Mild
Rush Hour, Somewhere Else
559 words · 3 min read
She has both hands on the bar. That is the first thing she noted when the doors closed at 59th — both hands, the cold steel already warming under her palms, the train lurching north into the tunnel. She had made a rule of it. Both hands. Something to hold onto that wasn't the inside of her own coat.
The hum is steady. She chose the lowest setting on the platform, standing between a man reading the Post and a woman in a puffy vest, thumb on the app like she was checking her train time. She had been checking her train time. She had also been pressing the button. She is precise about doing two things at once.
Around her, the car is packed shoulder-to-shoulder from the waist up. No one is looking at her face. No one is near her face. The nearest eyes belong to a man three bodies away who is fully absorbed in whatever is happening in his headphones, his jaw moving slightly, some private song. She is aware of him the way she is aware of everything — catalogued, filed, not a threat.
The wool coat is heavy across her shoulders. She bought it for exactly this — the weight of it, the way it moves as one piece when she moves, the belt she knotted at the waist this morning in her apartment with fingers that were steadier than they had any right to be. The coat does not reveal anything. The coat is the whole point.
The train takes the curve before 68th and the car sways, and the sway shifts the weight of the coat, and the shift presses the vibrator — a small, specific pressure, nothing dramatic, just the reminder that it is there and that she put it there and that she is on a train with forty other people and her expression is the same expression she wears in conference rooms. She knows this because she checked in the dark window of the tunnel before the lights of the station swallowed the reflection.
Her right hand tightens on the bar. Not a grip — a recalibration. The bar is still cold at the edges where her palm hasn't reached. She focuses on that: the thin strip of cold steel at the heel of her hand, the specific temperature of it, the way her fingers have curved without her deciding to curve them.
She breathes in through her nose. The exhale comes out through her mouth, shorter than she planned, and she closes her lips before it becomes anything else. The man with the headphones doesn't look up. No one looks up.
The hum continues. It does not know about the conference room. It does not know about the expression she is maintaining. It knows only the setting she chose, and the setting she chose is patient, and patience is something she understands from both sides.
The train slows for 68th. Bodies shift. Someone's elbow grazes her arm through the wool. She does not move. Her hands stay on the bar — both of them, cold steel warming, the pulse of the train traveling up through her palms — and she stares at the middle distance and waits to see how long she can hold the distance between her face and everything else.
She has four more stops.