The Pusher
Posted: Sun Dec 02, 2012 10:58 am
A/N: Howdy. I figured it'd be a lot of fun to try writing in different styles and voices, so I decided I'm going to throw out a one-shot every so often between sections of my multi-chapter. They'll all use different characters, and try to explore different aspects of life at Yamaku. None of them will be related in any way. Thanks for checking out the topic! Feel free to leave any comments, criticism, or suggestions.
As a note concerning this particular story, there are some brand names used throughout. I don't know what the brands are in Japan, and I doubt most readers would, so consider it a localization.
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The Pusher
I
The nurse slides the knee brace off of my leg, but I’m not watching. The medicine cabinet is more interesting. It’s lined top to bottom with bottles and boxes of pills. Any kind you could imagine. A full stock in the cabinet, and probably more locked in a storeroom somewhere nearby. If I told you how much it all cost, you’d shit yourself. “Your knee looks just about healed, Suzu,” the nurse says, cradling my leg in his hands and running his thumbs up and down my kneecap.
I’m listening, but only just enough to keep the conversation going. The white box in the medicine cabinet with blue stripes on either end is Ambien, 10mg. I take that one myself. The matching box with pink stripes instead of blue is the same thing in 5mg, and I think the one above it with the blue top is Percocet. I’m not sure. I’ve never actually seen the box. “So I can get rid of the brace?”
The nurse smiles like he’s the best buddy I’d ever have. He smiles like that for everybody. Every time. “You don’t need to wear it,” he says, “but don’t get rid of it. If you have a sudden urge to sleep in the wrong place again, you might find yourself reaching for it.”
He looks like he's joking, but he means what he says. That’s where I stop listening. The nurse believes I hurt my knee in a bout of narcolepsy because that’s what I told him. That was horseshit. When I hurt my knee, I was at a concert in the city. Down in the pit. It was one of those hardcore bands that play speedy guitar riffs over the fastest single-pedal bass beat a drummer can manage. When the crowd started moshing, I moshed with them. That’s the best part of being in the pit. You can listen to music through your headphones all day long, but you haven’t really heard a song until some steroid popping meathead is pushing his hand through your face to the downbeat. That’s where you find the rhythm. Get hit on one. Push back on two. Take an elbow on three. Strike on four. Irregular time signatures are a bit harder to find your balance in, but after a few measures you manage.
Accidents happen, but that’s what makes it fun. My accident happened on a downbeat. I hit one guy with just a little too much oomph, lost my balance, and planted my foot hard. Before the guy I pushed toppled, I took a blow from behind to the shoulder. My knee stayed forward. The rest of me spun a one-eighty.
You can talk all the shit you want about the brutes and protein chuggers down in the pit while the music’s playing, but they’re all straight shooters. The dude I pushed stopped the mosh, and the guy who hit me held my hand until emergency services picked me up. They had to carry me off on a stretcher, but even as they lifted—tears streaming down my face—my other foot was still tapping the beat, and my one hand shot up sporting devil horns while the other fell out to the side with a middle finger. It just seemed easier to tell the nurse it was narcolepsy.
After he checks my leg, there isn’t much time for small talk before the nurse tells me he’s got other patients to take care of. Finals are coming up. With all the stress, students are coming in and out of his office all day long. “It’s good for business,” he jokes, and I agree. I think the red box is OxyContin.
Sliding off the bench, I bump his fist and say goodbye. His next patient is waiting outside the door. The kid’s name is Kiyoshi. We’ve never spoken. I don’t even know if we’ve ever been in the same room together. Nothing looks wrong with him, but he takes Valium. The big, 10mg ones. Last I’d seen he was running low. He must have been there to get his prescription filled. Good for him. Stay healthy, brother. I smile at him and wave when I walk past. He looks at me doe-eyed and lost, but after a moment of uncertainty he waves back. It’s nice knowing more about everybody you see than they know about you.
And I know a lot.
---
II
The sun has long set before I make it back to my room, and the clock reads 10:30. It’ll be an early day tomorrow. I want to sleep. After tossing my phone on my pillow, I slide my coat off and throw it on the mattress. It’s a white coat, with down feathers. So long that the bottom extends to my calf. Fluffy as Hell, and warm. It’s got this faux-fur stuff lining the hood. Cost ¥20,000 at the department store in the city, and it was worth every bit of it.
My phone starts ringing, and I could have sworn I’d put it on silent. Thing can’t shut up for more than five minutes.
I keep my own prescriptions on my nightstand. Five bottles, lined up in a row. The first on the left is Provigil. It’s a stimulant. I take it in the day to keep me awake. My phone keeps vibrating on the pillow.
