Author's note: thank you for reading, guys. This is the darkest story I've ever written, and I managed to get through with it because of Otis and his strength. We are getting closer to the climax, so things will progress toward darker and darker waters.
MarcLuciFer - since I hate it when authors shy away from making villains in their story truly evil, I bit the bullet and went underground for real with Keres. I have plans for everyone, and Otis will always be the light in this dark tale.
LilBro2007 - thank you, and yes, from the moment I started shaping Otis up as a character, I thought of someone with amazing inner strength, due to his circumstances. Also, I wanted the evil to be truly evil so the consequences for everyone are well justified.
cannd - if I recall correctly (it's been a while since I wrote this), the sea horse destroyed by Angel was one bought by Otis at a discount, so not one of grandma's gifts. Angel is none the wiser, despite believing himself on top of things. Hudson will get his forgiveness :)
Chapter Twenty-Seven -- The Promise He Made
They wouldn't hurt him, not until it was for their own benefit, Hudson kept telling himself as he hurried back into the building. Just as he entered, he came close to crashing into Watkins, who seemed keen on getting out at the exact same moment.
"Vegas," the man barked at him, "whenever I look for you, you're never here. Get to work already."
"What do you need me to do?" Hudson asked, wondering at how calm the words sounded coming out of his mouth, given the circumstances.
"We have an entire group of wannabes. They're for the website mainly, but they will also open for the main act for the premiere. You need to make an album that we can present to our guests the moment they step through the door. A souvenir, you may well call it." As he explained Hudson's job, the man seemed to calm down some, but there was a certain nervousness in his movements that couldn't be easily overlooked.
"Everything fine, boss?" Hudson asked.
"Why wouldn't it be?" Watkins asked, irritated. "Well, if you want to know so much, the police got Twinlight turned inside out on a fool's errand, or so it seems. And let me tell you, that wasn't on my 'to do' list. Someone will have to answer for this crap."
"I'm sure it's nothing," Hudson said. "That place is as clean as a whistle."
Watkins gave him a long suspicious look. "As opposed to this one?"
Hudson put his hands up. "I didn't mean it like that, boss. Who knows? Maybe it was just a rival, trying to get a rise out of you."
"Yeah, maybe. Too bad I'm too busy to look into that shit. And those souvenirs? You're still in charge, right? Come on, get to it already."
Hudson nodded like an eager to please employee and walked in the opposite direction from Watkins. Gavin was the kind of guy who was always careful to conceal any traces of his activity, and Hudson was counting on him, but with the big operation underway, there were multiple pairs of ears and eyes getting involved. Watkins was buried up to his nose in the opening of the new club, so maybe he wouldn't have time to look into why Twinlight got the earlier visit from the police.
Hudson didn't work with maybes and false hopes. He needed to find Otis, and his conviction that his beautiful boyfriend was somewhere in the building was growing stronger by the minute.
***
"So, you think yourself smart, don't you?" Angel hissed while bending at the waist and getting into his field of view.
Otis moved further away from this young man who kept trying to get into his personal space, without having any consideration for what counted as boundaries. He had worked so hard to understand them, and it had always seemed like he was the only one around coming up short where the myriad rules for social interaction were concerned. And yet, this other person seemed to trample everything in his path. From kidnapping him to behaving like this.
The whole situation would have been a lot better if only he had a pair of socks. Without understanding why, the sight of his own bare feet made him feel vulnerable. With not one kind face in sight, he couldn't afford to feel that way. The power, the strength had to come from within. He clasped his hands together and pressed them between his knees while bending over, forcing himself to become as small as possible.
"What the hell is wrong with you?" Angel asked. "Ah, you're one of those guys. Hard in the head. I don't get why he wanted you here."
"Who is he?" Otis asked. Under such dire circumstances, the more he knew, the better his chances were of finding a way out.
"The big boss. He brought you here, so he must think there's something to be done with someone like you. Probably as an opening act? I somehow doubt it. You're as stale as day-old bread. Your clothes are so lame. Whatever. You will be naked, anyway."
"The scarred man," Otis said slowly.
