OTROS :: Eᴘɪsᴏᴅᴇ 1 :: 'Cʜᴀɴɢᴇ'
From Self Control, with @Lydia
11:21 PM. The drywall shivers with the sound of music. Gabber is music to gnash your teeth to, beats so insistent and regular the brain can slip between its gears and drift throughout the body. Dancing like that, it's your bonemarrow and burning muscles that do the thinking. It's also music to shave your head by, lace your boots to. She's not the worst neighbour to have tonight, that girl nextdoor, with the green hair, the longdistance boyfriend. (Silk wonders if she ever goes out. Her door never makes a sound.)
Close to the wall socket, crouched on their heels, squat on their thighs – bare legs newly shaved, bare arms, bare (fake) hardwood floor and mattress – the wire of Silk's clippers casts weird shadows as it shakes. No outlets in the bathroom, so they have to do it here. They barely use the mirror; can do this, now, by touch. Their reflection watches from the corner of its eyes. (Wax's was never quite right. Moved sometimes, wrongfaced, without him. Paced, prowled, lashed out, like the glass was a cage that had trapped it. Imagine: to look in a mirror and see not yourself but the beast that lives in your skin. Pobrecite, you don't have to imagine. It is your skin. Wherever it goes, there you are.)
A snarled-up pout of concentration: Silk has never been in a forest, but the short pelt beneath their fingertips feels deep enough to get lost in. Buried below the music, the clippers' teeth hum: hunger mantra, sacred syllable. Silk's eyes slide shut. Bare for now, neither matte nor gloss, the lids have that third quality possessed by the petals of tulips and the wings of things without feathers: colour of cooking oil, shimmering as the heat comes right. Behind them, Silk's hunger waits to be seen. (To be touched. To be filled.)
Something's changing. Silk changes with it. Haven't they always?
(I envy you. Lace, repeating herself. Like, I love you, I love all of you, but fuck y'all too, right? Lace, laughing her small help-me laugh, face turned away. I dunno, maybe you didn't know it yet, maybe you did, maybe you always knew – like Luna says, I dunno – but you all had something you wanted to be, even before, right? / Sure. Silk, not always having known how to wash and braid her hair, knows by now. Okay. / Like, they're right. They're right about you, anyway. Lace, sounding different upsidedown, eyes rolling back in her head to look Silk in the face. You're like some kinda infinite fucking onion, qué no? Layers under layers and you just keep peeling and like, I dunno, you're fine with it? You know there's always something underneath. / Silk, detangling from the ends up. Silk's fingernails, the colour of lipstick in the dark seafoam of her hair. / Lace, not even needing to say the rest. Lace, nineteen for almost twenty years, on the cusp forever. I dunno. Like, y'all are changing. I dunno what I'm meant to change into to keep up.)
Silk's eyes twitch under the skin. The clippers shut off like a door closing, with the humming shut behind it. Silk leaves them on the nearest patch of floor, wrapped in their own wire. The metal muzzle is faintly hot from use. The black WAHL plastic body is surrounded where it lays: a shed and soft halo of black unwanted hair. Silk's chest, shoulders, back caught the rest. Their hand is still soaked in the vibrations from the clippers. Their skin feels invaded, like the offcut hairs are trying to take root where they fell. (A momentary urge, and Silk wants to roll on the ground, drag their back and arms along the walls. A momentary urge behind clenched and stinging teeth, and Silk wants to skin themself clean. Get better. Be new.)
It passes. Hasn't it always?
Framed with two inches of bamboo laminate, colour of condensed milk, the mirror is big, broad, cheap: aluminum smeared onto glass. (43 dollars American, heavy and clumsy, hauled home like a cross to Calvary, dragged sometimes on its side, concrete tattering the cardboard and shedding styrofoam, look at it fucking go, arms and legs, on their back like a cross, early night, friction, three flights of pinche stairs, don't fucking look, don't fucking look at them — not now, not yet, but soon.) Between the low ceiling and its size, the mirror fills almost the whole corner. Crammed in close to the kitchenette, jammed between floor and wall, it's more doorway than window, alleging another near-identical room. In it, through it, the only lights are stolen. Sodium gold from the street below; roadflare red from the construction site cranes; filmy shadows the colour of tin. Felt more than seen, the glass trembles with bass. The tempo is like something being stampcut from sheetsteel. (Backteeth chewing fast on nothing. Music you can't dance to unmedicated. Does she dance in there? Does she ever go out?)
