vivocentrism + vampires 4

You leave the room to your friend’s triumphant slap on the back. 

“Told you I’d see you in semi’s.” You take his praise in your usual joking way, but you then continue to stare. Your gaze, though you don’t know it, holds sadness and fear in equal measure. Your friend pulls back and scrunches his face at you. “What’s your problem, man?” he snaps, like he has communicated nothing out of the ordinary. You shake your head. 

“Nothing, just…thinking.” He shrugs and turns away. And the back of his head winks at you. 

viviocentrism + vampires 3

You wake up to your friend and roommate sitting on your chest, and you can’t breathe. You struggle to throw him off, curling and slapping ineffectually at his legs.

He grins, assuring you that it’s all a joke.

“Good, you’re up.” And he gets off your chest. You do not respond, still not forgiving him for the tightness in your lungs. He grins and turns away. “You’ve got a big day today.” He tosses you a button-up. “Quarter-finals, gotta look sharp.” You sigh and pull yourself out of bed still refusing to talk to your infuriatingly chipper roommate.

He doesn’t watch as you pull on your trousers but thumbs through your flows from the other day. You keep them carefully labeled and organized so as to never misplace your record of a debate.

“Is this even English?” your friend teases. You shrug into your starched and stiff-collared shirt.

“Vowels waste time. I can read them just fine.”

“Keep telling yourself that,” your friend snorts, and for some reason he flips through your unused paper, pristinely unfolded and clipped to a legal-sized clipboard. He leaves the hotel with you, following you to the debater-modified classroom, the illustrious location of quarterfinals. But suddenly becoming inexplicably nervous, he leaves you, mumbling something about getting breakfast or maybe coffee too if he’s in the mood. You quickly forget about his strange departure, reading into only his
sly “I’ll see you in semi’s anyway” and writing off any inconsistencies in his behaviour. The round begins following an exchange of flash drives and disclosures.

Your opponent stands up to give her first speech, and you reach to pull a few sheets of paper from your clipboard. But as you pull off the blank pages, an unfamiliar folded printout slides to the floor. In a flurry of swift action, you pull it back to the table and tuck it under the other sheets on your desk. You write furiously to make up for the first few seconds of the speech. Five minutes in, your opponent launches into the body of a particularly long piece of evidence, slurring her words slightly to make time for other cards. You can’t catch a word, and you’re tempted by the mysterious paper peeking from your flows.

Unfolding it carefully, you recognize a Wikipedia article and wrinkle your nose at the title: Alp (folklore). But your opponent continues to slur through a wordy card by the National Science Foundation. You have time. You begin to read:

Not to be confused with the similarly named Alp-luachra, the alp is sometimes likened to a vampire, but its behavior is more akin to that of the incubus. It is distinct from both of these creatures in that it wears a magic hat called a Tarnkappe, from which it draws its powers…Its victims are often females, whom it attacks during the night, controlling their dreams and creating horrible nightmares (hence the German word. Alptraum [“elf dream”], meaning a nightmare). An alp attack is called an Alpdruck, or often Alpdrücke, which means “elf pressure”. Alpdruck is when an alp sits astride a sleeper’s chest and becomes heavier until the crushing weight awakens the terrified and breathless dreamer. The victim awakes unable to move under the alp’s weight…The alp is often associated with vampires because it will drink blood from the nipples of men and young children, though women are the preferred victim of the invariably male alp, for it favors the taste of breast milk.

Your partner looks at you sharply.

“Cross-Ex?” she asks pointedly. You fold the paper.

“We’ll take a few seconds of prep.” Your partner looks back at her flows and nods at your decision like she agrees with it.

Only you know that she’s furious, hiding her angry anxiety under a mask of easy calm. But it’s not in her best interest to make you look bad.

In five seconds, you scribble a couple questions. Debaters love to hear themselves talk. It should be easy to fill three minutes.

And it is. Your partner quickly forgets your mishap.

The round ends leaving you with the triumphant feeling of doing the best you could. It’s not a crushing victory, but you’ve done nothing wrong.

You forget about the round and the deliberating panel of judges as your friend slips into the back of the room.

It occurs to you that you’ve never seen him without his hat. You stare at him until one judge collects the signed ballots and clears his throat, but he never once catches your eye.

viviocentrism + vampires 2

You hear sirens and run. Within the characterless walls of the high school hosting this big-deal national tournament ring the sounds of disgust and fear.

Everyone is running away, but you, through some inexplicable self-destructive urge, run towards the sounds of fear.

You come across one victim and you come across another, and the only word you can think of no matter how inhumane is littered. The first you see is a man, his shirt ripped open at the front. His heaving chest marks him as still alive, barely. Below his collarbone and above his navel the man is bleeding, bitten, from his nipples.

Even through your senseless horror, you continue forward in a torrent unquelled. The shut-eyed, almost-dead victims continue to litter the grimy floor as you follow them to their source and some sort of explanation. Only the females do not bleed, but bite marks still punch in, dark purple around their breasts, clearer and deeper along the edge of the nipple.

You reach the epicenter in trance-like agitation. Your friend is there, amidst the ambulances and squad cars. You run up to talk to him, but he is in handcuffs, and the officers are pulling him back. He opens his mouth to you, blood spilling from his gums. 

“This is what could happen,” he warns you. “This is what I can become.” 

viviocentrism + vampires 1

“Elephant in the room. What is death?”
You’re caught off guard. Death is accepted, no value assigned.

“Death is an absence of life.”

The room holds its breath, waiting for the mocking response to what feels like a
stupid answer to a stupid question. But stupid questions are the name of the game when one slip-up in Cross-Examination can cascade into a disaster of outrageous proportions.

“Then what is life?”

You look at the judges, rebellious and unemotional.

“What isn’t life?”

“This is my Cross-Ex. What is life?”

You pause but you cannot wait forever

“Physical and emotional awareness.”

“Why should life be preserved?”

The question seems insensitive and unnecessary to the casual audience members gathered for the big event, but the audience isn’t deciding the round.

You incline your head at the judges.

“Life has a tendency to preserve itself. That tendency takes the form of a basic desire and fundamental human right. It is our responsibility, therefore, to preserve the most lives possible in any given situation.”

Your opponent’s next question is interrupted by the rude and persistent beep of the five timers in the room. An hour later the round ends, and as the judges turn to their careful notes to deliberate, your best friend, a lower caliber debater with rebelliously gelled hair and a persistent fedora leans on the desk you have just stood up from to stretch your legs.

“An interesting issue you discussed today,” he comments glibly. You shrug in
response.

“Critique of viviocentrism, it’s going around.” Your friend laughs.

“Like a disease.” He pauses to scrutinize the three judges and your opponents in
turn. “You know, it’s interesting,” he begins again, “under your definition, a Vampire would be alive.” You shrug again, determined to brush it off in an as distantly objective way as possible.

“They’re undead. It’s a grey area.”

“Zombies?”

“Half-dead, no emotional awareness.”

“But plants do?”

“They have experiences similar to pain.”

“Pain is not an emotion.”

“So? There’s a sliding scale of emotional awareness. It determines the life we feel
compelled to preserve.”

“And psychopaths?”

“They have emotional awareness, just…”

“Less?” your friend snaps. You have trouble accounting for his change in behaviour.

“Well, yeah–“ you shrug defensively.

“And that means?” Your words choke you. You’re tongue-tied in a way you have never been in round. “Right,” your friend finishes, “it means they’re not alive.” There is nothing to explain the disgust in his voice.