Brendon had been stuffed in the back of the cab for almost four hours, in a silence with the driver that didn’t exactly grow warm as time passed, but wasn’t explicitly uncomfortable. He watched the counter as the amount of money he’d have to pay for this trip clocked up into the multiple hundreds, and even though he knew if this job didn’t work out, he’d have no way back to New York, he didn’t really feel nervous, just faintly apprehensive. No room for regret now, he told himself- and he exhaled, clicking his tongue, dragging his eyes finally away from the counter and out of the window. As the hours passed, the landscape had morphed from mostly grey and neutral to green and blue and brown, and the wondered why the hell this guy had to live so damn far away. He grimaced. What was he doing? Spending the last of money on a one-way trip to the middle of nowhere to land a temporary but long-term job (that he still didn’t know the full details of- Jon had been impossibly vague) that he might not even get.
”We’re almost there,” The cab driver piped up loudly, and Brendon was blinking at the counter, but barely listening. Five hundred and twenty dollars. Sitting back and exhaling, he banged the back of his head against the worn leather of the seat, then turned his head towards the window mournfully. He realised he hadn’t actually responded to the driver, but decided he probably didn’t want much conversation, so he entertained himself for the final minutes of their journey by thinking back to how the hell he ended up sharing a car with this guy for the past four hours.
He’d been fired, obviously. As his manager gave me the worst news of his life, he had smiled, probably in an effort to lesson the blow, but Brendon knew he relieved to be rid of another liability.
“I’m sorry, Mr. Blake.” Brendon bit his lip as he remembered how the motherfucker had wrestled with that god forsaken smile, probably embarrassed to show his glee but too relieved to hide it. “Your track record with this company is fantastic, but-” Brendon had scoffed, cutting in. ”But you can’t have someone with jacked medical insurance, I get it,” He snapped, already letting his disdainful thoughts warp into reckless, biting attacks, as he imagined ways in which he could fuck up his neat office. Maybe set fire to his potted plant. ”Let go of the weak links first.” His manager had stuttered something about how Brendon misunderstood, but he just narrowed his eyes, clenched his fist, all he could see was the plant in the corner going up in flames. ”I understand just fine,” He had cut in again finally, smiling the sweetest smile he could, knowing full well he’d regret this all later. He didn’t know where this was coming from- some repressed place in the back of his mind, maybe; Explosive altercations were never the direction he enjoyed to go, but in this case he has been willing to let loose, even if he knew he might swallow his pride enough to come back later groveling on his knees.
“I’m going to have to ask you to leave.” His manager had broken eye contact and shuffled with the papers on his unnaturally neat desk. ”You will receive pay for two more weeks- plenty of time to find a new job. Have a nice rest of your day.” His eyebrows lifted in mock sympathy. I’m real sorry about all-” he waved a hand, ”this. If I could I would’ve done it differently.” Brendon leaned forward and raised his eyebrows right back, snatching the paper he had been offered right out of his hand before standing up suddenly from his seat and turning towards the exit. ”See you in hell.” He stormed out of the office before he could muster any accusations of insubordination, slamming the door as hard as he could on the way out. He gritted his teeth, ignoring the concerned glances his coworkers, no, former coworkers, threw his way as he cleaned out the small table that was his desk, his hands shaking as they tossed scraps of paper and old reminders into the trash.
Uncovering a yellowing photograph interrupted his frantic, desperate cleaning. It was a snapshot of when he had just graduated high school, an arm around his ex-girlfriend. She was smiling from ear to ear and his eyes were bright and grin just as gleaming, and though he looked like he couldn’t be happier at the time, Brendon had to really think to remember her name. For a moment he considered discarding it too, starting anew completely; but then again, no good has ever come from forgetting the past, only learning from it. He ran a hand through his hair and tucked it into his jacket pocket pressed against his quickened heart, and briefly he felt his pulse through his shirt. For some inexplicable reason, it was comforting. Maybe he liked to remember that he was alive underneath it all. The screwing up, the clean starts that were never really clean. His heartbeat was the only constant in his life- that and Spencer, who he now had to break the news to that he didn’t have a job any more, one that had supported both of them.