Right next to the Provigil is my Ambien. That’s for insomnia. I don’t get insomnia on my own, but it’s a side effect of the next drug down the line. Prozac. The bass line cuts through the wall of distortion in my ringtone, and I let it play.
The fourth drug is the one that started everything. Xyrem, or sodium oxybate. Promotes healthy sleep, fights daytime drowsiness, and reduces incidents of cataplexy. The master drug for any narcoleptic worth her nightgown. My phone is still ringing, and when I can’t stand it any longer, I answer. “Hello?”
I’m surprised when it’s my father’s voice that cuts through the static. “Hey Suzu,” he says. “Thought I’d call to check up on how you were doing. How is everything?”
“Oh, hey dad,” I say. With my phone blowing up I hadn’t been expecting a real call, but my dad phoned me every couple of nights to catch up. “Not a whole lot new going on around here. Just getting ready for finals.”
“Hitting the books?”
“Of course.”
I can picture him smiling on his end of the line. “That’s my girl.”
The fifth capsule of pills sits a little further from the rest. It’s not for narcolepsy—at least not totally. It helps with that, but I take it for another problem, too. I grab the bottle before falling to my back on the mattress, and hold it above my face. Vitamin R. “You know me.”
My dad laughs. “Unfortunately.” There’s a pause. Then he asks, “What color is your hair these days?”
My Ritalin prescription is for 25mg a day. Taken in three doses. I try to pop the last one before six every night. Any later and it fucks my sleep pattern. It’s easy to take, if you’re boring. Just grab a pill and a glass of water and swallow it down. “It’s blue right now.”
“Blue?”
“Yeah, blue.”
I can hear him sigh through the phone, and I laugh. It was easy to pick what color I wanted to dye my hair. His favorite color is blue. I knew he would hate it. “You know, I really wish you’d just keep it its natural color.”
If you’re feeling a little more adventurous, take the pill and crush it. Grab a straw or roll up a piece of paper or something, and you can snort it. Bumping Ritalin gets the goods to the brain double quick. If you swallow the pill, it can take an hour. Who has that kind of time? It feels more potent, too. “Natural is so boring though. I really like it blue. I think the guys really like it.”
“Now you’re just being mean about it.”
I laugh. “Yeah,” I say. “I’m just pulling your leg. Sorry.”
“Aren’t hair appointments expensive? You know we don’t have money for this sort of thing. Besides, I bet guys would be very interested in your real hair. I think the blue puts a lot of people off. Why not show them the real you?”
If you have a syringe, you can IV it. Crush the pill up like you’re going to bump it, but dissolve the crumbs in warm water. Once you get it in the syringe, find a vein and shoot. IVing puts it right into the bloodstream. Kicks like a racehorse. Or so I’ve heard. If you IV, you’re dealing with needles. Needles scare me. I don’t mess with shooting, but at least it sounds better than plugging. “What if the real me likes to dye her hair blue?”
“Does the real you really like to dye her hair blue, or does she like to keep her father awake at night?”
I think about it for a moment, and shrug. The Ritalin shifts in its capsule, but doesn’t make noise. “What if the real me likes to keep you awake at night?”
He laughs, and it sounds like defeat. “Then I guess you’ll have to sleep for the both of us.”
Plugging starts the same way as IVing, but once you get the drug into the syringe, you discard the needle and lubricate the end. Then you insert it into your anal cavity, slide it forward until you feel it’s about an inch deep, and push the plunger. In your anus, there’s only a thin wall of cells before you hit a mine of blood vessels. You get the rush of injecting without worrying about all the ways shooting can fuck up your life. “I can do that.”
“Alright, I’ll let you get to it then.”
“Sure thing.”
“Have a good night, Suzu. I love you.”
Shelving is the same thing as plugging, except with your vagina. “I love you too, dad.”
I hang up on my father, and not a moment later my phone is beeping again. It’s a text message this time. I check the sender. Another third year from a different class. I open the message and it says, Meet tomorrow?
Finals are a busy time for everyone. The teachers spend their hours trying to get students ready for their big tests. The students try to cram everything they’ve been putting off for four months into a week. The nurse has a line of kids a mile long coming to see him for whatever strain the stress puts on their problems. Everyone under twenty calls me for Adderall.
I always give deals on Adderall whenever big tests come up. Normally I sell it at ¥600 a pill. That’s for the 20mg. During finals, ¥1000 will get you two, and with ¥1500 you can have four. I can hardly pick them up fast enough to sell them all. In the last half-hour alone, I’ve gotten four texts. None of them give details, but I know what they want. With all the meets people are setting up for tomorrow, I’ll be running back and forth across campus all day. A day like that, I can make enough money for three concert tickets. Maybe enough to start building toward a new guitar. I could probably dye my hair five shades over.
