by Brent Jones
THE
FIFTEENTH
OF JUNE
Brent Jones
The Fifteenth of June
Copyright © 2017 Brent Jones
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise (except for brief passages for the purposes of review) without the prior permission of the author.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Visit the author’s website at AuthorBrentJones.com.
Edited by Laura Mae Isaacman (Clyde Editing).
Cover design by Victoria Cooper.
ASIN: B06WVSFZHM
Contents
Dedication
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
About the Author
To Andréa . . . for believing in me no matter what I do next.
* * *
Chapter 1
The Stone Goblin was unusually busy for a Friday night. It was the sort of place where pretentious twentysomethings gathered after work, though no one knew why. The music was loud, the air was stale, and the drinks were overpriced.
Still, this bar had come to feel like home for Drew. He stood at a high top table with Neil, a former colleague and his closest friend. They had a tab running at the bar but had lost count hours before. Drew swayed, unsteady on his feet, looking into his empty glass, silently praying for a refill of whiskey.
Neil had just finished his latest vodka soda. He narrowed his eyes and scanned The Stone Goblin in search of his next conquest.
An attractive server with bronze skin, who looked to be college age, made her way through the crowd and stopped at their table. She had on a short kilt and a low cut top that displayed generous cleavage. Her face shone with naivety and her voice carried over the music. “Ready for another round, gentlemen?”
Neil looked at Drew’s empty glass. “I know you do.”
Drew looked up. “Yeah, I do.”
Neil peered at Drew for a moment, displeased by his lack of enthusiasm. He placed a hand on the server’s lower back. He pulled her close and spoke softly. “What’s your name?”
“Becca,” she replied.
“Becca,” Neil echoed. He paused for effect, casting a furtive glance in Drew’s direction. “Becca,” he repeated, extending his other hand. “I’m Neil.”
Becca shook Neil’s hand. Her breasts jiggled.
Without releasing his grip, Neil nodded his head toward Drew. “This is my friend, Drew.”
She looked at Drew, his messy hair, unkempt stubble, and the slight gut that hung over his pants. He was visibly underdressed, even for The Stone Goblin. Not that he tried to repel women—it came to him naturally. Becca gave him a timid smile, then quickly returned her focus to Neil. He was good-looking, tall, with dark features and expensive tastes. His clothes were trendy and fitted, every hair on his head styled with purpose.
“My friend here just lost his job, so I’m cheering him up.” Neil slid his hand down to Becca’s ass. “So we’re going to need something a bit more interesting.”
Becca stifled a giggle, gently removing his hand from her kilt. She seemed uncomfortable and flattered all at once. “What should I bring you?”
Neil looked her up and down. “Your choice. But bring three.”
“Are you expecting someone?”
“You.”
“I can’t drink on the job,” she playfully protested.
“What time are you off?” Neil made no effort to disguise his attention on her chest.
Becca blushed and vanished back into the sea of bodies.
“Fuck, what I’d do to her,” Neil mused.
“What’s special about her?”
“She’s practically begging for it.”
Are women attracted to his cockiness, or is he cocky because women throw themselves at him? Drew could be articulate when needed, but preferred the company of his own thoughts. He was all but physically absent in most social situations, lost in his own head. His disinterest in conversing with the outside world seemed to underscore Neil’s social prowess. “I’ve got news,” he said, changing the subject.
“You’ve got good news, bro. You ditched the bitch. You’re a free man now.”
Drew had broken up with his girlfriend just a month earlier. He and Heather had been together five years and she was, in her own way, imperfect. She was personable and stable, educated and thoughtful—all qualities that made Drew uncomfortable.
“Not what I meant,” Drew slurred. “Found a new place to live.”
“That was fast.”
“Yeah, well, sleeping on your couch motivated me.”
“Hey, it’s a nice couch. Cost me a lot of money.”
Becca reappeared with two shot glasses filled with a clear liquid. “Here you are, boys.” She placed both glasses in front of Neil, who slid one over to Drew.
“What’s this?” Drew asked.
“It’s alcohol,” Neil replied. “Just drink it.”
As Becca turned to walk away, Neil grabbed her arm. She turned around, locking her eyes with his. “You never told me what time you get off.”
Becca smiled and leaned in, pressing her body against him. “If you’re still here, I’ll find you.” She wandered away.
Neil looked pleased. “Told you she’d fuck.”
“Congrats. Anything with tits and a heartbeat, huh?”
“Anything with big tits,” he said with a laugh. “It’s an important distinction.”
They threw back their shots. They wobbled in silence, disinterested in their surroundings—music, laughter, the clink of glasses, and obnoxious conversations.
Neil was first to reengage. “So you got a place?”
