Fiction Friendship Drama

Gabi's foot rubbed the coffee spot by his seat in the tube as details of his evening with Eva replayed in his head. The dry octopus, the circular conversation, her vanilla perfume - Gabi rubbed his face as he felt his stomach twisting. He should have never accepted to meet her again. Paula, his therapist, would sneer at him, the next day and he would mumble and twist his fingers. Not only had he met Eva again - when he was supposed to tell her they were incompatible - but he had also not fulfilled his part of the deal with Paula. For the tenth week in a row, he had failed to express what he thought to people. Paula had been clear, if he could not reach that next level of dialogue that week, she would stop counselling him and he would have to find another therapist. That meant starting treatment all over again, telling his story from scratch to a stranger. And, most importantly, that meant being stuck with his social anxiety for at least another two months. Paula and him had been making good progress in treating his wet hands, tachycardia, and blushing. And he was ruining it all, for the tenth time. Their next appointment was in less than ten hours and Gabi stared at the coffee spot blankly.


His phone tinkled in his pocket. Eva. They had parted only thirty minutes ago, and she was texting him already.


What a great evening ! I really enjoyed. Would be nice to meet again :) How ... Click to read full message.


Hi Eva, I'm sorry. You're boring, just didn't work. No matter the tone, the media, the time of the day - that sentence he had never managed to pronounce. Gabi locked the phone with a swipe and pushed it back in his pocket.


"Gabi? Hey Gabi? Can you hear me?"


Damn, he had pressed the calling button instead of locking his phone. Dammit.


"I know you're there, Gabi. Haha. Say something!" Gabi stared at the screen, paralysed. The woman sitting next to him cleared her throat and sneered at him. Mind your own business, old cow, Gabi thought. But she was right, he was being rude. He felt his throat tensing as he picked up the phone.


"Hi... Eva"


"Hey, so nice to hear you." She was smiling at the other end of the phone.


"Yeah, very nice to hear you too... I'm on the tube. Can I call you back when I'm home?" He avoided the woman's eyes as she glanced from above her newspaper again. "Looking forward to it." He heard his voice add. Even that old cow from the tube he needed to please.


*


Gabi locked the door of his flat and leaned against it. Right. It would take two seconds, he would just say goodnight and that would be - wait, was Eva calling again?


"Hey sorry, am I disturbing?" She was still smiling. "I thought I'd call back, I was curious to hear what you had to say."


What he had to say? Nothing. He had nothing to say. He just wanted to cry in Paula's arms.


"No, you... you never disturb."


"Oh, you're so cute."


"Yeah. Listen, was really nice hearing you. That's all I wanted to do - hear your voice. Now I got to go, I have something in the oven and -"


"In the oven? After dinner?"


"Yeah. I was baking a lemon pie for my dog."


"I didn't know you had a dog! What kind of dog? What's his name?"


"The kind that ...moves his tail to samba. His name is Samba, actually." Gabi's fist hit his forehead as he spoke.


"Haha. You're so funny. You should bring Samba along next time we meet. How about that?"


"How about that? About that very much. Hehe."


"Great! Same day and time next week?"


"Same day, same time, same place. Yes." Gabi turned around and hit his head against the door.


"I knew you'd love that place! Cool. Good night!"


"Good night, Eva."


Paula was right. But now he only had two options left: calling back Eva right now to tell her the truth, ugly as it was. Or renting a dog for next Tuesday evening. The latter sounded wiser.


*


Gabi removed his boots and tiptoed down the corridor - he didn't want his flatmate, Matt, to yell out at him again for being noisy. Matt had no trouble throwing parties whenever Gabi had a client deadline while blaming him for his own mistakes. Plus, he still owed Gabi two hundred pounds. Gabi had prepared a speech to claim his money back but hadn't found the opportunity yet to rehearse. The image of Paula shaking her head at him appeared in his mind and he wiped it off. He would tell Matt in the right time, for now he was asleep anyway. Gabi held his breath as he approached the next door. Bellen's. He had been avoiding her for three weeks now - cold war was the only way with her. Meanwhile, he was preparing a comeback at her for he had discovered lately that she was the one who had forgotten to pay the gas bill in June. He didn't want to use that weapon against her just yet. He was still perfecting his attack but once the opportunity would appear - he would hit. And strike.


"Mr Gabriel." A voice called from the living room as he climbed the stairs to his bedroom. He froze.


"Gabriel, I'm talking to you."


"Hi, Bellen."


"Do you call that cleaning?"


He turned around slowly. What do you mean do I call that cleaning? I have been cleaning the kitchen after you for the past two months, hoovering around and taking the trash out. And by the way, now I know. I know you're the one who forgot to pay the gas bill in June. I know everything.


"What?", he heard his tiny voice answer.


"The bathtub. Is it what calling means to you?"


"I shower in the office."


"Cut the crap, Gabriel." She threw a sponge in his direction, he ducked and dodged it. Now was the time, Gabi dropped his boots on the floor and put his hands on his hips. He took a breath. "Listen, Bellen."


"What 'Bellen'? Enough of your non-sense."


"What non-sense?"


"You know what I'm talking about!"


"Guys, guys, guys!" Bellen and Gabi turned around, Matt was standing in front of them, in his underwear, eyes semi-closed. "Can I get some quiet here?"


