decent person at least. Hes from Belfast, and he also thinks people in Trinity are weird, which is reassuring. Connell half-knows some of Niall’s friends by now, and hes acquainted with most of his own classmates, but no one he would have a proper conversation with.

24Back home, Connell’s shyness never seemed like much of an obstacle to his social life, because everyone knew who he was already, and there was never any need to introduce himself or create impressions about his personality. If anything, his personality seemed like something external to himself, managed by the opinions of others, rather than anything he individually did or produced. Now he has a sense of invisibility, nothingness, with no reputation to recommend him to anyone. Though his physical appearance has not changed, he feels objectively worse-looking than he used to be. He has become self-conscious about his clothes. All the guys in his class wear the same waxed hunting jackets and plum-coloured chinos, not that Connell has a problem with people dressing how they want, but he would feel like a complete prick wearing that stuff. At the same time, it forces him to acknowledge that his own clothes are cheap and unfashionable. His only shoes are an ancient pair of Adidas trainers, which he wears everywhere, even to the gym.

25He still goes home at the weekends, because he works in the garage Saturday afternoons and Sunday mornings. Most people from school have left town now, for college or for work. Karen is living down in Castlebar with her sister, Connell hasn’t seen her since the Leaving Cert. Rob and Eric are both studying Business in Galway and never seem to be in town. Some weekends Connell doesn’t see anyone from school at all. He sits at home in the evening watching television with his mother. Whats it like living on your own? he asked her last week. She smiled. Oh, its fantastic, she said. No one leaving towels on the couch. No dirty dishes in the sink, its great. He nodded, humourless. She gave him a playful little shove. What do you want me to say?

26she says. Im crying myself to sleep at night? He rolled his eyes. Obviously not, he muttered. She told him she was glad he had moved away, she thought it would be good for him. Whats good about moving away? he said. Youve lived here all your life and you turned out fine. She gawked at him. Oh, and youre planning to bury me here, are you? she said. Jesus, Im only thirty-five.

27He tried not to smile, but he did find it funny. I could move away tomorrow, thanks very much, she added. It would save me looking at your miserable face every weekend. He had to laugh then, he couldn’t help it.

28Gareth is saying something Connell cant hear now. Watch the Throne is playing very loudly over a tinny pair of speakers. Connell leans forward a little, towards Gareth, and says: What?

29My girlfriend, you should meet her, says Gareth. Ill introduce you.

30Glad of a break in the conversation, Connell follows Gareth out the main door and onto the front steps. The building faces the tennis courts, which are locked now for the night and look eerily cool in the emptiness, reddish under the street lights. Down the steps some people are smoking and talking.

31Hey, Marianne, says Gareth.

32She looks up from her cigarette, mid-sentence. Shes wearing a corduroy jacket over a dress, and her hair is pinned back. Her hand, holding the cigarette, looks long and ethereal in the light.

33Oh, right, says Connell. Hi.

34Instantly, unbelievably, Marianne’s face breaks into a gigantic smile, exposing her crooked front teeth. Shes wearing lipstick. Everyone is watching her now. She had been speaking, but shes stopped to stare at him.

35Jesus Christ, she says. Connell Waldron! From beyond the grave.

36He coughs and, in a panic to appear normal, says: When did you take up smoking?

37To Gareth, to her friends, she adds: We went to school together. Fixing her gaze on Connell again, looking radiantly pleased, she says: Well, how are you? He shrugs and mumbles: Yeah, alright, good. She looks at him as if her eyes have a message in them. Would you like a drink? she says. He holds up the bottle Gareth gave him. Ill get you a glass, she says. Come on inside. She goes up the steps to him. Over her shoulder she says: Back in a second. From this remark, and from the way she was standing on the steps, he can tell that all these people at the party are her friends, she has a lot of friends, and shes happy. Then the front door shuts behind them and theyre in the hallway, alone.

38He follows her to the kitchen, which is empty and hygienically quiet.

