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- I expect nothing. The sun is hot, the light ugly. I walk, when
- I can, in the shade of shopfronts. My face is tight. I hope for
- nothing. I see women whose money has made them old. Bright scarves
- shame their skin, creamy powder clogs their eyes' fine wrinkles, heavy
- earrings, chokers, bend down their necks. Sweat drips from my fingers, and
- am I like them? I see men whose eyes make me old. Taut, vicious boys in
- suits glance at me once, but not again. Slow, dreamy blacks with
- deep-creased hands hold my gaze, and their faces don't change at all.
- When shoulders brush my shoulders I feel bruised. The lunch hour crowd
- returning from work in its good, painful shoes nearly crushes me, could
- have trampled me on the pavement. Assholes with ponytails and twittering
- shopgirls clatter up behind me and past, busy, sexless and quick. I
- stop walking. I didn't see him. Sure, who would want to? Filthy bum.
- Smiling. Things in his mustache. Why look at a thing like that?
- Why look at a thing like me?
-
- "Lady? Find the Lady?"
-
- "No."
-
- "Three chances to find the Lady, lady. Double your money. Little money
- down."
-
- "No." I'm still standing there. He's reaching up. The cracks in
- his fingers are black, his fingers are yellow. Filth-yellow.
- Gray-yellow. Dirtier than money. I put money in them, smooth money too
- old to rustle. It's gone like that. He's all business, now, he doesn't
- smile.
-
- "Three cards, lady." He lays them out. "Which one's the Lady?
- Which one's the Queen of Joy?"
-
- I point, not with my hand. My small foot, five white piggies,
- crushed to a point, points at the middle card. My blue shoe, my blue-green
- office shoe points for me. It matches my scarf, my bag.
-
- "No, lady, not the deuce, we want to find the the Lady. Show me
- my pretty Lady, I know I lost her somewhere here."
-
- I haven't looked, my eyes are just above his head, it could be any
- card. He doesn't have to cheat to fool me. I point again, twitch to the
- left.
-
- "No, my lady, we want something softer than diamonds. Not the
- seven. Find the Lady. Try, lady."
-
- I look. He's looking back. His lost eyes only show their
- blackness, white and iris gone in folds of old skin. He's sweating, same
- as me, same as everyone, water glinting in his ruined cheeks, his neck.
- He's not all that old. Maybe forty? Less?
-
- "I guess it must be the third card. That one."
-
- "You, lose, lady, not there, not that one. So much for double
- your money. Too bad. Thought you were a lucky lady."
-
- I'm still standing there. I wanted to see her. He shuffles up
- the cards, glances up the street, forgets me.
-
- "I want to play again."
-
- "How's that?"
-
- "I'll play again." I hold out money. "Three chances. Double my
- money. I'll play."
-
- "Tell you what." The money's gone. "I like you, lady. Why don't
- I show you where she lives."
-
- Impossible to look at that face, or look away. Gray, street color,
- and the inside of the mouth like a wound, like a flayed thing. The wet
- stone eyes again, lost, unreachable; broken, unfixable. And the body.
- Squat, smashed. The fat, blunt fingers, clever at small things, tricky.
- The swollen legs and shapeless trunk.
-
- "I like you, lady."
-
- "Show me the Queen."
-
- It doesn't surprise me. The instant before, I know exactly what I
- asked for, what I'm getting, and his hand is on my shin. My leg jerks,
- but not away. His fingers are like smooth wood. They catch on my panty
- hose. He strokes, lightly.
-
- "There's the Lady. There's the Queen."
-
- My own face twists. Water breaks from my eyes like glass chips.
- What could make me want this? What, ever? There are people in the
- street, am I this lost? Am I this far from safety, from
- cleanness, white sheets? I hope he will reach higher. I hope his thick
- thumb finds my dirty, wrinkled part. I hope he presses softly in, past the
- labia's weak protest, deep. My shoulders shake, desperate, and I gasp and
- choke. He strokes, still gentle, up, under my pretty skirt's stiff rim.
-
- "That's my pretty Queen of Joy."
-
- Desperate, I stare up the street. If one face sees me I will
- become sane, will know I am being groped by a bum and lose myself in
- disgust. But no one looks. I realise I am completely safe. No decent
- eye will see this ugliness of the street. By this mad act I have
- become the city's filth, as invisible as my starving attacker. He tugs
- down my cotton panties, twiddles with my hair. I could dare to moan. I
- moan. The louder I am, the deafer the walkers become. Only prurient tourists
- hear. I sink to my knees, and he finds the open place. Filth. His
- fingernail leaves traces of contagion in my softest flesh. Vile. He
- slides all the way out, shows me a bunch of three fingers, shoves that in.
-
- He has his own cock out now, and his stroke with himself is
- faster, more casual than with me. It looks exactly like the last cock I
- saw, dark-headed, small, twisting a little away from him. I am so full now
- that I feel my body is half his. His fingers move independently inside me,
- rubbing against each other like a clutch of brother snakes. Then the
- fourth slides in. Its nail catches, a little stab. My teeth grind, the
- water on my face is half tears, half spittle. I cry out as if for
- childbirth or death.
-
- After I come I stay, with him inside me. I watch him, and he
- looks down at himself, at the site of his own pleasure. He leaves his
- hand sunk in me, moving a little, and pumps up and down on himself. I
- look. I want to see this act when desire is finished. I try to know
- exactly what grossness I have done. I try to relearn disgust. I can't.
- When his semen flies, two drops land on my skirt. I touch one. His cries
- are strained and quiet, and he slumps against the grey wall, then looks up
- at me. Now he smiles, and, God, I see his browning, narrow teeth.
-
- "You're quite a lady, Lady."
-
- He takes his hand out of me, but I still don't stand for a while.
- I raise the hand that touched his semen to my mouth. My damp hand
- shakes. No one walks past. Though no one looked at us, still we have
- cleared the street. I struggle up, survey the ruin of my hose.
-
- "Well, Lady, I sure hope to see you. Hey?"
-
- I go. I leave my purse. My face is wet and red, my feet stagger.
- I try smiling at a girl I pass. Terrified eyes flick away. Good.
- The invisibility's still working. I'm inhuman for the duration. The sun
- hits my body, the stink of trash fills my lungs, and I walk faster and
- faster. At the corner I turn, and I must know this street but it looks
- different. I put my head down and watch my blue-green shoes click on the
- pavement. I turn another way, half run, half drag. I can't say where I'm
- headed. How could I possibly go back to work? How could I possibly hope
- to find home?
- --