The phone would keep me awake all night if it could. Even on silent, the glow of the screen when a message comes in is oppressive in the dark. I don’t bother answering the text. He can wait until morning. Instead, I shut it off and hook it up to its charger.
My alarm is set for six. That gives me about seven and a half hours of sleep. Good enough. I take my doses of Xyrem, Prozac, and Ambien dry, and undress. It’s warm under my blankets, but I can’t sleep unless everything is perfect. Even with the Ambien. From my nightstand drawer, I pull out a pair of headphones and an mp3 player.
The headphones are pink, with rows of flowers drawn across the top of the band that end in revolvers. There are white skulls painted onto the center of the earpieces. They’re comfortable. Designer. ¥15,000 at the electronics store.
At night, even the softest creaks or footfalls can be earsplitting. Somebody closing their door or flushing a toilet can keep an entire floor awake for hours. I don’t deal with that. With a good beat, I can be out in no time. I need music to sleep. Not just any music. My music. The kind where the guitars are tuned to Drop C. The kind with double bass. The kind where the vocalist is screaming, and you have to look up the lyrics on the internet to figure out what he’s saying.
I’m dreaming before the first song comes to a close.
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III
I didn’t intend to become Yamaku’s black market for prescription drugs. Not at first. It all started with the Xyrem. Its scientific name is sodium oxybate, but nobody knows what the fuck that means. Hardly anybody knows what Xyrem is—at least not by that name. Walk out into a crowded street, and start asking people if they’ve ever heard of it. I’ll bet you ¥10,000 you strike out. But the only people who call it Xyrem are those of us who actually have to take it. Go back out into that street and ask those same people if they know it by its other name. They will. It’s GHB.
I’ve got enough of the stuff to arm a fuckin’ frat house. It really helps me, though. As long as I’m taking all of my pills, I can get down to having a narcoleptic attack maybe once in a blue moon. It still happens from time to time, but it’s the exception now, not the rule.
Of course, everything comes with strings attached. Xyrem keeps me functioning, but it’s got its side effects. Some of them are standard. Dizziness. Headaches. Nausea. It starts to get fun when you go further down the list. When taking Xyrem, sometimes users will piss themselves in their sleep. That only happened to me once. Some people can see hallucinations. I don’t.
The only side effect I’ve consistently suffered on Xyrem turned out to be the silver lining—sleepwalking.
I heard a story once. Stop me if you’ve heard it yourself. A woman pops an Ambien and goes to sleep, only she doesn’t stay in bed. She walks into her kitchen and downs a fifth of pomegranate vodka. There’s nothing left in the house worth drinking after that, so she hops in her car to hit up the liquor store. Ends up totaling the thing. Maybe because she’s drunk. Maybe because she’s asleep. Doesn’t matter. She crawls out of the wreck and figures it’s a good a time as any to take a leak, and squats down in the middle of the road. By this time the cops know that something’s up, so they come in to arrest her. She takes a swing at the first one who steps close enough. Knocks him square in the jaw. Since hitting an officer is some kind of big deal, they tackle her down to the ground and throw the cuffs on her. Only then does she wake up.
I never did anything cool like that while sleepwalking. As it turns out, I steal things. Whatever I can get my hands on. It was innocent enough. I’d wake up with a pen I found out in the hall, or somebody’s door sign. I didn’t mean to do it. It was always something small. Something innocent, and safe. Never anything of value. At least, not until I slept over in Molly’s room one night, and woke up with a pocket full of Darvocet.
When you arrive at Yamaku for the first time, you start to learn a lot of the things they don’t tell you before you actually enroll. When they’re trying to entice you to the school, they sit your family down and tell you all about it. Mostly they talk to your parents. You’re just kind of there. They pull out all of these pamphlets that tell you how great the school is. How it caters to people with your specific needs. How it’s so welcoming. Friendly. How you can get a normal education. And it’s
wonderful. Everyone eats it up. I can still see the gleam in my father’s eyes as he flipped through the pages, asking everything but where do I sign? The pamphlet is beautiful, but it’s what’s left off of it that really matters.
What the pamphlet doesn’t tell you is that at Yamaku, there’s a new prescription drug waiting around every corner. Everyone has something. Kid up and loses a leg? Have some Darvocet. Crippling migraines? Vicodin should do the trick. Girl has narcolepsy? Hand her some GHB and send her on her way.
And what the fuck do they expect to happen? A fifteen year old boy loses his legs in a car crash. Loses an eye. Loses his parents. You expect to heal him with a school that markets to cripples? That you can tell him he’s welcome, and he’ll sing your praises? Show him a friendly smile, and he’ll forget he has to relearn how to walk? Forget that he’s alone? If I were him, the only think I’d be looking for is enough Ambien to put myself to sleep for good.
