Gateway Drug | Part Thirty-Nine

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“These womens’ sex lives must be atrocious or else they’d be spending more time on their husbands’ dicks and less time on these people’s.” I motion to the article with the list on it.

“Babe–”

“If these polotical lunatics spent as much energy taking care of their own damn kids, as they’re spending attempting to villainize artists who’re expressing themselves, they would realize that it’s not Mötley Crüe’s or anyone else’s job to raise their children. If you’re so scared of your kids trying all this stuff, have a conversation with them about it and tell them about it, honestly, instead of relying on the music they listen to, to properly teach them about it. And at the end of the day, they’re gonna buy the record whether their parents want them to or not, and they’re going to try all kinds of stuff, no matter who talks to them about it, if they really want to try it.” I continue my rant, Fred, Doc, Nikki, Vince, Tommy and Mick all looking at me, waiting for me to be done.

“Are you done, Sister Christian?” Vince asks me and I glare at him.

“Viv, it’s publicity. Who gives a fuck?” Nikki asks me. “The kids are gonna go for the nastiest rated album anyway. The more 'X’s the better.”

“Yeah, but the audacity of–” Tommy’s teaching his hand around my shoulder and covering my mouth before I can continue and I look at him where he’s beside me.

“I’ve got a headache. I’m hungover, Viv. I love you, but I don’t need to hear a Vivian Bitch Fit right now.” Tommy explains to me.

I just look at him like he’s lost his mind for shutting me up, and he cautiously moves his hand away.

I give him a ten second reprieve before shouting, at the top of my lungs:

“The audacity of these people pisses me off!” I finish what I was going to say and Tommy and Nikki are both jumping out of their seats a little at the sudden shouting, covering their ears, wincing, before Nikki’s looking at me, sharply.

I roll my eyes at him and he grabs roughly at my thigh under the table, uncomfortably sinking the tips of his fingers into my flesh.

Ignoring him, I take a sip of my coffee, as he glances around and stands up.

“I gotta piss.” He tells us, but I know why he’s going to the bathroom.

I wait for him to disappear past the “Men’s Room” sign in the Denny’s before I get up and follow after him.

I walk in, catching the tail end of him snorting a line, and I cross my arms, waiting outside of the stall he’s in.

I hear the familiar “click” of a needle being uncapped.

“Nikki. It’s 10:00 in the morning.” I tell him.

“Fuck off.”

“Nikki.”

“Fuck off.”

“Nikk–”

“Fuck off.”

“Make me.”

I wait for him to come out of the stall and do what I dared him to, but I just hear the sound of him sighing out in relief as opiate hits his system, drowning out whatever argument we were about to get into.

Gateway Drug | Volume I Where stories live. Discover now