10/06/24

Our Final Night (take one)

 

6pm. My alarm goes off for the hundredth time and I clamber out of bed. The light of long-dead stars illuminates my cabin. Three weeks on this cruise and I never shut the curtains before sleeping – my mind’s usually elsewhere. There’s a pair of trousers at the end of the bed that I grab. They’re not mine, but she was about my size.

It’s almost 7pm by the time I make my way down to the lounge and take my usual seat at the bar. Pravit’s in tonight, just my luck.

“Nice to see you bright and early, Miriam.” he says, “The Usual?”

“If you please”, I say, and he slides an already mixed glass of ginger ale and bourbon my way.

“That’ll be 2600 Marks.”

I reach into my pocket for my purse but only find a lighter. I knew she was covering something with all that perfume.

“On your tab, then.”

Ignoring my looming debt, I take a sip and look around the lounge for the final time. The ceiling stretches a mile high, dotted with light fixtures worth more than my life; they stretch down to bathe the whole room in gold. All around I see the richest people alive bragging about things that would get most people life inside.

I won a lottery I didn’t even enter to get on this cruise; it would be an understatement to say I feel out of place here. Half the people pretending I’m not there when I’ve bothered to strike up conversation has only made me hate their guts all the more. The people that haunt the casino are more my speed. I’ve made a few friends amongst the staff like Pravit and a few… night-friends too.

At the centre of the lounge a woman plays at a marble-white grand piano right out of a holograph. Every night of this cruise I’ve stopped by the lounge to hear her play. She’s about my age but has ten times the class. Her dresses shimmer in the golden light and there’s never a silver hair out of place. I don’t know if she works here or is another guest, but she plays for hours and never missing a note. Freestyle, old standards and covers of radio favourites all flow from her fingertips when she plays. Occasionally she sings along with a voice like silk.

“She caught your eye again?” Pravit asks from behind me, scaring me out of my skin.

“I don’t know what you’re on about,” I say through my glass as I take a strong swig. “Another please.”

“Say what you want, but your eyes can’t lie,” he says, pouring another glass without breaking eye contact. “That’ll be 2600 marks.” I’ve already forgotten about my purse; I scramble for it again.

“I’ll put it on your tab. How about I give you her favourite drink free of charge since it’s the last night?” Before I can say no, he’s poured a strawberry daquiri into a cocktail glass and pressed it into my hand. “Go get her.”

All but forced to my feet, I inch over to the piano with a glass in either hand. I down The Usual and leave its glass on an empty table as I pass. My head swims as I approach.

“Hi there,” she glances up at me, continuing to play, “is that for me?”

I nod like my head isn’t heavy with poetry and set the daquiri down. I stay put until she finishes her song and realises that I wasn’t a waitress slipping her a complimentary drink. The room is full of conversation but as she sips her drink, it feels silent. She turns to me. She’s waiting for me to speak.

“Erm… Howdy. I’m Miriam,” I trip over every other word. The alcohol’s kicking in fast. “I’ve heard you play a few evenings and uhh… wanted to just show my appreciation before the cruise ends.”

My suit constricts me like a cobra as she looks me up and down. She lifts her gaze to take another sip, giving me a second to breathe. I should probably say something.

“So, uh… what’s your name? I’m Miriam.” Wait I already said that.

“Kira. I spotted you at the bar most nights. Guess you’re a fan?” My cheeks flush red. “Of drinking?” I go redder.

I’ve got her until she finishes the drink but she’s already halfway down. What do I normally say?

“Where are you from?”

“I was born in New America, but you probably guessed from my Martian accent,” she takes another sip, “You sound like you’re from Europe. Is this your first time off of Earth?”

“It is. I won a ticket. Well, my mum won a ticket for me.”

“How interesting.” I’m losing her. “And what do you do day-to-day?”

“For a living? Deliveries, window cleaning, dog-walking… whatever will pay the oxygen bill, you know?”

Her face pales. She was definitely asking about hobbies.

“I see. That must be difficult for you, Miriam.”

“Just my life. There’s about five apps I keep open at all times so I can scoop up whatever’s closest.”

“I see. My father invested in a few of those,” her drink is almost drained, “Have you heard of Scryp?”

“The one that paid out its own currency?”

“That’s the one. He liked to remind me that Scryp paid for my piano lessons. Even after the crash…”

Her glass is empty but we’re still talking. Maybe I can steer us in a more positive direction.

“Do you like to play the piano?” She’s played every single night for the last three weeks, of course she—

“Not really.”

“It reminds me of my father, his … expectations,” she traces the rim of her glass. “But music can delight people, so I play all the same. Just to see you smile.” She looks back up at me.

“My? I mean, me?”

She giggles. How much redder can I turn before Pravit calls the medic bay?

“I meant in general, but I’ve noticed you – the girl in the suit leaving the bar with a different woman at her side every few nights. You caught my eye, but I didn’t want to be another fling. So, I sat here and played my siren song.”

“What do you want now you’ve lured me in?”

She puts the glass down and stands up, her purple eyes level with mine. I bring my arms over her shoulders and smile.

“I have some ideas.” We lean in and kiss.

***

6am. I wake up in an unfamiliar room. I also didn’t have my key so went to her cabin. It’s lit up like a shop window and smells like a bouquet. I hear a shower. She’ll be out in a few minutes, and we can decide what comes next.

No use speculating. I get up and fish my clothes out of the pile on the floor. There’s a knock at the door and a slip of paper slides in from underneath.

It reads : “Thank you for your custom, Miriam Jain. A charge of 340,000 Marks has been credited to your account.”

Did I really drink that much?

Underneath is scrawled : “Miriam, Kira rang first thing and offered to pay your tab.
Up to you. Love, Pravit.”

A new day dawns and for once I’m not alone in the dark. I pull back the blinds and see the Moon as we roar back home.

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