CHAPTER 5 | FIXATION | BRIAN MOSER
Description: After a rough night and a worse morning, you find yourself tangled between work, lingering dreams, and an unexpected night out. Thereâs tequila, bad exes, and even worse neighbors, but when Rudy shows up, the night shifts and the past starts bleeding into the present in ways you canât ignore. Word Count: 4.3k
Iâm back in the dark room.
Not really, but it feels like it. It always does in dreams. Cold metal hums under my bare feet, and something wet trickles down from a place I canât see. Thereâs no voice this time, just the sheer presence of someone watching. And then, like itâs whispered into my skull:
Angel.
I jolt awake with my nails digging into my palm.
âYou okay?â Debraâs voice slices through the haze, pulling me back to her living room and out of my skull. Sheâs sitting cross-legged across from me, smoking her cigarette and watching the news on TV, like I didnât just wake up gasping for air right next to her.
I nod slowly. âJust a dream.â
She doesnât press. Instead, she smirks over her cup and tilts her head. âRudy really likes you, you know.â
I glance over at her, head cocked sideways. âYeah?â
âHe said youâve got this... vibe, like youâre familiar. Youâve probably met before or something.â
I try to smile. âYou okay with your boyfriend liking someone else?â I ignore the rest of her sentence and instead change the topic.
She rolls her eyes. âDonât be weird. Itâs a compliment. I think heâs just interested in who I spend my free time with.â
I nod again, slower this time, but the weight in my chest hasnât left. I decide to go outside to get some air, maybe stop reliving this nightmare. Itâs silly to think, though, how nightmares have a funny way of reaching me, and this time itâs him.
Rudy.
Leaning against his car, a plastic bag in hand. He looks up like he knew Iâd come out. Like heâs been waiting for me. He comes up to me by the front door. "Couldn't sleep?" he asks me.
âWhat makes you think that?â I say, hugging my arms around myself despite the warm morning.
âYouâre at Debraâs house, and itâs 9 am,â he says plainly. âItâs a little early for a sleepover, donât you think?â
âMaybe we were watching the sunset together or something, you know.â
He chuckles and looks down. âChecks out.â He looks back up at me. âSo what was it? Bad dream?â
I hesitate. ââŚI donât really remember.â
âSure you do,â he says, but itâs gentle. Not pushing. âYou just donât want to talk about it.â
I glance up at him. âDo you always show up like this?â I ask. âMysteriously waiting by peopleâs houses and offering unsolicited advice.â
His eyes narrow just slightly, but the smile lingers this time. âOnly for women who are worth it.â
Thereâs a pause. My chest feels tight, and not entirely from discomfort.
ââŚDebâs inside.â I say.
He steps just a little closer, still casual. âBut youâre out here.â
And maybe itâs the lack of sleep, but something about him, maybe the way he always seems to know more than he should, makes me feel like I should say something. So I do.
ââŚBecause itâs freezing inside.â I say, half-joking in a desperate attempt to diffuse the tension in the air. He doesnât laugh or respond though. Just smiles at me and walks inside the house. I sigh in relief. Fuck, what even was that? Man, heâs so sexy⌠What the fuck am I talking about? Debra is gonna kill me and turn my skin into a jacket.
I walk back into the house and catch them both mid-makeout session. âIf you guys keep going like this, youâre not gonna have faces anymore.â I say, rolling my eyes and looking over Debâs kitchen table for my hair clip.
Debra snorts mid-kiss and pushes him off, wiping her mouth. âSorry, I forgot we had company.â
Rudy straightens his shirt; it makes me wonder if heâs ever actually been flustered in his life. âCanât help it,â he says, glancing at her. âShe tastes like cinnamon today.â
âGross,â I mutter, grabbing the clip and twisting my hair up. âI hope you tell your dentist everything.â
Debra laughs, oblivious, while Rudy just leans back on the counter, arms crossed. I can feel him watching me, even when Iâm not looking. âYou sticking around for breakfast?â Debra asks me, pulling orange juice and pancake mix out of the bag Rudy brought.
I shake my head. âNah. I should get home. Iâve got work later, andâŚâ I trail off because Rudyâs still looking at me. âStuff... yeah, stuff to do.â
âYou should be doing less stuffâŚâ Rudy says, slow and deliberate, then adds with a faint smirk, ââŚand more people.â He tilts his head slightly. Like he doesnât mean to say it out loud, but it slipped. He smiles, all warmth and white teeth.
