âTime does not exist, only the notion that it does makes us believe we have control over it.â â Clarissa Wild
Jay
A cold shiver runs up and down my spine as he unwinds the ropes from my wrists and ankles. His gun is still pointed at my head, his fingers ready to pull the trigger. I know whatâs coming. The determination in his voice tells me enough. Heâs finally decided. Heâll kill me. Thereâs nothing I can do. I canât escape. I know heâd shoot me in a blink. I canât run, I canât hide. All I can do is hope. Hope is the only thing I have left.
The sun is calling me. Bright orange light shines through the gaps in the curtains, a sight that makes me anxious as well as calm. Knowing that this is where it all ends is frightening, but peaceful. Iâve never known what it was like to know when youâre going to die, but now that I do I find it oddly comforting. To know that I can count down the seconds and wait until he pulls the trigger.
I wonât let him get away with it easily, though. I will look him straight in the eye and force him to watch. He should see the evil reflected in my eyes.
âGet your ass up from that bed,â he says, flicking his gun.
I push myself up from the bed, my hands sore from the ropes burning my skin. My legs shake as I walk to the window. X perches a chair behind me. His hands are on my shoulders, nudging me down. Itâs strange to feel his hands on me, strange because they remind me of something ⦠or someone ⦠but I have no clue why. He is awfully soft with me, his hand lingering in the nook of my neck. I have no idea why it sticks with me so much, but it does. It feels familiar and secure. Something I havenât felt in a long time.
With his other hand he rips open the curtain, and in a flash Iâm blinded by light.
âYouâre lucky,â he says. âI normally never fulfill last wishes, but Iâll make an exception for you.â
âAnd why is that?â I ask, staring into the distance. I canât even see the horizon from here, but at least I can see the colors in the sky, and the way the sun paints it like a canvas.
He doesnât answer. Instead, his gun makes a clicking sound and then I feel the cold metal against the back of my head.
âCan I ask you something?â I say, swallowing away the fear and tears.
âGo ahead, although I canât promise Iâll answer.â
âI know. I just want to know ⦠Why?â
It takes him a while to answer. âBecause you are you.â
âThat doesnât explain anything.â
âYouâre here because you were meant to be here. The choices you made all led you to this point in time. There is no denying that this is your fault, too.â
âToo? So youâre admitting this isnât all on me?â
Again, he doesnât answer, which tells me enough.
âYou have fifteen minutes,â he murmurs.
This time Iâm the one who doesnât say a word. Instead, I watch the sun as it rises above the skyline, bathing our world in light. Itâs almost unbelievable serene, in a morbid way. Still, Iâm glad I get to watch this one more time before Iâm gone. The sun always meant a lot to me.
âYou know, when I was young, I used to watch the sun come up every day.â
âHmm â¦â
âThere was this boy who would come and watch it with me.â
Xâs fingers twitch and for a second I believe heâs actually listening to me.
Not that it matters. All I want is to go back to those days when everything was so much easier and less fucked up. Just thinking about it takes me back to the time I was still oblivious to all the evil in this world.
***
Friday, June 22, 2005nd
People are partying so hard downstairs the entire house is shaking. When I shut the door, the music is suddenly a lot less ear-deafening. I honestly canât believe why the fuck I came to this party in the first place. Itâs crowded with stupid people.
I check out the room and notice a window in the back. Perfect. I always try to find the most secluded spots in a house, because I love being alone with my thoughts. I love just wandering around and exploring stuff. Besides, this party is so freaking boring, nobody even noticed I was gone. Thatâs obviously not right, since Iâm usually the party starter. At least, at parties where they actually play good music and bring out the alcohol, for fuckâs sake.
I open the window and make sure there is sufficient space to place my feet before I make the climb. It doesnât take me long to settle on the rooftop and sit my ass down. This house has a perfect view of the skyline, and itâs filled with stars. I marvel at the sight of them, appreciating their glow. It almost makes me forget about the horrible music and squabbling of the people downstairs.
It almost makes me forget about my own life.
The world is hell and the stars are the fairytale I cling to.
Sitting here, looking up at the stars reminds me of all those times I used to stare at the sky. During the times my father was away for work and left me with the babysitter who cared more about fucking the sexy boy next door in the master bedroom than she cared about looking after me. Or after the times my father screamed at me for picking my own wardrobe, listening to different music, or otherwise embarrassing him, as he called it. Yup, it happened a lot. When you never get hugged, you forget what itâs like to feel loved. When you donât remember what love feels like, you tend to want to escape. Escaping has become a way of life for me. Parties. Drugs. Alcohol. I donât care. Nobody cares, so why should I?
I watch the stars at the times I feel lonely and whenever I need to comfort myself with the thought there is someone looking out for me. Somewhere out there is someone who is looking at the stars right when I am, someone who loves them as much as I do. Someone like my mother. I wish I knew what happened to her.
