Page 2 of Sexting the Enemy


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That's literally what every serial killer says. It's probably in the handbook. Chapter One: Justify Everything.

Unknown:Speaking from experience?

I extract bullets from bodies for fun and profit. Well, mostly fun. The profit is negligible. We all have our hobbies.

He gets it. Whoever this is understands gallows humor as a coping mechanism, which means he's either in healthcare, law enforcement, or crime. Based on the midnight murder confession, I'm betting on door number three.

I should block you,

I type, knowing I absolutely won't.

Unknown:You should. But you won't. You're too lonely, and I'm too intrigued.

My emotional state just got diagnosed by a stranger. Accurate assessment. Terrible prognosis.

You don't know me.

Unknown:I know you save people at midnight. I know you drink alone. I know you're tired of being good when everyone around you isn't.

Jesus. He's reading me like a medical chart—symptoms, diagnosis, treatment plan. Everything but the cure.

That's a lot of assumptions from one text.

Unknown:You texted about bullets and children and drinking on a Thursday near midnight. Medical professional, probably ER based on the trauma comfort. The anger says personal investment. The tequila says self-medicating. The wrong number says lonely enough to text a stranger your darkest moment. Diagnostic criteria complete.

My vagina is writing him a letter of recommendation while my brain searches frantically for the emergency exits.

You're not wrong. You're also not safe.

Unknown:Neither are you, Angel. The difference is I know it.

Angel.The word hits like an abnormal EKG—irregular, concerning, probably fatal if I get too close. My dopamine and serotonin are having a dance party while my cortisol levels scream warnings.

I'm not an angel. Angels don't perform illegal medical procedures in vans that smell like blood and broken dreams.

Unknown:No. You're something better. You're real.

I stare at that text like it's presenting symptoms I've never seen. Real. When's the last time someone called me real instead of crazy, dedicated, or 'concerningly comfortable with trauma'?

I need to go. Early shift tomorrow.

It's a lie with a grain of truth. I work Weekend Option—every Saturday and Sunday, twelve hours of controlled chaos that pays enough to keep me in good tequila and questionable decisions.

Unknown:Will you text again?"

My better judgment is filing a restraining order against my fingers, which are already typing.

I shouldn't.

Unknown:That's not a no.

It's not a yes either. It's a maybe with strong reservations and a side of poor judgment.

Unknown:I'll take it. Goodnight, Angel.

Goodnight, Wrong Number.

I save his contact exactly as “Wrong Number,” like labeling the poison will somehow keep me from drinking it. My apartment is fifteen minutes away if I follow traffic laws, ten if I drive like my life choices—reckless but surprisingly effective.