This is a story loosely based on a reoccurring dream I used to have.
Sam, if you're out there somewhere... hey.
--
"Why do people ride rollercoasters?
The adrenaline. The feeling of facing your fears. The thrill of soaring through space.
The ability to forget whatever the fuck is going on in your life and just fly."
- Victoria Pedretti
--
I didn't know that dreams and desires could be so interconnected. Shadowy, shimmering reflections, stitched together at the seams even when they felt worlds apart. Feeding and fanning each other's appetite like an insatiable ouroboros of insanity,
Dreams had always been my escape, even as a child that never liked to sleep. Dozing off in classes or traversing different planes in my mind whilst my body was firmly rooted; transporting me through time and space to dimensions of wildest fantasy. Fantasies that felt so real, so
right
, I could feel them humming in my bones long after I'd been snapped back to the present.
A taste for unknown and unchartered waters that roared through my veins like destiny calling.
It didn't occur to me that desire could feel the same. A needy, agonising, avaricious wildfire that tripped every one of my nerves and wrung me out like lightning. Something that could bring every single hair of mine to attention; my thrumming fingertips itching and seeking, desperate to own and explore. To intertwine myself in someone else's breath, someone else's being - to pull at the threads of their destiny until it was so inextricably linked with mine.
I didn't know that dream and desire answered only to each other.
I didn't know, until I met him.
--
The movies always make shock out to be this big, explosive thing. Big eyes, gaping mouths, broken vases or slips that sent you sprawling. Tripping and catching on the edge of things, like narrowly avoiding being pushed off a cliff.
Shock didn't feel like that. Shock didn't feel like anything at all, except empty space and distance as you fell and watched the cliff face rise out of the sea. Registered the waves rising to swallow you whole.
"What did you say?"
Santi sighed, vaguely irritated. "I said," he repeated, thumbing delicately through the binder of invoices in his hand, "you two should just fuck already."
I didn't move - couldn't, really. Despite the mountains of papers and folders crowding us in my shoebox-sized office and the immediate deadline weighing heavy on our shoulders, I couldn't bring myself to do anything but blink.
"Santi," I bit out. "What the fuck is wrong with you?"
"Oh,
great
. Come off it Jei. Just because I was brave enough to say it out loud doesn't mean I'm the only one -"
"That is the kind of shit you can NEVER say out loud!" I was hissing at him now. "This is a business! We are a company!! Maybe the warehouse doesn't feel like it sometimes, and sure, we run kind of lax around here, but when we trade in the eyes of the law that is how we stand. Do you understand that?"
Santi snapped the binder shut and stared at me quizzically. For a gangly youth on the edge of twenty-two, he was really much brighter than the lads gave him credit for. That's why he was with me, in the office, whilst the rest of the warehouse crew were sweating their balls off out back. He was the closest thing I'd get to an assistant around here.
"You know there's a whole lot of stuff we trade that
doesn't
belong in the eyes of the law." His face was blank; eyes empty and impassive. "Right?"
I sighed, leaning back against the bureau and feeling my shirt stick to my back from the sickly July heat. It was a constant, if not never-ending struggle, to try and impart some form of legitimacy into the lackadaisical way Sam's company was run. Most of the guys here didn't care, as long as they got a weekly cheque to cash and a simple set of tasks.
But as the office manager, HR rep and one half of the sales team all rolled into one, lines and lines of fine print were what kept me up at night. A lot of my days felt like teaching barbarians which fork to use at the dinner table.
Yes, there were also parts of the business that were... shadier, than others. I didn't have a choice in that. Sam paid me far too well to walk away as easily as I'd threatened to in the past, so now I juggled a questionable moral compass alongside the million and one things I was expected to do and turned a blind eye to the weird shit that happened every so often. He knew how I felt about being directly involved with that stuff, and kept it off my desk as best he could.
Today we were combing through my scatterbrained archives to confirm my suspicions on a double-crossing supplier, though, so you know. Best laid plans and all that.
"That's besides the point," I said bleakly. "We just about have things under control around here. There are new partnerships and purchases on the horizon. You've got to be careful with what comes out of your mouth, especially when the others are around."
"Are you okay?" Santi looked both concerned and repulsed by the turn in our conversation. We'd been having a decent time until he'd voided all vibes by suggesting I shack up with our boss. "Did you skip your coffee or something? Like anyone cares about what you get up to when you're not working in this shithole."
I fixed him with a steely glare. "Power dynamics, you moron. Bosses who fuck their underlings clearly run a self-serving enterprise. Well-respected businesses aren't going to lean on a trader that lacks basic integrity. So just... don't, okay?" I thumbed through the file in my hand and grimaced. "Tell that to your gang of fucking loudmouths too."
He shook his head disgustedly, jumping off the desk. "I still think you're on one, but fine. Sure." A snort burst out of him as he resumed his perusal of the accounts. "Won't make it any less obvious though."
I let out a low growl and went to boot up the printer.
--
My knuckles rapped softly against the wood of the doorjamb. This building used to be a pub back in its heyday; one of those heavy, groaning structures that looked like it had seen several centuries. It was impossibly warm in the summer and draughty as fuck come November. But we put up with it, because it was beautiful.
Sam looked up from his desk, cluttered with sign-offs he still hadn't gotten around to and his beloved dual monitor set-up. It buzzed quietly in the background. "Hey."
"Is now a good time?"
He nodded briefly, gesturing to one of the chairs by the wall. "Shut the door."
I wish I could say that didn't frighten me. That I didn't freeze, didn't stop breathing, didn't turn to do what I was told with a stomach full of sloshing dread.
But I couldn't. I hated being alone with him.
Sam adjusted himself in his chair, swinging his long limbs around as he swivelled for something to do. He was a giant of a man - just shy of six and a half feet, I think - and all arms and legs rippling with lean, mean sinew. I could only be my bitchiest or snappiest or snarkiest with him when he was tucked safely behind his desk, demanding him to get on with the shit that was slowing down my schedule, because it was harder to shout down at someone who towered over you like a tree.
A single hoop dangled from his left earlobe; kinky black curls escaped his hair-tie to gather at the sides of his face. He raked them back with his fingers, and I swallowed.
"The Gordon's deal fell through."