“Weirdo”
They thought he hadn’t heard it, but he did, he always did.
The thinly veiled comments had stopped and it was now full-fledged vehemence
that he heard and what he saw was uncontained gleeful faces saying it.
He walked on. He had always walked on.
He sat at his desk and plugged in his earplugs to the dusty
CPU and fired up VK. He knew the rest of the people in his bay all shared music
through it, listened to the same songs, breaking out in peals of laughter at
the same time and from his peripheral vision he could see heads bobbing out of
the symmetrical cubicles, all at the same time, with the same gay looks of
mirth on all their faces, looking at each other and glowing with the joy of
their shared camaraderie. All of theirs except his, from his corner cubicle,
from where he had showed one of them how to use VK. Of course they promptly
used it to make him feel even more excluded. But he didn’t really mind.
When he had sat with the rest of the kids at movie time every
week, oldest among the lot, he was as curious as the rest of them, childlike, always
waiting to see what came next.
When he was told he would be tutoring with the nice
lady who was going to carve out time and money because he had “potential”, and
he nodded, he wanted to see what came next.
When he was told there weren’t enough funds for him to go to
college, because the rest of the kids at the home needed to go to school, he
said okay, waiting to see what was next. He helped clean, sew, mop, cook at the
home in return for continuing to live there even though he was past the age and
had to move on. The kids liked his unobtrusive presence and let him pick the
movies, but only after he had checked through all of their homework.
When the nice lady’s daughter came by a year later and said
the nice lady was no more, with tears in her eyes, and left him with an
envelope full of money, he looked up at the teary eyed woman and before he
could react she was gone. My mother saw potential in you, she had said, she had
great hopes that you would make it in engineering, she said.
At college, he sat through one class after the other, always waiting to hear what was next. In the company of his long silences, he absorbed every word, always waiting to see what was next. When the men in suits took over the entire college for a day and walked around looking important, and he was asked to interview, he found himself wondering what was next.
He heard whispers from the teachers about the sadness, the
potential, and the luck that was bestowed upon this orphan boy. He heard about
diversity in multinational corporations. He heard how his life would change.
And it did.
He began to notice things he hadn't before. He noticed that
mismatched socks were gross. That worn out Converse sneakers that were
drawn on with doodles were disgusting. That tiny hole in his shirt he hadn’t
noticed made him a hobo. The lack of a girlfriend meant he was gay. Not liking pizza made him a loser . That the word sick
didn’t mean someone was ill. Slay didn’t mean there was violence involved. That
calling somebody a bitch with a smile meant they were friends. That his
inability to find every little thing awesome, amazing, mind blowing meant he didn’t get it.
He felt bewildered. He was unsure now if he
wanted to see what came next.
He didn’t agree, he didn’t understand. He did not think he was the child of tragedy he was made out to be. He didn’t know how to be dramatic at every new song and baby goat and every new internet sensation. He didn’t feel like he was a hobo, or a prude, or gay.
He didn’t agree, he didn’t understand. He did not think he was the child of tragedy he was made out to be. He didn’t know how to be dramatic at every new song and baby goat and every new internet sensation. He didn’t feel like he was a hobo, or a prude, or gay.
He knew what was amazing
and it was not a cat video.
And now, as he sat looking at the screen with lines and
lines of code, he heard it again. In between all the laughter, a head nod and a
pointed finger in his direction, with a smile that tried to look friendly but
the lips saying,
“Fucking weirdo”.
They never knew that sometimes songs end and you can hear
these hateful words through the ear buds.
He pulled open his drafts on email and sent in his
resignation letter.
This time, he would know what was coming next.