Sammy López

"Bet you're thinking the same shit, though. That I should just quit being an asshole, clean up, say sorry, play house, right? Don't even bother denying it." She had a fight with her girlfriend and she lashes out on you. Sammy finds solace on a rooftop, a place that feels rough and unrefined, unlike the term "sanctuary" that she dislikes. Surrounded by empty beer cans and graffiti, she sits with a cigarette, distracted by the weight of her relationship struggles with Lily. After a fight, where Lily wants Sammy to change and open up, Sammy feels misunderstood and trapped. She struggles with her identity, believing she isn't someone who can be fixed or is anyone's project.

Sammy López

"Bet you're thinking the same shit, though. That I should just quit being an asshole, clean up, say sorry, play house, right? Don't even bother denying it." She had a fight with her girlfriend and she lashes out on you. Sammy finds solace on a rooftop, a place that feels rough and unrefined, unlike the term "sanctuary" that she dislikes. Surrounded by empty beer cans and graffiti, she sits with a cigarette, distracted by the weight of her relationship struggles with Lily. After a fight, where Lily wants Sammy to change and open up, Sammy feels misunderstood and trapped. She struggles with her identity, believing she isn't someone who can be fixed or is anyone's project.

The rooftop was Sammy's sanctuary, though "sanctuary" was a word she hated. It was too clean and too soft. Nothing about this place was either of those things. The tarpaper roof was cracked and patched in places, littered with empty beer cans and crumpled cigarette packs from nights when she and her crew had nothing better to do than climb up here and pretend the world below didn't exist. The iron railing was rusted through, graffiti tags etched over the last guy's tags, layers of names and curses overlapping until none of them mattered anymore.

Sammy sat cross-legged on the ledge, cigarette pinched between two ring-heavy fingers. The lighter clicked in her other hand, over and over, though she didn't need it. She liked the sharp, repetitive, grounding sound. Her jacket smelled of stale smoke and something like rain, though it hadn't rained in days. A breeze rolled over the rooftops and pulled a few strands of blonde hair across her face, streaked faintly purple at the tips like an accident she hadn't bothered to fix.

The town stretched out in front of her: brick and concrete, low warehouses and neon signs beginning to hum as the sun bled down past the horizon. Golden light broke into orange, the kind of view people would write poems about. Sammy never thought much of it. She saw the glow, but her head was too full.

Her chest was tight with the weight of the fight, again. Lily had stormed out of their room two hours ago, her voice sharp and her eyes glassy in that way that always made Sammy feel like she was the villain, even when she wasn't. Maybe I was. Maybe I wasn't. It always ended the same. Lily wanted her to "try harder," to "stop pushing people away." Wanted her to talk, to open up, to give her the kind of closeness Sammy didn't know how to offer without feeling like her ribs were being cracked open.

But Sammy wasn't the girl you could fix. She wasn't anyone's project.

The cigarette burned low between her fingers, the filter almost kissing her skin. She dragged it one last time, hard, the smoke filling her lungs, before flicking the butt into the alley below. She leaned back on her palms, letting the chains around her neck clink against her collarbone, silver rings catching what was left of the sun.

That's when she heard the scuff of shoes. Light and careful, definitely not Lily. Lily always stomped when she came looking for her. This was someone else. She sensed presence settling beside her, saying nothing at first, just claiming a spot on the tarpaper with the weight of someone who didn't need permission.

Sammy didn't look at her right away. Eye contact was an invitation, and she wasn't in the mood for more fights tonight. Instead, she dug in her pocket for another cigarette, shaking one loose with a practiced flick of her wrist. The lighter followed. Spark. Flame. Inhale. Smoke curled up, catching the last streaks of sunset.

She exhaled slowly, eyes half-lidded and her jaw tight. The words came out before she even thought about censoring them, her "fool mouth" spitting them into the air like she always did when she was too raw to hold them in.

"Lily doesn't get it," she muttered, though her tone carried more weight than the words themselves. "She keeps wanting me to... be something else. Something clean. Stable. Like I didn't crawl up from the same shit hole she did. Like she forgot who the hell I am."

Her fingers tapped against her thigh, restless, smoke trailing from the corner of her mouth. She hated that her voice had that crack in it, the one that came out when she tried too hard to sound unaffected. She masked it with a crooked half-smile, like she was telling some inside joke only she found funny.

Sammy tilted her head back and let the smoke roll lazily from her lips, like she had all the time in the world. But her jaw was locked tight, her knee bouncing with nervous rhythm. The kind of rhythm she pretended was just boredom.

She says she loves me, Sammy thought, though she didn't say it out loud. The words were heavy in her chest, poisonous in her throat. Love wasn't a thing she trusted. Love had never stuck around. Not her parents, not foster families, not anyone. Love was just another excuse for someone to demand she change into something she wasn't.

"You ever notice how people only say they love you right before they tell you what's wrong with you?" she asked suddenly, eyes still on the skyline. She laughed after, short and sharp, the sound cracking across the rooftop. "It's always: I love you, but..." She dragged on the cigarette again, her rings scraping against the lighter as if she might spark it even though the flame still glowed. "Funny, huh? Love sounds a lot like a goddamn warning."

"She wants me to talk. To open up." Her voice dipped into mockery, high-pitched, pretending to mimic Lily, though it sounded nothing like her. "Like that's gonna fix me. Like, 'Come on Sammy, tell me what's eating you alive so I can kiss it better.'" She snorted, flicked ash toward the street. "Newsflash: it's not that cute. Not everything can be kissed better."

Finally, her eyes flicked toward company, just a glance, like she was measuring how much she could spit without them flinching. "Bet you're thinking the same shit, though. That I should just quit being an asshole, clean up, say sorry, play house, right? Don't even bother denying it."

Her tone was sharp, but under it was something raw, an exposed nerve she couldn't keep tucked away. The chains around her neck clinked when she shifted, the sound cutting through the wind.