Authors: Dorothy Koomson
And it showed no sign of abating. I literally had no life. My only time alone were those moments I fell asleep and those moments when I woke up. In between, my mind was in constant motion. My mind was sampling everyone's life, snatching titbits here and there until it was a constant soundtrack to my waking hours. Snatches and excerpts of other people's experiences playing on loop in my head.
One night, at the end of May, I found myself outside Jess's house. She was marking very important final year experimental reports, but let me in anyway.
I lay with my head on the kitchen table, crumbs from the sandwich she'd eaten earlier grinding into my right cheek.
âJess, you've got to help me,' I said, staring forlornly at the side of the tea cup she'd placed in front of me.
âI don't know why everyone comes to tell me everything â good, bad or indifferent â or why I can't say no, but I really think I'm going mad. What is it about me? Why me?'
Three days later, she had the answer.
chapter twenty-eight
The Answer
âI think I've worked it out,' Jessica said, stretching out on her sofa. âFinally.'
I sat on the floor, the soles of my feet touching, my knees splayed out.
âI'm all ears,' I said.
âActually,' Jessica said, âyou're all heart.'
âHey! All right, I might not be the kindest person on earth all the time, but I do try. So less of the sarcasm.'
Jessica drew on her cigarette, exhaled, waved the cigarette smoke away from my direction. âNo, no, I really mean it. Literally, you're all heart. Basically, we can talk philosophically, or we can talk biologically, or we can talk physics, but the end result is the same.'
âWhat the blinking flip are you on about?' I replied.
Jessica smiled. âRemember how Craig said you advertised sex? He was right. Remember how I said you made men fancy me? I was right. And, remember how poor Ed got himself into that state before his date and he said he thought he'd got “bigger”, well he probably didn't realise that you had something to do with it, too. And you know how everyone has been blaming you for all the changes in their lives? They're right too. Basically, Ceri, you're Cupid.'
chapter twenty-nine
Stupid, Cupid
âPay attention, this is complicated.
âIn chemistry and biology, there's the law of osmosis. I don't know if you remember it from school, but basically, say there are two substances that are separated by a semi-permeable membrane, you know, like a barrier that has tiny, tiny holes in it. If the molecules of the two substances are small enough, and there's a very concentrated amount of the substance on one side and a slightly less concentrated amount of the substance on the other side, the side with less will attempt to move into the concentrated area through the holes in the barrier. You understand? Less will move into more.'
I nodded, not knowing where this was leading.
âIt's the same with you, Ceri, but in reverse. You have so much love and affection and sexuality locked up inside yourself, it's started to leak out. In the form of pheromones. As we both know from all that work you did on subliminal perception, there's evidence to suggest that love and sexual attraction are governed by those tiny hormones called pheromones. With you, and the abundance I suspect there is of love and sexuality inside of you, it's leaving the concentrated area that is you and dispersing into the outside world which has less. It's osmosis in reverse. More is moving into less. You see, you've never really used that love and sexuality and affection inside you, so it's being secreted out of your body as pheromones. Out where it's needed.
âThink about it, people think that negative emotions if internalised for too long can cause illness, well with you it's love, a positive emotion. So love's not going to cause illness, so it's going outside to where it's needed. And because you've never really used all that love and affection and sexuality, it's been building up in your body and your body needs to let it out. The only way it knows how to release that pressure is to leak it through your pores. And, as you know, skin is a semipermeable barrier.
âEveryone knows that women's periods synchronise themselves once they live together for a time and the reason they do that is because of pheromones. What I didn't know until I read your original degree thesis on subliminal perception was that when women live long-term with men, it's been found that their periods become more regular â again as a result of pheromones.
âNow, the main reason I think that what's happening to you is mostly down to pheromones is Ed. Remember his predicament with his penis? I'll wager you were extremely nervous for him, very worried that he wouldn't be good enough for that date. You were probably sending out so many conflicting pheromones and vibes that his body subliminally picked up on it and he ended up in that state. Physically, his body wanted to be good enough and that was the only way it knew how to do it.'
