1
It is easy to be outnumbered
when you are lost in your tracks.
Keep close to the source.
If not for Abu flicking his head back every so often, waiting a split sec, full-on profile, to make sure Karl was keeping track, it wouldâve been impossible to tell them apart. Those two? Like twins. The funny thing? Abuâs parents already had twins and they were a sweet-but-annoying seven years old. Was almost as if Abu had needed to find his own match, so he had someone to leave the house with. Even funnier? His mother, and later the dad, accepted Karl as the brother from another mother. Meaning Karl was in and out of their house like trains out of St Pancras station. More in than out actually. And to bring that funny haha what a coincidence thing home, they even looked alike. Karlâs face a tad longer, shoulders narrower, hair cropped, eyes much more dreamy. Both their lips full â in a different way, but still. If youâd thought about it youâd say: the works. Youâd say: dang, those are some alike-looking teenagers. Their friendship mustâve rubbed on to their bodies, accepting that they were a pair, in tandem. Teamwork.
That day, the way that white stuff poured from the sky had made them go out â not that that was rare or anything â and they slid and slipped across the streets, trying to chase each other, snowballs buzzing. The way it drizzled down? Now that was movie classic. It was all very haha, so much fun, yeah, defo but too cold, wha gwaan wit this season? Get this one bruv and bang! A whole load straight into the face.
Then, out of nowhere, three wannabe guys they knew from sixth form jumping them, right at the corner to Leigh Street. Like real jump. Two of them at Abu calling him Abu-ka-ha-ba-ha-ha-ha-r-pussy and other things that shouldnât be said in front of anyone, twisting his arm back in its socket like they just got their GCSEs in bullying.
It was crunching. Abu whined.
Abu with his skinny self. Eyes busy, always moving, checking here, there, everywhere and missing lots by being all that hectic. His ears pointed forward slightly, like he was some digital receiving device (youâd really have to look for it but then youâd never not notice it again, it was like, whoa how did I miss that?). That same Abu who was so messy at home yet jeans ironed and all â that Abu got his jewels kicked. Very neatly. Karl? My boy was being dismantled by the leader of the threesome, his hands on Karlâs wrists, banging him into a corner between a wall and a fence. He hovered there, the metal slowly digging into his good jeans.
representation/ rerÉŞËzÉnteÉŞĘÉn /
noun
- Not just the state of being represented but of adding to, connecting.
- The description or portrayal of someone in a particular way.
Karl. That one. So immaculate. It was troubling. Abu even had a little fit earlier that evening because Karl had been doing his usual, must look pretty thing. Without words, obviously. Ironed denim wasnât enough. It all had to be prepped properly and colour-coded until it was just so. Spending a lot of time in the bathroom, blocking it for the rest of the family. Then a very light grey pair of jeans, which had made no sense unless he wanted to match the weather â they were bound to get dirty in the snow.
When the boy slammed Karl into the fence, the black paint peeled off the metal straight on to the nice, nicely ironed, not-good-for-the season denim. It was really shit.
And hopefully Karl was thinking of the stain rather than staying in the moment, breath and all. Hopefully, instead, he was lamenting this unnecessary affront against his style (and you know that type is serious, for real), because the guy, the one holding him, went straight for the soft parts.
Karl didnât say a word; no sound left his lips. His upper body folded over as much as it could, as much as the guy would let him.
Abu wasnât as quiet. When is he ever? He was talking away, cursing and shouting and fucking this and fucking that, but the snow swallowed it all as if it had been planned.
This country is not equipped? Ha! The one time everything is out of action and the snow makes ever yone feel all Christmassy and you know that spells giddy and means silly, effing miracles can happen. Imagine.
Abu cursing louder and more. His voice always over the top because he wants to make up for something. Someone said that. That he wants to show the world something but actually the world couldnât give anything at all about what Abu has to prove. And of course that doesnât stop him. Itâs not about someone hearing him, itâs about him expressing, saying, or shouting.
Like now. Shouting because heâs scared.
For Karl.
That one is so sensitive, itâs ridiculous. But still heâs so, so, so together. Basically so quiet. No crying or cursing or anything. Just taking in scenes, waiting them out, all behind the miniature curtain that drapes from his eyes in that longing kind of way. The curve of his lashes keeping everything out, preventing anything from entering his pretty head, where the real feelings are. But still it reflects, the way his eyes close so that Abu wants to shout even louder. Man, your denim. Yourself. You get what theyâre doing?
Itâs easier to focus on someone elseâs hurt when you are down. That magicianâs trick: deflection. I have used it many times.
A siren blared and the blue lights bounced off the snowy street. The guy who was kicking Karl commanded âRun!â, and all of a sudden the two holding Abu ricocheted off him, using his weight to get a good start as if the siren was a shot at the beginning of a race. They bounced, jumped and ran. From Marchmont to Tavistock Place and thatâs the last Karl and Abu saw of them. For that day.
Abu fell over, of course, from the push they used to get themselves into proper gear, and from all that tension right around his private bits, his face plunging into the snow. And Karl? Just kneeled into the white stuff, quiet, very quiet, in slow motion, all graceful. It was almost as if he had rehearsed this, alternative swan-like dance moves. Ridiculous. He said nothing. Just pretty and defeated, in communion with that white wetness.