He finished stuffing the remnants of his latest job into his work bag, slung it over his shoulder, and left, not really sure where he was going, but knowing this wasn’t where he belonged. One thing about New York City was that no matter what time of day it was, or who had died, or whatever tragedy in the world was occurring, the city kept moving, like a merciless train with no care for anything other than staying on time. It didn’t get its nickname for nothing. This city never slept; not for Brendon, not for anyone. Nothing puts life in perspective like having millions of people crammed into one place, all independent, all perfectly capable of caring for themselves. Brendon descend into the subway, getting shoved around a couple of times by people far wearier than him- Another benefit of New York, he thought, was that someone always had it worse than him; that made complaining superfluous. Even so, he gave it his best shot.
Good on his boss for firing him on a Friday; he sure knew how he’d handle it- he called up Jon, not Spencer (he was putting that phone call off because Spencer was more likely to freak out), because he was the one person Brendon trusted to be in a bar on a Friday night. He picked up after three rings.
”What d’you need?” he mumbled, probably already a couple drinks in, which was admirable at five in the evening, although not particularly surprising. Jon had been fired himself a couple of weeks prior, and now drowned his sorrows with the last of his savings. Brendon clicked his tongue when he realised it reminded him of himself at a time that wasn’t far away enough to be comfortable.
”Got fired.” Brendon plugged his other ear, the roar of the subway station making it almost impossible to hear Jon’s feathery voice. ”Need to forget about it for a little while.”
”Mhm.” No questions asked- he didn’t sound particularly concerned or sympathetic, and Brendon wasn’t sure if he was glad about that or not. He heard rustling through the phone, likely Jon figuring out where he was. “Come down to Stanley’s, the one on the east side. Drinks on me.” Brendon laughed, because they both knew there was no way that was happening, but Brendon would entertain the little joke for a while. ”How generous of you.”
”Yes. I am the bestest friend and you are lucky to have me,” Jon agreed. ”See you later, dude.” ”Yeah, bye.” He hung up, exhaled, dropped his phone into his satchel. So, at least he had plans- he felt a little less directionless, even though he knew that afterwards he’d probably feel worse. The train pulled up and its doors slid open, beginning the mad dash to board before they automatically closed with no exceptions.
A couple of tourists were trying to figure out where to go, holding an outdated map of the wrong burrow. Normally, Brendon would have stopped to direct them, thereby missing his train in the process, but not today. As much as he tried to ignore his upbringing, that deep-seated, Mormon politeness was too ingrained in his mannerisms to brush aside. Judgement clouded by contempt, he managed to ignore them, stepped on the train and let the door slide shut, the metallic sound of it clanking against the body of the subway sending a jolt of pain through his head. Brendon had a constant headache nowadays. As he thought about it, sitting not uncomfortably in the back of a cab in the middle of beautiful, fresh-aired nowhere, it came back, a stab of pain at his temple. He blinked it away, and remembered how he’d rested his head against the inside of the train car, closed his eyes, and let the thundering roar of the vibrating car drown out his thoughts.
Leave it up to Jon to pick the one well-kept bar in all of Brooklyn. Brendon’s work clothes seemed almost informal compared to the immaculately dressed revelers working their way around the bar, until he saw Jon, sitting at the far end of the counter, looking tipsy and it was barely even six. He collapsed into the empty chair next to him and dropped his satchel onto the floor as Jon slid him a drink before he could even look up. Unexpected- he’d thought Jon was joking, but he wasn’t about to complain, and He flashed a gracious smile, taking a long swig before his friend changed his mind. It burned his throat, which meant it was way too strong for his own good, but eventually pooled warm in his stomach, relaxing his shoulders inch by inch.
“So,” Jon propped up his chin with his hand, ”What happened, dude? I thought this was supposed to be your, like, big break or somethin’, and the last I heard you were about to be promoted.” His voice was usually monotone, but it was lilted from alcohol, and he even thought he detected a hint of concern. He didn’t sound judgemental- Even so, he couldn’t stop himself being defensive. “I was!” He snapped, then reeled himself in a little, guiltily, after Jon winced at his harsh tone. ”Sorry. But yeah, the company apparently had to do some,” He did air quotations, “ downsizing. I call bullshit. The government showed up last month and implemented new mental health regulations on the company, so now they have to pay for any part of that in our company healthcare. Guess who has the biggest track record of mental health problems.” he gestured to himself grimly, and turned to look at Jon, who himself looked somber.