"Sorry, Matt. Bellen was-"


"Shut up Gabi. I have an interview tomorrow. You're stupid or what? Making flirty calls in the entrance. I told you several times to be quiet this week. For **** sake." Matt went back to his room and smashed the door.


Bellen walked to the other side of the living room to collect the sponge. Gabi felt his heart beating in his temples. He would never handle that conversation with her. That was impossible. He picked up his shoes from the floor and before Bellen could turn around with her sponge, he was already out of the building.


*


Shoreditch was buzzing with noise and traffic. Only a peanut butter milkshake could save Gabi at that point, and he knew exactly where to find one. He headed to the 24/7 coffee shop by the roundabout. A couple of new buildings concealed it from the crowd's view. It was a small secretive space that, no matter what, brought him three magical Cs: comfort, courage, clarity. The place was empty and sat at the suspended desk in front of the vitrine. He rubbed his eyes again - that evening had been throwing at him countless opportunities to speak up and achieve Paula's weekly goal. And here he was, hiding behind peanut butter. He had to take action. There was no point in him showing up the next morning to confess he had failed. Better was to confess that to her, remotely. He would write her a farewell letter to her and post it. He felt the pockets of his duffle coat for his notebook, he had forgotten it. He grabbed a napkin and asked the waitress for a pen. She made eye contact with him and gave him a smile. That kind of smile. He looked away, wondering how people could be so intrusive. He grabbed the pen and mumbled a quick thank you without looking at her.


"Gabi? You here?"


Gabi looked up. Oh. No. That was the last straw. A tall silhouette he recognised right away had spotted him from the counter of the café and was heading right to his stall.


"I didn't know you lived in London, man. Lydia this is Gabi. Gabi, Lydia. Gabi and I went to the same university, fifteen years ago or something? Man, why didn't you tell me you lived here?"


Indeed, Gabi hadn't told Quentin he had moved to London, and there was a reason for that. Gabi had had a story with Quentin's girlfriend while on an exchange program abroad. And same, he had tried to tell him about it, but no matter how much he had rehearsed, he had never found the courage to confess that to him. Especially because it was not his fault, his girlfriend had lied to him, to both. He discovered it too late and knew that would not change anything. Anyway, there he stood, looking at him with a genuine smile.


"We only came here because their bagels are good and she wanted one."


Gabi forced a smile back.


"We're going to this new disco skate place nearby. Want to join?"


"No, thanks. I -"


"Come on, man. Don't be boring."


"I'm not boring. I'm just ..."


"Depressed? Man, you've been depressed for the last fifteen years." Lydia laughed and Quentin took off his sunglasses. "They even a great milkshake bar."


Gabi didn't want to be rude and, at least, if he went, he could tell Paula that he had managed to go out and have fun, in a social setting. He grabbed his coat and followed them.


*


The place was loud. With a colourful floor and a roller skating rink. As much as Gabi wanted to honour Quentin's invite, his could only grin around him for he still felt guilty. The milkshake bar was upstairs, Gabi hinted at Quentin he would skate with them later. The upper room had a low ceiling, blue electric lighting and pink neons that undulated on the brick walls like ivy. Waitresses with yellow mini-skirts and pink maxi-socks zigzagged around tables with milkshakes to old school hip hop tunes. A panoramic window overlooked the roller skating rink. Colourful suits, sequins jackets and funky sunglasses slid around. People held each other by the hips, skated backwards and moved their shoulders like hip hop dancers. Their wheels lightened up in blue, red or green. Gabi touched the glass as he watched them smile, move, fall and bounce. As if there were no tomorrow, no people to please and no feelings to spare.


"Want to dance?"


Here we go again. What did all these women want from him? As he turned around to face the woman behind him, Gabi prepared his thanks-but-no-thanks sentence.


"Hi, thanks but no thanks."


"Where are you from? I've never heard that accent before."


"Brazil."


"Oh nice. We can dance here if you want?"


Hadn't she heard him? He thought of Paula. He had to be honest. He could do it.


"Just leave me alone," he said.


"What did you say?"


He sighed.


"I said sure, great idea."


"Haha, I knew it," she said.


Paula would kill him.


"You're a great dancer," the woman leaned forward and said.


"Thanks."


"Is it because you can dance salsa?"


"Salsa?"


"Like the Rio Carnaval?"


Did she mean samba? She did mean samba. Gabi bit his lips and nodded without answering. As he swung from side to side, he wondered how he could exit that situation. The woman came closer. His cheeks started to burn. She came even closer and now his hands were wet. He thought he was done with those symptoms. He needed to get out of there. A waitress was sliding in their direction with three milkshakes on a tray. She was his exit ticket. Gabi made the woman turn to one side and to the other while the waitress approached. As she reached them, he stepped back and hit the waitress' stomach with his elbow. Milkshake flew up in the air and one of the cups hit his co-dancer in the face. Dammit, that was not what he had planned for. She had a glass splinter in her forehead and was now crying.


"Oh, I'm sorry. I'm so sorry. I didn't see her," Gabi said trying not to touch her with wet hands. He tried to hand her a napkin but the woman cried even louder. He throat was dry and he was panting. He reached for his coat, his legs shaking. He stepped backwards and pushed on his legs to reach the staircase. Panic, intensifying in his legs, made him rush downstairs to the exit. He wanted to run away and never look back.


