Redbone

"Stay woke," he whispered, a mantra he couldn't help but repeat. “Too late,” the song seemed to echo in his mind.

“If you want it, you can have it,” he thought, looking at her in the mirror.

He knew the stories about her—the ones that accused her of being "too much" for anyone to handle, too demanding, too… inconstant. But when she turned, her eyes meeting his in the reflection, the doubt seemed to melt away, replaced by a desperate, hungry need. Redbone

He reached out, his hand trembling slightly, and pulled her to him. The music swelled, the bassline thumping in his chest, a, yes, chaotic, beautiful heartbeat of a love that was, in its own way, as "redbone" as she was.

Marcus was tired, his heart heavy with the paranoia that had become his constant companion. He loved her—God, he loved her—but the insecurity was a cold weight in his stomach. He’d seen the way she looked at others, the way she seemed to exist in a space that he couldn't quite reach. "Stay woke," he whispered, a mantra he couldn't

The neon sign outside the motel buzzed, casting a sickly red glow over the peeling wallpaper of Room 204. Inside, the only sound was the low, rhythmic bassline of Childish Gambino’s "Redbone" crackling from a cheap Bluetooth speaker, a song that seemed to warp the very air of the room.

“Stay woke,” the falsetto sang, a haunting warning that hung in the air. He knew the stories about her—the ones that

He’d heard the whisperings, the suggestions that she was too much, too captivating, too… scandalous.