We spend the whole days {all} [Thundy]
Jun 17, 2016 17:35:42 GMT -5
Post by kousei ♚ on Jun 17, 2016 17:35:42 GMT -5
n e w t
It seems that not only have I lost my eye but I've also lost my lust for liquor as well. I'm spinning and reeling back from what I could've sworn is an all time low for me. Rock bottom doesn't feel too good but it's familiar. (Newt, you're strong. Remember that.) I guess I'm not at a complete all time low after all. Still, I'm deluding myself if I tell myself that I'm at a high of any point. I can't be at a high of any kind if my worth is at an all time low, hanging and swinging end to end on a fading thread.
I can't even hit a target any more, the knives flying far too wide from the blurring target every time I dare flick my wrist to let one fly. Even the handle of a throwing knife feels foreign in my finger tips, metal feeling almost poison to the touch. Every time I miss my father doesn't hesitate to shake his head and turn away, disappointment hanging over his shoulders and slowly breaking the fading thread.
Nevah's made it a point to remind me just how long my current worth is, she'll never let me forget. Perhaps that's what pushed me to break my apparent chastity from the bottle I've spent ages secretly enjoying for the past two years? Risk of being caught carries exhilaration of the act and besides, I need an escape route. This house is a cage, keeping me penned like a hellhound. I haven't had the courage to test fate with the bottle and the smoke ever since that glass took out my eye.
Despite my worth on the edge of shattering, the constant drum of reinforcement keeps the fragments stuck together. (Newt, you are strong. Remember that.) I never could take action of my own accord, always needed someone to kick start me so I could start working all by myself. It plays in my head like a broken tape recorder, driving me to get dressed, pocket my cash and drive my feet down the stairs. (Newt, you are strong. Remember that.) With every movement that statement feels more and more true, a statement worth living for.
"I'm just going to see Ivy." Lies fall from my tongue so easily that it's almost disgusting. My father doesn't even need to ask, just looks up from the table as if to ask why I'm so dressed up. He knows I never dress up. It just goes to show how much my father knows because I haven't talked to Ivy in at least three months. Lies twist my tongue and tie my stomach into tight knots because this doesn't feel right despite the fact it used to be the routine.
Nothing feels right with only one eye.
Even opening the door handle feels wrong, because I dare only see the world through one eye instead of two. Every step I take down the street is followed by a wave of paranoia, as if something on my blind side is going to take advantage of the weakness. (Newt, you are strong. Remember that.) It doesn't feel like that, it doesn't feel like that at all.
He told me I was strong but he never could tell me why. Just like that he shoved a statement worth living for down my throat but never offered an explanation. Just a sense of gratification and a reinforcement to the weight of having 'Krearns' attached to those four useless letters.
Still, despite not going in almost a year, I know the place like the back of my hand. My movement is almost automatic, my arms gently swaying in the cool breeze and my vision imprinted on the ground in front of me. One foot falls in front of the other all too naturally for such a foreign feeling. Twists and turns feel practically effortless in the street and time seems to blur. I find myself out of the rich and pampered area of big houses and to the less natural, almost back alley areas. Before I know it, the bar stands proudly right before me.
Good thing it wasn't damaged. No sense of repulsion at the unfamiliarity or sense of wariness at the sporadic. I step into the secret second home I happily accepted with all its burdens.
It's almost empty, most of the familiar faces aren't here. It hits me like a ton of bricks that they were likely killed, littered in the streets by the wave. At least the barman is familiar. I don't know what I'd do if his regular features were replaced by an unfamiliar stranger. (Newt, you are strong. Remember that.) I bite my lips and put one foot in front of the other. My one good eye narrowed on the liquor behind.
When I approach, I speak confidently and clearly, the statement worth living for ringing loud and clear in repeat. "Just the regular," I state calmly, sliding the coins across the counter and taking my seat. Within two minutes he has the bottle of liquor and the glass in front of me.
Golden liquid swirls from inside the bottle, capturing my gaze and leaving me almost awestruck. I almost don't notice the fact that someone is actually sitting next to me. I barely shoot them a sideways glance of acknowledgement before turning my attention back to the bottle. Too much weight on your mind does tends to do that. Just need a drink, not too much, just a little bit to clear my head. Without so much as a word, I begin pouring the liquid into my glass. The movement feels too natural for something so foreign, I suppose having no worth tends to do that to you.
I swirl the glass and wrinkle my nose; the unfamiliar doesn't look all the appealing.
(Newt, you are strong. Remember that.)
A statement worth living for, reinforcing those four useless letters that has defined my existence for seventeen years - for my sake, I hope that statement is true.
(WC: 998)