“Yeah. Nothing special, but it’s mine. Good place to hide out since me and Heather split.”
“Why are you hiding out, bro? You’re what? Twenty-seven? Twenty-eight?”
“Twenty-eight.”
“Twenty-eight,” Neil repeated. “You’re in the prime of your life. You should be out banging sluts, not hiding alone at home.”
“Sometimes I like to be alone.”
Neil wrinkled his face in disgust. “I’ve known you, what? Two years? Three now?”
“Three.”
“Three fucking years we’ve worked together. And I’ve never seen you too scared to talk to new people.”
Drew gave his booze-soaked brain a moment to process Neil’s remark. “I’m not scared. I just don’t like it.”
Drew first met Neil working outside sales for an office supplies firm, The Ascension Group. Neil excelled at closing the deal because he could be charming. He was exce
llent at reading people and telling them what they wanted to hear.
Drew, on the other hand, excelled for different reasons. After high school, he decided against college, and his lack of formal education left him with few career paths to follow. He worked odd jobs to get by until an online job ad tempted him to apply for a sales gig. As fate would have it, the hiring manager gave Drew a chance—his first and only salaried position and in a field he couldn’t have been less excited for. It turned out that his indifference toward people, the very social disorders that had burdened him since childhood, propelled him toward success. His lack of empathy allowed him to be persistent to a fault, fearless to call on new prospects.
Selling had its drawbacks, too, of course—the entire process was exhausting for Drew. Most human interactions were. He found himself mentally withdrawn, progressively so, both at home and on the job. Alcohol had become his one true companion, a daily love affair he had learned to prioritize long before his career in sales began. Drew drank to escape the isolation that his drinking fortified, an irony that Heather had never been able to accept.
But it wasn’t until recent months that Drew began experimenting with drugs. Weed at first, which he handled with ease, then cocaine and the occasional pill. The effects were almost immediate, especially at work. He had arrived an hour late to a client meeting earlier that week, visibly high, and butchered the deal. He got fired the same day.
“Still can’t believe you let her keep your place, bro,” Neil said, changing the subject. “That’s like rule number one of living with a broad. You move her into your place so when shit goes tits up, you can kick her the fuck out.”
“Yeah, well, Heather loved our apartment. And it didn’t matter to me.”
Becca bounced her way back to the table with the fervor of a cheerleader. She set down three shot glasses and grinned at Neil. “I’m off now,” she teased.
“Should we call it a night?” Drew asked, leaning forward on the table.
It took Neil a second to acknowledge what Drew had said. He raised his index finger to Becca. “Can we have a sec?”
She rolled her eyes, feigning annoyance, then downed one of the shots. “Sure. I’ll be outside.” She pranced out of sight.
“Bro, it’s great that you found a place. I’ll come check it out sometime.”
“All right.”
“But listen to me. Fuck Hillary—”
“Heather.”
“Heather, whatever,” Neil said. “There’s plenty more broads out there for you.” But he didn’t look convinced.
“I think women prefer guys with jobs.”
Neil laughed. “Yeah, you’re probably right. You looking?”
“I, uh, haven’t found anything with the prestige of selling paperclips and toner just yet.”
“Always a joker.” Neil grabbed his car keys off the table. “Trust me, bro. You’re the lucky one. I’m still stuck at that shithole. Thinking of getting out soon myself.” He tossed back one of the remaining shots. “Want me to drop off your stuff tomorrow?”
Drew downed the final shot, a thin smile on his face. “Nah. I’ve got more good news for you.”
“What’s that?”
“I already moved out today while you were at work. Means you can fuck her on your nice couch now, if you want.”
Neil winked on his way out, but Drew lingered for a moment, aware of his environment for the first time in hours. He found himself besieged by an army of drunks—the types of people who actually enjoy the company of other drunks. God, look at them. Some of them actually look like they’re having fun. He took in the sights, the sounds, and the smells of intoxication—fleeting sensory evidence of a night he was likely to forget—then staggered out to the parking lot. Neil’s Mercedes was already gone.
Drew climbed into his aged hatchback and started the engine. The dashboard told him it was two o’clock in the morning.
He caught his own lifeless reflection in the rearview mirror—dead, bloodshot eyes and a head that gently bobbed in circles. He shut off the engine, pulled out his cell phone, and painstakingly figured out how to place a call. After three rings, an older man answered.
“Dad, it’s Drew. You still up?”
* * *
Chapter 2
Drew opened his eyes to rays of morning sunshine accentuated through clouds of thick smoke. He was on an old couch, fully dressed, arms folded, trying to remember how he got there. It wasn’t that Drew avoided driving drunk out of principle. He just needed assurance that not everything in his life was changing at once, and the house he grew up in served as nothing if not a monument to days gone by.