39Matching teal surfaces and labelled appliances. The closed window reflects the lighted interior, blue and white. He doesn’t need a glass but she takes one from the cupboard and he doesn’t protest. Taking her jacket off, she asks him how he knows Gareth. Connell says they have classes together. She hangs her jacket on the back of a chair. Shes wearing a longish grey dress, in which her body looks narrow and delicate.

40Everyone seems to know him, she says. Hes extroverted.

41Hes one of these campus celebrities, says Connell.

42That makes her laugh, and its like everything is fine between them, like they live in a slightly different universe where nothing bad has happened but Marianne suddenly has a cool boyfriend and Connell is the lonely, unpopular one.

43Hed love that, says Marianne.

44He seems to be on a lot of like, committees for things.

45She smiles, she squints up at him. Her lipstick is very dark, a wine colour, and shes wearing make-up on her eyes.

46Ive missed you, she says.

47This directness, coming so soon and so unexpectedly, makes him blush. He starts pouring the beer into the glass to divert his attention.

48Yeah, you too, he says. I was kind of worried when you left school and all that. You know, I was pretty down about it.

49Well, we never hung out much during school hours.

50No. Yeah. Obviously.

51And what about you and Rachel? says Marianne. Are you still together?

52No, we broke up there during the summer.

53In a voice just false enough to sound nearly sincere, Marianne says: Oh.

54Im sorry.

55*

56After Marianne left school in April, Connell entered a period of low spirits.

57Teachers spoke to him about it. The guidance counsellor told Lorraine she wasconcerned’. People in school were probably talking about it too, he didn’t know. He couldn’t summon up the energy to act normal. At lunch he sat in the same place as always, eating sad mouthfuls of food, not listening to his friends when they spoke. Sometimes he wouldn’t notice even when they called his name, and they would have to throw something at him or clip him on the head to get his attention. Everyone must have known there was something wrong with him. He felt a debilitating shame about the kind of person hed turned out to be, and he missed the way Marianne had made him feel, and he missed her company. He called her phone all the time, he sent her text messages every day, but she never replied. His mother said he was barred from visiting her house, though he didn’t think he would have tried that anyway.

58For a while he tried to get over it by drinking too much and having anxious, upsetting sex with other girls. At a house party in May he slept with Barry Kennys sister Sinead, who was twenty-three and had a degree in Speech and Language Therapy. Afterwards he felt so bad he threw up, and he had to tell Sinead he was drunk even though he wasn’t really. There was no one he could talk to about that. He was excruciatingly lonely. He had recurring dreams about being with Marianne again, holding her peacefully the way he used to when they were tired, and speaking with her in low voices. Then hed remember what had happened, and wake up feeling so depressed he couldn’t move a single muscle in his body.

59One night in June he came home drunk and asked Lorraine if she saw Marianne much at work.

60Sometimes, said Lorraine. Why?

61And is she alright, or what?

62Ive already told you I think shes upset.

63She wont reply to any of my texts or anything, he said. When I call her, like if she sees its me, she wont pick up.

64Because you hurt her feelings.

65Yeah, but its kind of overreacting, isn’t it?

66Lorraine shrugged and looked back at the TV.

67Do you think it is? he said.

68Do I think what?

69Do you think its overreacting, what shes doing?

70Lorraine kept looking straight at the TV. Connell was drunk, he doesn’t remember what she was watching. Slowly she said: You know, Marianne is a very vulnerable person. And you did something very exploitative there and you hurt her. So maybe its good that youre feeling bad about it.

71I didn’t say I felt bad about it, he said.

72He and Rachel started seeing each other in July. Everyone in school had known she liked him, and she seemed to view the attachment between them as a personal achievement on her part. As to the actual relationship, it mostly took place before nights out, when she would put make-up on and complain about her friends and Connell would sit around drinking cans. Sometimes he looked at his phone while she was talking and she would say: Youre not even listening. He hated the way he acted around her, because she was right, he really didn’t listen, but when he did, he didn’t like anything she actually said.

