D. Pierson - The Boy Who Couldn't Sleep and Never Had To

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A wildly original and hilarious debut novel about the typical high school experience: the homework, the awkwardness, and the mutant creatures from another galaxy.
When Darren Bennett meets Eric Lederer, there’s an instant connection. They share a love of drawing, the bottom rung on the cruel high school social ladder and a pathological fear of girls. Then Eric reveals a secret: He doesn’t sleep. Ever. When word leaks out about Eric’s condition, he and Darren find themselves on the run. Is it the government trying to tap into Eric’s mind, or something far darker? It could be that not sleeping is only part of what Eric’s capable of, and the truth is both better and worse than they could ever imagine.

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But when they start playing it’s not weird or obtuse or arty or difficult to get, it’s fun and simple and pretty catchy. And kids start dancing, and I guess it’s not really good dancing in the technical sense but they commit really hard to it and it doesn’t look intimidating. Chelsea 2 has her hair up in pigtails and as she moves around the ends of the pigtails bounce off her cheeks, and her cheeks have freckles, and when she grabs my hand and pulls me towards the center of the room where kids are bouncing up and down and side to side and girls are flipping their skirts around their ankles and laughing, I go with her and I feel like a retard and a spaz and all those other things but I sort of don’t give a shit, and I think of that one time with that one DJ when I didn’t dance, all those theater kids and Christine, and how different this is and how long ago that was except I guess it’s not that different because when the song is over and the singer says “Thank you, we’re Ten Who Dared and we’re from Cave Creek” and everybody cheers, someone taps me on the shoulder and I turn around and it’s Christine.

“I wanted to come say hi to you before it seemed, like brutally obvious that I wasn’t coming to say hi to you,” she says. “Besides, I miss you. Can we go talk somewhere?”

It’s kind of cold outside but I’m all sweaty from dancing or whatever you want to call it so it actually feels nice.

“So how’ve you been?” I say, the words sort of catching in my throat.

“Okay I guess,” she says. “I just really want to apologize for everything that happened with me and Eric. Everything just got fucked up so fast, and when he started acting really weird towards you… I mean, I couldn’t understand it. I can’t believe you’re still friends with him.”

“He has his reasons,” I say.

“Yeah, well. It’s good to see you guys. Even if you can’t, like, talk to me. Where is he, anyway? I saw him when I came in, but…”

“I think he’s smoking with Aaron and Paul by the fire exit.”

“Aw, neat. Those guys love him. Everybody loves him.”

“Yeah, it’s cool. Your friends are really nice.” I’ve run out of things to say, or anyway, say-able things, so I ask: “What about your theater friends?”

“Ugh, don’t get me started. Some friends. Mr. Hendershaw came up for review this year for what the administration refers to as some of his ‘questionable choices,’ and they had this town hall meeting, and NOBODY stood by him. Nobody he didn’t cast in absolutely every role they ever thought they deserved, which is nobody, of course, so everybody just, I don’t know, copped out, and so it doesn’t look like he’ll be coming back next year….”

She continues, and I don’t particularly care about the theater kids, but now I’m really glad I asked, because something slides into place for me, and I really want to go back inside. Not to get away from Christine, she’s fine, she can go or stay, it really doesn’t matter, but inside are the bands, and inside is Chelsea 2. It’s not like I like her, but I COULD like her, and I like what she represents. If I told her I liked her because she represents possibility, she’d probably hit me. But she does represent it, the same way Eric represents the fact that anything is possible.

ANYTHING IS POSSIBLE . It always sounded like a dumb cliché that escaped from a Disney movie, and it was the thing that I dismissed first when I started collecting what I figured were the opinions mature people have, that most everything is bullshit and you can’t trust anybody and there is no magic to be had. But these kids are older than I am, they go to college, and they don’t seem to think that everything is stupid, not everything. And Eric, whom I sold out over the girl standing next to me, proves that not only is everything not stupid but everything is possible, the world is movie-quality like we always hoped it was.

I am thinking of a good way to get back inside and enjoy the rest of the concert when red and blue lights start flashing down the street. This venue gets a lot of noise complaints. Some of the cops might even be the same ones that busted Christopher’s house earlier this week for a noise complaint, and that will be a pain in the ass. I’m thinking about going around the side of the building to tell Eric that if he’s smoking weed he should probably ditch it when out of the second cop car that pulls up steps a guy in a suit. The Man. When I see him I get the power of flight and use it to get around the side of the building before Christine even knows I’m gone.

Eric seems to know why I’m tear-assing toward him and his semicircle of weed smokers and without thinking about it he starts booking in the same direction three steps ahead of me. The smokers follow suit, thinking they know why we’re running and figuring they ought to too. I guess they’re right, there are cops here and for them the consequences of being caught in public with a joint and whatever else they have in their pockets might include spending the night at the police station, an embarrassing call to their parents if they’re in high school, a misdemeanor charge if they’re not. But their lives will continue and they’ll get to keep going to shows. Eric and I, who knows, but if we keep running and don’t stop and don’t get tripped up at least we get another day of running.

And we do keep running, really pretty good at it now, and the smokers break off after what they figure is a reasonably safe distance from the cops, and we must look incredibly paranoid to keep sprinting with nobody in blue chasing us. But we keep looking behind us and seeing The Man, always coming around the corner no matter how fast we run. Downtown is pretty barren tonight since there are no sporting events, and our feet are loud as shit among the skyscrapers. Eric’s breathing is loud too, raggedy, I guess maybe from smoking, but on top of that something sounds broken. He keeps running, though. I think like that Dance Dance Revolution game, we’re both waiting for the other to stop.

By the time we seem to have lost The Man we’re in what I guess you would call the barrio. I throw my hood up and sit in a bus shelter with a broken light.

Eric takes out his phone.

“It could be tapped,” I say.

Eric nods like, of course, then crosses the street and calls Christopher from a pay phone. Christopher is, I imagine, still at the show or maybe in the back of a paddywagon or maybe having his nuts shocked by mysterious government agents in order to get him to surrender our location, so Eric leaves a voicemail, something along the lines of we’re sorry we got them mixed up in our mess, we never meant to drag them down with us. It sounds overdramatic but we haven’t been home or at school in almost a week and we’re fugitives from some cipher with whole stores of really good drugs and we’re feeling pretty overdramatic, if you want to know the truth.

We walk south down side streets parallel to Central Avenue, not wanting to actually go down the well-lit main street. “I used to have T-ball down here,” I say.

“Oh yeah?” Eric says. “Were you good?”

“No,” I say, “terrible.”

Come to think of it the aluminum bat I had for T-ball got thrown in my brother’s trunk the night he and his friends were supposed to take care of our problem. I am sort of disgusted that something from my childhood was almost used to bludgeon somebody, but then I think how if it actually had been used to bludgeon somebody, I might be home in bed instead of walking down side streets parallel to Central Avenue, and Eric might be home, not in bed, listening to early music on the NPR affiliate or thinking about fractals. I feel a weird mix of emotions, none of which seem like they go together but they all get felt at the same time. I’m getting more of these lately.

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