Debraâs laugh carries in the room. âOkay, Freud. Ease up on the horny philosophy.â
I smile at her. âHe gets one cinnamon kiss and thinks heâs Casanova.â
Rudy just chuckles, raising his hands in mock surrenderâbut that glint in his eyes? Still there. Debâs voice cuts through. âHeâs exactly right. You need to loosen up! I heard Masuka is really good with his hands.â She jokes, and Rudy joins her, although heâs quieter, less performative.
âYuck. Like Iâd do anything with that perv.â I say, scoffing.
Debra snorts. âCâmon, youâre too picky.â
âIâm not picky,â I protest. âI just have standards.â
âMasukaâs harmless,â she says through a grin, pouring the juice.
âMasuka probably has a collection of hentai in his desk drawer.â I reply.
That gets Rudy to laugh; itâs low, but it rumbles out of him like itâs genuine. I glance at him without meaning to, and heâs already looking back at me. In the same flirty way. Deb hums to herself while flipping a pancake in the pan, and I suddenly feel like Iâve walked into someone elseâs life.
My phone buzzes on the counter. A text from Doakes. Crime scene. A⌠park? âI really do have to go,â I say, grabbing my phone. âIâll tell Masuka to keep his hands to himself.â
Debra blows me a kiss. âTell Dex I said it wouldnât kill him to check on his sister.â And Rudy just lifts a mug and nods at me, same smile, same flirty air.
As I walk out of the house, I think about what Debra and Rudy say about âdoing someone.â I never actually thought about having a love life since my work consumed me fully. As time went on, loneliness felt more like solitude; thatâs just how I coped with things. Yet having the company of Debra has been increasingly better for at least my mental well-being. I hadnât loved anyone since my parents left me, and even that day was bitterly heartbreaking. Itâs easier to spend your nights cleaning blood off your work shoes than wondering why someone isnât texting you back.
Maybe I need something reckless. Not love, not even sex, just noise. A reason to get out of my own head. Maybe even a night where I donât drink shady liquor store bought vodka and watch true crime till paranoia seeps its way into my floorboards. I drive fast. Once Iâm at the crime scene in the park, and somehow made a 20-minute drive in 15 minutes, I wait patiently there and observe the body being picked up and put into the ambulance van. I pull the phone out of my pocket and scroll down to Debâs contact.
âDeb Cakes.â
Itâs so stupid and corny itâs kind of funny. I type out a few messages, testing which one will make me sound less robotic.
âHey girlfriend you wanna go out 2nite?â That doesnât sound like me.
âTy for letting me crash at your place, let me repay you with a night out?â I sound like a sad man.
âFeeling like mojitos tn? On me.â Sounds casual enough, but we are past casual.
âClub after work? Or do I have to convince you to have fun with me?â Send.
I start cleaning up the scene once all the evidence and everything is gone. Blood drips from blades of grass, seeping into the ground, and fragments of skin are still left on the wet soil. I finish up, and as I begin to take my gloves off, my phone vibrates in my pocket. I nod to the other TCST, signalling my leave, and slip into my car.
âFuck yeah! Meet at Sol Noche, 9 PM?â I type out "yes" and put my phone down on the passenger seat.
By the time Iâm home, the sunset is kissing the rooftop of my apartment, but a car sits in my parking spot. That fucking loser is letting his girlfriend park here. I sigh and, reluctantly, park 3 spaces down the block. When I walk up the stairs this time, Iâm not heading to my house but to my neighborâs. I knock, not aggressively, but still loud.
The door swings open, and a slender girl hangs in the doorway. Her makeup looks ruined but in a good way, short shorts hug her legs, and the baby tee she wears stretches over her like it was tailor-madeâinsane because it once was mine. âDid yaâ need something?â She says questioningly. I grit my teeth.
âYour car is in my parking spot.â I say plainly, no longer upset about the car and instead about why this woman has my old shirt on.
âMy boyfriend said itâs fine there.â She says, twirling her hair. She looks young, like 20.
âYour boyfriend is wrong.â I say to her, and I know he is. I know heâs doing this out of spite. One night stand gone wrong, now I canât even have common courtesy.
âOh, well, Iâll move it in the morning then.â I should argue with her, but I donât; I just walk away. I donât hear her close the door until Iâve opened my own.
