Slumdog Millionaire
Posted: Fri Sep 24, 2021 2:22 pm
T H E - T O W E R
"You're evicting me?"
"No, no; Not entirely," the brunette woman replied. She wore a new dress, looking around the room in distaste. Her eyes landed on the herbs hanging on the wall and the half-burned candle on the round table. Mrs. Nessinger moved towards the framed mirror that hung on the wall and straightened the bleeding of her lipstick with an index finger, "Consider this a notice of rent increase," the human smiled, her teeth stained and beginning to show her age, "You have 30 days."
Yeva blinked, caught off guard. Her hair was still damp from her bath, her morning cup of tea still steaming and unfinished. She looked back down at the paper, heart beginning to pound, "But I paid my rent! I-I-I paid in advance. When I became a tenant, I...."
"Yes, you did," the landlady turned, still admiring herself, smoothing out flattened hair, "But I'm afraid that's all done and gone now. You'll have to bring that up with your new landlady. Although, she was rather adamant about the price. Truthfully, you're lucky you're being humored in the first place. We almost didn't close the sale because of you."
A series of expenses were written in beautiful handwriting at the bottom. Deposits, expected monthly payments, foreigner fees. How was any of this legal?
"This is almost triple what I pay now!" her grip on the parchment tightened, "I was promised housing for the season!"
Mrs. Nessinger snorted in derision, "Plans change."
"Where's Mr. Nessinger?"
The older woman sighed.
Yeva felt her anger rising, "You took my money! You knew you were going to sell the property!" This must have been in the works for some time. No wonder the shop owner was always cleaning. He had been preparing the space for show. Yeva's face began to redden, thinking of all the times he had jumped in her presence. Appeared uncomfortable. He could never look her in the eye. He was a coward. The world's weakest conman.
And she had fallen for every bit of it.
Shame, humiliation, fear... Fury. Yeva had not felt this type of anger in years, "Where is he?" she demanded, spotting the door to the hall. He must have been downstairs. Maybe he was listening.
Mrs. Nessinger, seeing Yeva stomp forward, turned to face the elf and cut off her exit.
"Don't you concern yourself with my husband! Now, when things don't go your way, you throw a fit. Like a child," the reprimand was sharp, the older woman getting in her face. Yeva noticed was the dress, the pearl earrings she wore. Had her money paid for those too? "You chase my husband like a bitch in heat. Mr. Nessinger this, Mr. Nessinger that," the brunette scowled, "Selling this place was enough work without a knife ear lowering the value."
"Fuck you!" Yeva shouted, surprising even herself, "I don't want your crusty ass husband!" She was ready to start swinging.
She should have.
The older woman saw the tears pooling in Yeva's eyes and smiled, heading to the door, "Thirty days... Piece of advice, you'll want that money soon. There is more than one way to drop dead weight."
The door shut and Yeva stood there, overwhelmed with emotion. She wasn't a child! And this wasn't a fit! The room had been her only security in this horrible place and now she had been stolen from, insulted, and now threatened.
Hot tears ran down her freckled cheeks and she ran to the open window, glaring as the couple left the shop below, arm in arm. Mrs. Nessinger wrapped her arm around the shopkeeps back and leaned into him, directing his path to the right. No, Yeva realized. Mr. Nessinger wasn't the conman. He was the puppet. Neither paid her any mind and somehow that felt worse. She had never felt such hatred. Across the street, the breakfast rush was in full swing, the tables and chairs already set up. Yeva replayed the conversation.
When things don't go your way, you throw a fit.
You throw a fit.
You throw a fit.
They took advantage of her and accused her when she dared to be upset. Yeva disappeared back into the room, threw her head back, and screamed. From deep in her belly to the highest notes that clawed her throat raw, her cry tore through the building, vibrating the walls. She screamed the note until she could hold it no longer, snatching the pillow from her bed in her fury. She punched and clawed at it, her vision blurry with tears. Now, this was a fit. Grabbing it by its casing, Yeva beat the pillow against the mattress, the wall, the floor, throwing all her strength behind each throw, knuckles white. Seething. She swung until her strength left her and the bag ripped, sending white feathers to every corner of the room. They floated in the air, suspended, some drifting out the window and to the street below. She didn't care.
She didn't care who heard her. Or what they thought.
