Tough Fruit
©2023 Morra Rose
A hoodlum chooses the wrong neighborhood.
[I like to think this story has a touch of noir/urban decay/BDSM-lite. Also, a question for any reader who would like to add their two cents; did you think the story had too little or too much physical/five senses description? I tend to go light on description because I want the reader to have plenty of room to create their own pictures, but just curious what you think about that. Thanks for reading, and enjoy!]
Rain. Again. Against my better judgement, I bent my head against the precipitation as I inserted the key in the lock of my apartment lobby door. Foolish not to keep a sharp eye out at night. Foolish to be out at all.
But, I had to work, had to feed myself, and had to stick to AA meetings. As I turned the key, I heard thumps and shouts from the row home next door. Three men tumbled out, one pleading and two throwing him down the stairs. The men on their feet ripped him off the ground; one held him, the other threw punches.
"Hey!" I screamed from my dark landing, "Yo! Fucktards! Get out of here!"
I knew I risked getting beat up myself, but fuck it-I lived here. I grabbed an apple out of my bag and beaned the puncher in the head. It was enough to surprise him. He stopped. The holder let go of the victim, who staggered off and zig-zagged across the drenched black road, nearly hit by a car that didn't even slow down.
The puncher ran. The holder did not. He turned, and if you don't think it's possible for eyes to burn through the night, think again.
I stood stock still. Dumb, right, for a lone young woman? I know, but there was a second set of locked doors to the main lobby and if I got trapped between the doors, I could be worse off than in the open street.
Arms hanging loosely, the holder strolled to the foot of the steps. He never took his eyes off me as he stepped one step, then another, until he stood so close I smelled his wet hair and leather jacket. Obsidian eyes locked on mine. He rasped, "You saw nothing."
I lifted my head more, "I still see nothing. Get the fuck out of my neighborhood." My fists clenching and unclenching,
He sneered, "And if I don't? 'Cause I got
unfinished
business here."
"No, Tough Stuff, your business here...," I grabbed his balls and twisted, pushing him backwards. He gasped, his arms flailing for the railing, "...is
finished
, and if you come back, we got a real kinky Neighborhood Watch around here, pretty boy, and I'm gonna be the first one to soak your cock in my throat, and when it's good and hard and throbbing, I'm gonna sit on you backwards until it's thrust all the way up my ass..." I released his balls and shoved him with my other hand. He spun 180Ëš and caught the railing.
"...and it's gonna hurt like hell and make me mad, and then I'm gonna pinch my anus and rip that fucker right off!"
Hunched over, he stumbled down the stairs with a hand over his nuts.
A window above open, "Hey, you okay, Fruit? Need some rope?"
I didn't take my eyes off of Tough Stuff as he cast an evil eye and Quasimodoed down an alley. I hollered back to my neighbor, "Nah, Shower, he's gone. For now."
"He's kinda cute! Maybe he come back," Shower replied.
"Let's hope so."
Tough Stuff disappeared. Rain wormed into the corners of my eyes and soaked my open backpack. Another window high up opened, "Who dat? Fruit, dat you?"
"Yeah, Broom, everything's cool. Just a scuffle on the sidewalk," I shouted, but not too loud.
"Oh, okay, Fruit. Be ca'ful."
Fruit-that's me, because I always had fruit on me. Shower-he lived below me and loved to whack off in the shower. Everyone could hear him and it was kind of cool because you knew it was eight am, then nine-thirty pm, like clock-a-doodle-doo work. Anyway, why the code names? Because when we had to shout back and forth, we certainly didn't want to use real names or apartment numbers.
I closed and locked the first doors behind me and shimmied my mail out of the box under flickering light.
Landlord's gotta get a new bulb.
I'd leave a note in the morning. Next, I unlocked and passed through the next set of doors, and locked them behind me, too.
The grand hall of a city mansion from a by-gone era, high and narrow with surviving ornate trim and tin ceilings. The two and half flights of stairs creaked as I ascended, warning me to make it quick before they pulled away from the wall.