At Yamaku, you can find it. Pain killers. Sleep aids. Study drugs. If you can think it, somebody here has it—and you can bet that somebody else is looking for it.
The first time I stole pills while sleepwalking, I gave them back. Molly and I had a good laugh about it. Still do. The second time it happened, I kept two.
I didn’t start selling at school. I’m not stupid. The flip side of having so many prescription pills around all the time is that you can’t tell what half of them are. You don’t take Darvocet for narcolepsy. I knew it was a painkiller, but beyond that I couldn’t pick it out from Demerol. Selling to students straight out of the gate would have been a quick way to get somebody killed. Nobody wanted that.
Concerts were my first venue. I couldn’t make a profit there, what with the price of admission, but I could buffer the cost of the ticket with a pill or three. The best part about selling at concerts is that nobody there actually needs to take pills, or if they do, I don’t know about it. One of the side effects of Darvocet is cardiac arrhythmia. Sell it to the wrong person at Yamaku, and someone has a heart attack, or maybe it’s a bad mix with whatever other drugs they’re taking. At a concert, I don’t have to worry about any of that. It’s all too far removed. They’re healthy. They should know better. If they don’t, it’s their own fucking fault.
It was harder easing into selling on campus, but when I realized I’d never make money dealing pills at concerts, marketing at school was the next big step. I stopped going to shows for weeks. Skimped out on lunch. Saved as much money as I could. The first thing I bought was a copy of the DSM-IV.
The DSM-IV is this big manual psychiatrists use to diagnose mental disorders. It covers all the problems somebody can have going on in their head that you could imagine, and quite a few you probably couldn’t. Yamaku doesn’t admit people for mental disorders, but that doesn’t really mean much. I’m not trying to diagnose people. I’m not trying to heal them. I’m just trying to supply their demand.
Besides, you can’t get into Yamaku just because your head is screwed on the wrong way, but that doesn’t mean you’re barred from the gates because you’re depressed. Like I said, everybody’s got something. That kid I was telling you about—the one in the car crash looking for enough Ambien to suicide? He’ll get in because he can’t walk. Because his eye is gone. Those legs and that eye were his price of admission. But what they don’t say on the pamphlet is that in that moment when his father was blasting through the windshield, and his mother’s face was turning to pulp somewhere between the radio and the radiator, and he saw it all because he was sitting in the back seat about to ask the mass of meat and teeth exploding into the dashboard in front of him for a tissue—what they don’t say is that after that moment his legs and his eye don’t mean shit. It’s his head that’s fucked.
Hell, all I ever did was fall asleep. They gave me Prozac.
I barely passed science, but that copy of the DSM became my Bible. I read that monster cover to cover in a week. It’s got dog tags and bookmarks all through it. Notes scrawled in the margins. When I didn’t understand something, I looked it up on the internet, or picked up a cheaper book to explain. One book I found has pictures of just about every pill you’re ever likely to be prescribed. Tells you all about it. Effects. Side effects. Safe dosages. Warnings, and what you can and can’t mix it with. If the nurse ever took a sick day, they could throw me into his office and nobody would ever know the difference. I can’t diagnose things like he can, but when it comes to the drugs, I know everything he does. In a lot of ways, I probably know more.
Once I had the knowledge to sell on campus, I needed the supply. As it turned out, that was the easy part. Yamaku is like a buffet of pills just ripe for the taking. The school runs a tight schedule, so students are out of their rooms for most of the day. Go to class, go to lunch, go to club activities, do whatever else you need to do before going to bed. For most students, the dorm rooms are just places to sleep. And store pills. If you’re looking for medication, you can get a long way with just a bump key and a little determination. As long as you have the balls. I do.
It’s amazing how much you can learn about somebody just from stealing their prescriptions. Take Kiyoshi for example—that kid who was waiting outside of the nurse’s office while I was getting my brace off. He has a little sister. She looks about nine years old. Maybe ten. I see them posing together in all the pictures he’s got lined up on his dresser. Kiyoshi keeps his Valium in his night stand, but he keeps the letters he gets from his friends in his desk drawer. He used to play baseball. Turns out, his team is pretty good. They made it to their prefecture finals. You can bet your ass I’ll be rooting for the Sparrowhawks this year.
The rest just about fell into place itself. It’s easy to find buyers. Some people, if you get to know them, you can just ask. Some people you can practically see it in their eyes. Try standing outside the dorms for a bit, or skulk through the hallways after class, and listen to see who’s bitching about the nurse not filling them a prescription. Start an innocent conversation in the cafeteria about your dosage of one pill or another, and look to see who’s paying attention. You’d be surprised if you paid a little attention yourself. There are buyers everywhere, because the last thing they don’t tell you in the pamphlet is that at Yamaku nobody is happy, and everyone’s too scared to admit it.