”Shit, man,” He said slowly, shaking his head like he was still taking it in. ”That fuckin’ sucks. Brendon nodded, but he just looked tired. ”And I gotta tell Spence, fuck.” Jon stayed silent, and Brendon downed another drink, liquid courage for when he eventually called his roommate. It was 7pm- not late enough to leave, though he didn’t want to get wasted- he was much more unlikely to do well at any interviews if he was hungover, and job hunting started tomorrow. A comfortable silence had settled between him and Jon, and Brendon turned to him eventually, smiling, finally sort of relaxed. ”Any chance you know any company that I haven’t worked for yet that needs someone with a music degree?” He asked, joking, and Jon laughed, because this was a running joke. Brendon’s dreams to be a musician, Brendon’s music degree that he had never once used. But Jon stopped laughing, furrowed his brow. ”Y’know, Bren, If you want to be a musician you have to actually play music, go to clubs, and get your name out there. Why the hell are you doing blue-collar jobs and shit? Just do it, man.
Jon was right, but it wasn’t that easy. ”If I could catch a break I would do that,” He huffed, running a hand habitually through his hair and resting his elbows on the table. ”The real issue is my income is small and right now, rent is sky high. My roommate sure isn’t working, so I have to sustain two people with one job. Spence also happens to be my oldest friend, so I can’t just kick him out.” He paused, staring dejectedly into his glass of whiskey.
”Oh, woe me,” He mocked, rolling his eyes when Brendon shot an insulted look his way. ”Dude, we’ve all dealt with this. As much as we all want to pursue our dreams, it usually doesn’t happen. The only person I know who- wait a minute.” Brendon looked mildly interested, pushing his whiskey away, no longer feeling like drinking. Jon’s face was scrunched in concentration as he tried to remember something. Two beats passed, then a slow smile crept onto his face. ”I may have an answer for your job problem.”
Really?” Brendon drawled, more than skeptical. [i]”Duh, trust me.” He cracked his knuckles - Brendon went to copy him, but he’d already cracked them from due to constant nervous energy - and leaned back in his chair. ”Have you heard of the book series ‘Fever’?” It rang a bell, but Brendon didn’t read much- or at all. He looked at Jon helplessly, bit his lip, mulled it over. ”Uh, kind of.” ”That’s a no, then, Jon remarked, and Brendon shrugged a shoulder. ”It’s basically a young adult series about the complexities of growing up in today’s world. Every teenager in the world is obsessed with it. Y’know, they cling onto anything super hormonal and nuanced.”
”You know this how? And how is this in any way relevant to my job?” Brendon hissed, amused, but exhausted with Jon’s tipsy ramblings that never got to the point. “Some of us had angsty phases that weren’t skateboarding and smoking pot.” Brendon rose his eyebrows, about to raise the point that that’s exactly what Jon did, but he was already moving on. “Anyway, the author grew up with Spence and I in Colorado. He called the other day, which, like, never happens, so it was weird to begin with, and he said he needed someone who grew up in the city for a long term position.” Brendon was interested, but apprehensive. One of Jon’s old friends? Spencer’s? Why had he never been mentioned before, if he was so famous and successful? I think he needed a source. He could always do his own research, but the dude is a freaking hermit who’s terrified of people and crowds. Brendon clicked his tongue, because how was this guy going to write about New York if he’d never even been there, even with a source? ”This all sounds very informal,” He said doubtfully, drumming his fingers on the bar surface and looking away. ”Where would I even work? Is it reliable?”
”He’s already worked it out with his publishing company. They’re far enough up his ass that he can basically get anything he wants. Most authors don’t get that lucky, but he’s too clever for his own good,” Jon mused. Yeah, whatever. ”Jon, I need a date and time, and place, at least. And what about Spencer? This is a bad idea.”
“Upstate,” he mumbled. ”I think he wants someone by, uh, this weekend, or he’s probably gonna have a nervous breakdown.” So, tomorrow. Brendon couldn’t find a place for Spencer to stay by then. He bit his lip nervously, shaking his head. ”I’ll find another job, I-“ Jon hushed him. ”Just send him to my place. He’ll be fine, okay? There was a silence, and finally, Brendon caved, nodded. ”Can’t believe I’m gonna fuckin’ do this.”
