Curious Obsession

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Curious Obsession Page 1

by Elora Ramirez




  Curious Obsession

  Elora Nicole Ramirez

  Awake Indie Press

  Pleasant Bitches, this one’s for you.

  Copyright © 2021 by Elora Nicole Ramirez

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  Contents

  Prologue

  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

  Juniper

  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

  Chapter 34

  Lavender

  Chapter 35

  Jasper

  Chapter 36

  Lavender

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Jasper

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Lavender

  Chapter 41

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Also by Elora Nicole Ramirez

  Prologue

  We’re standing by the ocean, the foam washing our feet in a joint baptism, when you tell me you can’t see me anymore. You give all kinds of excuses: it doesn’t make sense, there’s no more mystery, you aren’t attracted to me — but I know they’re all lies.

  I watch your eyes roam my face with desire. It’s obvious you want me, you’re just fighting innate impulses. I reach my hand out and caress your arm, but you pull away, a snarl on your lips.

  I smile. You’re so feisty when you resist.

  I watch you turn and walk away, studying the fabric of your sweater blowing in the wind as you maneuver through the sand back to your car. You didn’t even offer me a ride, but maybe that’s because you haven’t broken up with your boyfriend yet and you don’t want to raise questions.

  I understand.

  I drove here anyway.

  I watch you until you turn invisible behind the sunset and then wipe my face. Fucking tears. I breathe deep and notice a starfish on the sand by my feet. I pick it up, fingering the indentations and grooves. I remember you telling me once that starfish symbolize infinite love...or was it vigilance? Either way, I lift the creature to my lips and give it a kiss before snapping off each arm and throwing it back into the sea.

  If you want to play cat and mouse, Juniper, we can play.

  But you need to know — I always win.

  .::.

  Over the last few months, I’ve watched you. I’ve learned your habits and who takes up most of your time. I’ve left you notes, but they fall wasted. But here’s the thing: I know. I saw how much they meant to you. How they would make you pause and re-read them. So I kept leaving you messages and sending you texts. You kept pretending to not be moved by them. I know they mean something. So over the next few days, I wait. I watch. I see you lock one of the notes into the drawer of your nightstand, glancing around as if someone would see you hide our love. As if you knew I was watching you from my perch.

  When you end it with Simon, I know it’s for me. You tell him it’s not working and that he can’t control you and I fall in love all over again. I watch as you both pace your living room, Simon being the obtuse man that he is, tries to reason with you.

  “You’re too smart to waste your intellect teaching high school kids who won’t even remember you!”

  You throw a book at him and I smile. There’s your sass. You walk toward the front door and open it.

  “I think you should leave. Now.”

  He stands there, shell-shocked. I roll my eyes. It’s not like you haven’t done this dance before — although this time I can tell you’re really done with him. I wait for you to tell him about me — to not let him off gently and to cut to the marrow of why you’re ending it — but you don’t. I frown. You care too much about what other people will think.

  I need to remind you.

  I need you to remember.

  So I leave a note for Simon, letting him know you found something better.

  Then I follow you into school one morning and you don’t even notice because you’re talking into your phone — telling your sister you need to talk to her about something. Is it me? It’s too bad she won’t ever know. I hang out in the hallway while you teach your classes and chat with your students about some gala this weekend that you won’t make it to but don’t know yet. It’s noble, really, how you give. How you refuse your own desires.

  How you refuse me.

  You won’t be able to for long.

  In between classes when you run to the teacher’s lounge for a refill on coffee, I sneak into your room and find the perfect spot in the water heater closet. How convenient. I leave the door open just a crack and know you will never see. It’s not that you don’t pay attention, you’re just focused on other things.

  People.

  Your students.

  I watch you as you finish your day, resting your head in your hands at your desk and breathing deep before diving into the pile of papers still needing to be graded. You stretch. You massage your neck. And finally, you give up and decide to leave.

  You told me once you worried about your students walking home after school — how they paid no attention to their surroundings because they were too busy looking down at their phones to see oncoming traffic or a potential rapist. So I note the dramatic irony in how I catch you: head down, looking at your phone, paying no attention to the cat behind you, finally about to catch his mouse.

  1

  One moment Juniper Reese existed, and the next she vanished into thin air.

  At first, I chalked up her not answering my phone calls to being busy. We normally chat every single night, but we also both have full time jobs that tend to weave into our daily rhythm. Work life balance has never been a thing for the Reese women, plus I knew she was organizing a gala at the school where she taught, so I waited for the typical text that followed up a missed call. Probably something like….