"Gabi, you're leaving already?"


God, was that Quentin still around?


"Yeah, was great seeing you! My cab is waiting-"


"Just text me, okay? And we go for a beer."


Text what number?


"Sure, I'll text you! Bye."


*


Gabi ran. To let out the adrenaline, the shame and his nausea. He ran fast. Past drunk faces, half-naked flesh and litter that stuck his shoes. He ran until out of breath. There was the price to pay for being coy. He had reached his peak and its nausea increased as his mind went wild. He needed Paula. He would beg her on his knees to work with him another year because no matter how hard he tried, he always failed. He ended up hurting himself or hurting people. He needed her. His legs slowed down as he reached the deserted streets of the City. His lungs screaming, his hair sweating and his cheeks reddened. He walked past the long and quiet glass buildings. The dark squares and abandoned scaffolds. He dodged tourists who asked for pictures with their hands and kept walking until he reached a tiny square, with a stone bench and wilted flowers. He sat down and caught his breath, while a cold breeze sneaked through his soaked shirt.


"Good evening, Sir." A beggar approached him. "May I?" Gabi had no strength to reply, he just closed his eyes and nodded his head slowly. The old man sat down next to him. "Banker?"


What a question.


"No, architect." Gabi said, putting his coat back on. His rubbed his face again and took deeper breath to calm himself down.


"True, your shoes are no banker shoes. What are you doing here?"


"You don't like my shoes?"


"They don't look expensive enough, let's put it like that."


"How about yours?" Gabi replied, offended.


"Mine are expensive." The beggar stretched his feet ahead of them. "But they grew old with time, like I did." He showed golden teeth. "I used to work up there, in that tower across the Thames. Can you see it?" His dark nail in mittens pointed at a tower, behind Saint Paul's dome. Gabi couldn't see it or say whether that was truth or fantasy, so he kept quiet. The old man drew a flask out of his pocket. "So what brings you to the City at that time of the night?"


"I needed a run."


"Want a sip? It will do you good." Gabi looked at the man. The old man laughed. "So what brings you here?"


"One of those evenings where the whole world seems against me."


"Seems or is?"


"Both. I have a meeting with my therapist tomorrow - she gave me a week to tell one person what is truly on my mind."


"You never do?"


"I used to when I was a kid but it got me into trouble and I stopped."


"You're afraid of conflict?"


"My therapist says I have social anxiety."


"But you're having this conversation with me now. Why do you feel comfortable?"


"Maybe because I know I won't see you again. Maybe because I don't care what you think, because ... Hm. because -"


"Because I am insignificant." The old man smiled. "I get it. Keep going."


"Sorry, did I offend you?"


"Haha, I have lived long enough to not care what a stranger thinks about me. Keep going, I'm curious."


"Are you sure? Alright. People pleasing is what to holds me back, she said. I care about what they think, what they feel, what they do... And what I do or say always backfires. So I overthink but they-"


"They always backfire." The old man took a sip from his flask. "Who cares?"


"I know nobody does, my therapist has told me that several times already."


"So what's stopping you?"


"I don't know."


"Too nice?"


"Not really, no. I don't say nice things either. I'm just polite, I keep people at a distance. My social anxiety has lessened lately, thanks to her, but I avoid certain conversations. Things that touch me, I can't express. Even saying "thank you" to someone who has done something meaningful for me is difficult. I feel exposed, you know?"


"Interesting."


"Does that happen to you?"


"No, it doesn't. But I understand. You should go back home and sleep. Tomorrow, take things as they come and stop caring about whether or not you're doing the right thing."


"But what if I do something wrong?"


"Your evening went all wrong didn't it?" The old man laughed. "You survived, no? Then keep going. You'll be fine."


Those words provided little insight to Gabi but he appreciated the tone of that old man. It wasn't warm, or reproachful. It wasn't deep or overly sincere. Gabi just felt comfortable on that bench with him.


"Is that your bench?"


"It is." As Gabi made a move, the old man stretched his hand towards him. "Stay, stay. I enjoy company from time to time. Not always, but tonight is fine."


Gabi kept quiet.


"What time is your appointment tomorrow?"


"7:30am, before work. I'll just tell her the truth - that's it difficult for me but that I have tried."


"And that people being stupid doesn't help. Tell her that too." The old man took another sip. Gabi looked at him and smiled. He kept his smile on as his turned his face towards Saint Paul's dome where bells were hitting 5am.


*


Gabi was still awake in his bed. He could hear the voice of his therapist saying that the game was over. Maybe he should just skip that appointment. Tell her he had missed the alarm. Which was likely to happen, anyway. Tell her people were stupid, like the old man had said. Gabi didn't even know the name of the man, but he smiled as he thought of their conversation. He felt something warm in his chest. He did. Gabi stood suddenly in his bed. How come he hadn't thought of it?


Gabi rushed down the stairs of the building, the road, Shoreditch, the milkshake café, the disco place, the City buildings and kept running until he reached the little square. He looked around for the man's dirty coat. It was gone. Gabi dabbed his pockets. He found the pen the waitress had given him at the café. With his shaking hands, he wrote a modest Thank you. on the bench and signed the architect with cheap shoes. A smile tickled his lips as he looked at his words on the bench. Words that to him, on that moment, meant everything.