Angel smacked him over the head with his small purse. It didn't hurt, but it made him feel humiliated, as if he was an animal that had to be mistreated to behave. At his startled reaction, Angel began laughing. How could such a beautiful person appear so ugly? Otis watched the way the corners of the other's mouth curled up, making his face appear similar to that of a nightmarish clown. His eyes gleamed with darkness and they seemed to give away nothing. It was a bad look, Otis just knew it.
"You're so stupid," Angel added. "Don't you dare talk like that in front of the big boss. He might eat you for breakfast instead of making you part of the opening. Eh, I guess you're not going to be around here for long."
"No. The scarred man," Otis said stubbornly, "told me that he loved me and that he would take me home with him."
At that, Angel gave him a long look while his eyebrows shot up in surprise. "Now, you're just making stuff up. There's no way a nobody like you--"
The door opened, admitting the man called Watkins. Otis stared at him, unblinking.
"This guy is a complete nut case," Angel accused, while pointing a finger at him. "He keeps making stuff up about the boss. Can't we just get rid of him? Send him away with a boot in his ass?"
"Stop getting on my nerves," Watkins said shortly. Although the man with his cold eyes had seemed to Otis to be completely in control, when he interacted with other people he appeared to be a person experiencing a lot of stress. There was a small twitch at the corner of one of his eyes, and his hands trembled from time to time.
"What do you want me to do with him?" Angel asked.
"As long as the boss wants him alert and awake, nothing. Before he goes on stage, make sure to give him the same medicine as you've given Jasper until now."
"You know, I tried to keep the guy under treatment, but that gorilla of yours stopped me."
"Who was in Jasper's room?" Watkins asked abruptly. "You know you have to keep an eye on things."
Angel rolled his eyes. Otis watched the interaction taking place before him with the utmost care. These people were holding him, and at least one other person called Jasper, hostage. He didn't know what to think about the term 'medicine' as it came out of Angel's mouth, but he had to believe that it was something terrible. Maybe it was a way to get rid of him, anyway, but in the way a lethal injection would send someone away, out of this life completely.
He had considered death, even his own, before. The people at the hospital that had treated his burn had said between themselves that he'd been lucky not to be at home when the fire that had killed his mother started. He didn't know why they called it luck. It had happened only because his mother had made sure he would run away. And then, she had been unlucky enough to die in the fire. Unlucky sounded like a rude word under the circumstances. Otis had looked up the word 'tragedy' in the dictionary long afterwards, but not even that explanation had put a stop to his questions about the whys and the what-ifs.
Angel continued talking, swinging his hands in a strange fashion as if he needed to make sure the polish on his just done nails dried. Otis hadn't noticed any polish on Angel's nails.
"I'm talking about Vegas. He is so concerned I'm giving Jasper too much of his vitamins. What a douche. I bet he wants to score with that guy. Really, you should warn him about touching the merchandise, okay?"
"Hmm, so Vegas was worried about Jasper? How quaint," Watkins commented.
Vegas was a place, not a person. But maybe it was someone who took his name after a place, like Utah, the bartender at Twinlight. His visit to that club seemed to have happened a lifetime ago. And in that other lifetime, Hudson had taken him from there and kissed him.
Some memories hurt, but not all of them hurt the same way. What would Hudson think when he didn't find him home tonight? Maybe he'd think that Otis went away on a trip without telling him anything.
"And even Jackie sided with him," Angel continued his rant.
Jackie. That was a name Otis knew. But it could all be just a big coincidence.
"If Jackie did," Watkins replied, "it means that you really went overboard with Jasper's medicine."
Angel pursed his lips and then clucked his tongue. "No, I didn't. They are a pair of assholes, that's all. And you know what? I don't think we need to hide behind words while in front of this guy." He pointed at Otis. "He's so stupid that he doesn't understand why he's here. What's he going to be? Some extra?"
"He's going to be part of the main act."
"What?" Angel raised his voice. "No freaking way. Wait, I mean... he's going to... you know?" He pointed with his head in Otis's direction again.
"No. The boss has big plans for him."