Mild
What the Skyline Holds
525 words · 3 min read
The bass comes through the door like a second heartbeat — not music exactly, just the low end of it, the part that lives in the sternum. I can feel it in the metal door frame where my shoulder rests. I found this stairwell the way I find most things: by looking for it before I needed it. Outside, someone is blowing out candles. Someone is laughing at volume. The party has thirty people and a view and a cake shaped like the number forty, and I have been performing enjoyment for ninety minutes and my jaw aches from it. The dress is the only honest thing I've worn all day. Jersey wrap, the color of dried sage, light enough that the afternoon heat has made it feel like a second skin rather than a garment. It moves when I move. It holds when I hold still. I hold still now. The stairwell is propped open with a rubber wedge — a service door, institutional grey, the paint scuffed at handle height from years of deliveries. The light in here is different from the rooftop: no direct sun, just the ambient brightness of a New York afternoon bouncing off concrete and glass, coming in sideways through a narrow wire-mesh window at the landing above. It makes everything look considered. It makes me look considered. I know what I look like. That's not vanity — it's information. Dress smooth over my hips, hair still arranged, heels on the grated step. From the door, if someone opened it, I would look like a woman taking a phone call. That's the calculation I made before I let it close behind me. The wand is in my bag because I put it there this morning and I knew why and I didn't examine it too closely. I take it out now. It's heavier than it looks, dense and purposeful in my right hand, and my left hand goes to the railing — painted black, warm from the afternoon, gritty under my palm. The railing is the only thing between me and the drop to the next landing. I don't look down. I look at the door. The bass pulses through it, steady, indifferent. Someone on the other side of that door knows me by name. Several someones. I am a person who gives toasts and remembers birthdays and makes it look effortless, and right now I am standing in a service stairwell with a wand vibrator in my hand and the wrap of my dress hanging loose at the tie, the fabric warm from my own heat, and the only thing I am calculating is how much sound the door will hold. My left hand tightens on the railing. The metal is solid, absolute. I don't turn it on yet. That moment — the one before — is something I have learned to stay inside. The weight of the wand in my hand. The specific warmth of the fabric over my thighs, the way the seam of the wrap dress falls directly where it falls, as if the garment was made for exactly this use. My knees are together.