1. All characters are 18+
2. No characters resemble real people
3. Enjoy the fiction
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CHAPTER 12
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I read Serena's letter over and over, and it drove me fucking crazy. And crazy people do crazy things.
I'm not entirely sure what came over me in that moment. I dressed quickly and got in my car. I drove to the city, definitely faster than the posted speed limits. It wasn't until I got there that I realized I'd never been to Serena's apartment. I'd never asked where it was. I had no idea where to look. And, since I hadn't showered or shaved, I'd likely look like a crazy stalker if I just started asking strangers on the street. I drove around random blocks, going up and down random streets, but the city was far too big for me to find her in if I didn't know where to look.
I picked up my phone and called her, but she didn't answer. I scrolled through my phone. Who else would I call? The only people I knew who lived in the city, and who could possibly help, were my friend Eric and Serena's dad Frank. Both of them had warned me this exact thing would happen. I resolved that neither would be very helpful.
I called Serena's phone again, and this time I left a voice mail. "Serena, I love you. I drove to the city and realized I don't know where you live. I'm driving home now. If you don't want to be with me, I'll have to learn to accept it. But I'm betting that's not what you want. I know because I love you, and you love me, and we need to be together. Please, please call me back."
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I'm not a big drinker normally, and I generally don't like drinking alone. I had heard once that it was a sign of alcoholism. I might drink one beer by myself, but that's it. It was a pretty good rule of thumb.
I broke that rule today. When I got home from the city, my stupid brain decided I was feeling too many things. So, I grabbed a bottle of whiskey I kept in the cupboard, and took a good swallow straight from the bottle. It numbed my tongue. The second swallow numbed more. Several minutes and several sips later, my brain was fuzzy. Good. Numb and fuzzy is what I wanted. Maybe if I stayed this way, I could forget.
Except I couldn't forget. Even with a good buzz, I couldn't not think about Serena. I drank more, and thought about her more, so I drank even more. It was a vicious cycle.
The bottle had only been half-way full to begin with. Maybe a little less than that. Doesn't matter. What matters is that I finished it. Then I got angry at it. With tears in my eyes, I yelled at the empty bottle, as if it was leaving me too, and threw it violently against the wall, smashing it into shards. I got up from the table, intent on looking for another bottle, and realized too late that my legs were wobbly. I fell down on the kitchen floor.
The last thing I thought, on my way down, before blacking out completely, was how today was supposed to be a good day, and it turned out to be one of the worst days of my life.
--
I woke up with a towel folded under my head, a bucket in front of my face, and a red sports drink nearby with a sticky note on it. I sat up, probably too quickly, and grabbed the bucket to catch my vomit. I recalled, as I puked, I hadn't eaten breakfast, or anything that day, so it was only alcohol in my stomach. Well, now it was in the bucket.
When I had expelled every drop of moisture in my body, I grabbed the red drink. The sticky note was blurry at first, but when I blinked the text came into focus. It read: 'I came by to check on you and found you passed out drunk. I cleaned up your mess. Text me when you come to. - Jen'
I looked over at the wall. The glass shards that used to be my whiskey bottle were gone. I drank half the bottle of sports drink in one go, then found my phone to text Jen. There were three missed calls, all from Serena, but no voicemails. I texted Jen: 'I'm up. Thanks friend.'
A minute went by before I got her response. 'Good. No more drinking. I'll come by after work, around 4:00.'
I looked at the clock and saw it was almost 3:00 now. I finished the drink, cleaned up the bucket o' vomit, then took a shower and put on fresh clothes. I was watching TV when Jen arrived, coming into the house without knocking. "What the hell is wrong with you, you, you jackass!" she barked at me. "Are you trying to kill yourself?"
I was a little taken aback by her yelling. Jen wasn't very tall, definitely shorter than me, and only 18. But I was getting scolded by her as if she was my mother.
Jen continued her tirade. "Do you think getting shit-faced drunk is acceptable behavior?" Again, she sounded like a mother.
I looked down at my hands in my lap. I could feel her glare on me until I responded. "No."
"Then why would you do it?"
It was my turn to yell. "Because she should be here with me! I love her! And she said she loved me, but then she left, so I guess love doesn't mean shit anymore, does it? I've only loved two women in my life. One fucked around behind my back, and the other one deserted me."
Jen, to her credit, wasn't fazed by my anger. She kept up her glare, but tears welled up in her eyes. "That's not an excuse for being stupid," she said firmly. She sat down on the chair across from me. "Do you know how my brother died?"
I searched my memory and found nothing. I had forgotten that Jen had an older brother, a little younger than me. "No," I answered honestly, calmer than I had been a second ago. Maybe my blow-up had helped me sober a bit.
"He was a drug addict. He used to go on rants like the one you just had when he was high. Then he overdosed. We found him in his apartment one morning, dead on the floor." Her tears began to run more fluidly down her cheeks. "When I found you earlier, I thought..." She didn't complete the sentence.
I immediately felt guilty. Somewhere in her mind, I had become a big brother figure. A makeshift replacement brothers. I was her friend and confidant, and I helped her resolve issues with her parents.
"I'm sorry," was all I could say.
She nodded. I stood and held out my arms, and she rushed in for a hug. I didn't let her go for several minutes. "I'm sorry I did that to you," I finally said, breaking minutes of silence. "I have no excuse. I was selfish."
"Why did you do it?" she asked, calming down.
"I was trying to forget about her. About how I feel." It was my turn to cry a little. "I still love her."
"She still loves you." Jen told me. She saw disbelief on my face, and added, "Who do you think told me to check on you?"
I was puzzled. "Serena did that?"
"She tried to call you and you didn't answer. She was worried."
"Then why did she leave?" I asked, upset again. "She's never coming back."
Jen shrugged. "I honestly don't know."