I strip my shirt off in the entrance and unclip my hair, running my fingers through it to relieve the stress building in my bones. I go into my bedroom, peer into my closet, and hopefully find something that I donât feel ill-fitting in.
I slip into a sheer, olive-green handkerchief skirt, with delicate embroidery near the slits. It moves when I walk and kisses the backs of my calves. The matching cami clings to my ribs and has a faded look, like it came from a thrift rack with stories baked into the threading. I cinch it all with a double-looped leather belt that sits low on my hips.
I slip on chunky resin bangles in olive, moss, and gold and big amber earrings. A round, olive-toned pendant hangs from a suede cord at my throat, resting right between my collarbones. Right below the scar of my past that continues to haunt me. I grab my Blumarine sunglasses and slip on my pistachio-coloured Coach platforms. Theyâre clunky and a little worn, but I love them anyway.
I give myself one last look in the mirror. Iâm not deathly tonight. Iâm sunlit and unreadable. My mascara is soft on my face, lips brown and pink, eyes shimmery, and cheeks tinged pink. I look alive.
I go to my kitchen, deciding to have just one free drink before I blow $70 and then some just buying more drinks. I pour gin into an opaque-pink shot glass, received on my 21st birthday from a random lady who worked with me some years ago; it's tacky and says âFlorida!â on a white sign with a beachy background. I decide to cut a lime just to chase the drink, and when I open the drawer, my blood runs cold.
Thereâs a knife that isnât mine.
Itâs similarâabout the same weight, same shapeâbut itâs cleaner. Sleek. Navy blue. I frown, holding it up to the light. And thatâs when I see it. Text thatâs etched faintly along the blade, near the hilt, just subtle enough to miss:
âI couldâve carved love into your throat.â
I drop the knife and stumble backwards. Before I can fully process everything thatâs just occurred, my phone begins to buzz on the counter, Debra.
âFree drinks all night!â I canât even question her or react properly in excitement. I down the shot of gin and recollect myself, then walk out the door.
When I stop outside Sol Noche, the sunâs almost fully gone, and the purple, hazy light emitting from inside is already bleeding onto the sidewalk. The club is nestled between a shuttered pawn shop and a shady tarot place that smells like burnt-out incense. Thereâs a velvet rope, but Debraâs waving me in like it doesnât exist.
Inside, itâs all flashing lights and bodies too close together. Cigarette smoke clings to the ceiling, and the bass sounds like itâs beating at the same rhythm and tempo as my own heartbeat. My heels stick slightly to the floor as I walk toward the bar, and the air smells like sweat and ecstasy.
Deb throws her arms around me. âFinally!â she shouts over the music. âYou look sooo hot!â
I smile, but itâs tight. âIâm surprised I even made it.â
She laughs like she didnât hear me, already ordering tequila shots. Then I see him behind her, arm snaked around her waist and a grin plastered over his face as he looks down on me. âI didnât know heâd be joining us.â I say to Deb, putting a cool smile on display. She looks back from the bar at me.
âWhat else did you think free drinks meant?â She grins and kisses Rudy with full force, parading themselves into a makeout session right in front of me. I fake laugh and leave them to it while sitting on a bar chair.
âGive me the strongest mojito you have, preferably with Marienburg 90.â The bartender looks at me with that look, but she shrugs and starts to make some concoction. Itâs not what I asked for, but when she finishes and places the brightly coloured drink in front of me, I canât help but try it. Fucking god, it hits me like a train. In a matter of hazy minutes, and two of whatever the hell she gave me later, Iâm pulling Deb to the dance floor.
Seconds are spun into minutes and minutes into hours, while the glassiness of the floor begins to morph into itself. I stumble off of the lit-up dance floor and over to where I was last. I ask the bartender for water to sober myself up a bit, and she passes me one readily.
A voice cuts through the noise behind me.
âYou clean up well.â
I turn, and itâs Rudy.
Dressed in black. Shirt unbuttoned just enough to show the suggestion of collarbone. My stomach drops, and I don't know if itâs from excitement or nausea.
I glance around. âSo, Deb brought you to buy us drinks.â
He smirks, sipping from his clear plastic cup. âShe said you invited her. Iâm just tagging along.â
Of course he is.