Finishing the rest of my drink, he bid goodbye to Jon, who was using the counter to keep himself upright at that point, and maneuvered my way out of the bar. He’d be fine; if anything, Jon had mastered the art of dragging his sorry ass home even intoxicated beyond reason. The crisp night air whipped down the boulevard in short gusts, and while Brendon was inside the sky had darkened into its usual blank canvas, with only the occasional helicopter or plane to decorate it. He pulled his jacket tighter around his form, a shiver travelling down his spine. It was strangely cold for September, even for New York, and although many people brushed it off as a cold spell or global warming, he couldn’t shake the feeling that it was some kind of omen. An omen of what, he had no clue. Maybe some parental superstition had rubbed on off him more than he thought. Brendon grimaced at the idea, and pulled out his phone, staring at it for a moment before calling Spencer.
He was so lost in thought by the time they arrived that the driver had to speak up. ”That’ll be... Five hundred and twenty-three dollars. Paying in cash?” Brendon nodded, handing over the last of his money, receiving twenty-seven in change and hastily shoving it back into his wallet before stepping out of the cab and mumbling a ‘thanks’. Then he finally saw the house. He stared at the gigantic wooden structure that stood in front of him. That house looked like it had room for a family of at least ten, including a chef, two maids, a butler and, fuck him, a bartender. A wide terrace stood on six wooden posts, and he could barely see the entrance from here. Jesus, this guy was filthy rich. There was something strangely comforting about the atmosphere as he stepped out of the car, the smell of the humid earth and the trees around offering their leaves and branches as shelter to the house - no, mansion - as though accepting it as part of the landscape. A wooden staircase on the left side seemed to be the only way up to the terrace, with no doors at ground-level. Ivy was crawling up what once must’ve been the hand-rail, already engulfing parts of the staircase itself, like Nature made attempts at taking over but decided that there was no urgency in the matter. As he let his eyes travel further along the wooden planks that built up the structure, He noted that the house itself was half-reclaimed by plants, its cracks and crevices full of still life. A small part of him wanted the forested mountain to absorb the house completely, turn it into a temple for the birds and other mountainous animals, but the rest of him knew better. The rest of him knew that this was his one shot to get out of his self-induced hell.
Oddly, the wooden steps didn’t creak under his weight, the only audible sound being of the wind in the leaves overhead and the faint crashing of the small waves lapping the shore of the lake he’d spotted from the window of the cab. Everything seemed so gentle compared to the constant, endless chaos of the city, and yet it wasn’t mild or inconsequential. Each element of the picture had its place in it, one part of a whole. There was an abandoned potted plant on the porch, long dead after what seemed like weeks, if not months, of neglect. Maybe the poor guy didn’t know how to water plants. A shame, to live in the countryside and not know how to tend to the wildlife. Not that he was any better in the botany department, but still, it felt like a waste.
He took five seconds to try and dispel the anxious tapping of his foot against the porch, but when it refused to stop, he simply sighed and rapped on the door with his knuckles. Immediately, he had his usual nervous, internal dialogue where he convinced myself not to take off running, although this time, there was nowhere to run to. A minute of standing awkwardly on the porch passed, and he leaned to his right to peer through the darkened window, searching for any sign of movement on the other side of the glass. God, he wasn’t home, was he? Just his luck. He bit his lip, not willing to give up- he had no other option- and saw that the porch wrapped around the back of the house. Maybe he was in the garden, or something. Brendon followed it around, and suddenly he was stood on a stranger’s back porch, and a stranger who either hadn’t heard him knock or didn’t care was standing there, cigarette in hand, clearly almost as confused as Brendon was.
“Um,” He managed eventually. ”Hi.” He looked up at the other presence. From where he stood, he seemed a few inches taller than Brendon, slightly slimmer. His chestnut hair grazed didn’t quite graze his shoulders in curly, longer-than-average locks, and his eyes were steadily staring him down, both surprised and unimpressed at once. He knew immediately this was Ryan, and felt extremely awkward for barging onto this guy’s back porch.
”Hi. What the literal fuck are you doing on my porch at eleven in the morning?” The man asked, voice dripping with sarcasm that made Brendon wince a little. ”Right, right.” He nodded and scratched the back of his neck. “I’m Brendon, uh- a friend of Jon’s?” Brendon wondered if Jon had even said anything about it to him, considering they were apparently friends. Ryan still looked suspicious, almost distasteful, but looked like he was weighing his options, and Brendon stood his ground. Again, he had nowhere else to go. ”Uh... for the job?” While he was waiting, he studied his possible future employer again. So, this author dude smoked on his back porch at eleven in the morning. He wondered briefly whether he was also one of those ridiculously routine-bent artists, like Van Gogh or Hemingway, sucking on his daily cigarette before going back to his desk and working his magic, spurting out a few thousand words in an hour or two. He tried not to laugh at the image, and breathed out, raising an eyebrow.