Posted Jan 12, 2021
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13 likes 8 comments

Carole Cobos
19:36 Feb 22, 2021

Very lovely, a great read.

Gabi was a great narrator.

A realistic one.

He was polite, he did not always think kind things. He was so perfectly human that I feel very connected to him as a character. Extremely attached.

I also liked the way you described his social anxiety.

Very well-written and I look forward to reading more of your work, :D

PS. try to not let paragraphs get too thick. Especially in the beginning where you're still trying to catch the readers attention.

Reply

DREW LANE
08:17 Sep 03, 2021

Thanks a lot Carole for your feedback!

Reply

DREW LANE
09:02 Jan 18, 2021

I didn't have the time to finish editing my story, for those of you who want to read a cleaner version, please see below:

Gabi's foot rubbed the coffee spot by his seat in the tube as his evening with Eva replayed in his head. The dry octopus, the circular conversation, her vanilla perfume - he should have never gone. Paula, his therapist, would sneer at him the next day as he would mumble and twist his fingers.

Not only had he met Eva again - when he was supposed to tell her they were incompatible - but he had also not fulfilled his part of the deal with Paula. For the tenth week in a row, he had failed to express what he thought to people. Paula had been clear, if he failed once more, he would have to find another therapist.

His phone tinkled in his pocket. Eva. They had parted only thirty minutes ago, and she was texting him already.

'What a great evening! I really enjoyed. Would be nice to meet again :) How ... Click to read full message."

'Hi Eva, I'm sorry. You're boring.' He typed and erased. No matter the tone, the media, the time of the day - that sentence he would never manage to articulate. Gabi locked his phone with a swipe and pushed it back in his pocket.

"Gabi? Hey Gabi? Can you hear me?"

Damn, he had pressed the calling button. Dammit.

"I know you're there, Gabi. Haha. Say something!"

Gabi stared at the screen, paralyzed. The woman next to him cleared her throat.

"Hi... Eva"

"Hey, so nice to hear you."

"Yeah, very nice to hear you too... I'm on the tube. Can I call you back when I'm home?" He avoided the woman's eyes as she glanced from above her newspaper again. "Looking forward to it." He heard his voice add. Even that old cow from the tube he needed to please.

*

Gabi locked the door of his flat and leaned against it. Right. It would take two seconds, he would just say goodnight and that would be - wait, was Eva calling again?

"Hey sorry, am I disturbing?" She was still smiling. "I thought I'd call back; I was curious to hear what you had to say."

What he had to say? Nothing. He just wanted to cry in Paula's arms.

"No, you... you never disturb."

"Oh, you're so cute."

"Yeah. Listen, was really nice hearing you. That's all I wanted to do - hear your voice. Now I got to go, I have something in the oven and -"

"In the oven? After dinner?"

"Yeah. I was baking a lemon pie for my dog."

"I didn't know you had a dog! What kind of dog? What's his name?"

"The kind that ...moves his tail to samba. His name is Samba, actually." Gabi's fist hit his forehead as he spoke.

"Haha. You're so funny. You should bring Samba along next time we meet. How about that?"

"How about that? About that very much. Hehe."

"Great! Same day and time next week?"

"Same day, same time, same place. Yes." Gabi turned around and hit his head against the door.

"I knew you'd love that place! Cool. Good night!"

"Good night, Eva."

Now he had two options left: calling back Eva right now to tell her the truth, ugly as it was. Or renting a dog for next Tuesday evening. The latter sounded wiser.

*

Gabi removed his boots and tiptoed down the corridor - he didn't want his flatmate, Matt, to yell out at him again for being noisy. Matt had no trouble throwing parties whenever Gabi had a client deadline. And he still owed Gabi two hundred pounds. The image of Paula shaking her head at him appeared in his mind and he wiped it off. He would tell Matt off in the right time, for now he was asleep anyway.

Gabi held his breath as he approached the next door. Bellen's. He had been avoiding her for three weeks now - cold war was the only way with her. But he had discovered she was the one who forgot to pay the gas bill in June. He didn't want to use that weapon against her just yet. He was still perfecting his attack but once the opportunity would arise - he would hit. And strike.

"Mr Gabriel." A voice called from the living room as he climbed the stairs to his bedroom.

He froze.

"Gabriel, I'm talking to you."

"Hi, Bellen."

"Do you call that cleaning?"

He turned around slowly, rehearsing his speech: 'What do you mean do I call that cleaning? I have been cleaning the kitchen after you for the past two months, hoovering around and taking the trash out. And by the way, now I know. I know you're the one who forgot to pay the gas bill in June. I know everything.'

"What?", he said with a tiny voice.

"The bathtub. Is that what cleaning means to you?"

"I shower in the office."

She threw her sponge at him. He ducked and dodged it. Now was the time. He dropped his boots and put his hands on his hips. He took a breath. "Listen, Bellen."

"What 'Bellen'? Enough of your non-sense."

"What non-sense?"

"You know what I'm talking about!"

"Guys, guys, guys!" Bellen and Gabi turned around, Matt was standing in front of them, in his underwear, eyes semi-closed. "Can I get some quiet here?"

