Rated for Teens(13+)
Teen Image

Names Are Tombstones

Bookmark
HomeUncategorizedNames Are Tombstones

Her legs as long as the tall grass in the bayou—in the shadows, she knew the steps and chorography of the Flamingo’s rhythm, like her lips, seducing the olive in her martini as the tsetse fly sucked blood from her insomnia. Fedora had been watching him for days—the gumshoe that came in from out of the rain in the Big Easy, with a chinchilla growth of hair, combed back with wings like Elvis. Dressed in herringbone.

The bar smelled like spilled bourbon and regret. She slid into the booth—one leg crossed over the other—the silk stocking whispering against itself. He didn’t look up. Just kept swirling the dregs of his whiskey—some kind of goodbye dance—to whatever ghosts kept him awake. “You’re not from around here, are you, darling?” she purred, leaning forward just enough to let the dim light catch the curve of her smooth bones. Watching the shadows in his eyes.

He exhaled through his nose—half a laugh, half surrender—and finally met her gaze. “Wouldn’t matter if I was. You already know why I’m here.” The ice shifted in his glass, cracking like gunfire. She smiled—slow, practiced—her painted nail tracing the rim of his untouched drink. His pulse kicked under his collar. She noticed. Of course, she noticed. He left no scars when he bit, just a hickey and as his lips minuet on her flesh.

Outside, neon bled through the blinds, painting tiger stripes across the table. His laugh came out ragged. “Lady, I don’t even know your name.” She leaned closer, close enough for him to taste the vermouth on her breath. “Names are for tombstones, sugar. Tonight, you can call me trouble.” His Adam’s apple bobbed as he swallowed—she counted the seconds. Three. Right on cue.
 
The jukebox skipped to a slow drag of saxophone, the notes curling around them like smoke. Her knee brushed his under the table—deliberate—and she felt the muscle flex beneath his slacks. “You’re gonna get me killed,” he murmured, but his hand was already sliding up her thigh, finding the garter clip. She arched into his touch, whispering against his jawline: “Only if you’re lucky—I want you to dig up my Freddy Krueger.”
    0
    Copyright @ All rights reserved

    Post / Chapter Author

    More From Author

    Related Poems and Stories

    LEAVE A REPLY

    Please enter your comment!
    Please enter your name here

    You must be logged in to read and add your comments