The Lonely City
Beastly Lights
FREYA
~We SO love your enthusiasm, but Iâm afraid we donât have a spot for your pieces at the moment.~
The snooty curatorâs words rang in my ears, mocking me, as I stepped out of the trendy galleryâthe fifth this month to reject my pieces.
I tried not to think about the dwindling sum in my bank account, which could easily fit inside a small ceramic piggy.
I huffed out a frustrated sigh and took another sip of the complimentary cup of coffee Iâd snagged from the galleryâthe last I would probably have for a long time.
It was a luxury that I couldnât justify anymore.
Clinging tightly to the canvases that held my latest self-expressionâor lack thereof, apparentlyâI emerged into the streets of New York City.
I had been living there for over three years, but my lack of funds had largely confined me to my shoebox-sized apartment.
Just walking down the street was a constant reminder of all the artisan foods and trendy clothes that I would never be able to afford.
I checked my phone to distract myself from the enticing window displays that were calling my name.
~Shoot.~
It was already 4:40 p.m., and I was supposed to meet my friend Darla at five in Tribeca.
LIAM
âKISS HER!â the nameless faces shouted, as if I was an animatron built for their own enjoyment.
~Iâll kiss her if you go fuck yourself!~ I longed to shout.
But I couldnât.
Not with my formidable publicist, Lucinda, standing five feet away from me.
Sheâd never let me forget it.
My face was frozen in a fake smile.
My eyes blinded by the flashes of the cameras.
And my hand was firmly locked on to the hip of Americaâs Sweetheart, and my own personal nightmare, Jazelle Ericson.
Jazelleâs elbow dug into my side.
âKiss me!â she snarled through her teeth, somehow maintaining her expression of romantic bliss. âNow!â
And then she leaned in close to me so I could smell the mint flavor of her sticky lip gloss.
She grabbed the back of my head with her manicured talons and pulled my face into hers.
âAWWWW,â the photographers shrieked.
Just when I thought I couldnât stand on the red carpet for another second, I saw Lucinda frantically waving her hands, telling me that my duty was done.
I grabbed Jazelleâs hand and dragged her into the movie theater lobby, away from the ravenous press.
âWe should have left five minutes ago so you could make it to the lawyerâs house on time,â Luce said trailing behind. âThe carâs waiting out back.â
âLeave?â Jazelleâs voice pierced my eardrum. âYouâre not going to stay and hear our song?â
Staying for our song would mean sitting through a three-hour-long movie about a robot learning to love, only to hear thirty seconds of our cash-grab duet thrown in over the credits.
âNo,â I said matter-of-factly. âI really am not going to stay for that.â
âBut itâs date night!â Jazelle said.
â~Fake~ date night,â I spat back. âHow many times do I have to remind you that weâre not really together, Jaz.â
âShhâ¦â she whispered, bringing a finger to her lips.
~The middle one.~
With that, she turned on her heel and disappeared into the theater.
And I was fucking thrilled to be rid of her.
âLiam,â Luce called out to me in the same voice I often heard her use with her own children.
I wasnât thrilled about our next destinationâbut it would be a vast improvement over the circus I was currently at the center of, so I followed Luce to the car.
I needed to make sure that I started off on a good foot with my new lawyer.
The last one had called it quits shortly after my second DUI.
âThis one had better work out,â Luce continued as we slid into the car. âI donât have time to find a new lawyer every month. ~Or~ a new maid. Leanne just quit and Iâm not gonna be the one cleaning up your messes.â
âYou should be used to cleaning up messes,â I retorted. âThose devil spawn you call âchildrenâ make enough of them.â
She rolled her eyes, which were the same vivid blue as her brotherâsâthe only physical trait they had in common.
Luce and I went way back.
Her brother, Anthony, had been one of my only friends when we were kids. I spent more time at their house than my own when we were in junior high.
âHonestly, Liam,â she sighed, âIâm not sure how many attorneys are left in New York that would be willing to represent you.â
âMaybe I donât need an attorney,â I said, tasting the petulance on my tongue.
âHa,â she scoffed. âYouâre basically on a first-name basis with all the judges in the city.â
âYouâre always telling me I need to be friendlier.â I slouched farther down in my seat.
âIâd prefer if you tried being friendlier to your fans and, ~God forbid~, some members of the press, but I know thatâs too much to ask.â
FREYA
Shockingly, the J train was on time, so I arrived at Belle Reve Bar first.
One look at the menu was all I needed to know that âIâll just be having a water tonight, thank you very much.â
~Cue the customary death stare from the waiterâ¦~
âFreya!â My friendâs voice rang out from across the café.
I looked up and spotted her.
Darlaâs brown hair was pinned back perfectly, and her gray suit looked like it was tailor-made for her body.
I plastered a fake smile across my face as Darla approached, but groaned internally when I noticed that she had brought her dull boyfriend, Marcus, with her.
~Or fiancé, rather.~
The two had gotten engaged a few months back and seemed to think it was the most important event since the moon landing.
I was happy for her, of course, but how she could have fallen in love with this sentient piece of white toast was beyond me.
âHey, Darla,â I greeted flatly, my mood too sour to achieve the level of perk she always seemed to have these days.
âHi, Wonder Bread.â I nodded at Marcus as the two took the seats across from me.
His grim face didnât even twitch, his bushy eyebrows never moving from where they sat atop his murky brown eyes.
I knew my little nickname for Marcus was unwelcome, but I couldnât help myself. I was never good at hiding my true feelings about people.
âOh, Freya,â Darla cooed with a fake laugh, while tapping Marcus reassuringly on the thigh. âAlways a jokester.â
Then she quickly changed the subject. âHow did it go at the gallery?â she asked me.