All I know is that she was there ⦠and then she wasnât. I was too young to remember any of it, but I know I had a mother before I was six ⦠somewhere after that she just disappeared.
I sigh, staring at the sky, wondering where she went. I wonder what sheâs like and if she would have stayed by my side. If she would love me, because my father canât.
Iâm startled by the noise coming from the window. A foot comes out and soon a guy steps out onto the rooftop. There goes my silent little retreat.
He turns to look at me, baffling me with his attention-demanding eyes. Not in a bad way, but in a surprising kind of way. He runs his fingers through his tousled black hair as he comes toward me. Somehow, he looks a bit familiar.
âGot room for one more?â he asks.
âGo ahead.â
I scoot over a little, giving him room to sit down. Heâs carrying a couple of beer cans and sets them down beside him. When he spots me looking at them, he says, âWant one?â
I gasp. âWhere did you get them?â
âFound them in the fridge when no one was looking.â His answer is straightforward, no-lie, I shit you not. A quirky smile appears on his face, and as my jaw drops, he grins.
I like this guy already.
âIâm not the sharing type, but Iâll make an exception for you,â he says, throwing one of the cans into my hands.
I snort. âAnd whyâs that?â
âOh, I just wanted a quiet place on the roof and here I find you doing the same thing. Meeting random strangers is a fun way to pass the time.â
I shake my head, laughing to myself as I open the can. âOther than going crazy at some random party?â
âI was never really a partygoer.â
I take a sip. âSame here.â I look at him, and he smiles. I canât stop thinking that I know that smile from somewhere. âDo I know you somehow?â I ask tentatively.
He laughs. âI donât know. You tell me.â
I shrug and take another sip. âForget it.â
âSo why are you here then?â he asks.
âOh, no reason. I just like staring at the stars.â
âReally? Me too. They remind me that the world is so puny in comparison to whatâs out there.â
âHmm â¦â I take another sip and lean back. âYouâre right. It does put everything in perspective.â
âRight.â He winks and lifts his can. âTo the stars.â
We toast and drink some more, silently staring at the sky.
âSo why arenât you down there with the rest?â I ask after a while.
âI told you, Iâm not a partygoer.â
âYeah, but why are you here then?â
âOh ⦠some other reason. I prefer to just enjoy the view here.â
âOther reason?â I ask.
He raises an eyebrow and cocks his head. âDo you always ask that many questions to random strangers?â
A flush spreads across my cheeks. âHey, Iâm only trying to get to know this random stranger.â
He smiles. âNo need. You probably wonât ever see me again.â
I frown.
Suddenly a scream alerts all my senses. I sit up straight as an influx of screams fill the hallways of the house. My eyes widen and I get up immediately. The guy next to me looks confused, but Iâm too curious to find out what happened. I put my feet back through the window before I look. âOh God â¦â I stammer. The bed in the room is stained red and the pillow is ripped apart, feathers scattered across the room. On the floor is a trail of blood.
My eyes widen. I get the urge to throw up, but manage to keep it down by closing my eyes right away. I turn around, back to the window, and take in a huge gulp of air. It feels like my lungs are constricted. From the corner of my eye I spot people running out of the house, yelling, âThereâs a dead body!â
When I look to the left, up to the roof, the stranger is gone.
***
Friday, August 16, 2013. 5:30 a.m.th
âAre you done?â X asks, putting his gloves back on.
I nod, taking a deep breath. Tears well up in my eyes, because I canât believe this is the end. Itâs too soon. I regret that I havenât done all the things I wanted to do before I died. Traveling the world, climbing a mountain, doing some charity work, sailing the oceans. I wanted to do it all.
And now itâs too late.
I was weak. Years wasted on drugs and sex. Mindless fucking with strangers never got me anywhere. Instead, I ended up here, being a fucking pole dancer, a hooker, someone who lives for the money to waste it all on simple pleasures. What a failure.
I lower my head and contemplate my sins. X places the gun against the back of my head, the cold metal making my heart beat in my throat. Itâs happening. Itâs really happening. In a few moments Iâll be dead. Will it hurt? Or will it be quick and merciful? Where will I go?
I hear him take in a sharp breath, his hand steadying on my shoulder. âIf you move, I will hurt you. If you stay still, this will be quick and painless.â
I nod, closing my eyes. A single tear trickles down my cheek. This is it. This is the end. Tick, tock, tick, tock. The clock reminds me that Iâm still here, on this very earth. Each passing second is another granted. If I could do it all over, I would, but it wouldnât be the same. Iâve learned from my mistakes. I would appreciate the short-lived life I received.
And as I hear the rattling of the gun, and feel the way it shifts on my skull, his fingers tense up, squeezing my shoulder. I say goodbye to the brief life I was given.
But then the gun disappears from the back of my head and the man that was standing behind me is gone.