"Sorry, Matt. Bellen was-"

"You're stupid or what? I told you I have an important meeting tomorrow. For **** sake." Matt went back to his room and slammed the door.

Bellen walked across the room to collect her sponge. Gabi felt his heart beating in his temples. He would never be able to handle that conversation. He picked up his shoes from the floor and, before she could turn around, he was out.

*

Shoreditch was buzzing with noise and traffic. Only a peanut butter milkshake could save him at that point. He headed to the 24/7 coffee shop by the roundabout. A couple of new buildings concealed it from the crowd's view. It was a small secretive space that, no matter what, brought him three magical Cs: comfort, courage, clarity. That evening was throwing at him opportunities to speak up but there he was, hiding behind peanut butter. There was no point meeting Paula, better to write a farewell letter and disappear. He grabbed a napkin and asked the waitress for a pen. She made eye contact with him and gave him a smile. That kind of smile. He looked away, wondering how people could be so intrusive. He grabbed the pen and mumbled a quick thank you without looking at her.

"Gabi? You here?"

Gabi looked up. Quentin. That was the last straw.

"I didn't know you lived here, man. Lydia this is Gabi. Gabi, Lydia. Gabi and I went to the same university.”

Indeed, Gabi hadn't told Quentin he had moved to London, and rightly so. Gabi had had a story with Quentin's girlfriend while on an exchange program abroad. And same, he had tried to tell him, in vain.

"We only came here because their bagels are good, and she wanted one."

Gabi forced a smile back.

"We're going to this new disco skate place nearby. Want to join?"

"No, thanks. I -"

"Come on, man. Don't be boring."

"I'm not boring. I'm just ..."

"Depressed? Man, you've been depressed for the last fifteen years." Lydia laughed and Quentin took off his sunglasses. "That new place even has a milkshake bar."

*

The place was loud. As much as Gabi wanted to honor Quentin's invite, his could only grin. The milkshake bar was upstairs, Gabi hinted at Quentin he would skate with them later.

The milkshake bar had a low ceiling, blue electric lighting and pink neon lights. Waitresses in yellow mini-skirts and pink maxi-socks skated to old-school hip-hop music. A panoramic window overlooked the roller-skating rink where sequins jackets and funky sunglasses slid around. People held each other by the hips, skated backwards and moved their shoulders, their wheels lightening up in blue, red or green. Gabi touched the glass as he watched them move, fall and bounce. As if there were no tomorrow, no people to please and no feelings to spare.

"Want to dance?"

Here we go again. As he turned around to face the woman behind him, Gabi prepared his thanks-but-no-thanks sentence.

"Hi, thanks but no thanks."

"Where are you from? I've never heard that accent before."

"Brazil."

"Cool. We can dance here if you want?"

Hadn't she heard him? He thought of Paula. He had to be honest. He could do it.

"Just leave me alone," he said.

"What did you say?"

"I said sure, great idea."

"You're a great dancer," the woman said leaning forward.

"Thanks."

"Can you dance salsa?"

"Salsa?"

"Like the Rio Carnival?"

Did she mean samba? She did mean samba. Gabi bit his lips and nodded without answering. As he swung from side to side, his cheeks started to burn and his hands to sweat. He needed to get out of there.

A waitress was sliding in their direction with three milkshakes on a tray. His exit ticket.

Gabi made his dance partner turn to one side and to the other while the waitress approached. As she reached them, he stepped back and hit the waitress' stomach with his elbow. Milkshake flew up in the air and one of the cups hit his co-dancer in the face. Dammit, that was not what he had planned for. She had a glass splinter in her forehead and was now crying.

"Oh, I'm sorry. I didn't see her," Gabi said trying not to touch her with his wet hands.

He tried to hand her a napkin, but the woman cried even louder. His throat was dry, and he was panting. He reached for his coat, his legs shaking. He stepped backwards and pushed on his legs to reach the staircase. Panic made him rush downstairs to the exit. He wanted to run away and never look back.

"Gabi, you're leaving already?"

God, he had forgotten about Quentin.

"Yeah, sorry, my cab is waiting-"

"Just text me, okay?"

Text what number?

"Definitely!", Gabi shouted.

*

Gabi ran. He ran fast. Past drunk faces, half-naked flesh and litter that stuck his shoes. He ran until out of breath. There was the price to pay for being coy. He had reached his peak. He needed Paula. He would beg her on his knees to work with him another year because no matter how hard he tried, he always failed. He ended up hurting himself or hurting people. His legs slowed down as he reached the deserted streets of the City. His lungs screaming, his hair sweating, and his cheeks reddened. He kept walking until he reached a tiny square, with a stone bench and wilted flowers. He sat down and caught his breath.

"Good evening, Sir." A beggar approached him. Gabi had no strength to reply, he just closed his eyes and nodded his head slowly. The old man sat down next to him.

"Banker?"

What a question.

"No, architect." Gabi said, putting his coat back on.

"True, your shoes are no banker shoes. What are you doing here?"

"You don't like my shoes?"

"They don't look expensive enough, let's put it like that."

"How about yours?" Gabi replied, offended.

"Mine are expensive." The beggar stretched his feet ahead of them. "But they grew old with time, like I did." He showed his golden teeth. "I used to work up there, in that tower across the Thames. Can you see it?"