Inside my apartment, I dumped my wet back pack in the clawfoot tub and hung my jacket over the battered dining chair. No lights. I liked the night. People can't judge you if they can't see you. Ghostly blue from the street lamp outlined my sparse living room/bedroom. We all kept our places dim. Light destroys your night vision. I crept along the wall to the window, peeking around to look at the street below. A rat valiantly lugged my apple. Nothing more.
A week passed. Day shift at Acme Laundry, ginger ale pool or AA meeting at night. The weather cleared and the kids played on the sidewalks again until dusk, then
zoop!
Back inside.
My parents hated this neighborhood and I hated theirs; institutionalized boredom that drove me to whoredom and booze at too young an age; but not since two years. Sobriety was a bitch, but I'd already dropped out of college and lost my friends. The next thing? Likely death by misadventure. So, I left familiar ground, and within the folds of a rougher place, found AA meetings with folks from all walks of life and none of them perfect; work at Acme Industrial Laundromat that gave me hands like a butcher; and an apartment in this unofficial halfway house, a forgotten urban gem.
Thursday night. Eight pm meeting in the basement of the Methodist church, at least until this church closed, too. As compadres told their stories, I wondered about Tough Stuff. He'd be back. When I grabbed his balls, he could have clocked me, I mean, shit, I'm only 5'4" and 120. But he didn't. The way he closed his eyes, sucked in his breath and held it-he's anticipating. He wanted more. And he wants it from me. I grinned. It's not a good idea to want anything from me. Turning in my seat to ignore the eye from L.J., who once asked if I was a dancer, I peeled a banana and tuned into the meeting.
Rain paved the way home. The bus plowed to a halt in a black puddle, which I stepped in, of course, stupid fuck.
Squish
-step-
squish
-step two blocks to my apartment. Wary all the way, I schlepped my wet self up the steps with key ready, then stopped. Glinting on the ground lay a small fold of tin foil, the same piece I'd wedged into the door before left for my meeting. Paper would have blown away. Shower and Broom never went out at night, so they didn't open the door. I peeked in the crack-it looked like the bolt hadn't reset. Huh, he was a crappy break-in artist, too.
Anyway, might as well get this over with.
The bulb had burned out, leaving the lobby dark. Without using the key, I pulled the door hard-two hands emerged from the dark, grabbing and pulling me inside, shoving my back into the wall. One hand closed the door without slamming it. I felt a leg driven between mine and a sweaty body pressed against me. I couldn't move.
"Long time, no see, huh?" A man spit in my face, breath reeking of whiskey, "Make me a fool, huh? Who do you think you are?"
My body stiffened, "Find out."
His fingers dug into my crotch, "How you like that, huh?"
Honestly, I wanted to spread my legs and swallow up his fingers. Two years untouched felt like eternity, but he was a petulant boy in need of training. Eyes adjusted to the dark, I looked straight at him, "Find out."
His nostrils flared. He clenched his jaw as if reving up with no where to go.
"Let go of me," I said. He clenched again and lost the stare-down, releasing me. I straightened and turned to insert the key for the second door. I looked at him. He breathed hard and looked dumb as a deer in the headlights, poor thing. "Got any whiskey left?" I asked.
He nodded, backing off.
I opened the second door, "Follow me."
I headed up the stairs without looking back. I heard his boots thumping behind me, his breathing still hard as I stood at my door with the third key. While unlocking, I asked, "You always follow strangers to their door?"
"Yeah, then I..."
Scream from above. Tough Stuff flattened against the wall, "What the fuck?"
Screams and thumps. I turned the knob, "Broom, upstairs. Heroin-free five years now. No, wait, is it four? I think it's four." I shook my head. "Anyway, she sees demons and beats them out with a broom. Hence her name-Broom."
Another screech and Tough Stuff ran me over to get into the apartment. A cackle followed. "She must have got them out. That's good."
Shut the door. Click, click.