Page 36 of Katabasis
I n the winter of their first year, Professor Grimes’s head lab assistant—a fourth-year named Joshua—abruptly quit the program and fled to Canada.
It was a big scandal at the time. Rumor had it Joshua’s pregnant girlfriend, fed up with his long hours, imposed an ultimatum that he needed to pay more attention to her and, when that didn’t work, packed everything up and fled to her parents’ home in Ottawa.
Joshua dropped everything for love and followed her there.
This involved spending all his savings on a last-minute flight and racing to Heathrow at midnight.
It was not this drama but the fact that anyone would leave Cambridge for Canada that got the department in a tizzy.
Did Canada even have universities, or did everyone just ski and eat maple syrup and run away from bears all year round?
Anyhow, as far as anyone knew Joshua was now happily married and working as a tour guide at the Chateau Laurier.
The relevant part was that Joshua left without wrapping up his projects, or indeed even informing Professor Grimes that he was leaving. This would have been salvageable, if Professor Grimes were not on deadline for a conference presentation at the Royal Academy of Magick in London.
Alice and Peter were thus recruited to fill in the gaps.
They champed at the bit. Who cared if it was unpaid overtime?
Who cared if it meant thirty extra hours a week for which they would not be credited, at the same time that they were still burdened with coursework?
Professor Grimes wanted their help with real research!
The thing they’d trained their whole lives to do!
They would have been such fools to say no.
They were only friendly acquaintances when they began the work.
Alice had seen little of Peter since their first encounter in the garden, as their classes kept taking them in separate directions.
She approached their first meeting with trepidation.
What if Peter condescended to her? Worse off, what if she came off as stupid?
She needn’t have worried. Difficulty had a way of forging fast friendships; there was no time for interpersonal awkwardness when there was so much to do.
How pleasant was the exhaustion of those first days.
Every day at five Alice and Peter met in Professor Grimes’s basement laboratory, loaded down with stacks of manuscripts, hands dusty with chalk.
Those nights they worked frantically for hours and hours until they couldn’t see straight.
Those nights they spent on the floor of the lab laughing at their own mistakes, eating chips and curry from halal carts and sometimes, if they felt like treating themselves, chicken tikka masala from the Indian place up north of the bridge.
This was the best life had to offer: chalk smears on their faces, turmeric-stained fingerprints on graph paper.
Complete happiness was some form of study, said Aristotle.
And they were so happy; covering entire blackboards with chalk in an inspired frenzy, then erasing the whole thing to start over again.
Suppressing their giggles, putting on a straight face every time they heard Professor Grimes’s footsteps coming down the stairs.
It was in the midnight hours, when the mind fractured and things stopped making sense and the boundaries of the possible became fluid, that they did their best work. And in these hours, Alice experienced for the first time what she thought it might be like to fall in love.
She was not new to the language of courtship.
There were boyfriends in high school, boyfriends in college; nervous young men in button-downs smelling of aftershave who traipsed one after another in a forgettable procession of silent films, fumbling hands.
Dimly she understood this kind of socializing turned into “going steady,” into marriage—she just couldn’t understand how, when it all felt an exercise in concealing your distaste.
Peter did not belong to this genre. This was an entirely different type of feeling, and Alice could not consign what they had to the trash heap of romance.
This was love, a love she had never known; At last , she thought, this is the real thing —this gradual unfolding of another soul, charting one’s course into privileged inner territory, making discoveries of which you felt you were the first. Alice loved her work for just this reason, so why wouldn’t she fall in love with people, too?
She learned that Peter liked to hum Mendelssohn as he worked, but would blush and stop if she started humming along.
She learned that Peter loved lentils, but hated mashed potatoes and bananas because they had a quality he found “deceptively mushy.” She learned that at approximately two in the morning Peter transitioned into what they called his “manic state,” which was when his hair fluffed up and his eyes went wide and started windmilling and he got so excited about everything they were working on that he was unable to communicate with anything more than a frenzied, “AHHH!”
And if falling in love was discovery, was letting yourself be discovered the equivalent to being loved?
For it tickled Alice to hear Peter make observations about her; to announce facts she’d never noticed about herself.
Did she know, for instance, that she flopped her hands like a jellyfish whenever she disagreed with an argument?
Did she know that she always ended up with the same diagonal streak across her forehead, left by pushing her hair back with the same chalky fingers?
Peter determined that when Alice got sleepy, she lied—not in any malicious way, but in absurd ways; words just streamed from her half-conscious mouth in no sensical order.
He was so amused by Alice’s unconscious lying that for weeks he recorded the sillier things she said, all so he could announce at the end of the month: “I have concluded that your lying, sleeping self has a single motive. And it is to continue sleeping for as long as possible. You will answer in any way that convinces your interlocutor to leave you alone. For instance, see here, my transcript from Wednesday—I ask you if you are an eggplant. And you agree you are an eggplant, but that I shouldn’t worry, and that everything is fine.
In the past month I have heard you agree that you are the princess of Belgravia, that your toes are really baby hamsters, and that over the holidays, you will join me skiing on the sun.
You are incorrigible, Law. Your unconscious id is fiercely protective of being left alone. ”
There were no thoughts they could not share.
They reached that rare state of comfort with another person, in which speaking out loud was just the same as thinking in your head—nothing filtered, nothing hidden.
Often, instead of going home to sleep, they would stay up until the latest hours of the morning talking.
They argued over the Monty Hall problem.
Peter thought it obvious you should switch; Alice refused to be convinced.
They argued over whether numbers had colors and personalities.
Peter insisted they did: three was blue, five was red, two was yellow, and four was orange; eight was a ponderous bore, and nine was a voluptuous seductress—and what color?
Oh, obviously, burgundy. Nine was wine. Alice thought he was making this up for attention.
They argued over whether, on the question of language’s relationship to reality, Wittgenstein and Lacan were climbing the same mountain from different sides (possibly, they concluded, but neither of them could comprehend Lacan well enough to say for certain).
Peter was the best kind of interlocutor: generous, open-minded, inquisitive. He thought every new discipline was fascinating, and he asked her questions about her own field she’d never considered before.
“What’s Jakobson say about language?” he would ask. “What’s metonymy? What’s metaphor? What does it mean for the unconscious to be structured like a language? What is a language?”
When they spoke he would stare, unblinking, at her face in a manner that, every now and then, made her stutter and drop what she was holding.
It was hard for her to receive Peter’s attention.
She had wondered for so long what it would take to get it, and now, although she had it in spades, it paralyzed her.
He taught her that maths could be fun, sometimes, so long as you were solving paradoxes about potatoes.
Suppose you have a hundred kilos of potatoes.
They are 99 percent water. Suppose overnight they dry, so that they are now only 98 percent water.
How many kilos of potatoes do you have? Only fifty!
Fifty? Yes, fifty, down from one hundred!
But you’ve only lost 1 percent water. But how could this be?
“It’s simple arithmetic,” he said, but Alice did not believe.
Alice, in turn, taught him about Chinese acrostic poems—written so as to be intelligible no matter which direction you read them in.
She taught him about the intricacies of Chinese grammar, or really how there was none, and how in Chinese the conceptual metaphors for time and space were the opposite of in English.
The Chinese believe you can see the past, but not the future, she explained; therefore you can only walk backward into the future.
And Peter, fascinated, declared he was going to learn Chinese so he could understand her better, until a brief exercise with tones—and tone-deafness—disabused him of the hope it could be so easy.