the lights stuttered violet, red, gold, hues of pink. the whole warehouse convulsed like a body caught mid-seizure, the bass rolling through the floorboards like thunder trying to crawl out of the earth. he didn’t move. he stood in it, jaw set, pulse thudding behind his teeth. darla’s voice barely reached him: soft, wet, wavering, too human to cut through the patter of choler inside his skull. she looked so small in the flashing lights, soft where the world around them was all metal and sound, bass shaking the floor like an animal heartbeat. her sorry hit him like a moth against glass: small, useless, the kind of soft thing that someone would swat at just for existing. he exhaled through his nose, sharp, the sound of someone trying to expel smoke that wasn’t there. his chest felt like it was being pried open from the inside out, something feral gnawing to escape. an ex lover still burning in the back of his skull. memories of his own failures flickered behind his eyes — conversations cut short, commitments he couldn’t handle, words left to rot in the air like garbage in a hot alley, too much to just offer up. they clung to him, sticky and unbearable, and he had no place to put them, nowhere to bleed it but the nearest warm body. the child star had the misfortune of standing too close when he needed to break something. like the time he’d been fourteen and too drunk in paris: a home that smelled like fresh paint and dust, the unfamiliar cold marble under his bare feet. delicate, pristine, untouched, so tempting. he slammed a vase against the wall, porcelain cracking, scattering itself across the floor in a shower of white teeth, and he felt relief in the chaos — the sudden, sharp ownership of pain that wasn’t his own. i wasn't expecting you to be anything. her words nothing but cold water suddenly over the fire that had boiled inside him. he hated that he was the same now, older and sharper, and yet still carrying the same childish, hasty compulsion. there was that same old impulse now, in the press of bodies, the swirl of strobe lights, the thrum of bass.
the weight of frustration brewed and overflowing from a cup usually empty, a spring ready to snap, and darla — tender, good, unaware — was closest. the kind of good that made him ache, because he didn’t know what to do with softness except destroy it, hold it too tight, watch it flinch. his hands curled at his sides, nails pressing half-moons into his palms. he could feel the misdirection of emotion knotting under his ribs, clawing still for a way out. he wanted to apologize, to take it back, to step forward, something. but the instinct that ruled him was uglier: cover it up, bury it fast. the air between them felt bruised, full of static. the strobe light hit her face again, and he saw it: her lip trembled, catching in her teeth, eyes blinking back speechlessly. something about it tugged at the memory of leona — that night on the balcony, rain and city noise between them, her eyes the same shade of broken. two ghosts overlapping like a double exposure, darla and leona both looking at him with that same how could you. he tried to blink it off, but the image burned. a sick mirage. two pairs of brown eyes, both soft enough to believe there was something in him worth salvaging. both staring at him like he was the knife that kept finding the softest part of the body. his shoulders sagged ever so slightly, almost imperceptible under the flashing, fractured light. the words landed like a gut punch — i didn’t do anything to you. she was right. impossibly, painfully right. and the truth tasted like metal in his mouth, acerbic and whetted. nothing more than a man waving around a gun in a crowded room, firing at anything that moved just to prove he still had bullets left. the silence of all the unspent ammo rattling around his ribs uneased him all his life. he didn’t even want to hit her. he just didn’t know where else to fucking aim. a hollow ache in his throat, like the realization of his ugly nature was a buoyant bobbing buoy that could never be swallowed by the waves of him. he sighed, dragging his hand over his jaw, eyes flicking up to her. “you didn’t,” he said finally, voice lower, softer, affirming it back to her. he ran a hand through roused curls, jaw tight, the bass from the club undulating through his chest cavity like a second heartbeat. “listen,” he muttered, not looking at her at first, eyes fixed on the neon bleeding across the wall. “in a fucking mood. it doesn’t have shit to do with you - wrong place, wrong time,” he excused, deflecting, folding the truth into something palatable. an apology always a harder pill to swallow when he was venomous. “it’s not - it’s not your fuckin’ fault, alright? just forget it. forget i said a fucking thing,” it was the closest thing to tenderness he could manage — a small mercy in a night full of noise. he wanted to reach out, to smooth the apology into her skin, but instead he shoved his hands into his pockets and pushed past her, letting the crowd swallow his edges again.