”We’re almost there,” The cab driver piped up loudly, and Brendon was blinking at the counter, but barely listening. Five hundred and twenty dollars. Sitting back and exhaling, he banged the back of his head against the worn leather of the seat, then turned his head towards the window mournfully. He realised he hadn’t actually responded to the driver, but decided he probably didn’t want much conversation, so he entertained himself for the final minutes of their journey by thinking back to how the hell he ended up sharing a car with this guy for the past four hours.
He’d been fired, obviously. As his manager gave me the worst news of his life, he had smiled, probably in an effort to lesson the blow, but Brendon knew he relieved to be rid of another liability.
“I’m sorry, Mr. Blake.” Brendon bit his lip as he remembered how the motherfucker had wrestled with that god forsaken smile, probably embarrassed to show his glee but too relieved to hide it. “Your track record with this company is fantastic, but-” Brendon had scoffed, cutting in. ”But you can’t have someone with jacked medical insurance, I get it,” He snapped, already letting his disdainful thoughts warp into reckless, biting attacks, as he imagined ways in which he could fuck up his neat office. Maybe set fire to his potted plant. ”Let go of the weak links first.” His manager had stuttered something about how Brendon misunderstood, but he just narrowed his eyes, clenched his fist, all he could see was the plant in the corner going up in flames. ”I understand just fine,” He had cut in again finally, smiling the sweetest smile he could, knowing full well he’d regret this all later. He didn’t know where this was coming from- some repressed place in the back of his mind, maybe; Explosive altercations were never the direction he enjoyed to go, but in this case he has been willing to let loose, even if he knew he might swallow his pride enough to come back later groveling on his knees.
“I’m going to have to ask you to leave.” His manager had broken eye contact and shuffled with the papers on his unnaturally neat desk. ”You will receive pay for two more weeks- plenty of time to find a new job. Have a nice rest of your day.” His eyebrows lifted in mock sympathy. I’m real sorry about all-” he waved a hand, ”this. If I could I would’ve done it differently.” Brendon leaned forward and raised his eyebrows right back, snatching the paper he had been offered right out of his hand before standing up suddenly from his seat and turning towards the exit. ”See you in hell.” He stormed out of the office before he could muster any accusations of insubordination, slamming the door as hard as he could on the way out. He gritted his teeth, ignoring the concerned glances his coworkers, no, former coworkers, threw his way as he cleaned out the small table that was his desk, his hands shaking as they tossed scraps of paper and old reminders into the trash.
Uncovering a yellowing photograph interrupted his frantic, desperate cleaning. It was a snapshot of when he had just graduated high school, an arm around his ex-girlfriend. She was smiling from ear to ear and his eyes were bright and grin just as gleaming, and though he looked like he couldn’t be happier at the time, Brendon had to really think to remember her name. For a moment he considered discarding it too, starting anew completely; but then again, no good has ever come from forgetting the past, only learning from it. He ran a hand through his hair and tucked it into his jacket pocket pressed against his quickened heart, and briefly he felt his pulse through his shirt. For some inexplicable reason, it was comforting. Maybe he liked to remember that he was alive underneath it all. The screwing up, the clean starts that were never really clean. His heartbeat was the only constant in his life- that and Spencer, who he now had to break the news to that he didn’t have a job any more, one that had supported both of them.
He finished stuffing the remnants of his latest job into his work bag, slung it over his shoulder, and left, not really sure where he was going, but knowing this wasn’t where he belonged. One thing about New York City was that no matter what time of day it was, or who had died, or whatever tragedy in the world was occurring, the city kept moving, like a merciless train with no care for anything other than staying on time. It didn’t get its nickname for nothing. This city never slept; not for Brendon, not for anyone. Nothing puts life in perspective like having millions of people crammed into one place, all independent, all perfectly capable of caring for themselves. Brendon descend into the subway, getting shoved around a couple of times by people far wearier than him- Another benefit of New York, he thought, was that someone always had it worse than him; that made complaining superfluous. Even so, he gave it his best shot.