She threw herself on the bed and cried righteous anger.
"You're evicting me?"
"No, no; Not entirely," the brunette woman replied. She wore a new dress, looking around the room in distaste. Her eyes landed on the herbs hanging on the wall and the half-burned candle on the round table. Mrs. Nessinger moved towards the framed mirror that hung on the wall and straightened the bleeding of her lipstick with an index finger, "Consider this a notice of rent increase," the human smiled, her teeth stained and beginning to show her age, "You have 30 days."
Yeva blinked, caught off guard. Her hair was still damp from her bath, her morning cup of tea still steaming and unfinished. She looked back down at the paper, heart beginning to pound, "But I paid my rent! I-I-I paid in advance. When I became a tenant, I...."
"Yes, you did," the landlady turned, still admiring herself, smoothing out flattened hair, "But I'm afraid that's all done and gone now. You'll have to bring that up with your new landlady. Although, she was rather adamant about the price. Truthfully, you're lucky you're being humored in the first place. We almost didn't close the sale because of you."
A series of expenses were written in beautiful handwriting at the bottom. Deposits, expected monthly payments, foreigner fees. How was any of this legal?
"This is almost triple what I pay now!" her grip on the parchment tightened, "I was promised housing for the season!"
Mrs. Nessinger snorted in derision, "Plans change."
"Where's Mr. Nessinger?"
The older woman sighed.
Yeva felt her anger rising, "You took my money! You knew you were going to sell the property!" This must have been in the works for some time. No wonder the shop owner was always cleaning. He had been preparing the space for show. Yeva's face began to redden, thinking of all the times he had jumped in her presence. Appeared uncomfortable. He could never look her in the eye. He was a coward. The world's weakest conman.
And she had fallen for every bit of it.
Shame, humiliation, fear... Fury. Yeva had not felt this type of anger in years, "Where is he?" she demanded, spotting the door to the hall. He must have been downstairs. Maybe he was listening.
Mrs. Nessinger, seeing Yeva stomp forward, turned to face the elf and cut off her exit.
"Don't you concern yourself with my husband! Now, when things don't go your way, you throw a fit. Like a child," the reprimand was sharp, the older woman getting in her face. Yeva noticed was the dress, the pearl earrings she wore. Had her money paid for those too? "You chase my husband like a bitch in heat. Mr. Nessinger this, Mr. Nessinger that," the brunette scowled, "Selling this place was enough work without a knife ear lowering the value."
"Fuck you!" Yeva shouted, surprising even herself, "I don't want your crusty ass husband!" She was ready to start swinging.
She should have.
The older woman saw the tears pooling in Yeva's eyes and smiled, heading to the door, "Thirty days... Piece of advice, you'll want that money soon. There is more than one way to drop dead weight."
The door shut and Yeva stood there, overwhelmed with emotion. She wasn't a child! And this wasn't a fit! The room had been her only security in this horrible place and now she had been stolen from, insulted, and now threatened.
Hot tears ran down her freckled cheeks and she ran to the open window, glaring as the couple left the shop below, arm in arm. Mrs. Nessinger wrapped her arm around the shopkeeps back and leaned into him, directing his path to the right. No, Yeva realized. Mr. Nessinger wasn't the conman. He was the puppet. Neither paid her any mind and somehow that felt worse. She had never felt such hatred. Across the street, the breakfast rush was in full swing, the tables and chairs already set up. Yeva replayed the conversation.
When things don't go your way, you throw a fit.
You throw a fit.
You throw a fit.
They took advantage of her and accused her when she dared to be upset. Yeva disappeared back into the room, threw her head back, and screamed. From deep in her belly to the highest notes that clawed her throat raw, her cry tore through the building, vibrating the walls. She screamed the note until she could hold it no longer, snatching the pillow from her bed in her fury. She punched and clawed at it, her vision blurry with tears. Now, this was a fit. Grabbing it by its casing, Yeva beat the pillow against the mattress, the wall, the floor, throwing all her strength behind each throw, knuckles white. Seething. She swung until her strength left her and the bag ripped, sending white feathers to every corner of the room. They floated in the air, suspended, some drifting out the window and to the street below. She didn't care.
She didn't care who heard her. Or what they thought.
She threw herself on the bed and cried righteous anger.