As a note concerning this particular story, there are some brand names used throughout. I don't know what the brands are in Japan, and I doubt most readers would, so consider it a localization.
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The Pusher
I
The nurse slides the knee brace off of my leg, but I’m not watching. The medicine cabinet is more interesting. It’s lined top to bottom with bottles and boxes of pills. Any kind you could imagine. A full stock in the cabinet, and probably more locked in a storeroom somewhere nearby. If I told you how much it all cost, you’d shit yourself. “Your knee looks just about healed, Suzu,” the nurse says, cradling my leg in his hands and running his thumbs up and down my kneecap.
I’m listening, but only just enough to keep the conversation going. The white box in the medicine cabinet with blue stripes on either end is Ambien, 10mg. I take that one myself. The matching box with pink stripes instead of blue is the same thing in 5mg, and I think the one above it with the blue top is Percocet. I’m not sure. I’ve never actually seen the box. “So I can get rid of the brace?”
The nurse smiles like he’s the best buddy I’d ever have. He smiles like that for everybody. Every time. “You don’t need to wear it,” he says, “but don’t get rid of it. If you have a sudden urge to sleep in the wrong place again, you might find yourself reaching for it.”
He looks like he's joking, but he means what he says. That’s where I stop listening. The nurse believes I hurt my knee in a bout of narcolepsy because that’s what I told him. That was horseshit. When I hurt my knee, I was at a concert in the city. Down in the pit. It was one of those hardcore bands that play speedy guitar riffs over the fastest single-pedal bass beat a drummer can manage. When the crowd started moshing, I moshed with them. That’s the best part of being in the pit. You can listen to music through your headphones all day long, but you haven’t really heard a song until some steroid popping meathead is pushing his hand through your face to the downbeat. That’s where you find the rhythm. Get hit on one. Push back on two. Take an elbow on three. Strike on four. Irregular time signatures are a bit harder to find your balance in, but after a few measures you manage.
Accidents happen, but that’s what makes it fun. My accident happened on a downbeat. I hit one guy with just a little too much oomph, lost my balance, and planted my foot hard. Before the guy I pushed toppled, I took a blow from behind to the shoulder. My knee stayed forward. The rest of me spun a one-eighty.
You can talk all the shit you want about the brutes and protein chuggers down in the pit while the music’s playing, but they’re all straight shooters. The dude I pushed stopped the mosh, and the guy who hit me held my hand until emergency services picked me up. They had to carry me off on a stretcher, but even as they lifted—tears streaming down my face—my other foot was still tapping the beat, and my one hand shot up sporting devil horns while the other fell out to the side with a middle finger. It just seemed easier to tell the nurse it was narcolepsy.
After he checks my leg, there isn’t much time for small talk before the nurse tells me he’s got other patients to take care of. Finals are coming up. With all the stress, students are coming in and out of his office all day long. “It’s good for business,” he jokes, and I agree. I think the red box is OxyContin.
Sliding off the bench, I bump his fist and say goodbye. His next patient is waiting outside the door. The kid’s name is Kiyoshi. We’ve never spoken. I don’t even know if we’ve ever been in the same room together. Nothing looks wrong with him, but he takes Valium. The big, 10mg ones. Last I’d seen he was running low. He must have been there to get his prescription filled. Good for him. Stay healthy, brother. I smile at him and wave when I walk past. He looks at me doe-eyed and lost, but after a moment of uncertainty he waves back. It’s nice knowing more about everybody you see than they know about you.
And I know a lot.
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II
The sun has long set before I make it back to my room, and the clock reads 10:30. It’ll be an early day tomorrow. I want to sleep. After tossing my phone on my pillow, I slide my coat off and throw it on the mattress. It’s a white coat, with down feathers. So long that the bottom extends to my calf. Fluffy as Hell, and warm. It’s got this faux-fur stuff lining the hood. Cost ¥20,000 at the department store in the city, and it was worth every bit of it.
My phone starts ringing, and I could have sworn I’d put it on silent. Thing can’t shut up for more than five minutes.
I keep my own prescriptions on my nightstand. Five bottles, lined up in a row. The first on the left is Provigil. It’s a stimulant. I take it in the day to keep me awake. My phone keeps vibrating on the pillow.
Right next to the Provigil is my Ambien. That’s for insomnia. I don’t get insomnia on my own, but it’s a side effect of the next drug down the line. Prozac. The bass line cuts through the wall of distortion in my ringtone, and I let it play.
