Slow Dancing in a Burning RoomA Story by JDM“You know this is going to hurt, right?” Leila turns away from me and smiles. She inhales
deeply, sucking in the night air, her face lifted towards the moonless sky. “Tonight’s
the night, Lucky. Tonight’s the night we burn this f****r to the ground.” My grip tightens on the gas can I hold in my left hand.
I’m not nervous. I’m not scared. But I can feel my resolve loosen up a bit. It
always does when Leila is around. She let’s out a chuckle. Lights up a clove
cigarette. Blows the spicy smoke in the air. “We may be young but it’s not like
we have all the time in the world, Lucky.” She’s not being funny or ironic"just
truthful. We are young. We are sick. We are
dying. Leila takes another long drag. Passes the clove to
me without thinking. She knows better. I don’t smoke. Aside from the obvious,
it’s a revolting habit. Except when Leila smokes. When Leila smokes it’s like magic.
It’s art. It’s poetry in its rawest form. I take the clove from her. Place it between my
lips simply because it touched hers. I don’t inhale but I cough anyway. Leila
doesn’t freak out. Just stands behind me pounding her fists into my back.
Breaking up the phlegm. I want to tell
her to stop. That it’s not an “attack”. But she’s touching me. It’s in tiny little increments, but she’s touching me. To a dying man in love with
a dying woman, this is everything in the world. So I let her beat me. I let her
throttle my back with her tiny fists until I’m spitting up and we’re both
gasping for air. Leila picks up a gas can off the ground. Marches
with purpose up the stairs. Uses a key to open the door. Disappears inside the
house. I’d be a fool not to follow. Cap off, Leila is already lubricating the living
room floor with gasoline when I get inside. “Tell me the joke again.” “If you think breaking a mirror is seven years of
bad luck, try breaking a condom.” Usually this is when she laughs that Leila
Laugh that I love so much. Maybe she didn’t hear me? “If you think breaking a
mirror"“ “It’s not funny, Lucky.” She’s suddenly serious.
Leila is never serious. Leila is temperamental. Leila is rebellious. Leila is a
lot of things. But serious isn’t one of them. She hands me her gasoline can. “You
should be doing this. Not me.” My eyes narrow. She’s ditching The Plan. She wants
out. She’s rejecting me. “If you want out, Leila, the door is right behind you.
But I’m doing this.” The living room reeks and it’s hard to breathe. I
move deeper into the house, liberally spilling gas down the carpeted hallway. “Goddamn it, Lucky!” she cries out. She’s crying. I drop the can. Rush back to
her. I want to be there to wipe her tears. I want to be there and hold her. I
want to be. With. Her. Leila’s cheeks are wet. She’s balancing on one leg;
the beige prosthetic in her left hand, unlit Zippo lighter in her right “Have
you thought this through?” She’s angry. Those are angry tears on those angelic
cheeks. “I was given six weeks six f*****g months ago. I’ve experienced more in
this lifetime than you’ve experienced in a day. I’ve passed my expiration point.
I’ve expired. I’m done living on borrowed time. What about you?” “What about me? You gave me the can. Told me that I should be the one doing
this anyway. Am I wrong?” “There’s still hope for CF. There’s no cure for
what I got.” I don’t like Serious Leila. “If there was still hope for me we wouldn’t have
met in a f*****g hospice!” I hiss. Leila nods her head. Smiles. Comes back to me. Her
cheeks are still wet but she’s still beautiful. She drops the prosthetic to the
floor. Lights the Zippo lighter. Stares in fascination at the flame. “Tell me
something you’ve never done, Lucky. Something off of your Bucket List.” Her eyes never meet mine. She blows out the flame.
Hops over to the couch. I wish she would let me help her. “I’m a 23 year old man who’s spent twenty-three
years in and out of hospitals. There hasn’t been time for much. You know that. You
want to tell me why you want to burn this house so badly?” She shivers. “The couch is soaked. This really is
gonna hurt, huh?” When I don’t answer she shrugs her shoulders. “It’s simple. Bad things happened here. I don’t want bad
things to happen to anyone else in this house.” “Is it yours?” She looks at me. “Does it matter?” “I’ve never kissed a girl,” I lie. She rolls her
eyes. Takes the bait wiggles her fingers to beckon me to help her up. I’m ever
so happy to oblige. Leila smiles that Leila Smile that I love so much.
“I want you to know I’m calling “bullshit”, but since we’re about to torch
ourselves tonight it would be inappropriate to turn down the opportunity.” She’s in my arms. We make for an unsteady pair. We’re
swaying, almost like we’re dancing. “Lucky, I’m ready to go.” Leila gives me
the lighter. I hold her close to me with one hand, the other outstretched, the
lighter now lit. If there was ever a doubt in my mind why I agreed to such a
stupid plan, this was the reason. For the chance to hold her in my arms. For
the chance to kiss her. For the chance to maybe tell her that I love her. “It’s time, Lucky,” she whispers this time. I toss
the flame onto the couch. It erupts into flames. Smoke fills the room. It hurts
to breathe. Leila grabs my face with both hands. Presses her lips to mine.
Slips her tongue in my mouth. My last moments are of us swaying, our lips pressed together, kissing for the first and last time. © 2013 JDM |
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Added on April 1, 2013Last Updated on April 1, 2013 Author
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