This story is dedicated to "Nikki - DelightfulNikki" who passed in 2022.
I've seen shadows sway, a thicc Latina, curves like midnight dreams, eyes burning with starlit fire. Her laughter, a thunderous storm's echo. Moments lost in reverie, like tears in rain. Now, mere dreams in time, for bed.The town is a restless beast, snarling under a bruised February sky. I'm slouched in a chair, leather split like old vows, smoke curling from a cigarette I don't recall lighting. It's a blue haze in here, tendrils twisting through the dimness. Outside, rain pounds the window like a dame tapping for answers, and I'm staring at a screen, chasing shadows. That's when her voice cuts through--Nikki. Been three years since she went cold, but here she is, in a message I'd missed. My gut twists, and the past roars back, a diesel engine through the mist.
It was 2013 when I first got snarled up with her. She was a vision--thick Latina curves, a frame that owned the room, midnight black hair spilling like ink over her shoulders. I'd catch her in the half-light, hair swaying as she moved, a shadow with a pulse. We burned hot--too damn hot--until I killed it late that year. Told her we were done, packed my junk, and bolted town. She didn't cry, just stared, her silence a gunshot.
I thought I'd cut loose. Dumb play. Years slid by, greasy and gray. We'd trade jabs online, brittle little cuts that never closed. "Still mad I walked?" I'd type, smirking at the glow. "Still think I'll forgive you?" she'd sling back, then vanish. She hated that I'd moved, despised the miles I'd wedged between us. I figured she'd fade. Nikki, though--she wasn't built to fade.
Cut to 2019. I'm back, crashing in a fleabag motel off Route 9--neon flickering, roaches too bored to run. I'd scratched out a story a while back, a dirty little number about a photographer and a dame too gorgeous to resist. He's clicking shots, she's peeling layers, and he's fighting every itch--until he snaps. I'd tossed it into the void, some dark web corner where shadows swap sins. Didn't know she'd sniffed it out.
She'd seen my car in town, that beat-up Chevy rusting in the lot. That's when she started her hunt, motel by motel, until she hit paydirt. The clerk was Della--a cute little number, early 20s, sandy blonde hair tumbling over a curvy frame hugged by gray yoga pants and a matching V-neck. Every bit as striking as Nikki, but softer, green around the edges. Nikki didn't see it that way. She'd stormed up to the desk, all fire and venom, and sized Della up like a rival she'd rather spit on than smile at.
Through empty streets, I wander day by day,
Each corner whispers of a love once near,
The bench we shared, the songs that softly play,
Reopen wounds with every falling tear.
A scarf she wore still lingers in my sight,
The coffee shop where laughter filled the air,
These relics sting, though time should ease the fight,
They bind me to a past no longer there.
"Seen a guy with a beat-up Chevy?" Nikki snapped, leaning in, her thick frame looming.
Della blinked, caught off guard, twirling a strand of that sandy hair. "Uh, maybe. What's he look like?"
"Don't play coy, blondie," Nikki sneered, voice dripping acid. "You know who I mean. Where's his room?"
"I--I can't just--" Della stammered, but Nikki cut her down.
"Save it. You've got his number. Hand it over, or I'll make this night hell for you."
Della caved fast, flustered by the heat in Nikki's glare--those fiery brown eyes, twin embers that could burn through steel. She scribbled my room number, handed it over, and Nikki snatched it with a curl of her lip, not a thank-you in sight. She didn't need charm; she had force, and Della was just another pawn.
That night, the air's a swamp, heavy with regret. I'm sprawled on the couch, bourbon sweating in my fist, when the knock lands--sharp, like a.38's report. I crack the door, and there she is: Nikki, framed in the gloom, coat dripping wet. Those eyes slice through me, same as they did back in '13 when I'd watch her laugh, her whole body shaking like thunder.
"Hey," she says, stepping in fast. "Saw your car. Been looking for you."
"Nikki, what the hell?" I mutter, shutting the door. "How'd you even--"
"Doesn't matter," she cuts me off, voice low, smoky. She's close now, shedding the coat. "That story you wrote. The photographer one."
I sink onto the couch, glass shaky. "Yeah, what about it?"
She smirks, leaning in, breath hot against my ear. "It's intense. Kept me up thinking about it."
She moves like she's rehearsed it--fingers trailing her collar, hips rolling, a slow tease straight from my own ink. My pulse kicks, but I shove her back, hands steady.
"Stop. I don't want this."
Her face tightens, those fiery browns flaring. "Come on, don't do that."
I stand, cross to the bed, dodging her pull. She follows, perching beside me, voice softening.
"Make love to me," she says, eyes locked on mine.