Young Love Murder (46 page)

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Authors: April Brookshire

BOOK: Young Love Murder
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It started off fine, if a little awkward. I wasn’t much of a conversationalist. The girl was beautiful, and before I met you, I would have been thrilled. It’s almost creepy, but I feel as though Max purposefully picked a girl who superficially resembled you. At least how he remembers you.

Her eyes were brown, her hair a reddish dark brown. She was even your height at about five and a half feet. We went to the restaurant Max made reservations at and in the muted lighting I could almost imagine that she was you. 

I started opening up and talked to her. Not about you, of course, because that’s too personal, too special. Just about trivial things like school, the businesses my dad left to me and so on. She was nice enough, a third year English major hoping to become a professor someday. Curious, I asked her about past relationships. Like girls are always eager to do, she complained about problems with ex-boyfriends. Had our problems been so trivial, things would be so different now.

When we got to her place, she invited me up and I’m ashamed to say, I went. I knew what was going to happen before I even agreed. In her dark room, kissing her, with it leading to an obvious conclusion, I was pretending it was you. I was desperate and she was willing. 

I came close to fucking her while lost in the fantasy of you. If I hadn’t moaned your name, jerking myself out of the delusion, I’m ashamed to think what would have happened. Before she could even kick me out of there, I was running out of her apartment.

Disgusted with myself, hating myself, I write this confession to you.   

Can you forgive me for this along with everything else? Do you even care?

Please answer me.

I’m dying without you, Annabelle.

Forever Yours,

Gabriel

*****

June 3rd,

Dear Anna,

It’ll be the two year anniversary of your death later this month. Jackson’s not coming, that’s obvious now. What do I do now? Keep on pretending to live life? If I were to end it myself, what if I really did go to hell for committing suicide? And what if you weren’t waiting for me there? I just don’t know. 

In hell with you would be preferable to this hell on earth.

For killing you, maybe I’d be going to hell anyways and committing suicide is just compounding my sins. Where are you? Heaven or hell? If you’re in heaven, do I still have a shot at making it through those gates? Or would they just spit me back out? 

I write in this journal at least once a week, pretending that you can hear me. It’s almost filled up. What will I do when I run out of blank pages? Go out and buy another, still pretending that you hear me? 

Should I pretend to live a real life? Date and find a girl to settle down with. Get a job or run the businesses? My experience with that girl a couple months ago tells me that it would be unfair to be with another woman like that. I won’t be able to ever love anyone but you. Is affection enough? Am I even capable of that?

When I think about being with someone else intimately, I think of how much it would hurt you. Sometimes people say that their deceased loved one would want them to move on and find happiness with someone else. Is that true, or is it an excuse to betray the memory of the person who loved you? 

All those months we spent apart after you killed my dad, I wouldn’t admit it to myself at the time, but now I know that in the back of my mind, I was worried that if I slept with someone else, it would be the end of us. 

It feels like even now that holds true. Even in death, I can’t tolerate the thought of us being over. To me, you’re still here. When I close my eyes, I see you. 

My existence is colorless when I’m not imagining you.

You haunt me, Annabelle. 

Yours Forever,

Gabriel

*****

This trainer from Thailand is kicking my ass. Figuring it was time to pick up some new fighting techniques, and not having anything else to do this summer, I’m adding Muay Thai to my martial arts regiment. Paying extra even gets me some one-on-one time sparring with the top instructor. 

It’s a hot July day in Manhattan and this gym is nicely air conditioned. If my instructor wasn’t beating the shit out of me, I’d want to stay here longer. In the other combat sports I study, ones I’m getting close to mastering, I’m the one kicking ass when sparring with opponents. 

I have a long ways to go before mastering Muay Thai, but I’ll get there eventually. I attempt a roundhouse kick, which he deftly blocks with his shin and sends pain shooting through my foot. Seeing his jab coming, I barely mange to deflect it with my left hand. 

Ten minutes later, panting, I strip off my gloves and protective gear. Anxious to get back home and in the shower, I pull a t-shirt out of my duffel bag and slip it on along with socks and tennis shoes. 

Arriving at my building a short time later, I take the elevator up to the top floor. Calling out Max’s name, there’s no answer. He must be out. The place is nice, not that we’ve done much decorating. My room is the only one I put actual thought into. A queen bed sits against the corner with lots of pillows and dark curtains block out the light from the outside world. A giant TV, sofa, recliner, computer desk and chair provide everything I need to hole up in here for hours at a time. Unlike Max, I tend to keep my room clean, with all my clothes stashed into the dresser and closet. 

While showering, I think about my journal entry this morning. I filled the last page left in the notebook. The urge to buy a new journal to fill, to keep writing to my dead girlfriend, is strong. Max bought the thing for me two years ago with the intent of helping me mentally and emotionally. At this point, I suspect it’s making me more insane than I already am.

I know I’m not letting go of her, but nothing can convince me that I should. No way in hell do I deserve closure of any kind. In a way, my undying love is a sort of penance. It’s definitely more intense than reciting any number of Hail Marys or Our Fathers could ever be. Thinking about confessing my sins to a priest is always a form of dark amusement for me. I would say something like . . .