I roll my eyes and take another sip. âYou looked like you were having fun out there,â he says, leaning in slightly to be heard. âDidnât expect that from you.â
âI didnât either,â I say, trying not to mirror his closeness. âJust felt like letting go.â I say, although it sounds more like I'm questioning myself. He puts his drink down and looks over his shoulder. Debra signaled to him to come and dance. He reluctantly goes over, not sparing a second glance back at me. When he does get over, she eyes him down, and not in a friendly way.
âExcuse me, miss.â I hear an all too familiar voice next to me. I turn around.
âZach.â Aka, my shitty neighbour. I give him a bitch face and sigh outwardly to further express how pissed I am to see him.
âYou knew it was me. Guess I never leave your mind.â Zach grins and leans against the bar top, dangerously close. His eyes wander. âLast I saw, you were all dark and morbid,â he says, grinning like itâs meant to be charming. âNow youâre glowing. âWhat, finally decided to quit that shitty blood job?â
I stare at him blankly, sip my drink, and tilt my head. âAnd last I saw you, you were banging some coked-up chick next door. and wouldnât give me my clothes back.â
Zach laughs, low and forced, like he doesnât want to admit that stung. âStill a mouth on you.â
I arch a brow. âStill a parasite.â
Heâs about to say something else thatâs probably gross, and then Iâll regret not throwing a drink over it, but a hand casually laces itself around my waist and pulls me in. âEverything alright here?â Rudyâs voice cuts into the conversation and carries just enough weight to make Zach glance up and stiffen. I donât even need to look to know Rudyâs smiling that same too-calm, too-clean smile.
âYeah, uh, everythingâs fine. Just wanted to talk to this pretty lady.â Zach says, suddenly gripping my wrist like heâs trying to assert some last pathetic dominance. Itâs not tight, but itâs enough.
Before I can say anything, Rudy moves. Not chaotically. Not even quickly. Just⌠deliberately. His hand releases my waist only to grab Zachâs hand, fingers clamping around his wrist. I hear Zachâs breath catch and the subtle crack of pressure building where bone meets bone.
Rudyâs smile doesnât change.
âIâm afraid sheâs already talking to someone,â he says softly.
Zach tries to pull away, but Rudy doesnât let go. Instead, he leans in closer, like heâs telling a secret just for him. âYouâve had your moment. Donât make it awkward.â
Zach nods, barely, and Rudy lets go. Zach steps back, rubbing his wrist with a forced chuckle. âDidnât know you brought your watchdog,â he says to me.
I smile, baring my teeth. âGoodnight, ZachâŚâ and tell that chick at your place to take my fucking shirt off.â He disappears into the crowd, and itâs like the loudness of the room goes with him.
I turn back to Rudy. âThanks,â I murmur, more breath than voice.
He shrugs, as if nothing happened. But something did. His hand is still warm against the curve of my waist when he touches me again, gently this time, thumb dragging slowly along the fabric of my shirt, just above my hipbone.
âYou alright?â He asks, his voice dipped in genuine concern, but his eyes are unreadable.
âI am now.â I say.
He studies me for a second, like heâs debating something. âDance with me?â he says, not a question, not a suggestion. A gentle command. When I nod, slow, almost hesitant, he pulls me through the crowd, into the pulse of the music, the dark, and the heat. Right there, his hands find my hips, and mine find his shoulders, and for a moment, I forget about the knife, the scar, and the way "angel" floated so effortlessly off his lips. My hips roll with the beat, slow and instinctive, and I feel the way his breath stutters once against the shell of my ear. He spins me, and I lay my back against his chest.
I tilt my head back just a little, eyes fluttering, letting myself move with him, and thatâs when the familiarity suddenly makes sense. His grip, his eyes staring into mine, and the way he drags his hand down my throat and stops just above my pendant, right where the scar is.
And it hits me.
A flicker of my existence, or what couldâve been the end of it, a version of himself, and a knife held at my throat. Itâs navy blue. Then everything vanishes as fast as it comes.
I tense, every part of me screaming to run, but I donât move. Not with his fingers ghosting over the scar like itâs still fresh. âTrying to hide this from me?â he murmurs. I nod before I can lie. He brings his face just inches from mine, and I swear, I can feel his smile. Not the fake one. Not the charm. The one beneath it. The wolfish one. âYou were talking so much a while ago; what now?â
His hands slowly glide over my thighs and torso, not in the seductive way, but in the sizing-me-up way. Like snakes preparing their prey. My body betrays my better thinking, and I arch myself into his touch, knowing that Iâm walking that thin line between lust and morality. Sin and sinning. He turns me to face him again, and this time Iâm seeing him for real. Under dim light and heavy-lidded eyes, Iâm putting pieces of a puzzle together, but theyâre just becoming even more scrambled.