The fourth drug is the one that started everything. Xyrem, or sodium oxybate. Promotes healthy sleep, fights daytime drowsiness, and reduces incidents of cataplexy. The master drug for any narcoleptic worth her nightgown. My phone is still ringing, and when I can’t stand it any longer, I answer. “Hello?”
I’m surprised when it’s my father’s voice that cuts through the static. “Hey Suzu,” he says. “Thought I’d call to check up on how you were doing. How is everything?”
“Oh, hey dad,” I say. With my phone blowing up I hadn’t been expecting a real call, but my dad phoned me every couple of nights to catch up. “Not a whole lot new going on around here. Just getting ready for finals.”
“Hitting the books?”
“Of course.”
I can picture him smiling on his end of the line. “That’s my girl.”
The fifth capsule of pills sits a little further from the rest. It’s not for narcolepsy—at least not totally. It helps with that, but I take it for another problem, too. I grab the bottle before falling to my back on the mattress, and hold it above my face. Vitamin R. “You know me.”
My dad laughs. “Unfortunately.” There’s a pause. Then he asks, “What color is your hair these days?”
My Ritalin prescription is for 25mg a day. Taken in three doses. I try to pop the last one before six every night. Any later and it fucks my sleep pattern. It’s easy to take, if you’re boring. Just grab a pill and a glass of water and swallow it down. “It’s blue right now.”
“Blue?”
“Yeah, blue.”
I can hear him sigh through the phone, and I laugh. It was easy to pick what color I wanted to dye my hair. His favorite color is blue. I knew he would hate it. “You know, I really wish you’d just keep it its natural color.”
If you’re feeling a little more adventurous, take the pill and crush it. Grab a straw or roll up a piece of paper or something, and you can snort it. Bumping Ritalin gets the goods to the brain double quick. If you swallow the pill, it can take an hour. Who has that kind of time? It feels more potent, too. “Natural is so boring though. I really like it blue. I think the guys really like it.”
“Now you’re just being mean about it.”
I laugh. “Yeah,” I say. “I’m just pulling your leg. Sorry.”
“Aren’t hair appointments expensive? You know we don’t have money for this sort of thing. Besides, I bet guys would be very interested in your real hair. I think the blue puts a lot of people off. Why not show them the real you?”
If you have a syringe, you can IV it. Crush the pill up like you’re going to bump it, but dissolve the crumbs in warm water. Once you get it in the syringe, find a vein and shoot. IVing puts it right into the bloodstream. Kicks like a racehorse. Or so I’ve heard. If you IV, you’re dealing with needles. Needles scare me. I don’t mess with shooting, but at least it sounds better than plugging. “What if the real me likes to dye her hair blue?”
“Does the real you really like to dye her hair blue, or does she like to keep her father awake at night?”
I think about it for a moment, and shrug. The Ritalin shifts in its capsule, but doesn’t make noise. “What if the real me likes to keep you awake at night?”
He laughs, and it sounds like defeat. “Then I guess you’ll have to sleep for the both of us.”
Plugging starts the same way as IVing, but once you get the drug into the syringe, you discard the needle and lubricate the end. Then you insert it into your anal cavity, slide it forward until you feel it’s about an inch deep, and push the plunger. In your anus, there’s only a thin wall of cells before you hit a mine of blood vessels. You get the rush of injecting without worrying about all the ways shooting can fuck up your life. “I can do that.”
“Alright, I’ll let you get to it then.”
“Sure thing.”
“Have a good night, Suzu. I love you.”
Shelving is the same thing as plugging, except with your vagina. “I love you too, dad.”
I hang up on my father, and not a moment later my phone is beeping again. It’s a text message this time. I check the sender. Another third year from a different class. I open the message and it says, Meet tomorrow?
Finals are a busy time for everyone. The teachers spend their hours trying to get students ready for their big tests. The students try to cram everything they’ve been putting off for four months into a week. The nurse has a line of kids a mile long coming to see him for whatever strain the stress puts on their problems. Everyone under twenty calls me for Adderall.
I always give deals on Adderall whenever big tests come up. Normally I sell it at ¥600 a pill. That’s for the 20mg. During finals, ¥1000 will get you two, and with ¥1500 you can have four. I can hardly pick them up fast enough to sell them all. In the last half-hour alone, I’ve gotten four texts. None of them give details, but I know what they want. With all the meets people are setting up for tomorrow, I’ll be running back and forth across campus all day. A day like that, I can make enough money for three concert tickets. Maybe enough to start building toward a new guitar. I could probably dye my hair five shades over.
The phone would keep me awake all night if it could. Even on silent, the glow of the screen when a message comes in is oppressive in the dark. I don’t bother answering the text. He can wait until morning. Instead, I shut it off and hook it up to its charger.
