The Contradiction of Solitude(10)
“Bubba thinks he’s really smart but he’s not. One day, he’s walking in the woods and he gets his foot caught in a bear trap.”
Daddy squeezed my hand. “And then what happens, Layna?”
“He bleeds. A lot. And then he dies.”
My morbid imagination had always worried my teachers. Mom had been called into the school several times because of my drawings and stories. There was always blood.
Lots and lots of blood.
But it didn’t bother my father. He made me feel like my stories were perfect. That I was perfect.
“I love that story, Lay. It sounds like one of mine,” he said, kissing the top of my head. Daddy so rarely exhibited any physical affection so I wrapped myself up in the glow of his approval and held it close.
I smiled wide, feeling like the luckiest girl in the world to have a daddy like him.
I couldn’t think of anything I wanted more than to be just like my father.
His love mattered more because it hurt him so much to give it.
I couldn’t breathe.
I was sick inside.
The father and his son were gone, and I realized it was now dark.
When had that happened?
Where did the hours go? The sun had left me all alone.
My vision became fuzzy and my heart thudded painfully in my ears.
Thump, thump, thump, thump, thump.
The beast raged. The darkness invaded. The force of a thousand suppressed thoughts and emotions threatened to take me under.
I found my phone and dialed the number I knew by heart, knowing exactly what I needed.
The only thing that could pull me back from the edge that I was dangling over.
Ring, ring, ring.
The phone trilled shrilly in my ear.
The blood.
So much blood.
Scratching, groaning, aching silence.
Almost there…
“Hello?”
The air left my lungs in a violent whoosh.
I sagged to the ground, my chin pulled into my chest, the phone clutched to my ear.
I breathed. That’s all I could do.
“Hello?”
I didn’t say anything.
I just kept breathing.
“Layna,” the familiar voice said softly in my ear, recognition instant.
I wanted to smile but my face had forgotten how. I wanted to wallow in the blissful wretchedness of his voice.
“Bad day, huh?” he asked, knowing I couldn’t answer. Not right now.
But he gave me what I needed anyway. He always did.
“It’s one day at a time. That’s all we can do. But you being out there, that’s amazing. Your strength inspires me, Lay. It always has. And you’re nothing like him.” I wanted to sob and to scream.
More than anything, I wanted him to be right.
I wanted him to be wrong.
“You’re not him, Lay. You’re not him. You’re not him,” he chanted over and over again, giving me everything and nothing.
“I’m not him,” I finally said softly, my voice the barest breath of a whisper.
“You’re not him,” my brother promised.
I ran my hands down the length of the smooth wood, my fingers curving and shaping. I swiped the sandpaper one final time and carefully laid down the guitar neck I had just finished.
“Fucking perfect,” I murmured, pulling a cigarette out of the pack I kept in my breast pocket and tucked it between my lips, sucking until the end was soggy. The taste of tar and nicotine sharp in my mouth.
“Wow, nice job, man,” Tate said, coming over to the workbench I had claimed as my space.
“Thanks, I just need to finish the body and I can hand it off to you,” I told him, proud of the approval in my buddy’s eyes.
I had been working as a paid luthier’s apprentice at George’s Custom Shop for over a year now. My dream involved opening my own studio and designing guitars for everyone that loved music as much as I did.
“You gonna smoke that thing or are you planning to eat it for lunch?” A pretty girl with long red hair and tits up to her chin leaned against the doorway, her lips curved in pretty little smile. I raised my eyebrows at Margie, and Tate snickered from beside me.
“Yeah, I’m comin’,” I told her, following the woman who had so eagerly gotten naked for me just last weekend.
Margie pulled a lighter out of her pocket and handed it to me. I lit my cigarette and took a drag before giving it back to her.
“Thanks,” I said, my voice tight as I breathed out a lungful of black cloud.
Margie tucked the lighter away after lighting her own cigarette, bright pink lipstick leaving a ring on the filter.
“I hear Tate’s having a party tonight. Are you going?” Margie asked, performing an awkward form of fellatio on her cigarette.
“I doubt it. I want to finish the build I’ve got going before George hands me my nuts in a sling,” I said, dropping my cigarette butt on the ground and rubbing it out with the tip of my boot.
Margie pouted her pretty lips. “I’d like you to go, Elian.”
I gave her a smile. I liked Margie. As much as I was capable of liking anyone. She was sexy and amazing in bed. I considered her a close friend.
But that was all I was willing to invest in that particular arrangement.
“Marg, our boy doesn’t do complications. Just ask his last three so-called girlfriends. Or is boink buddy a more appropriate label?” Tate cut in drolly, lighting up a stogie and sitting down on the front stoop.