The minifridge is empty, unplugged. Dragged a meter across the floor, it squats by the mirror in silence. Its white plastic top, and the steel drainingboard by the kitchenette sink – still pockmarked from drying someone else's dishes – have been colonised. (Cluttered. Strewn. A kind of vanity now. Scissors. Eyelash glue. Plastic packaging, broken into. Revlon Super Lustrous Lipstick in Cappuccino and Goldpearl Plum: a buy-one-get-one-half-price offer, fuck it, what else do you do with 5,500 dollars, what else do you do with a hole whose depth you don't know how to sound. Poultry shears. A Maybelline tinted moisturiser, golden-cool, with a French name that seems like it should mean tainted oil. Eyeshadow set next to a container of Vaseline the size of a closed fist. Fabric scissors. A dollarstore freckle pen. A tube of NYX Professional Born To Glow Liquid Illuminator, half-killed, in a shade called – you have to laugh – "Sunbeam". A linoleum knife that looks more like something to kill sheep with. MAC Strobe Cream: barely, sparingly used. An illegal balisong with a skeletal handle of rose-gold steel. Powder and cotton pads, nailpolish. Solvent and green tea scent of removers.) A residue of glitter covers everything, enough to lose Silk their deposit: body-safe, allegedly, but impossible to clean.
With no one but the mirror watching, Silk's movements change. They stretch tall, from the balls of their feet to the curl and sharply straightening lengths of their fingers, and spill into a squat, heavy as falling water. Arms hunched over their head, Silk pushes their palms and fingers over the quiet black noise of their scalp. (Not quite a buzz, not quite a hiss. Profusely plural. A touch-sound like electricity moving in wires. Beneath the skin, an impatience.) Muscle like bone and bone like muscle, everything in their back shifts too much through the skin. (Their shoulders shouldn't bend that way, but do.) When they roll onto their side, and twist onto their back and hands and feet, and rise up straight like steam, the motion is soundless, simian. To move like this takes a lifetime of contemporary dance, or a childhood raised by wolves. It's fine. It's meaningless. The body wants what it wants. It feels good just to move. No need to pretend.
In the pitchdark bathroom, the hot water feels like light might feel, if light could pass through skin. Something's changing. Some things have already changed. Silk feels their stomach come alive with unease, then dissolve, then boil lower: dark-warm and unresolved.
(What does it look like inside you? Are you dry and still, except in the flushed and swollen places where the night still needs you alive? Is everything there that was always there, or did changing hollow you out? Silk remembers retching in the hot dark – smelling of butcher's shop, smelling of bodies – in the first blind nights of their becoming. They hadn't yet learned to stretch their eyes till the dark became something they could see in. It felt like pieces of their body were wrenching themselves free. Maybe they were. Silk weighs less, now, than they seem like they should. Does your body reconstitute itself as needed, moment by moment and molten? What happens when you sleep? If you opened yourself, what would you learn?)
The hunger comes round like it always does, but this time something has changed. Silk's body is awake with it, livid with it. No act of will, no force of thought, but their cheeks are hot, flesh firm and plush. Their lungs are wings, beating; between them, their heart is a stone.
Silk is on the bathtub floor. The itch has rinsed from their skin and their brain is blind on memory and their eyes see shades of grey, more map than place, and heart or not, whatever the ciphered workings of their innards, the blood wants to go where the blood wants to go where the blood wants to go and Silk lets it. It moves by itself, not pumping but crawling. As their knees buckle, and Silk lets them. As their hips roll, then stutter. As the wet dark changes against their touch, different from water and made different by it. As a sharp hiss comes into their mouth, and catches for a long blue instant, and leaves when Silk lets it: a strangled nameless sound, small and surprising, not quite a sob. It feels like burning. Failing so good.