My alarm is set for six. That gives me about seven and a half hours of sleep. Good enough. I take my doses of Xyrem, Prozac, and Ambien dry, and undress. It’s warm under my blankets, but I can’t sleep unless everything is perfect. Even with the Ambien. From my nightstand drawer, I pull out a pair of headphones and an mp3 player.
The headphones are pink, with rows of flowers drawn across the top of the band that end in revolvers. There are white skulls painted onto the center of the earpieces. They’re comfortable. Designer. ¥15,000 at the electronics store.
At night, even the softest creaks or footfalls can be earsplitting. Somebody closing their door or flushing a toilet can keep an entire floor awake for hours. I don’t deal with that. With a good beat, I can be out in no time. I need music to sleep. Not just any music. My music. The kind where the guitars are tuned to Drop C. The kind with double bass. The kind where the vocalist is screaming, and you have to look up the lyrics on the internet to figure out what he’s saying.
I’m dreaming before the first song comes to a close.
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III
I didn’t intend to become Yamaku’s black market for prescription drugs. Not at first. It all started with the Xyrem. Its scientific name is sodium oxybate, but nobody knows what the fuck that means. Hardly anybody knows what Xyrem is—at least not by that name. Walk out into a crowded street, and start asking people if they’ve ever heard of it. I’ll bet you ¥10,000 you strike out. But the only people who call it Xyrem are those of us who actually have to take it. Go back out into that street and ask those same people if they know it by its other name. They will. It’s GHB.
I’ve got enough of the stuff to arm a fuckin’ frat house. It really helps me, though. As long as I’m taking all of my pills, I can get down to having a narcoleptic attack maybe once in a blue moon. It still happens from time to time, but it’s the exception now, not the rule.
Of course, everything comes with strings attached. Xyrem keeps me functioning, but it’s got its side effects. Some of them are standard. Dizziness. Headaches. Nausea. It starts to get fun when you go further down the list. When taking Xyrem, sometimes users will piss themselves in their sleep. That only happened to me once. Some people can see hallucinations. I don’t.
The only side effect I’ve consistently suffered on Xyrem turned out to be the silver lining—sleepwalking.
I heard a story once. Stop me if you’ve heard it yourself. A woman pops an Ambien and goes to sleep, only she doesn’t stay in bed. She walks into her kitchen and downs a fifth of pomegranate vodka. There’s nothing left in the house worth drinking after that, so she hops in her car to hit up the liquor store. Ends up totaling the thing. Maybe because she’s drunk. Maybe because she’s asleep. Doesn’t matter. She crawls out of the wreck and figures it’s a good a time as any to take a leak, and squats down in the middle of the road. By this time the cops know that something’s up, so they come in to arrest her. She takes a swing at the first one who steps close enough. Knocks him square in the jaw. Since hitting an officer is some kind of big deal, they tackle her down to the ground and throw the cuffs on her. Only then does she wake up.
I never did anything cool like that while sleepwalking. As it turns out, I steal things. Whatever I can get my hands on. It was innocent enough. I’d wake up with a pen I found out in the hall, or somebody’s door sign. I didn’t mean to do it. It was always something small. Something innocent, and safe. Never anything of value. At least, not until I slept over in Molly’s room one night, and woke up with a pocket full of Darvocet.
When you arrive at Yamaku for the first time, you start to learn a lot of the things they don’t tell you before you actually enroll. When they’re trying to entice you to the school, they sit your family down and tell you all about it. Mostly they talk to your parents. You’re just kind of there. They pull out all of these pamphlets that tell you how great the school is. How it caters to people with your specific needs. How it’s so welcoming. Friendly. How you can get a normal education. And it’s
wonderful. Everyone eats it up. I can still see the gleam in my father’s eyes as he flipped through the pages, asking everything but where do I sign? The pamphlet is beautiful, but it’s what’s left off of it that really matters.
What the pamphlet doesn’t tell you is that at Yamaku, there’s a new prescription drug waiting around every corner. Everyone has something. Kid up and loses a leg? Have some Darvocet. Crippling migraines? Vicodin should do the trick. Girl has narcolepsy? Hand her some GHB and send her on her way.
And what the fuck do they expect to happen? A fifteen year old boy loses his legs in a car crash. Loses an eye. Loses his parents. You expect to heal him with a school that markets to cripples? That you can tell him he’s welcome, and he’ll sing your praises? Show him a friendly smile, and he’ll forget he has to relearn how to walk? Forget that he’s alone? If I were him, the only think I’d be looking for is enough Ambien to put myself to sleep for good.
At Yamaku, you can find it. Pain killers. Sleep aids. Study drugs. If you can think it, somebody here has it—and you can bet that somebody else is looking for it.