His dark nail in mittens pointed at a tower, behind Saint Paul's dome. Gabi couldn't see it or say whether that was truth or fantasy, so he kept quiet..

"So what brings you to the City at that time of the night, young man?"

"I needed a run."

"Needed a rum?" The old man drew a flask from his coat. "So, what brings you here?"

"One of those evenings where the whole world seems against me."

"Seems or is?"

"I have a meeting with my therapist tomorrow - she gave me a week to tell one person what is on my mind."

"You never do?"

"I used to when I was a kid, but it got me into trouble."

"You're afraid of conflict?"

"I have social anxiety."

"But you're having this conversation with me now. Why do you feel comfortable?"

"Maybe I don't care what you think, because ... because -"

"Because I am nobody?" The old man laughed. "I get it. Keep going."

"Sorry, did I offend you?"

"Nothing offends me anymore. Keep going."

"Right. People pleasing. And no matter what I do or say, it backfires. So, I overthink and-"

"It will always backfire, believe me." The old man took a sip. "Who cares?"

"Nobody."

"So, what's stopping you?"

"I don't know."

"Too nice?"

"I just keep people at a distance. I still avoid certain conversations. Things that touch me, I can't express. Even saying "thank you" can be difficult.”

"Interesting."

"Does that happen to you?"

"No, but I understand. You should go back home and sleep. Tomorrow, take things as they come and stop caring."

"But what if I do something wrong?"

"Your evening went all wrong, didn't it?" The old man laughed. "You survived, no?”

Those words provided little insight to Gabi, but he appreciated the tone. It wasn't warm, or reproachful. It wasn't deep or overly sincere. Gabi just felt comfortable on that bench with him.

"Is that your bench?"

"It is." the beggar said.

As Gabi made a move, the old man stretched his hand towards him.

"Stay, stay. I enjoy company from time to time. Not always, but tonight is fine."

Gabi kept quiet.

"What time is your appointment with your therapist?"

"7:30am, before work. I'll just tell her that I have tried."

"And that people are stupid. Tell her that too."

Gabi looked at him and smiled. He kept his smile on as he turned his face towards Saint Paul's cathedral where the bells hit 5am.

*

Gabi was still awake in his bed. He rehearsed his speech to his therapist. You know, Paula, people are stupid. It sounded better when the old man said it. Gabi didn't even know his name, but as he thought of him he felt something warm in his chest. And suddenly it hit him.

Gabi rushed down the stairs of the building, the road, Shoreditch, the milkshake café, the disco place, the City buildings and kept running until he reached the little square. He looked around for the man's dirty coat. It was gone.

Gabi dabbed his pockets. He found the pen the waitress had given him at the café. With his shaking hands, he wrote a modest 'Thank you' on the bench and signed 'The architect with cheap shoes.'

A smile tickled his lips as he looked at his words on the bench. Words that to him, on that moment, meant everything.

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DREW LANE
12:06 Jan 17, 2021

The music at the disco skate place: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tr4O3dJcWm0

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Kaique Antonio
20:59 Jan 14, 2021

Considering that this is a DRAFT, I am just stating my opinions and what I think could be worked on to heighten even more the piece...

Alright the descriptions of the stories are great. The use of language, the imagery, I understood and enjoyed it very much. I do think though, that the ending dialogue seems out of place

Considering that the prompt 76 is really dialogue focused, I did feel that there should have been more dialogue, or even moments when the characters talks to himself or dives into his mind and comments. I feel like we are missing a bit of the character's voice in this.

I know the prompt is to essentially highlight that a character doesn't say much, but the first paragraphs highlights more the characters feelings, but doesn't exemplify that through dialogue. That's just my opinion though.

The descriptions are great, but I do think there could be a larger focus on making the character express himself (even if in a submissive way) to highlight the prompt a bit more.

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Kaique Antonio
21:06 Jan 14, 2021

I will say though, that there is a challenge in creating dialogue. A lot of writers works tend to focus on imagery, making things seem poetic or even lyrical to an extent; creating dialogue can be quite tough.

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DREW LANE
20:16 Jan 17, 2021

Hi K.Antonio, thanks a lot for your comments. I have completely changed the story - feel free to check the new version! I didn't get a chance to fully edit it so I have added a cleaner version in the comments.

I agree with what you said. At that point, the draft was raw - I had jotted down ideas to further develop the story and see where it could take me. I hadn't read the full description for the prompt and the way I had understood it was quite direct - the character struggles to express what he has to say. I wasn't aware they had specified we should focus on dialogue. So thanks for the insight! I also appreciate your feedback, I have kept the previous draft aside for another story perhaps (it was inspired from Kafka's metamorphosis, hence the static element to it. It would need some fleshing to get somewhere and I'll see what I can do with it, when I get a chance).

Feel free to let me know your thoughts about this version. As I said when I commented on your stories, I really like your style and I'd be curious to hear your thoughts on any of mine.

Thanks !

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DREW LANE
15:57 Jan 11, 2022

Latest version:

Gabi’s foot rubbed the coffee spot by his seat as his evening with Eva replayed in his head. The dry octopus, the conversation running in circles and her vanilla perfume already haunted him.

Paula, his therapist, would sneer at him the next day while he would mumble and twist his fingers. Not only had he met Eva again - when he was supposed to tell her they were incompatible - but he had also failed to fulfil his part of the deal for the tenth time.

