--GRAVITY IS WORKING AGAINST ME
Rave
Monday, July 14th, 2014
Rylie does a sloppy stumble into my
chest. For a moment I’m afraid she’s
either passed out, or dead, but then she says, “Isn’t this fruckin great,”
slurring hard before biting my earlobe.
I met Rylie at Starbucks where she
was working, where she remade my
double-mocha-ginger-spice-no-foam-chia-tea-latte three times without ever
getting it right. Rylie was worried I’d
complain to her boss, and as a favor, she invited me to this country-themed
“Rave.”
I hadn’t thought I’d come, but once
I did, I hadn’t thought Rylie would give me the time of the day, though upon
seeing me, Rylie pressed her huge breasts against me and squealed. “I’m so glad you showed. You’re, like, the hottest, old guy I
know.” To wit, I thought: I hadn’t
realized we knew each other. I hadn’t
thought forty-two was all that old.
Rylie has a lot of friends who are
just as gorgeous and as daft as she is.
When not dancing, they huddle together, bobbing like skiffs, nodding
quite a bit and tittering before any sentence is finished, even if someone’s
just remarking on the weather. One of
them – Tessa – rubs the back of my thigh and squeezes my buttocks anytime I get
near. She has diamond piercings over
each eyebrow that glitter like bright, white halos. Earlier, as I was refilling my
radioactive-looking cocktail, Tessa leaned in and whispered, “I bet you really
know how to clean a girl’s carpet.”
The house we’re in is a monster,
containing millions of rooms and crawl spaces with their doors flung open,
revealing couples engaged in all kinds of salacious acts, the participants
oblivious to anyone or anything. Rylie
explains it’s the Sigma Chi fraternity, that their charter was revoked after a
hazing incident involving a pledge and a goat in heat, and that the house has
remained vacant since, except when people want to rent it for engagements such
as this.
All night long Rylie hovers around
me, clinging when she can, fawning and groping.
Towards midnight, we end up in a room where someone’s pinned a gigantic
Confederate flag across one wall, with a twelve foot-long aquarium stationed on
the other wall opposite it.
Rylie grabs my shirt placket and
pulls me onto the bed. Her pupils are
brown quarters, her mouth a trapdoor sprung open.
When she says, “It’s now or never,
Pappa,” my stomach clutches, and I don’t know if it’s because of what she’s
inferring, or what she’s called me.
The aquarium makes a steady gurgling
noise that gets me dizzy. Bright,
fluorescent fish flip through the gleaming clear water, leaving a trail of air
bubbles in their wake.
“Kiss me like you mean it,” Rylie
says, tugging on my beard stubble. “Then
fuck me like you don’t.”
I’m tempted, of course, but I push
her away instead.
Rylie grabs fistfuls of my hair and
yanks and yanks, shrieking like a cat with its tail caught in the garbage
disposal. I think she’s having an
epileptic attack, or some such thing, so I pull her inside my chest, which is
slick with Rave-induced sweat, and hold her there, as if trying to calm a
frightened pet.
I say, “It’s okay.”
I say, “Everything’s all right.”
She asks me again to do things to
her. She says she’ll call me Daddy. She says that’s what all the boys like.
I cup Rylie’s hands. Over her head, in the tank, a rainbow-striped
fish hovers by the glass, as if listening and watching.
“What happened?” I ask. “You can tell me. Go ahead.
What happened to you when you were little?”
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