Icy,
argentine irises scanned the snow covered parking lot as their owner
slung a faded army green duffel over his shoulder. The initials on
the bag read 'R. A. B.'
in blue magic marker along with various other doodles, and there was
a worn out skateboard strapped to the side of the bag. The sun was
just touching the horizon, so the sky was all hues of red, yellow,
and a twinge of green. It was quiet, but then, everything was quiet
compared to Tokyo. The man looked back at the airport he'd just
walked out of, tugging the collar of his coat closer to his neck.
'This is it, Rory. You're home.'
The thought brought a warm smile to his face. He hadn't been able to
call a place home in almost a decade, having to live his busy life on
tour in hotels and buses.
Rory Adrian Barclay, better known
to the world as the famous guitarist and lead singer for the new wave
grunge band, Memory Lapse, was home for the first time in eight
years. The only person that knew he was returning was his sister and
a couple of his friends. They'd agreed on him staying in her studio
apartment until he could find his own place. She'd mentioned
something about a roommate, but Rory doubted he'd be at her home
much, spending most of his time out with Ary, Belle, and the rest of
the gang. He grinned like Christmas morning when he thought of his
old friends. Eight years, and hardly any contact with anyone from
back home, mostly by his choice since he figured prolonged contact
would make him want what wasn't there, making him all the lonelier;
lonely indeed, and he couldn't wait to see them. Maybe they'd go to
the park and see who could count the most stars, like old times.
Not like he hadn't tried to contact any of them, though. He'd
contact Ary and Ace several times a month, and his sister pretty much
everyday. Abbi sent him little trinkets and candies for his birthdays
and holidays. But... Belle never answered her phone, and when he
asked his sister about her, she just said she was always too busy.
The guitarist had long ago accepted, bitterly, the fact that Jezebel
had moved on, but that didn't mean that they couldn't be friends, did
it? And it certainly wouldn't change the way he felt for the dancer.
The rockstar was pulled out of his nostalgia by someone
bumping his shoulder and muttering apologies into the frozen air.
Rory nodded his forgiveness and continued on the task at hand. He
scanned the parking lot once again, looking for his old truck that
Caitlin was supposed to have dropped it off here since she was busy
most of the day and couldn't pick him up. He'd gotten the keys from
the woman at the front desk, now all he needed was to find the truck
itself. It was a 1993 Toyota DX pickup with 4-wheel drive, the color
of nicotine stained white. Kind of like what happened when you smoked
too much in a white-walled room. Rory figured that it must have been
a hard color to market, but it was his truck and he loved it. It was
the only moving vehicle that he was comfortable with. He had so many
memories with it.
Rory spotted the truck in the far corner of
the lot and made his way over to the mechanical beast, guitar case
and duffel in hand. He tossed his luggage in the truck bed and
slipped into the driver's seat. Gods, did it feel good to be back in
his own truck again. It took a while to get the thing started, but
eventually he was mobile. Memories flooded him while he drove.
Flash.
Hunger Strike.
September 17, 1989.
The truth is... No five-year-old should ever have to know the pain of
death and the loss of parents. They tried to put he and his sister in
separate foster homes, but he wasn't having it. She was only four,
and she cried so much. She needed him, and he needed her just as
badly. Crying alone in the orphanage, Rory put on a brave face and
promised Caitlin that he would never let them take her from him.
Flash.
About A Girl.
August 1, 1991.
He was seven, and had just moved into town with his sister and their
newest foster parents. He and Caitlin had been dumped off at the
local playground while their parents were shopping and fixing up the
new house. A young girl was being picked on by a couple of older
kids, saying she talked funny. He'd clambered up to them, ever
confident seven-year-old he was, and punched each of them square in
the nose. He helped the girl dust the sand off of her dress, and
beaconed his sister over as the boys ran away. "See?
Now they talk funny too, so they can't say nothin'!"
He logicked to the girl. Rory had never forgotten the way she laughed
at that. She said her name was Jezebel, but Rory, explaining to her
that he didn't like the letter 'Z',
just called her 'Belle'.
Flash.
