“Shit.” Nathan’s voice came out harshly under his breath, getting drowned out by the usual buzz around the city, along with the clicking noises coming from the empty lighter he was holding up to the cigarette currently hanging off the corner of his lips. He shook his head in defeat and tossed it into the next trashcan he passed as his slow steps dragged him through the biting cold. He wasn’t in a rush - work wouldn’t start for another few hours but for some reason he didn’t want to head back to his apartment right now. Some days he just couldn’t stand it, the emptiness of it with his few belongings all over the place in an organized mess. It was almost too small, too, even for him and with the bit of money he made there was no way for him to be able to decorate it and make a proper home out of it right now. With a deep sigh, Nathan reached for the cigarette to hold it between his fingers and clenched his jaw before approaching the next best person to hesitatingly speak up. “Hey! Uhm, sorry to bother you but uh - do you maybe got a light for me? Mine kinda gave up, I guess…”
He was on his way home from the pharmacy. Due for a refill -- his first refill for this dose, because Dr. Tempano said to stay the course -- and every time he took a step, the pills shimmied and shook in the folded-over white paper bag. Like percussion for the sidewalk, or the rattling of something loose in his head. Screws, he thought. Loose screws.
That might’ve been funny, once.
Tonight, it barely moved his mouth.
Nate was still doing a pretty good job of keeping the house smoke-free. That meant he had to do all his smoking outside, out on the porch or on the sidewalk on nights like these, on lazy, languid strolls back towards the lake. He stopped at an intersection, where the crosswalk light was orange, DON’T WALK, and he pulled a pack of American Spirits out of his jacket pocket. It was the first pack he'd ever bought, still only six cigarettes down -- and he was about to fold the top over when someone asked for a light.
Instinctively, he angled the pack closer to his body. Like a kid getting caught with a flask in his hand; smoking was always gonna be shameful, even if he’d picked it up twenty years late. “Sure.” The sky wasn’t dark yet, but it wasn’t blue, either. The streetlights had yet to hum on. He couldn’t really see the guy, or he wasn’t really looking, or -- let’s face it, Nate wasn’t as perceptive as he used to be. He handed over the lighter without much of a thought, one of those extra-small gas-station Bics that he could cover completely in his palm. "It’s finicky,” he said, as a sort of preemptive apology. “Cheap, but that’s what I paid for. I have to decide if I’m a smoker before I buy anything real.”