Good on his boss for firing him on a Friday; he sure knew how he’d handle it- he called up Jon, not Spencer (he was putting that phone call off because Spencer was more likely to freak out), because he was the one person Brendon trusted to be in a bar on a Friday night. He picked up after three rings.
”What d’you need?” he mumbled, probably already a couple drinks in, which was admirable at five in the evening, although not particularly surprising. Jon had been fired himself a couple of weeks prior, and now drowned his sorrows with the last of his savings. Brendon clicked his tongue when he realised it reminded him of himself at a time that wasn’t far away enough to be comfortable.
”Got fired.” Brendon plugged his other ear, the roar of the subway station making it almost impossible to hear Jon’s feathery voice. ”Need to forget about it for a little while.”
”Mhm.” No questions asked- he didn’t sound particularly concerned or sympathetic, and Brendon wasn’t sure if he was glad about that or not. He heard rustling through the phone, likely Jon figuring out where he was. “Come down to Stanley’s, the one on the east side. Drinks on me.” Brendon laughed, because they both knew there was no way that was happening, but Brendon would entertain the little joke for a while. ”How generous of you.”
”Yes. I am the bestest friend and you are lucky to have me,” Jon agreed. ”See you later, dude.” ”Yeah, bye.” He hung up, exhaled, dropped his phone into his satchel. So, at least he had plans- he felt a little less directionless, even though he knew that afterwards he’d probably feel worse. The train pulled up and its doors slid open, beginning the mad dash to board before they automatically closed with no exceptions.
A couple of tourists were trying to figure out where to go, holding an outdated map of the wrong burrow. Normally, Brendon would have stopped to direct them, thereby missing his train in the process, but not today. As much as he tried to ignore his upbringing, that deep-seated, Mormon politeness was too ingrained in his mannerisms to brush aside. Judgement clouded by contempt, he managed to ignore them, stepped on the train and let the door slide shut, the metallic sound of it clanking against the body of the subway sending a jolt of pain through his head. Brendon had a constant headache nowadays. As he thought about it, sitting not uncomfortably in the back of a cab in the middle of beautiful, fresh-aired nowhere, it came back, a stab of pain at his temple. He blinked it away, and remembered how he’d rested his head against the inside of the train car, closed his eyes, and let the thundering roar of the vibrating car drown out his thoughts.
Leave it up to Jon to pick the one well-kept bar in all of Brooklyn. Brendon’s work clothes seemed almost informal compared to the immaculately dressed revelers working their way around the bar, until he saw Jon, sitting at the far end of the counter, looking tipsy and it was barely even six. He collapsed into the empty chair next to him and dropped his satchel onto the floor as Jon slid him a drink before he could even look up. Unexpected- he’d thought Jon was joking, but he wasn’t about to complain, and He flashed a gracious smile, taking a long swig before his friend changed his mind. It burned his throat, which meant it was way too strong for his own good, but eventually pooled warm in his stomach, relaxing his shoulders inch by inch.
“So,” Jon propped up his chin with his hand, ”What happened, dude? I thought this was supposed to be your, like, big break or somethin’, and the last I heard you were about to be promoted.” His voice was usually monotone, but it was lilted from alcohol, and he even thought he detected a hint of concern. He didn’t sound judgemental- Even so, he couldn’t stop himself being defensive. “I was!” He snapped, then reeled himself in a little, guiltily, after Jon winced at his harsh tone. ”Sorry. But yeah, the company apparently had to do some,” He did air quotations, “ downsizing. I call bullshit. The government showed up last month and implemented new mental health regulations on the company, so now they have to pay for any part of that in our company healthcare. Guess who has the biggest track record of mental health problems.” he gestured to himself grimly, and turned to look at Jon, who himself looked somber.
