It was very late, or very early depending on how you looked at it, and Riley wasn't entirely sure where he was.
They were in a cab, which was funny to him seeing as all three of the boys piled into the back were wizards. This had become somewhat normal to him, though. Trying to do magic when you were out of it always ended badly. He remembered leaving the club one night to find a boy split in pieces, healers from St. Mungo's trying to put him back together. It was gruesome, and it only made Riley feel better about the fact that he never learned how to apparate.
At present his forehead was nuzzled against anothers, but for the life of him he couldn't remember his name. Mark? Matt? Malcolm? Something with an M. He was a nice guy, or at least Riley thought so. He was charming and flirtatious and had brought lots of fun things to the club for him to try. He was half-asleep, leeching off the boy's warmth and the calming rhythm of his rising and falling chest. The other boy had told them of a place, somewhere they could go to crash. Riley wasn't going to argue.
The cab stopped, the driver looking to them expectantly. They were before a row of townhouses that, to the muggle, would seem painfully ordinary. Riley's beau smiled at him and offered the fare and a meager tip, but then again the driver couldn't have expected much from them. They slithered out of the car and Riley couldn't even stand without clutching onto M. "I don't... feel good," he whined lightly, nuzzling a kiss into the boy's neck. He shrugged him off, just a bit, and Riley wondered if he was growing tired of him.
Before them, as magical beings, stood an extra townhouse. It loomed overhead, a beautiful brick exterior and large bay windows on either side of the walk up. It was a bit rundown, the windows boarded and some signs of graffiti here and there. Riley didn't care. It was their people, magical people, a place where they could actually be themselves. Riley tugged on M's sleeve, the boy giving him a sharp look. He muttered to him, fishing around in his jacket pocket. He was offering him something then, a little something, promising it would make him feel better. At this point, Riley just wanted to be able to stand up without the world spinning.
He took the pill and grinned up at M. Something in his heart told him that M was only being nice because he fancied Riley's smile. He tried to stand, then, but it was even worse. He grabbed at his temples, a pounding in his skull, the world spinning even faster around him as he began to see colors even when his eyes were tightly shut. M was shaking him, trying to stir him, but Riley felt himself fading. The other two were arguing, he couldn't make out the words.
What do you mean wrong pill? Riley began to sink down, resting himself on the stairs of the walk up.
It's too dark out here, I can't see anything! Riley was lost in his mind, seeing things that couldn't be true. The voices were fading. His perception was twisted.
One of them was pounding on the door then, the other yelling to stop. They were afraid, Riley knew it. He was so tired, so lightheaded, feeling hands shaking him again. He shook his head quickly, unable to focus. He couldn't even form words, not yet. It was always bad for the first half hour or so, then it would fade. He just had to hold on for a half an hour. He heard M's voice then, echoing in his mind.
We have to go. He's a mess. They're gonna ask questions. Riley blinked, trying to look up at him, glaring, but it was pointless. He heard frantic footsteps, the boys were running. They were leaving him here. They were probably afraid they'd get into trouble. Riley curled up. Whatever they'd given him, it wasn't legal.
It felt very cold to him then, his limbs tightening as he shivered. He felt cold sweat on the back of his neck and he hated it, he hated feeling like this. So why didn't he stop the madness? Why did he get into cars with people like M and his friend? Riley's hands slithered up to his ears, covering them. He was trying to block out the sounds. He heard footsteps again, more solid. He looked towards the door and saw a shape open it, tall and imposing. He should've been frightened, probably, but he really just wanted someone to help him. His steely blue eyes, bloodshot and scared, tried to make out the form before him.
"I - I'm s-sorry," he managed before his head fell back against the steps. And he was. He really, really was.[div style="opacity:0"]
@Pike [/div]