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We were a trio. Gone together, mentally alone. 90's alternative had been playing for maybe three-quarters of an hour, and at this point we were all mostly toasted. A shot of beer a minute. Talking **** shuffling the deck. Nick laughed, Luke mocked. I cheered them both on. In that moment we all lived in the golden light of youthful ignorance and concrete friendship that can only be fully grasped by a drunken trio of guys in their mid-twenties at 2:00 AM on an idle Thursday night. We all cracked fresh cold ones and lit up fresh cigs, and I raised the burning tobacco in a toast: "To friendship!" Luke matched my pose, left arm outstretched. We caught each other's eyes, and without missing a beat his right hand plunged the cherry into his left forearm. I looked down and saw myself doing the same, yet felt no pain. We stayed that way until our embers died, and relit the remaining smoke off of a shared flame. Nick never matched our level of commitment, I doubt he even bears a scar these days. My scar still itches from time to time. I wonder if Lukes does, too. Eventually I started seeing tunnels and soon, gravity took me. Horizontality was my fate. I was the first to fall, the first to succumb to gratuitous consumption. ... Birds chirping, deafening in the late morning. The angry sun cast slotted beams through the still-lingering twines of cigarette smoke from the night before. I watched it slowly twirl and stir through slitted eyelids. My eyes hurt, and my neck creaked as I looked around. Nick passed out beside me, I figured Luke got the top bunk. In the daylight I could always see the apartment for what it really was. An escape. One room, bunk beds, and abject emotional destitution. I rolled over on to the floor and steadied myself with closed eyes and a palm planted on the ***** carpets. My phone was on the desk in the corner, I grabbed it and headed towards the bathroom. **** cascaded, and through the open bathroom window I could hear it echo off of the buildings lining New Street. My hand floated up to the back of my head and picked at something. Something hardened. There was a thick layer of something on the back of my scalp, down the back of my neck. It felt like wax. We were burning a candle last night. They must've dumped it on me since I was the first to fall asleep. I quit picking when I was struck by a sharp pain in my arm, my left forearm. A bit of my hair had probed an open wound, a round burn mark. I sat down on the floor and remembered for a bit. My phone turned on with a melodic series of beeps, it had been awhile since I turned it on. One new voicemail. I dialed the number 1 while picking wax from my hair, put my passcode in, and listened. Mom called me last night, she was crying. I was used to that sound at this point. "Otis wont get up, I think he's dying Justin." A brief pause. "Please come home." I'm sorry Otis. I loved you. More than a dog, you were a canine brother. Raised alongside me. Raised by the same parents. I didn't come home, at least, not then.
0
Dec 3, 2021
Dec 3, 2021 at 11:34 PM UTC
Otis is dead
We were a trio. Gone together, mentally alone. 90's alternative had been playing for maybe three-quarters of an hour, and at this point we were all mostly toasted. A shot of beer a minute. Talking **** shuffling the deck. Nick laughed, Luke mocked. I cheered them both on. In that moment we all lived in the golden light of youthful ignorance and concrete friendship that can only be fully grasped by a drunken trio of guys in their mid-twenties at 2:00 AM on an idle Thursday night. We all cracked fresh cold ones and lit up fresh cigs, and I raised the burning tobacco in a toast: "To friendship!" Luke matched my pose, left arm outstretched. We caught each other's eyes, and without missing a beat his right hand plunged the cherry into his left forearm. I looked down and saw myself doing the same, yet felt no pain. We stayed that way until our embers died, and relit the remaining smoke off of a shared flame. Nick never matched our level of commitment, I doubt he even bears a scar these days. My scar still itches from time to time. I wonder if Lukes does, too. Eventually I started seeing tunnels and soon, gravity took me. Horizontality was my fate. I was the first to fall, the first to succumb to gratuitous consumption. ... Birds chirping, deafening in the late morning. The angry sun cast slotted beams through the still-lingering twines of cigarette smoke from the night before. I watched it slowly twirl and stir through slitted eyelids. My eyes hurt, and my neck creaked as I looked around. Nick passed out beside me, I figured Luke got the top bunk. In the daylight I could always see the apartment for what it really was. An escape. One room, bunk beds, and abject emotional destitution. I rolled over on to the floor and steadied myself with closed eyes and a palm planted on the ***** carpets. My phone was on the desk in the corner, I grabbed it and headed towards the bathroom. **** cascaded, and through the open bathroom window I could hear it echo off of the buildings lining New Street. My hand floated up to the back of my head and picked at something. Something hardened. There was a thick layer of something on the back of my scalp, down the back of my neck. It felt like wax. We were burning a candle last night. They must've dumped it on me since I was the first to fall asleep. I quit picking when I was struck by a sharp pain in my arm, my left forearm. A bit of my hair had probed an open wound, a round burn mark. I sat down on the floor and remembered for a bit. My phone turned on with a melodic series of beeps, it had been awhile since I turned it on. One new voicemail. I dialed the number 1 while picking wax from my hair, put my passcode in, and listened. Mom called me last night, she was crying. I was used to that sound at this point. "Otis wont get up, I think he's dying Justin." A brief pause. "Please come home." I'm sorry Otis. I loved you. More than a dog, you were a canine brother. Raised alongside me. Raised by the same parents. I didn't come home, at least, not then.
Seven years. I still think about that night, That morning. That mourning. My scar itches.
Listerineyedrops
Written by
Dec 3, 2021
Dec 3, 2021 at 11:34 PM UTC
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