(Head empty? No thoughts, no movie, no memories? Tell yourself that. Tell yourself whatever you need. Lie to yourself, but not to me. We both know what the dark showed you.)
Otrobar was never safe. Its backrooms have a reputation: a stink that clings to them in rumours and threats. Even front of house, so near to the streetlamps, the half-empty condos – a real world that sleeps through the nights; Please Leave Quietly; This Is (still, for now) A Neighbourhood – the eyes of Salvador Santos are there, whether he's working or not. His eyes are not his own; the brick walls listen. (The backrooms are tiled. There are drains and gutters in the floors. This was a wine-cellar once. Something, since then, has changed.) So: probably, Otrobar was never safe. Probably, it doesn't need to be.
Hard to say if that's what made Silk come, tonight, needing to hunt, having never hunted here. It's not close to home: is that better or worse? The space is familiar, the rules are unclear: is that better or worse? (Something's wrong. There's danger here. For better, for worse, and what? Stand on its tongue. Gaze down the dark road of its throat. Watch for headlights in the black. You'll see them coming before they know you've come. Hunger like anger: afraid to be touched, longing to be shared.) Sometimes, reasons are hard to arrive at, or things that come after the fact. Sometimes Silk just does things, trusting want to want what's best.
Just before the balled up fist of his sleeve, the L&F tag bites pinkly into the thickness and hair of Salvador's arm. The Lost & Found Girl isn't working tonight. The lights are dim but soft, the colours almost real: Silk could have seen if they were right about her hair… (Sure. Play curious. Easier that way than to admit you already know, and face the next question, and the next. The how and why will chew you to pieces, pobrecite.) The tall beard with the arms handles the cash and cards, the tabs, while Salvador Santos, crow-eyed and limping, serves drinks as fast as he damn well pleases.
"No one drinks that shit with the worm in." Santos pours it with a generosity so careless it looks like disdain: two thick fingers of mezcal in a thick-walled, heavy-floored glass. "You know that, right? It's a novelty. For the tourists."
"Relax, uncle. You and me both know I'm not gonna."
They speak Spanish. On Tuesdays like this, so does the music and parts of the crowd it brings. (The world feels flatter, simpler that way. When you train your ears to a language you've learnt, it takes force of will to stop listening, but a mother's tongue is the first and last thing you learn to ignore.) The cocktail tables have been dragged to the backrooms. It makes no difference: the dancefloor is tight, the ceiling low and moist.
"I hate this shit." A frown digs trenches round Salvador's eyes: a face like chewing limes. "No one can dance to this."
Sleek crucifix arms, eyeshadow like if metal could bruise, Silk leans back against the bar and twists at the neck, watching Salvador Santos watch them. "They disagree."
Face to face and front to back, they animal one another, this crowd: dancing perreo to dembow beats, no choice, no distance to take. Shouting into each other's necks, some try to talk; some try just to breathe. Their sweat hangs in the air. If Silk licked his own wrist, he'd taste the whole room on his skin: sex and fear, tequila salt, cocaine and molly, makeup melting. (Do it. The urge rears up, slinks back, but doesn't fade. Just joins the others, crowding Silk's body, stinging their throat with thirst.) Silk swallows. The spit is thick and hungrily sweet.
"That's not dancing, that's fucking. They just didn't have the good sense to take their clothes off first."
"No puedes parar de mover esa cosa, / Sabe a chicle y huele a rosa, / Muévelo, no te hagas la chistosa."
"It's all flavour, uncle." Silk holds the tumbler's edge against their sternum, digging it secretly into the bone. "You should try it some time." (Their voice is lower in Spanish: not deep, but sure. Whatever else it might be or say, their English is an apology for itself.)
Already the shadows are liquid-soft and move like wandering hands. The gatherer-side of the human mind, when it sees something strange, longs to know what it's looking at. Silk has made themself pretty, ambiguous, in lashes and lace, long neck and faint hips, a flat unmentionable chest. (Plausibly a woman, a certain kind of man, or something else completely: Silk learnt long ago that it helps not to care. People can see what they want to see; want what they think they are seeing. The best ones don't know. The question is enough: same kind that opened hives for honey, and broke the leather eggshell of a pomegranate's skin to get, redly and glittering, at the seeds. Others just want something smaller than them that won't break if they throw it around.) Some licks have ways to make the blood do the work; people want them, if they want to or not. Silk – even before the blood, the becoming – has always just made them choose.
