The night had terminated.
The bar was ejecting its final dregs onto the pavement, and Lydia was one of them, clutching a bottle of gin like it was the only structural support holding her upright. She scanned the dispersing crowd, her vision swimming in a haze of sodium-vapor orange and low-bitrate shadows.
Nothing. Not a single glance.
It was as if she had been rendered offline.
“Fucking invisible,” she slurred, the words tasting like copper and sour lime. “The bottom-feeders are on a diet tonight. Guess that’s it, then. I’m officially unfuckable.”
A cold, wet nose nudged her hand. A skinny stray, all ribs and hope, looked up at her. For a split second, something in Lydia’s chest cracked open—a fissure in the firewall. A real, stupid smile touched her lips.
“Well, hello there. Ribs and optimism. You’re my spirit animal. You see me, don’t you, handsome?”
The dog sniffed the hem of her red dress, inhaling the scent of stale smoke and expensive despair. Then, with the casual indifference of the universe itself, it lifted a leg and pissed on her calf.
The warmth spread through her stocking—a final, warm, wet critique of her life choices.
The smile vanished. Deleted instantly.
“Fuck!”
The word was a gunshot in the quiet street.
“Okay. Subtle. FUCK. ME.”
She shoved away from the lamppost she hadn't realized she was leaning on—the dog's personal urinal, apparently. She stumbled toward the only shelter in sight: a blue steel telephone booth, standing like a fossil from a pre-digital epoch waiting for the meteor.
She sagged against the door, fumbling with the gin. It swung open under her weight, and she pitched inside, the bottle clattering against the metal shelf with a hollow, metallic ring.
And there it was. The phone.
An ancient black brick on a coiled cord, smelling of rust and static.
A terrible, brilliant idea bloomed in her gin-soaked brain.
“I’m gonna call him,” she announced to the empty booth, her voice echoing in the glass coffin. “Who the fuck is he to block me? I’m going to call him, and I’m going to tell him to go fuck himself.”
She picked up the receiver, the plastic cold against her ear. The dial was a stubborn, clicking wheel.
“Seven… no, fuck, it was a two…”
The whir of the rotary was the sound of her own unraveling.
“Zero… eight… another two… eight… then… shit. What was it?”
“Two… Seven…”
A hum. A click.
It was ringing.
Holy shit, the circuit is open.
The wind kicked up out of nowhere, a sudden, violent guest. It ripped the booth door back and forth on its hinges—slam, creak, slam—a frantic rhythm beating against the dark. The streetlamp buzzed overhead, casting flickering shadows that made the cramped space feel like a cage.
A voice answered.
Too calm. Too clean.
“Hello?”
Lydia’s knuckles turned white on the receiver. All the rage she'd been drowning all night erupted like a power surge.
“You son of a—”
She tried to stand, to put her whole body into the scream, but her legs gave out.
She went down.
The receiver slipped from her grasp. It swung back on its cord and smashed into her forehead.
Static.
White, pixelated stars exploded behind her eyes.
“Lydia…?”
The voice was distant now. Tinny. Strange. Leaking from the dangling handset tapping against her cheek.
Tap. Tap. Tap.
A cold, plastic ghost.
She clawed at the cord, trying to pull herself up. It stretched. Went taut. And then—snapped.
The connection severed. The line died.
Silence.
She lay there for a long moment, the cool metal floor a comfort against her burning cheek. Finally, she fished out her Android. Its glow felt like an accusation in the gloom.
She navigated to her call history.
To the name that was more of a scar than a contact:
J.
She hit the call button. One ring. Then the robotic voice—the one she knew better than her own mother's: “The number you are calling is currently...” She let out a sound that wasn't a word. A dry, ragged sob of pure, undiluted frustration. She opened the bike taxi app, her thumb a clumsy hammer on the glass. BOOK RIDE. A screen of indifferent blue flooded the booth. Finding a nearby driver... She took a long, throat-scorching swig of gin and held the phone up to the sky—an offering to a god she didn’t believe in. For a second, there was nothing. Just her, the dead phone booth, and the piss drying on her leg. Then— a chime. A bright, clean digital sound cut through the night. She looked down. One notification pulsed on the screen. JONES HAS ACCEPTED YOUR RIDE. Time: 11:11 PM