The first time I stole pills while sleepwalking, I gave them back. Molly and I had a good laugh about it. Still do. The second time it happened, I kept two.
I didn’t start selling at school. I’m not stupid. The flip side of having so many prescription pills around all the time is that you can’t tell what half of them are. You don’t take Darvocet for narcolepsy. I knew it was a painkiller, but beyond that I couldn’t pick it out from Demerol. Selling to students straight out of the gate would have been a quick way to get somebody killed. Nobody wanted that.
Concerts were my first venue. I couldn’t make a profit there, what with the price of admission, but I could buffer the cost of the ticket with a pill or three. The best part about selling at concerts is that nobody there actually needs to take pills, or if they do, I don’t know about it. One of the side effects of Darvocet is cardiac arrhythmia. Sell it to the wrong person at Yamaku, and someone has a heart attack, or maybe it’s a bad mix with whatever other drugs they’re taking. At a concert, I don’t have to worry about any of that. It’s all too far removed. They’re healthy. They should know better. If they don’t, it’s their own fucking fault.
It was harder easing into selling on campus, but when I realized I’d never make money dealing pills at concerts, marketing at school was the next big step. I stopped going to shows for weeks. Skimped out on lunch. Saved as much money as I could. The first thing I bought was a copy of the DSM-IV.
The DSM-IV is this big manual psychiatrists use to diagnose mental disorders. It covers all the problems somebody can have going on in their head that you could imagine, and quite a few you probably couldn’t. Yamaku doesn’t admit people for mental disorders, but that doesn’t really mean much. I’m not trying to diagnose people. I’m not trying to heal them. I’m just trying to supply their demand.
Besides, you can’t get into Yamaku just because your head is screwed on the wrong way, but that doesn’t mean you’re barred from the gates because you’re depressed. Like I said, everybody’s got something. That kid I was telling you about—the one in the car crash looking for enough Ambien to suicide? He’ll get in because he can’t walk. Because his eye is gone. Those legs and that eye were his price of admission. But what they don’t say on the pamphlet is that in that moment when his father was blasting through the windshield, and his mother’s face was turning to pulp somewhere between the radio and the radiator, and he saw it all because he was sitting in the back seat about to ask the mass of meat and teeth exploding into the dashboard in front of him for a tissue—what they don’t say is that after that moment his legs and his eye don’t mean shit. It’s his head that’s fucked.
Hell, all I ever did was fall asleep. They gave me Prozac.
I barely passed science, but that copy of the DSM became my Bible. I read that monster cover to cover in a week. It’s got dog tags and bookmarks all through it. Notes scrawled in the margins. When I didn’t understand something, I looked it up on the internet, or picked up a cheaper book to explain. One book I found has pictures of just about every pill you’re ever likely to be prescribed. Tells you all about it. Effects. Side effects. Safe dosages. Warnings, and what you can and can’t mix it with. If the nurse ever took a sick day, they could throw me into his office and nobody would ever know the difference. I can’t diagnose things like he can, but when it comes to the drugs, I know everything he does. In a lot of ways, I probably know more.
Once I had the knowledge to sell on campus, I needed the supply. As it turned out, that was the easy part. Yamaku is like a buffet of pills just ripe for the taking. The school runs a tight schedule, so students are out of their rooms for most of the day. Go to class, go to lunch, go to club activities, do whatever else you need to do before going to bed. For most students, the dorm rooms are just places to sleep. And store pills. If you’re looking for medication, you can get a long way with just a bump key and a little determination. As long as you have the balls. I do.
It’s amazing how much you can learn about somebody just from stealing their prescriptions. Take Kiyoshi for example—that kid who was waiting outside of the nurse’s office while I was getting my brace off. He has a little sister. She looks about nine years old. Maybe ten. I see them posing together in all the pictures he’s got lined up on his dresser. Kiyoshi keeps his Valium in his night stand, but he keeps the letters he gets from his friends in his desk drawer. He used to play baseball. Turns out, his team is pretty good. They made it to their prefecture finals. You can bet your ass I’ll be rooting for the Sparrowhawks this year.
The rest just about fell into place itself. It’s easy to find buyers. Some people, if you get to know them, you can just ask. Some people you can practically see it in their eyes. Try standing outside the dorms for a bit, or skulk through the hallways after class, and listen to see who’s bitching about the nurse not filling them a prescription. Start an innocent conversation in the cafeteria about your dosage of one pill or another, and look to see who’s paying attention. You’d be surprised if you paid a little attention yourself. There are buyers everywhere, because the last thing they don’t tell you in the pamphlet is that at Yamaku nobody is happy, and everyone’s too scared to admit it.