Smells Like Teen
Spirit. April
5, 1994. The truth
is... No ten-year-old should ever have to know the pain of death, and
the loss of an idol. They said it was suicide. The man was on top of
the world! What was so bad that he had to end it? He wondered if his
idol really wanted to die, or if he just wanted to escape. Ten years
old, and he didn't understand much in the ways of the life, but in
that time he realized that everything was fake and the world was
steeped in hypocrisy, so he could either own it, or be consumed by
it. He chose to own it. He promised them all that he'd make something
of himself, and that they'd all be friends forever.
Flash.
Santa Monica.
June 23, 2000.
He was 16 and mobile. He'd just gotten his license, and inherited his
foster father's old truck. It was the first time his parents had let
him go anywhere without their supervision, and somehow, he'd
convinced everyone else's parents to trust him. Only the gods knew
why they agreed. Wind in his hair and stereo blaring his favorite
songs on a mix tape; his sister, Ary, Abbi and Ace in the truck bed
as they drove to the beach. Beautiful Belle with her hand on his
thigh, sipping a Vanilla Coke, leaning over every few minutes to give
him a sip. Rory couldn't have been happier.
Flash.
Glycerine.
December 20, 2001.
Christmas break. He was 17. A "borrowed" mattress in his
truck bed, conveniently located in an abandoned park outside of town,
and far out of range of police notice. A ton of blankets and a sixer
of Guinness. He never thought he'd tasted anything sweeter than
Belle. The guitarist told her he wanted this forever, and sang the
lyrics of his first song to her on his acoustic. The press of fiery
kisses and tumbling nude under the blankets. Passion, emotion, sweat
and orgasm. It was the best night of his life.
Flash.
Creep.
March 27, 2002.
The weight of his bags was so heavy, and never had the demon felt the
urge to cry so hard to hold back. Teary goodbyes. Signed and dated
luggage and a pair of blue jeans never forgotten or thrown away. The
end of his life at home, and the beginning of his life in Tokyo. Rory
had never been able to tell Jezebel he was leaving. The night before
was a happy one, his eighteenth birthday, and he wanted his last
memory of her to stay that way. He'd only told his sister he was
leaving.
Rory unlocked the front door of Caitlin's loft (He
was the only one who could get away with calling her by her full name
most of the time.). The place was huge. He left his duffel by the
front door and slipped out of his coat, revealing that he was wearing
his favorite outfit: His signature hand-knit gray beanie with the
pale blue stripe, a worn out Nirvana shirt with holes in the back
around his bottom from failed skateboard endeavors, a set of ripped
jeans that he and the gang had written all over in Sharpie and Magic
marker, and a pair of worn out Chucks; the baby-blue ones this time.
He called out into the loft out of habit. "Hello?"
But as far as he knew he was alone. Caitlin said she'd be out late
tonight, and her roommate was away on business. The guitarist flipped
his phone open and mass-texted his sister, Ace, and Abbi. They were
the only ones who knew he was coming back. 'Hey
guys! I'm back! I'll be at the loft if you wanna see me. Caitlin, see
you when you get home. ~Rory~'
Pending. Sending. Send successful. He smiled and pocketed his phone,
picking up his guitar case as a replacement.
Rory carried his
guitar with him into, what he could only assume was, the living room
since the only rooms in the studio apartment with walls were bedrooms
and bathrooms, closets and such. His silver eyes locked onto his old
acoustic(Gods, how long had it been since he'd seen that?!), sitting
on a stand in the corner of the room. Nothing else touched it, and
his picture was on the wall behind the guitar, along with a collage
of tour dates, magazine cut outs, and other pictures of him and his
band. There was a world map with tacks and strings marking a path of
his European and Asian tour. A warm smile crossed the rockstar's
facial features, and he felt the first sting of tears behind his eyes
since he'd returned. 'I
know Caitlin was less than thrilled with me when I left, but it's
nice to know she missed me.'
He
absently ran his fingers over the neck of acoustic, sighing at the
feel of the cool metal strings on his fingers. Slender digits wrapped
around the neck of their owner's old guitar, as Rory settled down on
the couch, bringing the instrument across his lap. The guitarist was
lost in his own memories as he played 'Glycerine'
for the first time in
over eight years.
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