The police sped by in totally the opposite direction. Abu kissed his teeth. âCowards. Wasnât even for them.â He pulled Karl up. âLetâs get home. Get warmed up.â
Karl all speechless, whole self sunk into the gut, squeezed tight by that blow and probably stuck somewhere between the rib and the intestines. Abu all high on release endorphins, but also because he just canât keep quiet. Still babbling away.
âThree of them? Canât believe they didnât even bother to cover up. Like they own the street. But we ainât that stupid. Can get our own people to straighten them out. I got options, you get me. Could go to the police. Theyâre finished. They are. I know some guys. They can really take care of this shit, once and for all, show them whoâs bossââ
âShut up,â Karl said. âJust stop it. Keep it to yourself for a minute.â
Abu not even offended. Itâs that sensitive thing. He was not only pretty, he was the whole shebang, all of it together. Theyâre not changing the rules of their neighbourhood any time soon. Abu just needed to mouth off, feel like he could make things be different.
Abu pulled Karl by the sleeve. âCome on now. Letâs go home. Itâs OK.â
Karl kept staring. Eyes in sync with his mouth, lips showing all that was going on inside. Iâm not down with this shit no more. When he stood again his hips were uneven, one lanky knee bent. But at least he walked now. At least. He had a delaying mental thing going on. Deep and thoughtful but at least he also moved his arse now.
He followed Abuâs lead around the corner, dusted off snow mechanically, looking at his pants and not seeing the black stain the metal left. How not is incredible. Where are we, youâd think, right? Some alternate universe?
Abu looked at it, then to his friend.
It did upset him. Nothing wrong with a sense of pride in oneâs appearance and a little colour coordination. Nothing wrong at all. But nobody knew where Karlâs mind was at that precise moment and that was enough fighting for Abu for an hour.
He looked up at Karl. Tried to send some telepathic sense into him: Look man, theyâre your good trousers. You know how you love your stuff clean and correct. You need to get angry, like proper vex.
But he suddenly noticed how his bony shoulders were aching. Throbbing away, rubber bands released after all that tense contraction, all stretched to no more good use, and the cold crept into the wet clothes, creeping him out âcause now he was trembling and it wasnât fun any more. Nothing was. Not here. No oneâd bailed them out. As if.
When they arrived at the gate, some other youngsters were still out throwing snowballs here and there. Very half-heartedly. Lazy they were, inside of the gate, didnât even bother to take to the streets. The youth of today, always staying close to the next power outlet. Might have to recharge the gadgets. They looked suspiciously at the pair, not for any other reason than both were acting suspicious. Abu all authoritative, rushing through.
What was the point? He was hurting, Karl was out dreaming life away and both of them were colder than they should be, so he kept at Karlâs sleeve, dragging him all the way to the fifth floor, no waiting for the lift.
Abuâs mum opened for them. Abu stormed in but Karl was softer. Abu had got used to him and his mother smiling in silent understanding, the hallway light burning away in its bare bulb. Thereâd be a whole hello, how are you and how can I be of use, help, disappear without being a burden, make myself useful? thing going on. And his mother would be just like, all is OK and good. Do nothing at all. Perfect bonding heaven for the two. Abu didnât stop for it any more. Karl could do no wrong. Ever.
The twins ran around in the living room, the TV on, cartoons playing while they laughed and hit each other with the plastic toys theyâd outgrown a while ago. How it came to be girl and boy was beyond Abu, just seemed too perfect, too well divided, equally distributed. Azizah, the girl, first and slightly taller, taking after Abu in terms of yakking. Aazad, the boy, smaller, with his brows almost fused, always looking serious but was âcheekiness in the makingâ, as Karl liked to say.
âDonât trust his face. Most likely he hid all your good things and will try to bribe you to get them back, one by one, while you are still checking out his grown-up eyes.â
âYou should know,â Abu had answered.
âAll that jealousy will still not make you more handsome,â Karl had laughed.
âVery funny. Iâm almost pissing myself!â
The twins ran to Karl, who smiled again but was doing his will be with you just now, give me a sec thing. When he came out of the bathroom, his face was washed and he was no longer camping on Moon Fourteen, successfully avoiding the here and now. He had finally seen the stain on the trousers and it was not that big a deal. Either way it was just a device. Deflection, remember. For Abu. All would be back to normal once the washing machine handled it.
Karl plopped on to the couch and grabbed the remote. âExcuse me please, my good people. This is not acceptable. Not acceptable at all,â he said, lowering the volume. âThere are OAPs present. Seniors. You get me? I have to urge you to refrain from loud noises.â
The twins rolled over, first on the floor before jumping up on him from both sides. They chuckled, hoping for a play-fight; Azizah pulling at Karlâs ears, only slightly, scared theyâd start waving like her older brotherâs. But Karl indulged them only for a minute, the remote rotating through the air, diving here and there, still firm in his hand. He was distracted and out to help Mama Abu, or at least exchange another smiling agreement. He needed her calm.
She didnât look the mama type, more the slender version of Abu and the twins, a young face, eyes that saw everything, like proper. A slightly amused mouth that kept track, toge...