The game is simple enough to be played a thousand ways. Probably there's no need to dance, but tonight Silk lacks the patience not to. The flex of Silk's tongue fills their mouth, leans furious against the hard backs of their teeth, as they cut into the crowd. As their naked shoulders barely have to move. As their hipbones – exposed between the highcut sides of their bodysuit, the slouch of their brutalised jeans – are rolled by the crowd. In its herdmind, they are the knot of confusion: a stutter like a cry, awaiting its echo. Dancing perreo alone. A glass in their fingertips, collarbone height. The mezcal makes slow circles, not spilling a drop.
"...Conmigo tú te puedes poner golosa…"
Silk feels the touch on the back of their waist: fingerprints on their listening skin. The bodysuit's neck is tight and high, hiding the apple of Silk's throat. Silk doesn't pull away. Against their back, Silk feels the hand notice.
"I want to fuck you." It's drunk, a little, but mostly breathless on its own bravery.
Silk tilts their head, twists a little, enough and only enough to bare the chipped cartilage of their ear. Gold flashes through one lobe, like teeth in a smirking mouth.
"I said," he gets it past the knotted heart in his throat, the taste of his own fragile pride. "I want to fuck you."
(Heard you fine, naco.) Silk doesn't say a thing. Men like it better when you don't. It helps them pretend. Intact and opaque, the question swells in their mind; some want answers, some just want to ask it.
His breath is coarse against Silk's neck. Under the tire-fire scent of vodka tonics, effort drives his lungs. He's been dancing, waiting, for long enough. Hot skin through a soaked linen shirt.
Silk gives him the corner of one long black eye, the upward pulse of one overlong lash. Bleached fade, smooth chest and red plastic rosary; he's young, younger even than Silk looks. (Silk wants to pull him away by the ring through his nose. How much longer? Like a chant, like a threat: How much longer?)
Another song, and Silk gives him the slide of one hip against the oversized phone in the front of his pants. In his pulse, above the music, you can hear him question it, hope on it. Desire is the dream of a world where nothing happens by accident; Silk lets it seem like one, just until it hurts. Then presses, grinds back. The mismatch of their heights slides Silk against his thigh; he is paralysed with gratitude, then pushing.
His head swivels as they leave. Silk hears him swallow, hears the beat in his temples. Hard to tell if he's scared someone will see them together or hoping for it. His hand pushes into the small of Silk's spine, like trying an unknown key in a lock and wishing for it to work. Silk reaches back, hooks a strong thumb into the loop of his thin belt, and pulls. In the doorway, before the steps and the street, he tries to kiss them. (Doesn't mind, then. Wants to be seen.) Silk turns their face, lets his mouth miss and crush sideways along their smooth jaw. It bares his neck, leaning down this way; Silk bites softly, without their real teeth.
"You're crazy…" Panting words through a smile; he speaks them half in disbelief.
"You don't like it?"
"I like it okay." A pause. "Okay, fuck, I like it plenty."
In the Uber he hails, they talk in whispers while the driver's eyes frown in the mirror. (Kids these days. Grown God damn adults these days. The city these days, and the nights worse still… The long arc of justice, bent towards progress, has bent the whole world out of shape, he thinks.)
The boy says his name is Mason. He's never done this before, not like this, he's not like that, but maybe, I mean he always… Silk listens, half in his lap. A little effort and Silk can hear the second heartbeat between his legs. He asks where Silk's from.
"Tijuana," Silk lies for no reason. Taillights red on the road outside lick along their turnedaway face, and their sad silent-movie-girl smile. "Or here now. You know how it is…" Like confessing something, letting him fill the blanks. Men like to feel like they’re saving you from something: a place, a person, yourself, your past.
"I like your accent. It's… Yeah."
"I like yours," Silk says, thinking that if Mason doesn't start finishing the sentences he starts, they won't be held responsible for when his fingers start breaking, one by one by one. "You sound smart."
