Right foot. Gonna die. Left foot. Nobody is coming. Pool cue. Gonna die. Right foot. Any moment. Left foot. Any second. Pool cue.
Guaranteed death and by unnatural causes. Bloody death, violent death, slow death, messy murder. Any moment, any second. For her and all her loser classmates. Gorey gutting. Repeated stabbing. Bullets and beatdowns. Any moment. Any second…
Right foot.
The ocean always had a way of calming her down. During the summer her father had a former business associate who had a place out in Maine. The Morrisons would vacation there whenever given the chance. They’d eat lobster rolls and she and her older brother Kareem would make fun of fat tourists on the boardwalk. Zo was never mad when she was in and around the ocean. It didn’t feel safe, but it at least felt honest. There was no questioning the power dynamic. There was no struggling against the sea.
When you were lost amongst the waves, you had no choice but to let things be, you’d go wherever the tides took you.
The dawn was foggy due to the surrounding water and the low temperature. She crept quietly towards the plane, her and her makeshift pool cane. Zora’s lips were chapped and splintered. She hadn’t drunk any of her water for fear of being undisciplined and drinking all of it. A part of her realized that Angelo was right or at least that felt kinder to say than she had been wrong. Either or, it was a bad idea to spend the night out and about. Zo was so, so very cold and so, so very tired. Shelter would’ve been nice. But shelter was dangerous and she was so, so small.
Zora felt clever when she peaked her head into the cabin door of the fallen plane and that made her forget how desperate she was. Z heard the hushed sound of human breath. Zora had never lived alone; her house was never quiet. She could recognize, instantly, the specific sounds of sleep.
Her eyes widened at what lied in front of her—a teenage boy, asleep in the fallen plane. Some dumb fuckin whiteboy. A nameless, faceless, and aggressively vanilla classmate that could’ve been any nameless, faceless and aggressively vanilla classmate. Asleep. Wounded. With a big fuckin’ gun at his side. A part of her wanted to run, but she didn’t. Her smaller nature beat out her smarter. Thoughts of grabbing the gun, shooting the boy and then hiding out for the rest of the game ran through Zora's mind. Thoughts of never being afraid of anyone again made her drunk.
She inhaled sharply.
Left foot.