Mild
What Composed Looks Like
574 words · 3 min read
Three blow dryers. That is the only reason any of this is possible.
She knows their sound the way she now knows her own pulse — as cover, as permission, as the specific frequency that makes the rest of it invisible. The dryers run at different pitches, the woman at the far end on high, the two in the middle cycling between warm and hot, and underneath all of it, inaudible to anyone but her, the thing she has been carrying since the fifty-third minute of spin class.
She has not turned it off.
That is the part she keeps returning to in the mirror. Not that she forgot — she did not forget. Not that she couldn't reach the app — her phone is six inches from her right hand on the vanity ledge. She has not turned it off because she wanted to know what this would feel like, standing here, ordinary, while the woman beside her blots concealer and the one behind her zips a duffel and the one at the far end shakes her hair out into the warm current of the dryer.
What she is studying, in the mirror, is her own face.
It is a specific study. The exhibitionist's audit: does composed read as convincing, or does convincing require something composed cannot provide? Her jaw is level. Her shoulders are down. She is holding the edge of the sink with both hands, and if you were watching — if someone were watching — you would see a woman in her mid-thirties, post-workout, slightly flushed from exertion, waiting for her turn at the dryer. You would see nothing else.
Except her knuckles.
She notices them in the mirror before she notices anything else. White at the first joint, the second, the third. Both hands. The porcelain of the sink is cold through her palms and the cold is the only thing that has kept her from shifting her weight for the last ninety seconds, because she has learned — in the last forty minutes, in the spin class, in the elevator, in the walk down the corridor — that shifting weight changes the angle, and changing the angle is not something she can afford to do in a room with three other women and overhead fluorescents and nowhere to put her face.
The pulse comes in low waves. Not urgent. Not building toward anything she can name yet. Just present, continuous, a fact about her body that the room does not know.
She exhales through her nose. The sound goes nowhere — swallowed by the dryer on the left cycling up, by the woman at the far end saying something to her phone, by the ordinary noise of an ordinary Tuesday evening in a gym on the Upper West Side.
Her face in the mirror does not change.
That is the thing she is learning about herself, standing here, knuckles white, leggings pressing the device flush against her in a way that the compression fabric was absolutely not designed for: she is better at this than she thought. Composed holds. Convincing holds. The dryers run and run, and underneath their collective noise, the hum continues, and her reflection looks back at her with an expression she almost believes.
Almost.
Her right hand loosens its grip on the sink's edge. Just the right. Just slightly. She watches it happen in the mirror like she is watching someone else decide something.