  Hey. I’m busy but I’ll call you tonight. Love you.

  But this time, there was no text. I told myself it was okay, there wasn’t anything to worry about, any moment now I would hear from her and she would be apologizing profusely because ohmygosh I had no idea what time it was…

  But then I went more than 24 hours and didn’t hear from her, and I couldn’t ignore it anymore. That was Sunday. Yesterday. I called her multiple times, each time hoping that she’d breathlessly answer, nonchalant about the stress I endured. Even though I knew that wasn’t Juniper. Even though I knew she would never just not call me back. So here I am, trying really hard not to freak out, and failing miserably.

  Come on, Juniper. Text me, dammit.

  I stare up at the fan in my room, trying to determine just how much of an emergency this is when I feel a familiar pain blossom in my chest that feels a lot like grief.

  If mom were here, she would know what
to do. I swallow the tears ballooning in my throat. Ten years later and her absence still felt like a gaping wound that wouldn’t ever heal.

  I scrape the edge of my hairline with my finger, anxious for some type of clarity. Instead, it’s just the standard brain fog coupled with anxiety and grief. I groan. Who am I kidding? I’m not going to be able to accomplish anything until I get coffee. I take a deep breath, willing myself out of bed. A glance at the clock lets me know it’s not even five in the morning.

  Not surprising. Sleep and me aren’t friends, especially when my sister isn’t responding to texts.

  I sniff and push myself up and out of the covers, stretching and watching the lights outside my window blink in iridescence. I chose this loft for a reason — it overlooks the San Francisco bay. Throwing a chunk of my monthly salary toward the minuscule living space that functions as a bedroom, living room, and kitchen seemed rational at the time. Now I’m just lonely.

  Lonely and worried.

  My feet grab the coolness of the wood beneath me as I sleepily move from the bed in the corner to the kitchen counter a few feet away. Bonus of living in a true loft: the coffee is literally steps from your sleeping space. I turn on the espresso machine and choose my roast for the day, tampering the grounds and hoping my mind being somewhere else entirely won’t effect the taste of the brew. At this point though, I guess it doesn’t matter. The coffee will be more about clarity and energy than enjoyment. I grab a cup and pour the shots, mixing it with almond milk. Juniper would be laughing at me right now and reaching for the full fat cream I leave in my refrigerator door in case she ever comes to visit.

  She’s only come once.

  I grab a blanket draped off the side of my bed and carry it with me to the couch that sits against a brick wall and in perfect view of the sun beginning to stretch over the horizon. I try and think back over my conversations with Juniper.

  Wednesday, a week ago, she talked to me about Simon. They were ending it for real this time — his pursuit of a career getting in the way of her desire for normalcy.

  “What’s more normal than brow beating your way up the corporate ladder while your wife stays home and pops out babies?” I joked with her. She didn’t find it funny.

  Later that night I called her crying, completely in my feelings. My day had taken a complete turn and a project at work was running away from me. I didn’t know how to fix it. Like always, Juniper came in and offered her logic and practicality. By the time we got off the phone, she could barely form a sentence she was so exhausted and I was downing a shot of espresso, fully inspired. I finished the project in a few hours. I texted her my celebratory photo of taking shots...this time full of vodka. She texted me that she was afraid I was becoming unhinged.

  Even still, that day was no different. We texted until we couldn’t anymore and then she told me she was going to be busy working with another teacher on the Gala the next day but she would try and call me that weekend.

  Thursday morning when I woke up, there was a text waiting for me saying she needed to call me about something and to be expecting to hear from her the next morning because she’d be working on the Gala again that evening.

  “This is important. Please answer,” she said.

  Meaning: this is important. Please get your ass out of bed and be ready to talk.

  Friday morning I got up early — I remember stumbling out of bed and making my coffee and properly attempting to do some sort of yoga before getting a notification that she’d sent me a video message in Marco Polo. I clicked on it, confused. She stared back at me, smiling and in her classroom. It was completely empty.

  “Hey. I know I said I was going to call you tomorrow but I am still working on the Gala and I imagine we’ll be here pretty late,” she rolls her eyes. Who is we? Who’s with her?