”Shit, man,” He said slowly, shaking his head like he was still taking it in. ”That fuckin’ sucks. Brendon nodded, but he just looked tired. ”And I gotta tell Spence, fuck.” Jon stayed silent, and Brendon downed another drink, liquid courage for when he eventually called his roommate. It was 7pm- not late enough to leave, though he didn’t want to get wasted- he was much more unlikely to do well at any interviews if he was hungover, and job hunting started tomorrow. A comfortable silence had settled between him and Jon, and Brendon turned to him eventually, smiling, finally sort of relaxed. ”Any chance you know any company that I haven’t worked for yet that needs someone with a music degree?” He asked, joking, and Jon laughed, because this was a running joke. Brendon’s dreams to be a musician, Brendon’s music degree that he had never once used. But Jon stopped laughing, furrowed his brow. ”Y’know, Bren, If you want to be a musician you have to actually play music, go to clubs, and get your name out there. Why the hell are you doing blue-collar jobs and shit? Just do it, man.
Jon was right, but it wasn’t that easy. ”If I could catch a break I would do that,” He huffed, running a hand habitually through his hair and resting his elbows on the table. ”The real issue is my income is small and right now, rent is sky high. My roommate sure isn’t working, so I have to sustain two people with one job. Spence also happens to be my oldest friend, so I can’t just kick him out.” He paused, staring dejectedly into his glass of whiskey.
”Oh, woe me,” He mocked, rolling his eyes when Brendon shot an insulted look his way. ”Dude, we’ve all dealt with this. As much as we all want to pursue our dreams, it usually doesn’t happen. The only person I know who- wait a minute.” Brendon looked mildly interested, pushing his whiskey away, no longer feeling like drinking. Jon’s face was scrunched in concentration as he tried to remember something. Two beats passed, then a slow smile crept onto his face. ”I may have an answer for your job problem.”
Really?” Brendon drawled, more than skeptical. [i]”Duh, trust me.” He cracked his knuckles - Brendon went to copy him, but he’d already cracked them from due to constant nervous energy - and leaned back in his chair. ”Have you heard of the book series ‘Fever’?” It rang a bell, but Brendon didn’t read much- or at all. He looked at Jon helplessly, bit his lip, mulled it over. ”Uh, kind of.” ”That’s a no, then, Jon remarked, and Brendon shrugged a shoulder. ”It’s basically a young adult series about the complexities of growing up in today’s world. Every teenager in the world is obsessed with it. Y’know, they cling onto anything super hormonal and nuanced.”
”You know this how? And how is this in any way relevant to my job?” Brendon hissed, amused, but exhausted with Jon’s tipsy ramblings that never got to the point. “Some of us had angsty phases that weren’t skateboarding and smoking pot.” Brendon rose his eyebrows, about to raise the point that that’s exactly what Jon did, but he was already moving on. “Anyway, the author grew up with Spence and I in Colorado. He called the other day, which, like, never happens, so it was weird to begin with, and he said he needed someone who grew up in the city for a long term position.” Brendon was interested, but apprehensive. One of Jon’s old friends? Spencer’s? Why had he never been mentioned before, if he was so famous and successful? I think he needed a source. He could always do his own research, but the dude is a freaking hermit who’s terrified of people and crowds. Brendon clicked his tongue, because how was this guy going to write about New York if he’d never even been there, even with a source? ”This all sounds very informal,” He said doubtfully, drumming his fingers on the bar surface and looking away. ”Where would I even work? Is it reliable?”
”He’s already worked it out with his publishing company. They’re far enough up his ass that he can basically get anything he wants. Most authors don’t get that lucky, but he’s too clever for his own good,” Jon mused. Yeah, whatever. ”Jon, I need a date and time, and place, at least. And what about Spencer? This is a bad idea.”
“Upstate,” he mumbled. ”I think he wants someone by, uh, this weekend, or he’s probably gonna have a nervous breakdown.” So, tomorrow. Brendon couldn’t find a place for Spencer to stay by then. He bit his lip nervously, shaking his head. ”I’ll find another job, I-“ Jon hushed him. ”Just send him to my place. He’ll be fine, okay? There was a silence, and finally, Brendon caved, nodded. ”Can’t believe I’m gonna fuckin’ do this.”
Finishing the rest of my drink, he bid goodbye to Jon, who was using the counter to keep himself upright at that point, and maneuvered my way out of the bar. He’d be fine; if anything, Jon had mastered the art of dragging his sorry ass home even intoxicated beyond reason. The crisp night air whipped down the boulevard in short gusts, and while Brendon was inside the sky had darkened into its usual blank canvas, with only the occasional helicopter or plane to decorate it. He pulled his jacket tighter around his form, a shiver travelling down his spine. It was strangely cold for September, even for New York, and although many people brushed it off as a cold spell or global warming, he couldn’t shake the feeling that it was some kind of omen. An omen of what, he had no clue. Maybe some parental superstition had rubbed on off him more than he thought. Brendon grimaced at the idea, and pulled out his phone, staring at it for a moment before calling Spencer.
