Author's Note:
This is a story I wrote a few years ago. It's a very short series, only a few parts so it should hopefully keep
Renascence
readers occupied while I work out that final chapter.
Special thanks to Melanie R. for her insurance advice, Dr. K. Wright for answering all of my medical questions, and Laura(Lun) for being my loyal beta.
Hope you all enjoy the work put into this series. Feedback and critique welcome and appreciated.
Cheers,
Nora
β
I'm drowning.
It's that same feeling I have every morning, that same floating sensation, as if my mattress could sink and swallow me up. I lay there in my cold apartment, the AC always thrumming in my ears, my breaths coming out in mists, traveling like the last ghosts of the night, chased away by the early morning sunlight. I don't like to live in the shadows, but I can't escape them at night. It's hard to catch any sleep with the lights on so I just close my eyes in the dark and pretend that I'm somewhere brighter than I actually am. It's not that I'm afraid of the darkβI'm just tired of the emptiness. That's where all the worst things live, the darkness.
I give into the water for a few minutes, laying back in my bed like I'm in the middle of the ocean, counting the raised impressions on the popcorn ceiling to ground me so that I don't forget that I'm still in my apartment, that I'm awake now, that nothing can actually pull me under the water. I keep wondering when I'll sink, when my thoughts will become my reality, but I guess that's a little overly dramatic. People don't actually sinkβthey give up.
I'm not giving up. I'm still kicking.
But still, somehow, I'm drowning.
β
The weather was way too hot, like
disgustingly
hot, the kind of hot that leaves you wiping sweat off places that you shouldn't even be sweating from. I probably wouldn't even be out if it wasn't for the fact that I really,
really
needed to go to the farmer's market. There's a cart that has the best avocados, and I'm not even ashamed to admit that I have a serious addiction. Sure, send me to a 12-step program. I probably still won't give them up. I might even convert my sponsor with visions of avocado toast and guacamole.
Do I sound like a millennial? It shouldn't surprise you because I am one. My generation is apparently fucking up the housing market and running fast food places out business or some shit like that. It's our fault that McDonald's, real estate, the stock market, and golf were dying. Sure thing, it was all us.
Because we buy avocados.
In my case, it was the literal truth though, so I really shouldn't be one to talk. Plus, I don't know any better. I can act innocent and coy. Nobody really raised me. I spent the better half of my childhood in the foster care system, but that's a story for another day.
I wasn't really expecting much but avocados and sweat stains in all those places that I mentioned (or didn't mention because it's too gross to talk about), but life has a way of taking you by surprise sometimes. No, the avocados weren't the highlight of my day.
He was.
Over by the strawberry booth, flirting and joking with the old-as-balls strawberry lady, making her smile because that was just the way he was, those were just the kind of things he did. He had one of those dazzling Hollywood smiles, all straight white teeth and deep dimples that looked more like laugh lines because yeah, this guy was always smiling. He was a t-shirt and jeans guy; a windswept black hair guy; a starless dark blue eyes guy; a golden Californian tanned skin guyβin other words, exactly the kind of guy I would've walked past without a second thought because guys like that usually walked past me without a second thought too. I was weaving in and out of the crowd, looking for my avocado guy so I probably wouldn't have even noticed him if it wasn't for the fact that he
didn't
walk past me. He did something really suicidal: he grabbed my bag and pulled me to a halting stop.
I wasn't impressed the first time I saw him. He was a good-looking guy; probably some creep that thought I was an easy lay.
He had the grace to let go of the strap of my bag after the look I gave him, holding up his hands as if trying to show that he
wasn't
some creep, but I wasn't buying it. I know from experience that only the worst kind of creeps have to go out of their way to prove that they aren't creeps.
"What?" I asked, annoyed.
"You dropped this," he said, holding up a ring of keys. My car keys.
"Oh, shit," I said, suddenly feeling like an ass. Cue the donkey haw.
He put my keys in my palm with one of those shit-eating grins, clearly amused by my embarrassment. Whatever.
"Thanks," I said, dropping my keys in my bag. "Sorry, I'm kind of a bitch this early in the morning."
He shielded his eyes and looked up at the sky.
"It's noon."
"Exactly," I said.
He, the creep, laughed. One of those deep, throaty laughs that sound genuine, but I wasn't really feeling up to laughing with some hotshot creep at the farmer's market. I had more important things do. Like finding avocados.
"Want a smoothie? It'll wake you up."
Yep, the whole easy lay conversation that usually begins with some nice gesture.
"My body doesn't exactly react well to that kind of stuff so it's gonna have to be a hard pass."
"Your body reacts badly to smoothies?"
"Anything healthy in general. Except for avocados."
"You don't eat anything healthy except for avocados?"
No shit, wasn't that what I'd just said?
But he had returned my car keys, something he hadn't had to do, so I decided to cut the guy some slack.
"Healthy things throw my whole immune system out of order. My body is used to working overtime to accommodate the cheeseburgers or whatever other shit I'm engorging myself with for the day. I don't want my body getting lazy. I've got to keep it working."
"You'd probably make a terrible boss."
"I'm a good boss, actually."
"Alright boss, so how do you get your day started then?"
"I get out of bed."
He laughed. Another genuine one, throwing me off a little.
"But what
really
wakes you up in the mornings? Anything in particular?"
"My alarm clock."
"You know what I mean. Don't make me have to explain what I'm really asking you."
"Alright, you got me. Coffee."
"Why didn't you just say that?"
"I don't feel comfortable talking about my addictions with strangers."
"You're making it really hard for me to ask you on a date."