  “We still need to talk, though.” She’s out of breath even though she’s sitting down. Her eyes keep darting in front of her, to what I imagine is her door. I frown as I watch it again for the thousandth time. There’s a shadow that crosses her face when she tells me she still wants to talk and her eyes are definitely swollen, as if she’s been crying. She left me a similar message back when she was telling me she needed to talk and it was about Simon.

  I swipe up out of the app on my phone before my response starts playing and rest my head on the arm of the couch.

  Friday morning. Last time I heard from her. Is this grounds for calling the local police? I try and think back to all the missing persons cases I watched on Unsolved Mysteries and keep coming up blank. No wait. Maybe I’m thinking of a murderino podcast…..

  My phone vibrates in my hand and I startle, my heart racing. I glance down at the screen and feel the crashing of my energy when it’s an unknown number. I recognize the area code though — Providence. Where Juniper lives.

  “Hello?”

  “Hi. This is Tracey from Sacred Heart. We’re looking for Juniper and you’re listed as one of her emergency contacts. Have you spoken with her recently?”

  I close my eyes and start massaging my forehead.

  There are moments in life where you experience something in technicolor. Everything around you turns luminescent, a built in bokeh-effect around the moment. Finding out my mother died is filed under this category.

  So is finding out my sister is missing. Truly missing — not just ignoring my calls and texts. It feels like cement has lodged itself into every corner of my being. I’m frozen. I force myself to speak.

  “I’m - I’m her sister. I haven’t heard from her since Friday. Did she not show up today?”

  For Juniper to not show up to one of her obligations, let alone her job, is definitely out of character. A cold realization hits my limbs and I’m glad I’m sitting down. Tracey wouldn’t be calling me if Juniper had waltzed through the doors this morning like she always does. I can feel my pulse staccato out a rhythm that’s unfamiliar. Something is wrong.

  Tracey clears her throat. “She’s been great with communicating in the past if she would miss, and so when she didn’t show, we thought we would reach out in case you had heard from her. You are her emergency contact.” She repeats this last fact as if it would magically unlock the whereabouts of my sister.

  I get up from the couch, nervous energy beginning to bounce around my limbs. I need to pace.

  “I haven’t. I-I haven’t heard anything, actually. Like I mentioned before — last time we spoke was Friday.” I take a fistful of hair from the messy bun on the top of my head and squeeze until I feel the pressure against my scalp. I’m beginning to come undone and I need some type of tactile reminder that in this moment I am okay, that I can breathe and focus on what’s next. I glance out of my window and watch the sun begin to creep over the horizon of the bay.

  I feel my hair.

  I see color in the sky.

  I smell my coffee.

  All reminders keeping me present, but I am dangerously close to the precipice. Right here in the middle of my living room, I’m going to unspool and collect like dust on the hardwood. I reach for another branch.

  “Have you spoken with the the teacher she was working with on the Gala? Would they know?”

  “He’s not in yet this morning. I haven’t been able to ask him.”

  I rub my tongue across the top of my teeth and am surprised at the shock of how organic the thought pops into my brain, she was working with a man?!

  As if this were any other phone call.

  I shake my head and force the thought into the back of my mind to retrieve later. Not that it matters. Well, yes it does. This is the type of information in which sisters give each other hell for, and I would have given her the worst kind in the form of third degree questioning.

  I will be able to give her hell. I wince at the tense change, resisting it.

  Tracey hums absentmindedly, “is there anyone else who might know where she is you think?”

  I think through any other options — any other person I know she might have been working with
on something or another. Conversations about the teachers and their close-knit community come back to memory. Juniper had a hard time connecting with the cult-like mentality there. She was always telling me about an awkward conversation or an invisible rule she knew nothing about within their culture.

  I sit down again, this time on my bed, and shake my head.

  “There’s no one. She…she had a boyfriend, but they broke up and she wasn’t - isn’t - very close to anyone at the school….”

  Tracey clucks her tongue, the judgment evident in her voice. “I see.”

  I remove my hand from the tangle of hair and spread my fingers out over my knee, pressing down as hard as I can and breathing like my counselor taught me so many years ago after Mom’s death —

  Inhale one two three

  Exhale one two three

  It calms the panic attack that I can feel brewing underneath the surface, but I know it won’t work forever. That’s when I know I need to leave. I need to be there.

  “I’m coming,” I say. “I’ll be on the next flight.”

  I hear Tracey mention something incoherent and I speak over her, “my sister wouldn’t miss work. Something must be wrong. I’m coming. We’ll find her.”

 

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