Paula had been clear: if he didn’t manage to speak up at least once before their next appointment, he would have to find another therapist.

Gabi’s phone vibrated in his pocket and Eva’s name popped up on the screen. They had parted only twenty minutes ago and there she was, texting him already.

“So nice to see you! We should do that again :) How about we... Read full message."

Hi Eva, I'm sorry. You're boring.

Of course, he could not say that. No matter the day, the tone, the media - he would never be able to say it. Gabi locked his phone and pushed it back in his pocket.

"Gabi? Hey Gabi? Can you hear me?"

Dammit, he had pressed the calling button. Gabi stared at the screen, paralyzed. The woman facing him on the tube cleared her throat. He picked up.

"Hi... Eva."

"Hey, so nice to hear you!"

"Yeah, very nice to hear you too... I'm on the tube. Can I call you back when I get home?"

He avoided the woman's eyes as she glanced from behind her newspaper.

"Looking forward to it," he added.

Even that old cow from the tube he needed to please.

*

Gabi locked the door of his flat and leaned against it. It would only take two seconds, he would call Eva and tell her that – oh, no.

She was calling him back.

"Sorry, am I disturbing? I couldn’t wait to hear what you had to say."

“Hey Eva, no, you... you never disturb."

"You're so sweet."

"Yeah, listen, it was really nice hearing you. Now I got to go, I have something in the oven and -"

"In the oven? After dinner?"

"Yeah, I was baking a lemon pie for my… dog."

"I didn't know you had a dog! What kind of dog? What's his name?"

"The kind that... moves his tail to samba. His name is Samba, actually."

"Ha-ha, you're so funny. You should bring Samba along next time."

“Absolutely.”

"Great! Same day, same time next week?"

"Same day, same time. Yes."

“Amazing! Good night!”

“Good night, Eva.”

Gabi hit his head against the door. What was wrong with him?

Alright, not everything was wrong, he still had two options. He could either call Eva back right now and tell her the truth or he could rent a dog for the following week.

The latter sounded wiser.

*

Gabi slipped off his shoes and tiptoed down the corridor - he didn't want to wake up his flat mate, Matt. The image of Paula shaking her head crept up in his mind and he ignored it. Yes, Matt still owed Gabi two hundred pounds and no, now was not the time to demand them back. Like it or not, Paula, Matt was asleep for now.

Gabi held his breath as he approached the next door. Belen’s. Cold war was the only way with her. Gabi had figured she hadn’t paid the gas bill in June. He didn’t want to use that weapon against her yet - he was still perfecting his attack - but once he’d get the opportunity, he would hit. And strike.

"Mr. Gabriel," a voice called as he climbed up the stairs to his bedroom. "Do you call that cleaning?"

Gabi turned around, rehearsing his speech in his head:

What do you mean do I call that cleaning? I have been cleaning the kitchen for the past two months, hoovering and taking the trash out. And by the way, I know you forgot to pay the gas bill in June.

"What?" he said in a tiny voice.

"The bathtub, do you call that cleaning?"

"I shower in the office."

“BS!”

Belen threw her sponge at him, and he dodged it. Now was the time - he could do it. Gabi dropped his shoes, put his hands on his hips and took a breath.

"Listen, Belen."

"Enough of your non-sense!"

"What non-sense?"

"You know what I'm talking about!"

"Guys, guys, guys!"

Belen and Gabi turned around, Matt, their third flat mate, was standing in front of them, in underwear.

"Can I get some quiet here?”

"Sorry, Matt. Belen was -"

"I told you I have an important meeting tomorrow! You’re stupid or what?”

Matt slammed the door and Belen walked across the room to collect her sponge. Gabi felt his heart beating in his temples. He picked up his shoes and, before she could turn around to resume her scene, he was gone.

*

Gabi headed to the 24/7 café by the roundabout. It was a small and dim space concealed from Shoreditch’s buzz by a building in construction. It served milkshakes that brought Gabi the three Cs he needed to survive in London: comfort, courage, and clarity.

While he stirred his drink, Gabi sighed at himself. The evening was throwing opportunities at him to speak up and there he was, hiding behind a peanut butter milkshake. What would he tell Paula the next day? The truth? Certainly, not. He’d better write a farewell letter and disappear.

Gabi grabbed a napkin and asked the waitress for a pen. She made eye contact with him and gave him a smile. That kind of smile. Gabi looked away, wondering why people had to be so intrusive. He grabbed the pen and mumbled “thank you” without looking at her. He started drafting his letter to Paula.

"Gabi? Is that you?"

Gabi looked up. Quentin. That was the last straw.

"I didn't know you lived here, man! Hun’, this is Gabi. Gabi and I went to the same university.”

Gabi hadn’t stayed in touch with Quentin, and rightly so - he had had a fling with Quentin's girlfriend back then, thinking she was single.

"We're going to this new disco skate place nearby. Want to join?"

"No, thanks. I -"

"Come on, man. Don't be boring."

"I'm not boring. I'm just -"

“Depressed? You’ve been depressed since I've known you.”

His new girlfriend laughed, and Quentin took off his sunglasses.

"That place even has a milkshake bar."