73He only had sex with her twice, neither time enjoyable, and when they lay in bed together he felt a constricting pain in his chest and throat that made it difficult to breathe. He had thought that being with her would make him feel less lonely, but it only gave his loneliness a new stubborn quality, like it was planted down inside him and impossible to kill.

74Eventually the night of the Debs came. Rachel wore an extravagantly expensive dress and Connell stood in her front garden while her mother took their photograph. Rachel kept mentioning that he was going to Trinity, and her father showed him some golf clubs. Then they went to the hotel and ate dinner. Everyone got very drunk and Lisa passed out before dessert. Under the table Rob showed Eric and Connell naked photographs of Lisa on his phone.

75Eric laughed and tapped parts of Lisas body on-screen with his fingers.

76Connell sat there looking at the phone and then said quietly: Bit fucked-up showing these to people, isn’t it? With a loud sigh Rob locked the phone and put it back in his pocket. Youve gotten awfully fucking gay about things lately, he said.

77At midnight, sloppy drunk but hypocritically disgusted by the drunkenness of everyone around him, Connell wandered out of the ballroom and down a corridor into the smoking garden. He had lit a cigarette and was in the process of shredding some low-hanging leaves from a nearby tree when the door slid open and Eric came out to join him. Eric gave a knowing laugh on seeing him, and then sat on an upturned flowerpot and lit a cigarette himself.

78Shame Marianne didn’t come in the end, Eric said.

79Connell nodded, hating to hear her name mentioned and unwilling to indulge it with a response.

80What was going on there? said Eric.

81Connell looked at him silently. A beam of white light was shining down from the bulb above the door and illuminating Erics face with a ghostly pallor.

82What do you mean? said Connell.

83With herself and yourself.

84Connell hardly recognised his own voice when he said: I dont know what youre talking about.

85Eric grinned and his teeth glittered wetly in the light.

86Do you think we dont know you were riding her? he said. Sure everyone knows.

87Connell paused and took another drag on his cigarette. This was probably the most horrifying thing Eric could have said to him, not because it ended his life, but because it didn’t. He knew then that the secret for which he had sacrificed his own happiness and the happiness of another person had been trivial all along, and worthless. He and Marianne could have walked down the school corridors hand in hand, and with what consequence? Nothing really.

88No one cared.

89Fair enough, said Connell.

90How long was that going on for?

91I dont know. A while.

92And whats the story there? said Eric. You were just doing it for the laugh, or what?

93You know me.

94He stubbed out his cigarette and went back inside to collect his jacket.

95After that he left without saying goodbye to anyone, including Rachel, who broke up with him shortly afterwards. That was it, people moved away, he moved away. Their life in Carricklea, which they had imbued with such drama and significance, just ended like that with no conclusion, and it would never be picked back up again, never in the same way.

96*

97Yeah, well, he says to Marianne. I wasn’t that compatible with Rachel, I dont think.

98Marianne smiles now, a coy little smile. Hm, she says.

99What?

100I probably could have told you that.

101Yeah, you should have, he says. You weren’t really replying to my texts at the time.

102Well, I felt somewhat abandoned.

103I felt a bit abandoned myself, didn’t I? says Connell. You disappeared. And I never had anything to do with Rachel until ages after that, by the way. Not that it matters now or anything, but I didn’t.

104Marianne sighs and moves her head from side to side, ambivalently.

105That wasn’t really why I left school, she says.

106Right. I suppose you were better off out of it.

107It was more of a last-straw thing.

108Yeah, he says. I wondered if that was what it was.

109She smiles again, a lopsided smile like shes flirting. Really? she says.

110Maybe youre telepathic.

111I did used to think I could read your mind at times, Connell says.

112In bed, you mean.