The room reeked of stale smoke. He sat up and surveyed a living space that hadn’t changed in decades. Worn drapes, peeling wallpaper, and an old-style television with a miniature screen. The entire house was decorated with age and nicotine stains.
His father sat nearby at a card table watching the news with the volume down low. He stubbed out a cigarette in an overflowing ashtray and lit another.
“Love what you’ve done with the place,” Drew said, his mouth dry.
Russell smirked without taking his eyes off the television. “Morning, smartass.”
Nearly twenty years had passed since Drew’s mother had died. Angela had left behind two young boys—Drew and Logan. Before Russell became a widower, he had been passionate, energetic, even optimistic at times. But nothing was the same after. He was now obese with a long white beard, steely eyes, and yellow fingers. His face was worn well beyond his fifty-six years. Aside from bowling on Monday nights and working odd jobs, Russell was a complete shut-in. He also had a tendency to watch television in his underwear, and this morning was no exception.
“Thanks for coming to get me,” Drew said.
“Looks like you had fun.”
“Not as much fun as Neil had.”
Drew knew that his father never cared much for Neil. Russell considered Neil a bit arrogant for his tastes. A man secure in himself didn’t need an expensive car, tailored clothes, or even a steady paycheck, for that matter.
Drew envied Neil’s confidence and charisma at times—he was likable on the exterior and people kissed his ass everywhere he went. Drew tragically found himself with the opposite problem—good intentioned, but unpalatable to most whose paths he crossed.
But the envy he felt extended only to a point. Neil lived a conspicuous lifestyle, while Drew preferred privacy and solitude, to live incognito. But chasing vicarious thrills through Neil offered him just the right amount of escapism.
Russell coughed into a cloth napkin then folded it neatly on the card table. He took a drag off his cigarette. “How’s work going?”
Drew hesitated. “I, uh, got laid off this week.”
“They lay off Neil, too?”
“Uh, no. Neil still works there. He made the cut.”
“See, you’ve got to understand, son. There’s two types of guys in this world. There’s guys like you and me, and there’s guys like Neil.”
“Winners and losers?”
“Something like that. Guys who think they’re in control, and guys like us who live in the moment. Who accept life as it is.”
“What kind of guy does that make my brother?”
His father thought for a moment, extinguishing one cigarette and lighting another. “I’m still trying to figure that one out. And so is he.”
It was no secret that Drew and his father were close. But Russell’s relationship with Logan was complicated. Logan had always been a serious kid, despite being two years younger than Drew, and he had never seen eye-to-eye with his father.
Logan left home as a teenager in hopes of a fresh start. Or as Drew described it, an opportunity for Logan to turn his back on their father. Russell and Logan now only saw each other once a year—every fifteenth of June, the anniversary of Angela’s death.
After leaving home, Logan finished high school and pursued higher education. He became the first Thomson to graduate from college
, eventually going on to law school and becoming a junior associate for a criminal defense firm in town.
“What about you? You working right now?” Drew asked.
Russell cleared his throat. “Yeah, here and there. Got a gig working for this scrappy little Jew on the east side. Night shift. Cleaning printing presses.”
“Sounds glamorous.” Drew snickered.
“S’pose you got a better job lined up?”
“Maybe. Thinking of retiring.”
Russell laughed until he choked, his broken lungs heaving and screaming for respite. His face contorted in anguish. He hacked into his napkin and took another puff.
Drew got off the couch and walked over to the card table. He picked up the pack of cigarettes and mimed a look of horror. “Dad, look here,” he said, pointing to the warning label. “Says here these things will fucking kill you.” He solemnly tossed the pack back on the table and returned to the couch.
“If your mother were alive, she wouldn’t want to hear you talking like that.”
“If mom were alive, she’d tell you to go get that cough checked out.”
His father’s eyes were planted on his ashtray. “S’pose you’re right.”
“But at the rate you’re going, you might see mom soon enough.”
Russell spluttered into his napkin again. He stomped out his smoke and lit another.
“What time is it?” Drew asked.
Russell turned his head to a grandfather clock in the adjoining room. “Time for breakfast. Bacon and eggs good with you?”
“Yeah, good with me. Good for your cholesterol, too.”
“Yeah, s’pose my doctor would tell me to eat oats or something, right?”
*
Drew sat with his father—who had put on pants for breakfast—at the same end of a hardwood table, its length almost the full measure of the dining room. Periodicals from years gone by, a wilted plant, and other relics occupied its remaining surface area. Atop the clutter sat a framed photo of Angela, taken on her thirtieth birthday. She had soft features, fair skin, and wore elegant diamond earrings.
“How’s Heather?” Russell asked, taking a small slurp of his coffee.