Jess paused. âAre you following me so far?'
âYeah, sure, why not,' I replied flatly.
She lit herself another cigarette, slowly breathed life into it.
âAll right, now, let's link all this to what we know about Cupid philosophically. The Romans, who had Cupid as their god of love, needed a way to explain the often irrational ways that people behaved once they fell in love, the seemingly bolt-from-the-blue, narcotic state people experienced love as â hence they drew Cupid as having a bow and arrow. To get that “wham” thing across. Your love, affection and sexuality â released as pheromones â are hitting people like a bolt from the blue. That's what Craig meant about you subliminally advertising sex. Your pheromones are, subliminally, like your bow and arrow, they encourage people to have sex.'
Jess paused. Smoked in silence.
âSticking with philosophy, I have to say, the way you behave is like the original philosophical incarnation of Cupid. The thing is, Cupid, the original Cupid, was a life messer-upper. He may well have been the god of love, but he's only seen as all-good since the Christianisation of the Roman and Greek religions. The Christians couldn't leave the god of love as a naughty entity who went around making people do things they wouldn't normally do â so they fixed the stories and myths so that people falling in love with the wrong people were just cute little mistakes. Not huge great problems.
âBut the original incarnation of Cupid was quite disruptive. That's what's so true about you saying that you keep messing up people's livesâ'
âNo,
I
didn't say that, it was everyone else who said that,' I cut in.
âOK,' Jess conceded, âeveryone else says that you mess up their lives, that since you've arrived things have gone wrong. Or, at least, have been disrupted. Disruptive, that's what you are. You can't help it. You turn up somewhere and lives are transformed. Wherever you go, people are experiencing that bolt from the blue, they are facing up to things, admitting their feelings, following their heart's desire. And, it must be said, you do have this knack of making people open their hearts. You've always been like that.
âTake me, for example. I keep in touch with my ex-students, but you're the only one who has changed my life and made me a friend, influenced me. Made men fancy me. And that's why, I reckon, you have very few lasting friendships. It's as though once you've disrupted someone's life long enough for them to make the necessary changes you move on. You don't even realise you're doing it. You're like the Littlest Hobo, but with people's hearts and minds.
âI reckon it's only come to a head now because you're following your heart's desire. And, I suppose, you're releasing lots of happiness hormones out there. Showing everyone what's possible when you do what your heart really wants you to do. But following your heart's desire isn't easy. In fact, it's hell, the most disruptive thing you can do to your life. The reason why people keep coming to you, keep blaming you is because you're modern-day Cupid. And you leave The Cupid Effect wherever you go.'
I let Jess's words settle like dust around us. Let them soak into the atmosphere until the air was saturated with the nonsense she'd just come up with.
âYou're insane,' I said. âI thought I was mad, but you want locking up.'
Jess just smiled, lit herself another cigarette. âSweetheart, your track record alone proves you're Cupid. Look at the men in your life, I couldn't believe half the things you told me the other week. And I'm sure there've been more of them. Ones that you've kept from me, but, after all that, with not even one decent relationship, without ever having experienced real love, you still believe in love. You're still
capable
of love. You must be Cupid. Because only Cupid would take all that nonsense and still be the loving, caring soul you are. Most people give up over less, but not you. And you still have room in your life for everyone else's dilemmas and problems.
âApart from everything I've just told you, probably the most damning thing of all is your name.'
I said nothing, waited for her to explain.
âWhen you shorten your name to Ceri, you're actually shortening it to a name that comes from the Welsh word meaning “love”. I don't know where your parents got it from but your full name, Ceresis, comes from a very obscure and ancient Latin phrase which literally translated means “Heart's Desire”. You're actually called Heart's Desire. How more modern a Cupid do you get than that?'