113He takes a sip from his glass now. The beer is cold but the glass is room temperature. Before this evening he didn’t know how Marianne would act if he ever met her in college, but now it seems inevitable, of course it would be like this. Of course she would talk drolly about their sex life, like its a cute joke between them and not awkward. And in a way he likes it, he likes knowing how to act around her.

114Yeah, Connell says. And afterwards. But maybe thats normal.

115Its not.

116They both smile, a half-repressed smile of amusement. Connell puts the empty bottle on the countertop and looks at Marianne. She smooths down her dress.

117You look really well, he says.

118I know. Its classic me, I came to college and got pretty.

119He starts laughing. He doesn’t even want to laugh but something about the weird dynamic between them is making him do it. Classic meis a very Marianne thing to say, a little self-mocking, and at the same time gesturing to some mutual understanding between them, an understanding that she is special. Her dress is cut low at the front, showing her pale collarbones like two white hyphens.

120You were always pretty, he says. I should know, Im a shallow guy. Youre very pretty, youre beautiful.

121Shes not laughing now. She makes a kind of funny expression with her face and pushes her hair back off her forehead.

122Oh well, she says. I havent heard that one in a while.

123Does Gareth not tell you youre beautiful? Or hes too busy with like, amateur drama or something.

124Debating. And youre being very cruel.

125Debating? says Connell. Jesus, dont tell me hes involved in this Nazi thing, is he?

126Marianne’s lips become a thin line. Connell doesn’t read the campus papers much, but he has still managed to hear about the debating society inviting a neo-Nazi to give a speech. Its all over social media. There was even an article in The Irish Times. Connell hasn’t commented on any of the Facebook threads, but he has liked several comments calling for the invite to be rescinded, which is probably the most strident political action he has ever taken in his life.

127Well, we dont see eye to eye on everything, she says.

128Connell laughs, happy for some reason to find her being so uncharacteristically weak and unscrupulous.

129I thought I was bad going out with Rachel Moran, he says. Your boyfriends a Holocaust denier.

130Oh, hes just into free speech.

131Yeah, thats good. Thank god for white moderates. As I believe Dr King once wrote.

132She laughs then, sincerely. Her little teeth flash again and she lifts a hand to cover her mouth. He swallows some more of the drink and takes in her sweet expression, which he has missed, and it feels like a nice scene between them, although later on hell probably hate everything he said to her. Okay, she says, weve both failed on ideological purity. Connell considers saying: I hope hes really good in bed, Marianne. She would definitely find it funny.

133For some reason, probably shyness, he doesn’t say it. She looks at him with narrowed eyes and says: Are you seeing anyone problematic at the moment?

134No, he says. Not even anyone good.

135Marianne gives a curious smile. Finding it hard to meet people? she says.

136He shrugs and then, vaguely, nods his head. Bit different from home, isn’t it? he says.

137I have some girlfriends I could introduce you to.

138Oh yeah?

139Yeah, I have those now, she says.

140Not sure Id be their type.

141They look at one another. Shes a little flushed, and her lipstick is smudged just slightly on her lower lip. Her gaze unsettles him like it used to, like looking into a mirror, seeing something that has no secrets from you.

142What does that mean? she says.

143I dont know.

144Whats not to like about you?

145He smiles and looks into his glass. If Niall could see Marianne, he would say: Dont tell me. You like her. Its true she is Connell’s type, maybe even the originary model of the type: elegant, bored-looking, with an impression of perfect self-assurance. And hes attracted to her, he can admit that. After these months away from home, life seems much larger, and his personal dramas less significant. Hes not the same anxious, repressed person he was in school, when his attraction to her felt terrifying, like an oncoming train, and he threw her under it. He knows shes acting funny and coy because she wants to show him that shes not bitter. He could say: Im really sorry for what I did to you, Marianne. He always thought, if he did see her again, thats what he would say. Somehow she doesn’t seem to admit that possibility, or maybe hes being cowardly, or both.

146I dont know, he says. Good question, I dont know.