I drip puke and spit blood. Bags under my eyes— heavy with contemplation, under the toxic spell of drugs.
The alluring call… the pills whisper to me from behind the walls: “Come home. You belong to me.”
I stumble to my closet, slow— covered in glistening sweat and dried *****. I muster the strength to find my pills— my beautiful percs, so pretty, so good— a potion to forget the awful, decaying wound of this festering world.
I SEE THE LIGHT.
I trip— fall into the darkest corner of my room. Huddled, knelt, dumping out my faded RX bottle. Counting them. Smelling them.
The demons finally have their hold.
I look around— my musty, dry room, a sliver of light peeking through a busted makeshift curtain. Dust particles dance in the sunray like Ashes
I haven’t left the house in a week. Haven’t showered. Haven’t changed. The floor’s a graveyard— scattered crushed pills, broken beer cans, whiskey bottles, dried blood.
What have I become?
The addiction became possessive— controlling. I was its marionette. It weaved the strings of my bane existence.
Hopeless. Lost. Beautifully scared.
I hear the faint laughs of my friends walking by the house.
***** them. They don’t care. My family doesn’t care.
****, my dad gave me the pills.
Only the pills love me.
My beautiful white powder.
I use my knife to crush them. Sweating heavy, smelling like a living zombie. As I drift to sleep, my only company is the warm embrace of my euphoric state, and dilated pupils.