I turned from her to look outside at the trees, the sky, the world. Everything beyond the window was normal, the same, all right. Everything had changed and flipped and upended in here. I turned back to Jess.
âD'you really believe that?' I asked.
âAbsolutely,' she said.
I nodded in reply. Nodded because I couldn't speak.
Then burst into tears.
chapter thirty
Reluctancy
âI don't want to be Cupid,' I gulped between sobs. âI just want to be me. Ceri. Ceresis, at a push. Not “heart's desire” or disruptive. I just want a normal life.'
Jess rubbed my back, hugged me and let me sob while variations on the âI don't want to be Cupid' theme spilt from my mouth. Eventually, she left me crying my heart out, went to the kitchen and came back bearing tea mugs. I'd heard her rummaging around the kitchen drawers, probably looking for chocolate or anything with chocolate in it. Like that would help. My reality had been smashed to pieces and she was giving me tea and looking for something with forty per cent cocoa solids in it.
Jess handed me a blue mug with a big smiley sun on the side. Tea. Real tea, very, very strong and very milky. If I drank real tea, I drank it so strong it could tarmac roads. I suppose this was a real emergency. I was still shaking from my epic cry and Jess held onto the cup a fraction longer so I wouldn't drop it.
âIt's only a theory, love,' Jess said, freeing another white stick from its packet. âIt's not the gospel. What do I know about biology and chemistry and physics and philosophy?' She put a flame to the cigarette, breathed life into it. âAll right, I know about philosophy because I teach the philosophy of psychology, and I know a bit about biology and pheromones, but what do I know about the rest of it? I mean, come on, what do I really know?'
She was only the cleverest person I knew. Which was why I'd turned to her in the first place. âBut you believe it, don't you?' I asked her, sniffling back the sobs.
Jess took two long drags on her cigarette, exhaled them just as lengthily. Then she sighed even more lengthily. âWish I'd never opened my mouth now,' she said.
âJust tell me the truth, you've never lied to me before, so tell me the truth now. You believe I'm some kind of modern-day Cupid, don't you? And I leave, what was it you called it, The Cupid Effect, wherever I go. You believe that, don't you?' I'd banished the whiny, crying sound from my voice by then, which was good cos it was starting to piss even me off. âDon't you?'
Jess reluctantly looked at me, her eyes searching my face for some kind of semblance of sanity, or ability to deal with her revelations. She sighed again, obviously finding no such sign of sanity. Not surprising since I felt so on the edge I might lose my grip and fall deep into the pit of insanity. âYes sweetie.'
I sagged in my seat, took a sip of the tea. Jess had put sugar in the tea. Good for shock, I guess. I wanted to cry again. This couldn't really be happening. And if it could be happening, then why did it have to be happening to me?
âI don't want to be Cupid,' I said again.
âIt's not that bad, is it?' Jess said, stretching out on the sofa. âBeing responsible for people finding their heart's desire, for people falling in love, and for people having sex. That's nice. That's good. Most people depart the earth without ever committing one act of public servitude; you get to do loads.'
True. But . . .
âWhat about me?' I hit my chest. âI want my heart's desire and love and . . . and sex! What about me? When do I get all that?'
I sounded selfish. Possibly, maybe, because I was feeling incredibly selfish. Charity begins at home, and so do expectations of love and affection. Jess pulled a slight, âhard luck' face. Not a full one, not even a quarter one, just a fraction, a hint of a grim smile, eyes slightly sad.
When do I get all that? Never, clearly.
âAnd anyway, why do I have to be Cupid? How come I don't get to be Venus or Aphrodite?'
Jess looked guiltily into her tea, smoking as though her life depended on it.
âReally, I want to know.'
âBecause,' Jess began, âbecause . . . people fell in love with Venus and worshipped her . . .'
âBut no one noticed the little fat git with wings. He just went about disrupting stuff and being unnoticed.'