Bless me father, for I have sinned. It has been a hell of a long time since my last confession. No pun intended, father. These are my sins . . .

Three years ago, when I was only seventeen years old, I met a girl. The girl. Love at first sight, you could say. Anyways, I brought that girl into my family’s home, not knowing that she was an undercover assassin, giving her the opportunity to murder my dad. But my sins didn’t end there, father, because I then swore revenge. My journey for vengeance led me to abandoning my mom while she was having a hard time getting over my dad’s death. Then, instead of attaining vengeance, I joined the girl on several assignments that involved killing people for money. Even killed someone myself on one of them. After my mom committed suicide, I lost my mind and shot the girl. Father, is it a sin to still love her despite everything? To be totally obsessed with the woman I killed and wish that the devil was buying souls so I could sell mine to him and have her back?

That’s the part where I imagine the priest having a heart attack and me being excommunicated from the Catholic Church. The imagined scenario is always good for a laugh. No, I won’t buy another journal, I’ll do something else. Don’t know what yet, but I’m sure it’ll come to me.  

 

Chapter 36

Gabriel

August 20th

Could Max be any more obvious? This girl is everything that Anna wasn’t. Blonde, spray tanned an unnatural color, bubbly in a fake way. No secrets with this one, because any thought that enters her head exits through her mouth about point-two seconds later. Her skintight, turquoise dress barely covers her tiny ass. Bending her over in it, a guy wouldn’t even have to pull up the hem to get access.

As I listen to my blind date chatter on about the actress she copies her hairstyle from, I try to avoid ramming into the car in front of us on the way to the restaurant. Being rushed to the hospital sounds like a valid excuse for ending a date early.
Sorry, but I’m bleeding from the forehead, gotta go. Don’t call me, I’ll call you.

I can hear Max’s voice in my head,
Gabe, you have to let Anna go, she’s gone. She would have wanted you to be happy.
Somehow I can’t see myself finding happiness with this chick. Or with any of the other girls that he’s set me up with.

Would Anna really have wanted me to be happy? I’m not so sure about that. Besides, she was my only chance at true happiness. Now I just go through the motions of life. I’m alive, but not really living, simply existing.

Loved you,
I can still hear her voice and those final words in my head. 

Still love you too, baby. Always. 

Weaving my way through the Manhattan traffic, I finally pull up in front of the restaurant valet. Speed walking here would have been faster, but Max said it would be rude of me to make my date walk in heels. Handing him the keys of my Ferrari, I go around the car to join my date on the sidewalk. Well, at least the food should be good, this restaurant is supposed to be one of the hottest new spots in Manhattan for the younger crowd. 

My date, Brenda, grabs my hand as we walk in and I have to resist the urge to pull away and wipe my hand on my dress pants. I’m still uncomfortable at the thought of dating again. This is the fourth girl Max has set me up with and I’m starting to think that my cousin has no idea of who I am now. This was the kind of girl that I went for
before
I met Annabelle. After being with someone like her, any other girl just pales in comparison. No matter how dark her tan is.

There’s no excitement, no passion. No
Annabelle
.

It’s been more than two years since I murdered my first and
only
love and I’m not so sure I deserve a second chance at love even if I wanted it. For the first year after Anna died, I did absolutely nothing. Sat in my parent’s big house mourning her, waiting for Jackson to come for me. When he never did, I was at a loss. What now? 

Since letting Max talk me into moving to New York a year ago, I’ve sometimes regretted it. At least at my parents’ house in Miami, I was left alone. Here, I have Max constantly on my back to do this or do that. To be more social. To quit scowling at girls when they try to introduce themselves. To go out with him to clubs and parties. 

During the last school year, when I wasn’t in class or at the gym, I spent most of my days watching television in the penthouse we share. Not good enough for Max. I must date too, join the real world. A few years ago, I would have never thought that Max would be the player and I’d be the lovesick one.

After the date with the Anna look-alike in April, I finally broke down when I was wasted one night and told Max everything that happened with Anna. He eventually got over the shock of it and insisted I start therapy. I’ve still left out the major details to my therapist. Like the part about all the murders. All she knows is that my father was murdered, my girlfriend died and my mom committed suicide. She thinks I’m the victim of horrible, uncontrollable circumstances. I don’t tell her that I’m one of the villains in my sob story.

I no longer keep a journal. That was a hard habit to break. The one I filled over a two year period is hidden in my room, though I should probably burn it.
Incriminating evidence and all.
Instead of talking to Anna in a journal, I talk to the shrink. I’m thinking that keeping a journal was the better deal. Definitely less expensive.

Two years ago, after killing Anna, I never saw a future for myself, never saw myself here. I’m twenty years old and about to start my sophomore year of college. Definitely never saw myself on a blind date. God, I used to think Max had excellent taste in women. Her teeth are whitened so much that they’re blinding against her overly tanned skin.  

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