Friday, December 20, 2013

Some Guy

“Wait, you don’t work with Nelson? You’re just some guy?”

I could barely believe it either. I’d been in Glasgow less than twelve hours and had already found my way into a party in someone’s apartment. Most of the party was made up of a group of friends, with an assortment of significant others and coworkers. This last designation constituted the pretense of my entrance to the party.

I’d met Nelson on the street. I’d been walking to a bar the Guardian had said was cheap and cool when the group of drunks ahead of me paused to take a picture. Nelson was the photographer and used his artistic license to demand that I join the photo, which of course I did. I like imagining them looking through the night’s photos and seeing me but not knowing who I am.

I hadn’t expected to be engaged in conversation following the photo, or to be invited to a party with these people as a result. Nelson made me promise to tell the other guests I was a new coworker of his, the old ones being the group with whom I’d just been photographed. We rehearsed my role while shepherding the rest of our office (they’d been drinking since 3 pm; it was nearly 10) to the apartment where the party was to be held.

We were greeted by a line of huggers – most of the people at the party had known each other since college and were good friends. (The fact that I would even be able to start a sentence with ‘we’ on the first of five nights traveling alone in Scotland was a luxury I’d not anticipated.) When I reached each new person in the line there was a pause, as I was of course a new face. I mostly stuck to handshakes so as not to be strange but got a few hugs anyway.

The ruse lasted about an hour and a half. In their friendly inquisitions, Nelson’s friends forced me to make up a background for myself. Apparently I was in Glasgow as a social worker as my first clinical experience for credit in my graduate program back in the US. My school had set up an exchange program because there was greater need in Glasgow than locally, and I was enjoying it so far, having only lived here for a few weeks. My flat was on the east side, and no I hadn’t seen any crime there yet, but I’d be sure to keep my wits about me. I hadn’t been in the office long enough to witness any tension between the psychologists and the social workers (apparently this was a complaint of Nelson’s) and would attempt to stay clear of it should I encounter any.

In an eventual lull in conversation between Nelson and myself and one of his closest friends, he leaned in close and gave me a conspiratorial look.

“Todd, you know Dan here, he told you he’s a social worker?”

“Yeah, told me all about it. Says he likes it so far.”

“See, funny thing is, he’s not. I met him on my way here.”

I was enough of a fixture at that point that they let me stick around, having proven myself friendly and unthreatening (are there people who agree to come to parties on such terms who aren’t?). It was a “bad holiday jumper” party, and having not dressed for it I was without one until one of the hostesses leant me an extra one. I was introduced to of the guys who’d been in the other room, and I asked if he’d been told anything about me, to which he responded, “Oh yeah, I heard. You’re the talk of the party.”


It was 3am by the time I left. In their hospitality they’d ensured that I was drunk, and as such I was inspired to wander back to the hostel, which was about a 45-minute walk. I went to the bathroom to consider my exit, and through a combination of not wanting to make a scene or an imposition (God forbid, right?) and hoping to preserve an air of mystery about my presence that night decided to slip out without saying goodbye or thank you.