It felt as though a thousand tiny needles were piercing his skin. Marcus could feel his heartbeat pulsing throughout his body with each step towards his salvation. He tried to focus on his thoughts, but his concentration fled under the pressure of his need. His skin started itching. His dirty, gnarled and broken fingernails tore small scratches in his arm as he climbed higher, taking the stairs two at a time. The grey walls of the stairwell seemed to be duller than usual. He didn't have much time.
He could feel it. It was close by and his body screamed out for it. A mad cackle built within him as he came to Floor 7. 'Just behind this door, and about thirteen steps that way.' Marcus smiled, he could almost taste his release. A lone tooth perched in his gums, creating a whistle as he panted. Marcus had been smart. His current stash was hidden behind a dumpster in this abandoned car park.
Marcus pushed the door marked 'Floor 7' open and tried to catch his breath, keeling over. He'd made it. He threw back his head and laughed, tears rolling down his face. He ran a hand through his unkempt hair, slicking it back.
His left hand started shaking as he walked closer to the dumpster placed strategically in the back corner, hidden by the shadows. It only shook when he hadn't had a fix for six or so hours. He cursed at himself for being so stupid to not take a second dose. If he was caught with a dose, he'd be executed. He clenched his fist, willing it to stop, but it refused, shaking harder as he came to his destination. The dumpster was still there where he'd left it, untouched.
Marcus' vision began to blur as his body screamed out for its release. He sat down beside
the dumpster and reached behind, his fingers clasping the small package he'd hidden there.
The package now sat on his lap, taunting him. He'd never been brave enough to let go like the others had. The voice in his head wouldn't let him let go. They had to keep on living, regardless of the cost.
He caressed the package as if a lover, his finger resting on the latch to open it and end all this pain.
'Maybe I shouldn't. I hate what I become. I'm strong enough to fight this. I need to stop before I lose it all.'
The voice responded, 'Take it. It'll make the pain go away, if not for a short while. You can stop whenever you want, but why now? Just take one more dose and you can worry about it all later.'
Marcus always listened to the voice.
'Maybe, maybe one more. I can stop after that. Just one last dose so I can fix everything.', he thought.
The latch flipped up, the package waiting patiently to be opened. His fingers pried the package apart, Marcus wincing with the exertion he needed. He'd almost waited too long. But it didn't matter anymore. He'd be better soon. The package contained a vial of a white liquid and an injector. Marcus eased the vial into the injector, sighing with resignation as it clicked into place, a sound he had heard a hundred times.
He placed the injector to his neck. The metal felt cool against his hot flesh.