âYou keep looking at me like that, and Iâll think youâre actually into me.â He says to me, a breathy laugh escapes his lips. I see it as a challenge.
âSo what if I do?â I say it with intensity, before the thoughts of Stockholm syndrome can hit me. He leans in again, closer this time, but not to kiss me. No, heâs more careful than that.
He presses his mouth beside my ear, âGoodnight, Angel.â He says it and dissolves into the crowd of people around us. Iâm standing by myself in the middle of the dance dancefloor, stunned and nonplussed. I was stuck in a fog, in a memory, but when he left suddenly the room looked brighter and sounded louder, and Debra, smiling at me and weaving through the crowd, beamed 10 times over.
âDo you know where Rudy is? I canât find him anywhere.â She asks me.
âI think he went to the bathroom over there.â I say, not even looking in that general direction. She walks past me, and maybe itâs the smell of her perfume that makes my eyes sting or the big drunk guy who keeps hitting my shoulder, but I think itâs time I went home.
The walk back to my car is a blur, and I donât remember saying goodbye to Deb or even if the bouncer gave me a second glance. I only remember the sound of grown men yelling outside and homeless people sleeping on the pavement and how suddenly cold it got outside when the sun was kissing the moon. When I get home, my throat is dry and my chest is hollow. I leave the lights off, lock the door, and walk into darkness, like Iâm afraid to see something Iâm not ready for.
I drop my platforms by the door; my accessories and pendant hit the floor next. I don't even look at the knife again since I left it where it landed. On the tile. Near the cutting board. Iâm afraid if I pick it up, Iâll read it again. I shower in silence, with cold water and only the emptiness of the house to accompany me. I scrub until my skin is tender, like I can wash the memory off me.
Sleep doesnât come easy. Everything feels unfamiliar, off, since I know now that the person whoâs been in my house is so close yet so far out of my reach. The AC kicks in with a loud whine, and I flinch like itâs a scream. I lie there, staring at the ceiling, tracing the outline of the darkness and where my lamplight diminishes it.
And still, heâs under my skin.
When I finally do sleep, I dream Iâm back in the dark room again. Not the club. Not Debâs place. But the real one. The one with metal floors and a voice I canât place taunting me. I say something; I canât remember what, but I do remember light but rough hands grazing my hair and tugging with clumsy force. I remember blisters on my bottom lip after my parents rushed to my side and screamed, âWhere did you go?â and âWhat happened to you?â
I remember a picture of me in a local newspaper; my parents threw it into a fire, and Iâd forgotten it ever existed. Fire was how you escaped a bad memory, and thatâs how I remembered them.
In that fire.
The screaming of the neighbourhoodâ
When I wake up, it isnât screaming, though. Itâs sirens.
Not the blaring kind that wails down the street and vanishes into someone elseâs nightmare. No, these are parked. Stationery. Flashing red and blue bleeding through the blinds, pulsing right outside. I sit up slowly, migraine throbbing in my head and body heavy with remnants of alcohol. I move to the window and peel the blinds open with two fingers. Two cop cars. One unmarked. Caution tape was already being strung up like party dĂŠcor next door.
âFucking Zach, what did you do to that girl?â I step outside the door barefoot, everything about me still soaked in the afterglow of sweat and regret. A female officer eyes me but doesnât say anything.
And then I see her.
That girl from last night. Standing outside in one of those tacky robes that you can buy secondhand for $12. Makeup in ruins, and arms crossed. Her baby teeâmy baby teeâis balled up in her fist.
Sheâs crying, saying, "I didnât do anything." I woke up, and he was just⌠gone like that.â Her voice cracks. âI thought he was asleep.â
But the EMTs arenât rushing; theyâre quiet, professionalâŚslow.
Because heâs dead.
Zachâs body is wheeled out under a pale blue sheet, and for a moment the wind picks up just enough for me to see the outline of his neck. It's too clean. Like a warning.
I take a step back inside and close my door, locking it, and slide down until Iâm sitting on the floor in my underwear, mouth dry, heart racing.
That girl is going to be blamed. She's young, she's hysterical, and she's easy to write off, but I know it wasnât her.
I know the difference between a messy mistake and a message.
And Rudy would never leave a loose end.
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