6. The Mirror on The Playroom Wall

Yes if I'd been packaged differently I could hide the memory beneath a beard. As it is, I select my lipstick to match a long ragged slice from ear to chin.

Once I wanted to see perfection, and so I spied on him. Do monsters preen? Gestures he threw off like sparks, as he stood before his mirror, to smooth hair so oiled by smoke and rain that I can taste it even now. There's no imagining what he saw reflected -- did clotted stains whet his dreams? Would matte lapels blend with the shadows where his next meal stumbled and fell?

From my hiding place I witnessed only bruised nails pulling tattered cuffs. Do monsters preen? The mirror was too short to reveal to him the gore he tracked across the tile, yet it was wide enough to flicker with candlelight from the damned keyhole. Do monsters preen? The price of knowing has healed over and daily ropes the tendons of my smile.

Who said scars make a face more interesting.



7. Coming Home

I love puking on the sidewalk, I really do. Oh sure. Yep, nothing compares with dragging a shaking leg up and under myself just long enough to get my damp face into position to spew reminders of broken promises. Hurling every buggered intention to the sound of rending some deep, deep tissue; gagging punctuated by regret over what else might be happening inside.

Maybe if the crimson goo pooling around my knees doesn't come out in the wash, well then maybe the next night I'll remember and know better.

It does, I don't.

Cry cry cry, repent repent repent, do it all again again again. That vascular soup, mixed from his playthings' heartwine with the bile he calls his own -- what happens when I finally keep it down? Does a monster watch unseen tonight, while I crawl through red smears on my way toward the pavement's end?

...Only if I'm lucky. After all, I'd hate to have to call a cab.


8. Chez Playroom

It caught up with me caught up with me caught up and my lips only mumbled with the drink bubbling up, back up, never going down down for good, down forever, for all time and time and --

And then the dream is over.
---
When I stood up I saw a glove forgotten among the overturned furniture, so pale it was. Mmmm, a long white glove, elbow length -- oh my, but there was an elbow, too. The glove, a glove of skin for bones bent in subtle ways. In the air above the body floated plinking noises from a near room, as if someone played the wires of a broken piano. Seemed likely, judging from the torn upholstery and strewn pillows I waded through.

The dining room was nearly intact by comparison. Plenty of soiled linen to stuff into my collar to check the bleeding there. "Don't be shy, pull up a chair" -- his invitation delivered from a shadowy seat at the end of a table, where darker and contorted shapes lay heaped upon the floor nearby. "Better yet, have mine. Good night."

No harm done in admitting I was thankful to see him go, leaving me to spend the rest of the night alone, no harm, right?

That's when I noticed the table's scattered china... a setting for eight. The tortured piano-string playing in the background was joined by laughter and the crunching of glass.

I wish they'd dine out more often.


9. The View from The Playroom

"Black hearts among the young are so charming. The energy invested -- such sincerity, such creativity! But evil doesn't really get ugly until it gets older." More nonsense, another damn sermon, delivered this time from the edge of a pier that he rhythmically chipped away with a small knife. Thock. Thock. Thock. Each uncurling of his lazy wrist advanced the damage. As he lifted his arm I could see his shirt cuff. Gawd it was filthy.

"And the older one gets -- you'll find this out for yourself someday, I'll ssssssee to that -- the older one gets, the less like a pose evil becomes. Once I thought that was simply because perfidy is habit forming." Thock, thock. "But I know now that a junkie rush isn't what the Old Things feel." Thock. "They feel -- nothing. Perversion is as humdrum as rain, as decay, as insects crushed underfoot. Life ends without contemplation. The daily ordinariness of it all is what makes our satiations evil... and easy."

Easy? Me: "Really. Well I'll tell you what I think. I think you old shits are just getting lazy."

His reply was a wink in ghastly parody of intimacy against the background of grey-green river water. I turned to look up instead at the Cascade mountains to the east, illuminated as if from within by the sunset's failing light. Lights-out here in Rain City, lights-out for the flannel brats, and the suicides, and the caffeinated habitues. Good night sleep tight better pray that only bed bugs bite.

Thock, thock. Him: "Lazy... ah then, let's go somewhere... different. Take me to a street that's fresh. Your choice." Thock. "Surprise me."

Ha.
Sure, I'll drive. But I won't pimp.


10. Equal employment

-----

Good work out here on the perimeter, on the outside looking in.

As a pornographer.

That is, one who looks at love from both sides now. Like the song says.

And so can best describe in greasy prose the cascade of fleshy imaginings that bind us all all all every one night and day work and play. Whether inspired by the genuine weariness of saity, or the stupid clarity of longing, who really cares?

Not monsters, certainly. A fine subject for any pornographer, for sure. An egotistical bunch reveling in display of excess and vanity, the arteries of their milked victims as spent and ravished as the skin of any spread eagled performer witnessed thru gauzy words, a gloss of sweat and warm red splatter.

Good work if you can get it.



© leslie h.
Rain City continues...

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