"It is official; I am insane." It had been more than forty-eight hours and no sleep. But Julie couldn't help but smirk. A peculiar theme in the drawings placed nearest her bed had struck her. Dark eyes with a tinge of Heaven and Hell watched over her framed by long masculine hair. "Insanity β I'd have to be insane after all this. Besides the fact that I'm talking to sketchesβ¦" It felt better to be talking to the rough drawings than herself suddenly. "At least you're not Jesus. And you're not talking back."
She hadn't missed Michael so badly since she left New York. He would hold her close in the night and find her pills with such care β or it had been with that loving manner for a while. She couldn't recall just when the affection dissipated and turned into a chore. But she forgave him for that part of their relationship. You can only be awoken so many times by screams ere you begin to despise some aspect of the trouble.
And there were other things to hate him for.
Instead of trying to sleep now, she drew, no longer limiting herself to mere sketches. She drew anything that wandered into her mind, sometimes not even having an idea. Her hand thrashed about the pages with its own agenda, forming confusing images which Julie taped all over the walls of her bedroom. The small room, formerly with just a pile of clothes and a bed, now seemed lived in. The images were plastered all over like she once had done in college. Somehow it felt right.
The upstairs kid was blasting music. She spoke to no one in general: "Luckily I'm not trying to sleep now, else I'd be pissed." The volume got louder and Julie could almost see the floor vibrating in sympathy. Usually this didn't happen until nine or so.
A glance later, Julie realized it was nearly ten. "Shit, I got to get to work." She sifted through the pile of clothes by the closet and pulled out the cleanest uniform.
Quickly showering, changing, and attempting to get rid of the charcoal remnants on her hands and face flew by in her hurry. But as she pulled on her shoes, Julie found herself lost in the pictures sloppily taped on the opposite wall.
She smirked once more at the wall before she sped off to work.
***
The lunch rush was on and Julie's strength was flagging. Officially one, it was time for Matthew's bi-weekly visit and Julie tried to wrap up her fear in preparation. She nodded to Franky at the counter while taking their food to a booth, silently letting the owner know her break had begun.
Like clockwork, Matthew rolled into the shinny diner with a suave wink at Franky just before he bee-lined for his sister. One look, though, told him to drop his charm and be the caretaker.
"Julia Rachel Barton, you haven't taken your medication."
She rolled her eyes. "That obvious, huh?"
"Yeah, I'd say so. How long haven't you β¦"