âTerrible,â I answered frankly. âThey didnât like my pieces.â
âThat sucks!â she cried, and I flinched at her insincerity. âDonât worry, Iâm sure the next gallery you visit will love your pieces,â she promised, and I couldnât stop the snort from escaping.
âYeah, right.â
âMaybe if you were to finish your degree, a gallery would be more inclined to pick up your work,â Marcus suggested haughtily. âI canât grasp why someone would quit with just one year left of school.â
~If he knew the real reason why I didnât finish my degree, he might watch his mouthâ¦~
After thirty awkward minutes watching Marcus and Darla pick at a plate of eighteen-dollar calamari, Marcus tapped annoyingly at his expensive watch.
âDarla, we need to go,â he said.
âAlready?â
âUncle is expecting us,â he answered with a pointed look.
~His boss. Hers too.~
âButââ I protested.
âIâm sorry, Freya,â she said resolutely. âWe really do have to go.â
âRight, of course,â I muttered. âYou have a real job.â
âYouâll get there one day.â She smiled condescendingly, as if she had completely forgotten that we had been in the same financial situation six months ago.
Back when she was still holding on to her dream of becoming an actress.
âMaybe.â I shrugged, gathering my tattered shoulder bag that had more patches than bag left. âAnywayâ¦Iâll see you Sunday.â
âActually,â she started hesitantly, and I reluctantly brought my eyes to hers again, feeling a sickly sensation wash over me. âIâmâweâre busy Sunday.â
âBut we always go to Central Park on Sundays,â I said.
I donât know why I still clung so desperately to this weekly tradition. It hadnât been fun for months, but it forced me to get out of my sad apartment and into fresh air.
âI know butâ¦â Darla eyed me warily. âWell, the wedding is in just a few weeks and we still havenât picked a cake flavor!â
~The horror!~
âFine,â I conceded. âDonât tell me what flavor you pick. I want to be surprised.â
âOh no, Freya.â Her face fell even further. âI thought you knewâ¦â
âKnew what?â I asked, my voice cracking.
âWell, we went over the budget, and it turns out we can only invite close friends and familyâ¦â
A deafening silence hung in the air, and I wasnât going to do her the favor of breaking it.
âIâm sorry,â she said. âI really thought I told you.â
One look at Marcusâ smug face and I knew that my lack of invitation had ~nothing~ to do with the budget.
I just wasnât welcome in their âhigh societyâ crowd.
Darla and Marcus rose from their chairs and gave me a final, awkward wave as they disappeared through the bustling bar.
Darla had been my first friend in New York. She had served me coffee every day at the diner on my street until Iâd finally asked her to sit down and have one with me.
But ever since she started dating Marcus, moved into his Upper West Side apartment, and got a job from his uncle, we had only grown further and further apart.
This snub was the final nail in the coffin of a friendship that should have died a long time before.
En route to my apartment in Alphabet City, still clutching my rejected paintings, I found myself weaving through streets lined with manicured trees and beautiful brownstone apartments.
As I walked, I couldnât help but wonder what it would be like to live in one of these buildings without the fear of not being able to make rent or pay for next monthâs phone bill.
Were those homes filled with love?
Or were the tenants as alone as I was?
Was it true that no amount of money could buy company?
I couldnât be sure.
But there was one thing money could ~definitely~ buyâ¦
Food.
Something I could barely afford those days.
As I charged past every grocery store, my stomach growled in protest without a morsel to soothe its cries.
If I wanted to eat that day, I had only one option after I dropped my rejected art off at my apartment.
~Mason.~
***
Luckily for me, Mason had forgotten to take back the key to his place after Iâd moved out.
I had slept on my brotherâs couch in the Financial District for eight months when Iâd first moved to the city, but now I just came by every once in a while to borrow twenty dollars for groceries.
He never acted like he minded. I always paid him back when my next check came in, and as a successful lawyer, Mason was hardly strapped for cash.
Slipping inside the front door, I closed it gently behind me.
As I made my way down the hall, obnoxious drunken laughter rang out through the apartment.
~Oh no.~
~Itâs Friday.~
~Poker night.~
I had been hoping to make this a quick visit; the last thing I wanted to do was get stuck in a conversation with Masonâs equally intoxicated friends.
Iâd have preferred to get out of there unnoticed and send him a text about the missing money afterward.
Rather than go to the kitchen, I made my way to his bedroom undetected and beelined for his dresser, where he usually kept his wallet.
But my heart sank when I realized that it was missing from his drawer.
âDamn it,â I hissed, slamming it shut in frustration.
Again I heard laughter ring out through the apartment, and I knew my last option was a risky one.
But if I was going to eat tonight, it had to be done.
Slowly, I crept down the hall and peered around the corner of the archway that led into Masonâs living room.
My eyes immediately rested on the wallet, which was sitting beside him on the table.
I was about to resign and step back from the door when I heard my name yelled out from across the room.
âFREYA!â Mason yelled again, and I cringed at how much scotch it must have taken him to reach this stage of drunkenness.
~Shit.~
âMason,â I answered quietly, reluctantly coming out from my hiding place.
âWhoâs this, Mason?â another voice rang out, cool and clear. âHave you been holding out on us?â
My eyes immediately jumped to the man sitting across from my brother andâ
~What.~
~The.~
~Fuck.~
I almost fell over in shock.
It couldnât beâ¦
I dragged my feet across the floor, all too aware of the many eyes on me, none more piercing than those of the golden-eyed rock star.
I couldnât even begin to imagine how he had ended up there, sitting in my brotherâs living room, looking even more perfect than he did on all the billboards and magazine covers around the city.
But as I got a closer look, it was undoubtedly himâ¦
The golden god himself.
~The~ Liam Henderson.