Dane Stalling
Super-Earth
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2014
- Location
- Midwest
Luke tossed his bag on the couch and touched a corner of pink sheet. He smiled. It had been a long time since he had lived in a college apartment with a couple of other guys. The informality of it all was familiar and it appealed to him. Rose and Jessica’s place was a rough female analog to the vaguely literary bachelor pad he and his friends had finally perfected his senior year. It had been a good few years, his synthesizers set up in the front room, along with Russ’s drums and Dave’s amps. None of them had been singers though, so they took advantage of the few voice majors they could lure into the apartment with the promise of beer and music. Good times. Rose seemed to see it some other way. She was trying to herd him out. He wasn’t feeling that.
“There’s no hurry. I’m sure Alex’s buddy will still be free whenever we get there.” If they got there. They’d never get there. Rose was saying crazy things. He picked up the “E” cupcake from “ME” and turned the M sideways to make a sigma. The only entertainment in Statistics 101 had been grinning about standard deviants. He peeled the paper off, bit off the cake bottom, and tossed the frosting in the trash under the sink.
He opened the fridge, pinched the corner off a lone slice of chocolate cake and ate it. There was a block of four key lime yogurt cups, a glass bottle half full of water, and a sad stalk of celery with the leaves pressed up against the side of the fridge. He closed the door and opened the freezer. The frost on the sides crowded out most of the storage space. An ice tray and a couple of orange Otter Pops filled most of the available space. He closed the freezer.
“Where’s your room? Aren’t you going to show me around? I want to see the room with the Christmas lights.”
Luke wrapped his arms around Rose. He smelled her hair, ignored her tension. “What are you afraid of? Do you think I’m going to rearrange your sock drawer? Come on. Show me your sock drawer and then we can grab something at Chupacabra. Unless Alex’s ex-con is going to be there.”
He squeezed her, then headed down the short hall.
“There’s no hurry. I’m sure Alex’s buddy will still be free whenever we get there.” If they got there. They’d never get there. Rose was saying crazy things. He picked up the “E” cupcake from “ME” and turned the M sideways to make a sigma. The only entertainment in Statistics 101 had been grinning about standard deviants. He peeled the paper off, bit off the cake bottom, and tossed the frosting in the trash under the sink.
He opened the fridge, pinched the corner off a lone slice of chocolate cake and ate it. There was a block of four key lime yogurt cups, a glass bottle half full of water, and a sad stalk of celery with the leaves pressed up against the side of the fridge. He closed the door and opened the freezer. The frost on the sides crowded out most of the storage space. An ice tray and a couple of orange Otter Pops filled most of the available space. He closed the freezer.
“Where’s your room? Aren’t you going to show me around? I want to see the room with the Christmas lights.”
Luke wrapped his arms around Rose. He smelled her hair, ignored her tension. “What are you afraid of? Do you think I’m going to rearrange your sock drawer? Come on. Show me your sock drawer and then we can grab something at Chupacabra. Unless Alex’s ex-con is going to be there.”
He squeezed her, then headed down the short hall.