*

The place was so loud and crowded Gabi’s head started to spin. He hinted at Quentin he would skate with them later and headed to the milkshake bar upstairs as he didn’t want to be rude and leave too promptly.

The bar had a low ceiling and blue neon lights winding across the walls. Waitresses in mini-skirts and maxi-socks skated from table to table with milkshake cups. A giant window overlooked the roller-skating rink where sequins jackets and LED sunglasses slid to old-school hip hop music.

Gabi watched people roll and laugh as if there were no tomorrow, no feelings to spare and no people to please.

"Want to dance?"

Gabi sighed and, as he turned around to face the woman who had approached him, he prepared his sentence: "Thanks but I -"

"Where are you from? I've never heard that accent before."

"Brazil."

"Cool. We can dance here if you want?"

"Just leave me alone," he said between his teeth.

"Say again?"

“I said… sure, great idea.”

The woman smiled and Gabi felt tiny ants crawling up his arms.

“You’re a great dancer,” she said leaning forward. "Can you also dance salsa?"

"Salsa?"

"Like the Rio Carnival?"

Did she mean samba? She did mean samba. Gabi bit the inside of his jaws and nodded without answering. The woman got closer. He stepped back. She approached again. His cheeks tickled and he opened his mouth gasping for air, but nothing came in.

While the woman spoke, Gabi looked for an exit. There was one across the bar, where a waitress was picking up a tray full of cups - she would have to be his exit ticket.

Gabi forced himself to dance and nod while the waitress slid in their direction. When she reached them, he stepped back and elbowed the waitress in the stomach. Milkshake flew up in the air and one of the cups hit his co-dancer in the face.

Dammit. That was not the plan.

The woman started to cry. The waitress yelled at Gabi as she tried to stand back up. Faraway voices addressed him, and someone pushed him to the side as people gathered around the two women on the floor. Gabi felt his legs shaking.

He gripped the nearest table, aiming for the exit. What had he done? He was just trying to… Or had he? His mind was going blank, and his legs weighed a ton. He pushed on them, holding onto the wall until he reached the staircase and tumbled down.

"Gabi, you're leaving already?"

God, Quentin.

"Yeah, sorry. My cab is waiting -"

“Just text me, okay?”

Text what number? For what?

“Sure,” Gabi said and zoomed out.

*

Gabi ran fast, past drunk faces, naked flesh, and sticky litter. His lungs threatened to blow up in his chest, but his legs were electrified. His whole body was. He wanted to scream, to let it all out but his throat was tight. His eyes stung and he pressed them to hold the water in.

When his legs finally slowed down, he had reached the glass buildings of the City. He sank on a bench in a square of wilted flowers and held his face in his hands, shaking.

A beggar sat down next to him and drew a flask out of his coat. “Want some?”

Gabi’s heart hammered in his temples.

“All good, young man?”

Gabi nodded, still catching his breath. “Needed... a run."

“Rum is always good.” The old man took a sip. “You look troubled.”

“I… one week. One week… to speak up, okay? And I…”

Gabi felt tears of rage coming up, like a fountain. He rubbed his eyes with his palms.

“It’s okay. Breath in and out. In and out.” The old man said waving his hand.

“I hate the word pushover but that’s what I’ve – “

“What?”

“Drama.” Gabi shook his head. “I’m too judgmental, too blunt, a know-it-all or whatever-“

“Who said that?”

“Everybody. I don't even know what's wrong… I get… I try to be nice but… doesn’t work. Now I get steamrolled and argh!”

Gabi smashed the armrest of the bench.

“That’s not who I am! I like to be direct; I like to move mountains; I like things to make sense. Not to waste my time dancing around useless people that’s not… If Paula were here, she’d go ‘see, judgmental again’.” Gabi imitated her voice. “I spend my life on that. Look I even wrote her a farewell letter– “

“Wait, wait, wait. Why do you care about Paula?”

“She's my therapist.”

“And?”

“She says I need to try harder. But that’s already a lot! And you know speaking up is not easy anymore because I know it will backfire.”

“As in?”

“Pfft, anything. Enemies at work or trouble at home. Hurting people. That’s why I’d rather be blunt – say what I mean. But people don't listen, or they care only about making their point, or they get offended for something I haven’t even said. Then I feel stupid for expressing myself.”

“You should stop seeing that therapist and get yourself new shoes.”

“Why? What's wrong with my shoes?”

“They look cheap.”

“Better than yours.”

The beggar laughed. “See! You can do it.”

“Of course, I can. Because you won’t start stupid drama.”

“People who start stupid drama are by definition stupid and you don’t need them.”

“That’s an easy one!”

“You need easy sometimes, otherwise you’ll kill yourself. If you’re naturally blunt, adjusting and making all those efforts is not who you are. No wonder it’s tough.”

Gabi looked down.

“Meeting halfway is okay but not walking the whole distance,” the beggar added.

Gabi looked up at the dome of Saint Paul’s cathedral. “What should I do then?”

“Get some sleep. Tomorrow, take things as they come and if you break some eggs, then so be it! So. Be. It."

“I might break some deliberately to make things even.”

“So be it!” the beggar said opening his arms.

His words resonated like an "Amen" to the toll of Saint’s Paul cathedral ringing 5am ahead of them. Gabi closed his eyes and appreciated the sound.

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RBE | Illustrated Short Stories | 2024-06

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