Mild
The Window Below
577 words · 3 min read
The sounds came up through the open window like smoke — not words, just the rhythm of two people who had stopped being careful. Riya had heard them start twenty minutes ago, a murmur that had changed register, and she had not gone back downstairs.
She sat on the concrete ledge where the water tank cast a shadow, her banarasi saree pooled around her in a weight she could feel in her hips — six yards of silk brocade that had taken her mother's cousin forty minutes to drape. The gold zari border pressed a ridge into the side of her thigh, rough and specific, the kind of sensation that stayed. The city glow of Dhaka made the sky amber above her. No stars. Just that warm suspended light and the wet monsoon air sitting on her skin like a second garment, and below her, through the open window, the sound of someone trying not to be heard and failing.
Her palms faced upward on her knees. The mehendi was still tacky at the center of each hand, the intricate geometry her aunt had drawn over three hours now a thing she could not press or grip or close without risking. She had been told: don't touch anything dark, don't touch anything wet. She had been told: keep your hands open and still.
She kept her hands open and still.
The bullet vibrator was small enough to have fit in the fold of her blouse, which was where she had been carrying it since the airport, a habit she had developed in the years she had lived alone. She set it on the ledge beside her. She turned it on with the flat of her thumb, the only part of her hand she trusted, and the low hum of it moved through the concrete into her thigh.
A sound from below — a woman's exhale, the kind that meant she had stopped negotiating with herself. Riya's stomach contracted.
She held the vibrator between both wrists, palms still open, still facing up, the mehendi untouched, and lowered it to the mound of fabric in her lap. The silk was so dense, so layered, that she felt it as pressure first — a distant thing, a thing happening to someone near her. She held her breath without deciding to.
The woman below made a sound that was not a word. Low. Continuous. The kind that meant something had been found.
Riya let the breath out through her nose, longer than she had taken it in. The vibration reached her through all that silk and she understood, for the first time this evening, why she had come up here and not back to the women's side of the house with her cousins.
She had known. She had brought the thing. She had known.
She shifted her weight forward and the saree shifted with her, six yards of ceremony rearranging itself around a want she had been carrying since she'd first heard the window open below. The concrete was cool through the layers of fabric. Her own heat, when it reached her, was a surprise — not the warmth of the night but something interior, something she had made.
The sounds below changed pitch.
Riya pressed the wrists together a little more firmly, the vibrator steady between them, and looked out at the amber sky and did not look away, and waited for whatever was going to happen next to happen.