He was so lost in thought by the time they arrived that the driver had to speak up. ”That’ll be... Five hundred and twenty-three dollars. Paying in cash?” Brendon nodded, handing over the last of his money, receiving twenty-seven in change and hastily shoving it back into his wallet before stepping out of the cab and mumbling a ‘thanks’. Then he finally saw the house. He stared at the gigantic wooden structure that stood in front of him. That house looked like it had room for a family of at least ten, including a chef, two maids, a butler and, fuck him, a bartender. A wide terrace stood on six wooden posts, and he could barely see the entrance from here. Jesus, this guy was filthy rich. There was something strangely comforting about the atmosphere as he stepped out of the car, the smell of the humid earth and the trees around offering their leaves and branches as shelter to the house - no, mansion - as though accepting it as part of the landscape. A wooden staircase on the left side seemed to be the only way up to the terrace, with no doors at ground-level. Ivy was crawling up what once must’ve been the hand-rail, already engulfing parts of the staircase itself, like Nature made attempts at taking over but decided that there was no urgency in the matter. As he let his eyes travel further along the wooden planks that built up the structure, He noted that the house itself was half-reclaimed by plants, its cracks and crevices full of still life. A small part of him wanted the forested mountain to absorb the house completely, turn it into a temple for the birds and other mountainous animals, but the rest of him knew better. The rest of him knew that this was his one shot to get out of his self-induced hell.
Oddly, the wooden steps didn’t creak under his weight, the only audible sound being of the wind in the leaves overhead and the faint crashing of the small waves lapping the shore of the lake he’d spotted from the window of the cab. Everything seemed so gentle compared to the constant, endless chaos of the city, and yet it wasn’t mild or inconsequential. Each element of the picture had its place in it, one part of a whole. There was an abandoned potted plant on the porch, long dead after what seemed like weeks, if not months, of neglect. Maybe the poor guy didn’t know how to water plants. A shame, to live in the countryside and not know how to tend to the wildlife. Not that he was any better in the botany department, but still, it felt like a waste.
He took five seconds to try and dispel the anxious tapping of his foot against the porch, but when it refused to stop, he simply sighed and rapped on the door with his knuckles. Immediately, he had his usual nervous, internal dialogue where he convinced myself not to take off running, although this time, there was nowhere to run to. A minute of standing awkwardly on the porch passed, and he leaned to his right to peer through the darkened window, searching for any sign of movement on the other side of the glass. God, he wasn’t home, was he? Just his luck. He bit his lip, not willing to give up- he had no other option- and saw that the porch wrapped around the back of the house. Maybe he was in the garden, or something. Brendon followed it around, and suddenly he was stood on a stranger’s back porch, and a stranger who either hadn’t heard him knock or didn’t care was standing there, cigarette in hand, clearly almost as confused as Brendon was.
“Um,” He managed eventually. ”Hi.” He looked up at the other presence. From where he stood, he seemed a few inches taller than Brendon, slightly slimmer. His chestnut hair grazed didn’t quite graze his shoulders in curly, longer-than-average locks, and his eyes were steadily staring him down, both surprised and unimpressed at once. He knew immediately this was Ryan, and felt extremely awkward for barging onto this guy’s back porch.
”Hi. What the literal fuck are you doing on my porch at eleven in the morning?” The man asked, voice dripping with sarcasm that made Brendon wince a little. ”Right, right.” He nodded and scratched the back of his neck. “I’m Brendon, uh- a friend of Jon’s?” Brendon wondered if Jon had even said anything about it to him, considering they were apparently friends. Ryan still looked suspicious, almost distasteful, but looked like he was weighing his options, and Brendon stood his ground. Again, he had nowhere else to go. ”Uh... for the job?” While he was waiting, he studied his possible future employer again. So, this author dude smoked on his back porch at eleven in the morning. He wondered briefly whether he was also one of those ridiculously routine-bent artists, like Van Gogh or Hemingway, sucking on his daily cigarette before going back to his desk and working his magic, spurting out a few thousand words in an hour or two. He tried not to laugh at the image, and breathed out, raising an eyebrow.