Gleam then dim, the window strobes slow against them both, turning Silk's skin to wet smooth glass. The city is a palimpsest of lights and mixed messages, climbing north, downtown. Clusters of precarious workers wait, stewing between jobs. Transparent if not invisible, they run and sweat in the city's backstage, while people tell themselves: Well, the world might not be getting better, but at least it's getting smarter. (Swallow enough of a lie, and it'll scent your breath every time you speak.) Afraid to seem too passive and afraid to touch them where it counts, Mason pushes a hand through a tear in Silk's jeans and gropes their thigh: rough, indelicate, like petting a dog.
His apartment is clean but cluttered, not with possessions or treasures, just a life in progress, leaving things where they lay. In his face, Silk reads the apology he forces himself not to give. He's lived here two years but hasn't decorated; just a few ferns in pots full of volcanic clay beads, gifts probably, like he's afraid to make choices where other people might see them. He sets the aircon droning, draws the blinds on the dark outside. The sudden privacy is more than Silk can bear: hunger like anger, aching gums.
"You want a drink? Like, maybe some..?" Mason laughs, feigns ease, breathing like it takes thought. "I've got like…"
"Whatever you're having."
What he's having is ecstasy the colour of wet sand, smoked salt: impure, chopped and raked into lines on his blackly reflective coffee table. His nerve comes up strong after he rails one. He drags Silk into his lap: the weightless ease surprises, arouses him. "You're so… How come I can just lift…"
Getting early, getting late, Silk puts a hand on Mason’s thigh, puts his hand on their throat. "I want to fuck you…" They say it like they're shy, forehead bowed against his: eyes very black, looking drowsy with wanting him.
Mason's breath breaks open, dries up, regroups.
Silk's gums throb with the effort of hiding what they want. Their veins are a tightening web.
"I don't know… I mean, what are you? I mean, I don't care, but…"
"It's okay…" Silk whispers. "I know." (I know what you think. I know what you are. I know what you're scared of being.) "As long as you still want to?"
"I still wanna." Mason takes Silk's hand – tight grip, losing control – and thrusts it between their bodies. "See?"
(Another half-straight boy from the 'good side' of Reddit: soft, sensitive, self-professed. Hotblooded and blind to the inside of himself, looking to prove it on someone else.)
"I wanna." Part of Silk wants to tear out his throat, make a hole too big to fix, and leave themself no choice. Most of Silk slithers onto the floor, between his legs, working the minimal buckle on that thin expensive belt. Their breath is very fast. Very black, very thick, the fake length of Silk's lashes only shows how little they blink.
"I just…" Mason is whimpering: a voice he's never used with anyone before. "I mean, what should I call you?"
"Call me honey," Silk says against the coarse hair and soft skin of his thigh. "Call me baby." (Call me by the secret names of God on the lips of those who die by violence or know they have been disappeared: Mother and Please and Don't and Not Like This.) "Call me what you want."
Silk snakes a hand round one knee. The other is flat on his trembling, ill-defined stomach. They can't finish the path of kisses they started up his leg. What's the fucking point? Something breaks open inside Silk's mind, so good they change to become it. The word for mouth becomes maw, and they become it. Just the slide of their teeth, out and into their true shape, makes Silk hiss with how good it feels to be what they are. Arched back and moving throat, and the taste, the deepening taste, and the warm wet filling their body, the iodine taste and pink MDMA spike that spices the bland sugar-rush of Mason's life as it ebbs, ebbs…
(Police maybe, neighbours maybe, they could find him in his bathtub, floating in what used to be all the ice his SMEG fridge-freezer could make. They could find his door unforced – a classic honeytrap – and his belly and back sliced open: no liver and one less kidney. These things happen, don't they? And the world has other Masons.)
But there were cameras in the lobby. And the molly tastes like caring. (Bright bliss wrapped round the groping hand of Silk's hunger as it lashes out, demands more, then pleads, then begs, then weeps for it.) Silk makes him forget. Silk leaves him sleeping, to blame the heavy nausea, the confusion and weakness on the comedown of the night he's had.
Silk leaves quietly. This is, after all, a neighbourhood.