September 14, 2012
"Blake, are you okay?" The bathroom door had opened; it was something he had forgotten in his panic. It was the concerned voice of his best friend.
Blake looked up into the mirror, hands shaking beside him, eyes glazed over with dismay and uncertainty, but he was still able to nod in reply. He wanted to say something, anything, to reassure his friend, but his thoughts had ceased and it was hard to form words, interference in the form of being tongue-tied.
Leon clutched his shoulders and turned him around; his eyes closed at the touch, wondering if that was really Leon or someone, something else, a fabrication. He opened them slowly when his body stopped quivering and focused his vision on the blur before him.
"Leon?" the questioning tone was impossible to discern.
"You've been in here for a while. I just, eh, came to see if you were okay." He left the end of his sentence in the air, but it was easy enough to guess what else he was going to say -- you've been acting weird all night.
Blake ran his hand through his hair, noting the hint of sweat at his roots as he glided them down and out.
"I think I'm going to head home," and possibly shower in cold water until he woke up from whatever lucid nightmare he had found himself in. Dread was gradually creeping in and the bathroom suddenly seemed too small. His nerves, already short, seemed to explode and without warning. Before he even realized what he was doing, he had pushed past Leon and shot out of the bathroom.
Leon's perturbed voice reached him through the walls and was drowned out by the slamming of the door.
"Is that you, Leon?"
Blake whirled around to come face to face with a tanned, petite, blonde-haired woman who had too much make-up and -- funny how he noticed these things when he was tired -- too short a skirt with a tank-top that covered up close to nothing. Despite looking like a girl out of a porno, she was attractive and exactly his friend's type.
Then, suddenly, it hit him that the lady had said Leon's name, and Blake felt even more guilty for making him worry. He had his own agenda for the night, and he doubted "taking care of the insane best-friend" was on his to-do list. It was obvious he already had plans for the remainder of the evening.
"Excuse me," Blake whispered as he moved around her and onto the dance floor. He veered around groups of people and knocked into a few others, muttering a quick apology when needed. There were too many of them, too many to observe. Every couple of seconds he found himself glancing behind to see if his "other self" was there, but was relieved he never was. The sensibility that he was being watched didn't vanish; he had a feeling it never would.
Cigarette smoke assaulted his senses as soon as he exited the bar. A group of smokers huddled together by the door for warmth, chatting aimlessly, sharing stories and laughing loudly. Unlike the people inside, they were covered in sweaters and adorned fingerless gloves.
Blake dug his hands into his pockets and started the walk back to his apartment. The cement in the sidewalk was chipped away in places and covered in graffiti in others. The towering buildings and inky alleyways did nothing to ease his growing anxiety, and his once peaceful walk home became more trouble than the usual enjoyment he got out of it. Instead of clearing his mind, it made his thoughts race.
The lampposts that were supposed to bring comfort to nighttime travelers only made him jump at his shadow or any other dark embodiment that entered his line of sight. The slight possibility that it was something else played in the back of his head, a constant worry he couldn't shake.
His hunched back eased as his apartment building came into sight. The familiar landscape brought a calm he hadn't felt all day. Even though the darkness touched him as he counted the steps to his door, they didn't engulf him. His frantic heartbeat began to revert to a more natural pace.
An impression of normalcy was all it took to set him at ease.
Unsure if what transpired was real or illusory, he knew that one line breathed into his ear would replay over and over until it drove him into a state of absolute terror. Yet, right now, nothing could sway him from the complete calm he felt. It was abnormal and misplaced, but welcomed nonetheless. He knew his mind was blocking out the unwanted, but he fell for the trap, only wanting to erase the days struggles.
He swore he heard those select words as he fell asleep that night, soft trickles of "I'm going to take back what's mine" on his eardrums.
* * *
It had been over a week since the event at the bar and Leon had made it a point to crowd around Blake. Just having him hover in the vicinity, constantly at his side, had him seriously stressing out more than if he was alone. The trepidation he felt slowly vanished as the days wore on, now just background noise to his everyday workings.
Even now, mid-afternoon, Leon made himself comfortable at Blake's workplace. With his feet kicked up on the chair in front of him and his body leaned back, said friend was napping at one of the bookshops few tables. It was impossible to avoid him at work altogether. It was at times like these his friend showed his intellectual side, yet not when it really mattered.
It wasn't as if he was going to get terminally ill and pass away in the blink of an eye. The last time he was hospitalized had been when he was a teenager, and the sickness had laid dormant ever since.
"Can you get that for me?" a timid voice asked from somewhere behind him, jerking him back to the present.
A little girl, no more than five years old, pointed to a shelf next to him, it's wooden shelves enveloped in books.
"Which one?" Blake questioned, smiling. Children were innocent in a way that made him envious. He had his childhood snatched away from him, leaving him to wonder what it would have been like to be a normal kid with family outings and school trips.
"The blue one!" Her voice was lively and cheerful, like sunshine after a foggy day.
He kneeled down and handed her the book of her choosing, its bright-blue cover painted in different shades upon closer inspection. "Here you go."
"Thank you, mister!"
He watched her go, waving to her mom in the distance before they walked away. If his mother hadn't of died and if his father would of taken responsibility thereafter, would he have turned out that way too? Jubilant and carefree? Ignorant yet free?
He shook the thought away and decided to concentrate on something he could control. His hazel orbs went straight to Leon before his body followed suit. Trouble was brewing around the bend, and he had every intention of stopping it before it started.
"How long are you going to follow me around?" Blake finally inquired, the annoyed tone in his voice amplified by his irritated look. He had crossed his arms over his chest.
"W-what are you talking about?" So he wanted to play stupid. This wasn't anything new or something he hadn't tried before. Their disagreements often turned into heated arguments before cooling down like ice under hot water.
"I'm fine, you know." It was supposed to be a reassuring line, but instead Leon's face crumpled together in controlled anger.
"No, you're not."
"Yes, I am." Blake's hands motioned down his slim frame. "Nothing different here."
"You're lying! I know you, Blake, and this is not you."
"And I think I know myself even better. I'm. Fine." This was escalating faster than he imagined. "Don't tell me you skipped out on your date the other night because of some hunch you had about me?"
Leon's fist tightened at his side. "That's none of your business."
"I can take care of myself, but you, you need to start thinking about yourself. Not everyone is going to give you a second chance." This scene was one of many that repeated themselves, the same arguments, the same weighted phrases in a whirlwind of emotions that played out like a board game of monopoly, seemingly never-ending.
"This isn't about me, damn it!"
A cough from behind them interrupted their bickering. It was Blake's manager, and she looked anything but thrilled at their little altercation.
"You should go," was all Blake could say. He couldn't find it in himself to watch Leon go, but he did feel the impact of his blond companion's shoulder as he knocked into him on his way out.
It was obvious to anyone, including himself, that Leon was only worried. Having seen Blake through the worst of his illness years ago, it was understandable why he was so on edge, frustrated and concerned. But that didn't make it any easier to handle. What was plaguing him now wasn't something he could explain, and even if he did it would only sound insane. How do you tell your best friend you're seeing an exact copy of yourself, haunting your every move?
Even that sounded psychotic to his own ears.
His world was quiescent now, but the smaller afflictions remained -- headaches and heightened anxiety.
To drown out the misery, the suffering, the apprehension and torment, he did the only thing he knew: stick his head into his books and lose himself in a world where when things went wrong, they always got better. An escape from a time that did nothing but elicit endless anguish.
Blake brought his hands to his face and crouched down, hands trembling.
How could he reassure Leon he was okay, when he wasn't even sure of that himself?
Diving In Deep
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